Posts Tagged ‘bolton wanderers’

Premier League games will all go ahead despite snowfall in north-west

• Blackburn say snowfall around Ewood Park was ‘relatively light’
• Man City v Liverpool and Wigan v Tottenham also go ahead

All of today’s Premier League games are set to go ahead despite adverse weather conditions in Lancashire and Manchester. Overnight snowfall in the north-west had cast doubt over Blackburn v Bolton, Manchester City v Liverpool and Wigan v Tottenham, but all three home clubs released statements this morning confirming that the matches would not be postponed.

Blackburn’s statement said that the snowfall near Ewood Park had been “relatively light” ahead of their midday derby, while City reported that “traffic is moving freely around the City of Manchester Stadium”.

“The approaches immediately to the ground itself for those on foot are clear,” continued the City statement. “There is no problem with the playing surface and the game goes ahead at 3pm as scheduled. If you are coming to the game, the weather is set to remain cold and wet throughout the day, so please wear lots of layers and stay warm.”

Wigan, meanwhile, said: “The DW Stadium pitch undersoil heating has been functioning throughout the week, while snow ploughs and gritters have made the main access roads into the stadium passable. The club are warning, however, that it may be forced into some car park closures, depending on conditions later today.

“Supporters are being reminded that conditions remain potentially hazardous and roads throughout the region continue to be affected by the adverse weather.”

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Liverpool 2-0 Bolton Wanderers | Premier League match report

In a season filled with disappointment, Liverpool can take heart from one achievement. Rarely have a side so lacking in rhythm, nous and conviction threatened to achieve their eventual ambition. It is now five wins in six matches for Rafael Benítez’s team and this latest was arguably the ugliest of the lot. No matter, though, while that much-desired fourth place remains in sight.

The majority of those at Anfield desperately wanted to see their side swagger through games again and might have thought this would be the day. Bolton have not won at this ground in 56 years and, despite two consecutive wins under their new manager Owen Coyle, cannot be considered a major threat. But, yet again, a visiting side made life uncomfortable for Liverpool.

Ultimately they did triumph thanks to a close-range first-half strike from Dirk Kuyt following Alberto Aquilani’s nod down and then, 20 minutes from time, an own goal from Kevin Davies. The Bolton forward was unlucky to see Emiliano Insúa’s speculative drive squirm off his thigh and beyond Jussi Jaaskelainen in the visitors’ goal.

That aside, Liverpool rarely threatened. Steven Gerrard was shifted to the right wing in a bid to free him from the shackles of his expected man-marker, in this case Mark Davies, but the Liverpool captain, despite the increased room, could not influence proceedings in his usual manner.

It was, though, his close-range shot after 53 minutes from which David Ngog, brought into the side to play as a lone striker, missed an absolute sitter. With the goal open following Jaaskelainen’s low save of Gerrard’s strike, the Frenchman somehow managed to skew a drive from fewer than four yards out on to the bar.

It seemed then that Liverpool would once again crumble, but Kevin Davies’s bad luck soon afterwards eventually secured the win and kept the hosts within a point of Tottenham in fourth.

Time will tell how long Liverpool will continue to win ugly, but what is certain is that should Benítez, as he has hinted, join Juventus in the summer, the Turin club will hope he does not bring such dourness with him.

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Football transfer rumours: Yossi Benayoun to Dynamo Moscow?

Today’s tell-all is wet, wet, wet

For the Mill, this has been a wavering, indecisive kind of January window, full unanswered questions and a sapping, deathly kind of lassitude. Like some wheezing, burbling flu-ridden insomniac, looking up towards dawn and seeing, finally, light at the edge of the curtains, the Mill senses it’s all very nearly over. And so many questions have yet to be resolved.

Questions like, does it really matter if a player who doesn’t really play much but instead just talks a lot about playing somewhere else begins suddenly to talk about talking about playing somewhere else somewhere else and not where he currently no longer plays much any more? This at least is the thrust of Robinho’s announcement this morning that he is finally really properly physically leaving Manchester City. In a bit maybe.

