Man City manager eager to end season on a high


Written by: AFP
2008-05-04 03:32:20

Manchester City manager Sven-Goran Eriksson, seen here, has called on his players to end their season on a high in the light of mounting speculation that he could soon be sacked
  Manchester City manager Sven-Goran Eriksson, seen here, has called on his players to end their season on a high in the light of mounting speculation that he could soon be sacked
LIVERPOOL, England (AFP) - Manchester City manager Sven-Goran Eriksson has called on his players to end their season on a high in the light of mounting speculation that he could soon be sacked.

Reports this week claim Eriksson will be replaced by City owner Thaksin Shinawatra at the end of the season. City were even moved to cancel Eriksson's regular press conference on Friday due to "exceptional circumstances".

But Eriksson remains in charge for the trip to Anfield on Sunday and feels his players are fully focused on their short trip to Liverpool.

"The boys have worked very hard this week, I'm very pleased with them," Eriksson said.

"It was important that they did that in training, otherwise we would be a bit flat in the remaining games, so I hope we get the opposite of course.

"I'm looking for us to play some good football and to put in two good performances.

"We want to finish the season as well as possible, and to try to put in two good performances as well, that's important for us as professionals. It's what we have been talking about all week and what we will try to do."

It remains unlikely that Eriksson will be manager much beyond that but at least he will be able to call on his captain Richard Dunne after he missed the 3-2 defeat to Fulham with a hamstring problem.

Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez, who refused to comment on a reported bid for Aston Villa's Gareth Barry, has defended his team's campaign in the wake of their Champions League semi-final defeat to Chelsea.

While City sit in ninth place, once again the best the Reds can hope for is fourth place and they are well off Manchester United and Chelsea at the top.

But Benitez thinks that the level of competition in the Premier League makes that a record to be proud of.

"If you analyse it properly, to be in the top four in Europe is a massive achievement," Benitez said.

"To be in the top four in England, when you consider that the two of the best teams in Europe are Chelsea and United, it is not that bad.

"We always aim to win silverware here but top four in Europe and top four in England is not what you could call a fantastic season. But clearly it is not a bad one."

Having struggled with Liverpool's owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett, Benitez has sympathy for Eriksson and thinks the Swede has been harshly treated by Shinawatra.

He added: "I do not know all the details but he has done a very good job and had a good season. He must be happy with his own performance.

"I think he has done well, you never know in football but hopefully we will win this game and then they will play really well in the last one, but I don't know whether this will be good for him or not."

Benitez reported that Fernando Torres trained on Friday after being taken off against Chelsea in midweek with a hamstring problem, but the Spain international is not likely to be risked against City.

The Liverpool manager is also likely to rest defender Martin Skrtel, who came off with a knee injury at Stamford Bridge.



Discuss

dropkick May 4th, 2008 10:20

this is the big problem with all these foreign businessmen taking over the english clubs, they think that you can just buy a club and a few players and a manager and then you win everything. they have no greater understanding of the game.

ajax72 May 4th, 2008 12:29

If it weren't for the foreign money english clubs wouldn't continue after the group stage of CL let alone reach the final. You have to choose the lesser evil since England doesn't produce quality players and coaches. As it is there's very, very little 'english' in english football today.

aimforthehighest May 5th, 2008 11:24

stop whining/flaming about the takeovers.

they have every right reason to do it, but it projects good or bad results that not my problem, nor yours. It's the management team - its evolution of football.