Thứ Năm, 27 tháng 10, 2016

Brazil recalls Douglas Costa, Marcelo and Casemiro for Argentina clash

Douglas Costa - cropped
Brazil coach Tite has recalled Douglas Costa, Marcelo and Casemiro to his squad for the World Cup qualifiers against Argentina and Peru.
Costa missed the past two international breaks because of injury, meaning the Bayern Munich star is in line for his first appearances under Tite, who was appointed Brazil coach in June.
Real Madrid pair Marcelo and Casemiro have enjoyed strong starts to the domestic season in Spain and return after missing Brazil's last two matches with respective calf and fibula problems.
Chelsea midfielder Oscar is the only major omission, as he is dropped and replaced by Sao Paulo center back Rodrigo Caio.
Gabriel Jesus and Neymar will again shoulder much of the burden in attack and Tite has told the Barcelona star to rise above rough treatment from defenders after an elbow from Bolivia's Yasmani Duk left him with a bloodied face earlier this month.
"You know how many times I thought about replacing Neymar in that second half? About 10 times," Tite told reporters. "But this is a process of maturity that he needs to feel in the skin. I said to him: 'Hey, Neymar, forget the card. Leave this with me. Go play, shoot and dribble. In the first third of the field, you are not safe either, play and pass faster, but in attack you can play in the way you want.'
"It is a maturity process. Firstly, I'm sure Neymar went to the right club. He's in a very good situation and I'm sure he will improve. He has to absorb it [rough treatment] because he has a unique talent. He has to ignore it."
Brazil will be the favorite when it hosts bitter rival Argentina in Belo Horizonte on Nov. 11, with Edgardo Bauza's men fifth and five points behind the leaders, but Tite is wary of one man in particular.
"Messi and Neymar are in the top three [players in the world], you know," he added. "Messi and Cristiano [Ronaldo] are more similar, of the same generation — they have similar ages. Neymar is younger, is maturing and growing, evolving. Today, for me, Messi is the best player in the world."
Brazil heads to Peru five days later for what will be its final qualifier until March.
Brazil squad in full: 
Goalkeepers: Alisson (Roma), Alex Muralha (Flamengo), Weverton (Atletico Paranaense).
Defenders: Gil (Shandong Luneng), Marquinhos (PSG), Miranda (Inter Milan), Rodrigo Caio (Sao Paulo), Thiago Silva (PSG), Daniel Alves (Juventus), Fagner (Corinthians), Filipe Luis (Atletico Madrid), Marcelo (Real Madrid).
Midfielders: Casemiro (Real Madrid), Fernandinho (Manchester City), Giuliano (Zenit), Lucas Lima (Santos), Paulinho (Guanghzou Evergrande), Philippe Coutinho (Liverpool), Renato Augusto (Beijing Guoan), Willian (Chelsea).
Forwards: Roberto Firmino (Liverpool), Douglas Costa (Bayern Munich), Gabriel Jesus (Palmeiras), Neymar (Barcelona).

