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Zlatan Ibrahimovic expects to stay at Barcelona
Zlatan Ibrahimovic is adamant that his future lies at Barcelona, despite reports linking him with a move to the Premier League.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic expects to stay at Barcelona
Staying put: Zlatan Ibrahimovic has said he has no intentions of leaving Barcelona for the Premier League

Ibrahimovic has been regularly linked with a move away from Barcelona following a disappointing first season at the Nou Camp, and the club's signing of David Villa from Valencia has done nothing to dampen the rumours.

Manchester City and Chelsea are reported to have expressed an interest in Ibrahimovic, but the player himself says he has no intention of leaving the Spanish champions.

''I was a Barca player when I left [to go on holiday] and I'll be a Barca player when I go back,'' Ibrahimovic said.

''I have four years left on my contract.''

The former Inter Milan forward also criticised the press for their suggestion that he may be on the verge of a move to the Premier League.

''I want to congratulate everybody that has used my name, because it's fun to have been at Chelsea, at Manchester City, without having been there,'' Ibrahimovic said.

Ibrahimovic's first season in Spain started brightly, with goals in his first four league games and the winner in El Clásico against Real Madrid.

However, by the turn of the year the goals had started to dry up and the 28-year-old Swede's appearances on the substitutes bench became ever the more regular.

 
Muller: winning golden boot is incredible

Thomas Muller has said he never believed he would win the Golden Boot before the World Cup began.

Muller: winning golden boot is incredible
Incredible: Thomas Muller cannot believe he has won both the Golden Boot award and the Best Young Player Award at the World Cup.

The 20-year-old forward, who only made his international debut in March, scored five times at the World Cup to clinch the award.

David Villa, Wesley Sneijder and Diego Forlan also scored five goals, but the Bayern Munich man's three assists saw him edge out the trio.

"This is just incredible for a newcomer to the World Cup. If anyone had told me I'd end on eight scorer points, I'd have said they were kidding me," Muller said.

"It's an honour of course, but at the end of the day, I'd rather have had the World Cup itself."

Muller's performances in helping Germany reach the semi-finals in South Africa also won him the Best Young Player award.

"It's a huge honour to be part of a group including the likes of Pele, Franz Beckenbauer, Michael Owen and the most recent winner, Lukas Podolski," added Muller.

"For me personally, it's terrific confirmation of the work I've put in over the last year. I'm delighted my great run has continued here, and I've really enjoyed it too. The honour will be with me for all time, and it's a wonderful memento too."

 
World Cup 2010: Spain survive brutal final to become champions
Andres Iniesta's extra-time goal denies Holland in a showdown marred by 14 yellow cards and a sending-off

World Cup 2010: Spain survive brutal final to become champions
Spain's captain Iker Casillas lifts the World Cup trophy.

This World Cup ended the way the modern South Africa began 16 years ago: with Nelson Mandela its star. Possibly the final reward of Mandela's great political life was to pay a brief visit to the Johannesburg cauldron where Spain lifted the trophy for the first time with a goal in the 116th minute of a sometimes brutal encounter with Holland.

A tournament that was all about harmony produced an acrimonious finish as the Dutch attempted to stop, by brute force, Spain becoming the game's eighth world champions. Howard Webb, the English referee, risked repetitive strain injury showing 14 yellow cards, a record for a World Cup final. He also sent off Holland's John Heitinga as the Dutch suspended their artistic heritage.

With their poise and kaleidoscopic passing Spain represented football in its ideal state. Self-expression conquered pragmatism as fireworks over Johannesburg marked the end of Africa's first World Cup. "It was a very difficult game but we have some fantastic players who knew how to respond to the problems," said Vicente del Bosque, the Spanish coach. "We owe this to a great group of players."

An all-European showdown tore at the nerves of two great footballing cultures as the contest threatened to run to a penalty shoot-out before Barcelona's Andrés Iniesta closed the deal with a right-foot shot four minutes from the end of extra time.

In Spain, where many Basques and Catalans disown the national team, an estimated 300,000 fans rejoiced in Madrid's city centre as a side packed with Barcelona players added the world crown to the European championship they won in Vienna two years ago.

This will go down as the blood and thunder final at the end of a competition that emphasised South Africa's talent for integration and reconciliation. At times it was closer to white South Africa's favourite sport, rugby.

Within walking distance of his old family home at 8115 Orlando West, Soweto, Mandela took a short golf-cart ride across the pitch at the Soccer City stadium as if trying to draw one last epiphany from South Africa's transformation.