“I am going through a bad period,” Robinho said yesterday, slopping around in tracksuit trousers holding a pillow while eating muesli and occasionally crying at nothing in particular. “The directors all agree it’s better to send me out on loan,” he added, drawing a picture of the directors and explaining that they only come out at night. Robinho would like to go back to Santos because it’s his “home”.

Liverpool’s co-embarrassment Tom Hicks has sold his baseball team for £310m to a group of people that includes a lawyer called Chuck Greenberg and a pitcher called something that should relate to the law in an amusing fashion but unfortunately doesn’t. Rafael Benítez won’t get any of the money.

West Ham are about to “end James Beattie’s Stoke hell” by buying him for £3m. “I’d be hugely disappointed if we did not bring in a striker before the window closes,” David Gold whispered yesterday, putting a hand on your knee. Aston Villa have said they won’t loan Curtis Davies to Celtic. “We may well need Curtis. Things happen,” Martin O’Neill shrugged, making an “Iunnno….” noise.

In The Mirror Manchester United have been wandering around all day muttering “we buy any car. Any make any model any dum de dum. We buy any car. We buy any car” after finally working out a way to pay Wayne Rooney £150,000 a week so he doesn’t move to Spain. Sam Allardyce wants Bosnia winger Senijad Ibricic of 1970s European Cup nostalgia vehicle Hajduk Split. Morten Gamst Pedersen is off to Fenerbahce. And someone called Junior Hoilett is refusing to sign a new contract.

David Moyes is training his unblinking red-raw peeled-eyeball stare on Klaas-Jan Huntelaar and making him hum things to himself and pretend to be reading a newspaper. Spurs, Liverpool and West Ham are also interested. Marco Ruben is on his way to Wigan for £7m. Ruben plays for Villarreal reserves, but also scored on his debut for Argentina recently.

Marlon Harewood won’t be re-signing for Newcastle after breaking his foot in an undisclosed “freak training ground accident”, perhaps involving a misunderstanding with a celeriac, or falling backwards off his flimsy 1970s sun lounger while invisible people laugh uproariously like in the opening credits of Terry and June.

In The Mail Dynamo Moscow want to buy Yossi Benayoun from Liverpool for £7m. Standard Liége striker Milan Jovanovic could pass him heading the other direction after turning down a £3.5m-a-year move to Birmingham because he “wants a higher profile club”. Manchester City could be about to add Roma defender Marco Motta to their thriving new-build small town of random loanee travelling minstrel aces.

Arsenal really are going to sign Fulham reserve centre-half Chris Smalling for £8m. Smalling is 20 and used to play for Maidstone United in the Ryman Premier League. Lens striker and spell-check nightmare Toifilou Maoulida wants to play in the Premier League. West Ham, Wigan and Stoke are scratching about on the periphery looking urgent and friendly and trying to make decisive eye-contact. “I am in favour of the Lens project but the situation is complicated,” he said, sounding a bit queeny and fey and like he might be wearing some kind of beret. “The English league has always interested me.”

In The Times Galatasaray are performing a drunken version of the running man in front of Giovani dos Santos and hoping he’s kind of laughing with them. Birmingham City have held talks about signing Aruna Dindane, who is on loan at Portsmouth. David Moyes is keen to unwrap the waddling Swiss enigma Philippe Senderos. And Leeds United have agreed a fee for the blind Jewish New York jazz pianist of the 1950s and Leicester City winger Max Gradel.

According to Goal.com Harry Redknapp has offered scampering goal-gnome Robbie Keane to West Ham in an attempt to lure Carlton Cole to White Hart Lane. And Bayern Munich like the look of Steven Pienaar and his flapping judicial wig-style braids. Pienaar could be the man to replace the departing Franck Ribéry, who seems to have been departing for a really long time now, without doing any actual, real departing.

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