He was shrewd not to stay for the football. Two teams renowned for their verve turned the first half into a test of machismo, in which Holland were the worst offenders. English football managed to sneak a man onto the field but this was not a good night for Rotherham's Webb. At the high point of his five-year sabbatical from South Yorkshire police, he faced the match official's dilemma of whether to send a player off in a showpiece game as a succession of Dutchmen – Mark van Bommel especially – stretched his authority with persistent and bone-juddering fouls.

Spain responded with a few choice lunges of their own. With eight players booked in little over an hour Soccer City was hardly a festival of the finer arts. The vuvuzela was reassigned from a tool of support to an instrument of derision as the 84,490 crowd grew frustrated with the constant interruptions. Moments before the teams filed up the tunnel a pitch invader came within inches of swiping the World Cup trophy off its plinth but was tackled by security guards just in time. It was an isolated show of anti-World Cup sentiment at a tournament that left many European visitors ashamed of their preconceptions about crime and social disorder.

"South Africans are very proud of what the country has achieved and everyone in South Africa is walking tall," said Danny Jordaan, head of the World Cup organising committee. "For years, many South Africans have been told that they are inferior, that they are not good enough. The nation has crossed a huge psychological barrier."

Private security companies said violent crime in parts of Johannesburg fell 60%. Some believe criminal gangs took a kind of forced sabbatical to avoid the 40,000 extra police hired for the tournament.

The justice department reported that 194 crimes had been brought before the World Cup courts. After Spain's win Fifa might be wise to set up a footballing equivalent to hear the explanations of those players who were less concerned with beauty than belligerence.

 
Holland not worried about 'beautiful' football

Holland not worried about 'beautiful' football
Beauty or beast: Giovanni van Bronckhorst and Holland have been willing to sacrifice the Dutch traditions of the 'beautiful game' in South Africa

In contrast to sides like Argentina and Brazil, and even a rejuvenated Germany, Holland's style has not been seen as quite so easy on the eye.

But Van Bronckhorst said it was more important to achieve their goal of winning the country's first World Cup than to impress with the way they go about it.

"Many teams at this tournament have said we haven't been playing beautiful football, but we have done well in the group phase," said the veteran defender and Feyenoord star.

"Every game, you want to play well, the most important thing now is that we win matches.

"In the past, we have started well and then gone on to lose, this time we are much closer and full of confidence.

"Of course, we want to win with beautiful football, but it is more important we win matches. This team always wants to play good football, but sometimes it is not possible."

He added that it had become harder as the tournament progressed to turn on the style, hinting that Tuesday's semi-final against Uruguay in Cape Town would be more of the same.

"It is becoming harder as we are in the last four, our opponents will be tough," he said.

"If we win with beautiful football, great, but we would be happier with a victory."

 
Man Utd target £25m Wesley Sneijder

Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson is plotting a £25million raid for Inter Milan's Dutch ace Wesley Sneijder.

Ferguson has told his money men that the midfield maestro is the player he wants for next season to bring more goals and imagination to his engine room.

Sneijder has been one of the stars of the finals, with his goals and clever passing him taking his country to the semi-final clash with Uruguay today.

Fergie has been on his trail for weeks and began behind-the-scenes moves for the player who helped Inter win the Italian title and cup plus the Champions League after being discarded by Real Madrid.

The United chief sees Sneijder as the injection of class that his side needs after missing out on the big prizes at home and abroad last season.

And, with Jose Mourinho leaving and Benitez after his own men, Ferguson hopes that he may have a chance of landing the star - although it will cost him a small fortune.

United will pay big for Sneijder as he is just 26 and has a re-sale value, one of the demands that the Glazer family put on large cash signings.

The Americans have made funds available and chairman David Gill is ‘on the case’ to land the Dutchman.

Ferguson knows that he may have to replace the likes of Paul Scholes and Ryan Giggs in the coming season and Sneijder’s acquisition would help overcome that major problem.

Sneijder could be tempted by the move to Old Trafford if the terms are right. It would take a bumper contract, but there is also scope for that within the United budget.

Ferguson is well aware that his squad needs an extra lift after falling short in the closing weeks.

Midfield was a disappointing area in some of the top matches and Sneijder has proved to be one of the best in the business.

Sneijder is waiting to see how Benitez’s regime pans out at Inter.

The former Liverpool boss is trying to recruit in midfield with Javier Maschernao and possibly Lucas Leiva in his sights.

If Sneijder does not like the direction that the club is going he could push harder for the United move - although the decision would have to be made in this window to let him qualify for the Champions League.

 


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