More games: friv

Chủ Nhật, 14 tháng 8, 2016

Borussia Dortmund prepare hostile reception for Mario Gotze vs. Bayern

It's Borussia Dortmund vs. Bayern Munich in the German Super Cup for the fourth time in five years and there's a familiar theme: concern about a hostile reception for Mario Gotze at Signal Iduna Park.
But there's a twist, too. Unlike in 2013 and 2014, when the Germany international had to warm up inside the ground for fear of the crowd's anger, Gotze will be wearing the shirt of the Black and Yellows again on Sunday night. Whether that'll keep the expected negativity toward him under wraps is a different matter.
"Of course I'm thinking about the welcome I'll get," the 24-year-old admitted. "I don't know what it will be."
Many supporters have not forgiven the attacking midfielder for defecting south in 2013. The announcement of his return to Westphalia in 2016-17 was greeted with outright hostility in supporters' online forums. To counter those sentiments, Gotze has publicly shown contrition for his departure, declaring it a mistake.
BVB CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke has also asked the faithful to respect the returnee. "Players wearing the Borussia shirt demand support, in general," he told German newspaper Bild.
In addition, Watzke painted a picture of a naive, inexperienced Gotze having been led astray by the devious Bavarians in 2013, musing that "somebody told him lies" and falsely made out that he had been Pep Guardiola's favourite transfer.
As Bayern themselves have admitted, the Catalan coach had originally asked for Neymar instead. It's a good story -- and not too far from the truth -- but it also presents an obvious problem: it reminds everyone that Gotze has come back only because he didn't succeed at the Allianz Arena in the first place. Dortmund have offered an escape route, a chance for rehabilitation, for a career reboot. It was a business decision; it's not love. At least, not yet.
Fortunately for the scorer of the World Cup-winning goal in 2014, who's not expected to start against Bayern, there'll be a second, potentially even bigger target of animosity: former BVB captain Mats Hummels will make his second competitive Bayern debut -- he left Munich in 2008 after a handful of games -- against the club he has served as a leader for over the past eight years.
Hummels is under no illusions that "there will certainly be people who won't greet me that nicely," but he is not the type to lose too much sleep over it. Maybe by the time Gotze comes on as a substitute late on, alongside Germany teammate Andre Schurrle, who also won't feature from the beginning because of the pair's late return from Euro 2016, the Signal Iduna crowd will have become too hoarse from jeering Hummels to vent more ire toward "Super Mario." We will see. Or rather, hear.
As far as the game is concerned, Dortmund coach Thomas Tuchel has taken a very pessimistic stance, promising very little. "After the impressions from the last friendlies, I could do without the Super Cup," he said. "We're happy to play the game but we'd be well advised not to expect too much."
The integration of half a dozen of new signings, like winger Ousmane Dembele, former Barcelona centre-back Marc Bartra and Portugal's Euro 2016-winning left-back Raphael Guerreiro takes time, especially now that the team's central axis of Hummels, Ilkay Gundogan (sold to Manchester City) and Henrikh Mkhitaryan (sold to Manchester United) are no longer available to provide stability.
Tuchel wanted a bigger squad packed with versatile players to rotate more and change tactics more often. But one can tell that he's still getting to grips with the options at his disposal. The staggered arrival of the squad hasn't helped and the Super Cup, two weeks ahead of the start of the regular season, comes at a time when half the team seem a bit tired of preseason and the other half of late-comers are not quite up to speed.
"In terms of challenging Bayern, we've been in better situations before," he added.
Tuchel will have to curb his perfectionism and impatience in coming weeks to not put too much pressure on his re-engineered side. His opposite number Carlo Ancelotti has, by contrast, cut a very relaxed figure at Sabener Strasse, joking about his rudimentary command of German ("If I don't switch to English, we'll still be here by dinner time," he told reporters at the news conference on Friday) and taking some time out for a sneaky cigarette near the training ground.
There are injuries to contend with -- Arjen Robben, Holger Badstuber, Douglas Costa, Jerome Boateng and Renato Sanches -- but no real worries. The only contentious issue could be finding a place for Thomas Muller, whose starting position could come under threat in Ancelotti's preferred 4-3-3 system. Muller will have to adapt, once more, and play on the right side, as he did for Germany at the Euros, with less than impressive results as they crashed out in semifinals to France.
"Of course I'm not happy with the way the summer went, but that doesn't knock me down," the 26-year-old said on Thursday.
The Super Cup is a good chance for Ancelotti to look at Muller's confidence, and for the player to stave off further debate over his scoring drought.
A 4-4-2 formation with two strikers, Ancelotti conceded, could be a possibility in coming weeks, which would certainly help the Bayern talisman's cause. Either way, it is Bayern who will contest the season opener as the more settled side, with Ancelotti well poised to outdo his predecessor at the first attempt: Guardiola lost all three Super Cup games while in charge of the Reds, so the Italian has a chance to make an immediate statement.

Thứ Tư, 6 tháng 7, 2016

Bayern Munich Should See Douglas Costa's Olympic Bid as a Positive

Typically, it's a huge blow when a club is without one of their best attacking players for the pre-season and early stages of the following campaign. And indeed, there are some negatives for Bayern Munich in having Douglas Costa leave their squad to prepare for and compete in the Olympics this August.
The 25-year-old took like a fish to water following his transfer fromShakhtar Donetsk to the Allianz Arena side last summer, and his absence may well be noticed as the Bavarians take their first steps under incoming coach Carlo Ancelotti.
At the same time, what may appear as a sizable handicap may not be all that bad for Bayern. And ultimately, there may be more positives than negatives from Costa's Olympic bid.
The first thing to remember regarding Costa's participation in the Olympics is that, in terms of stress and strain, it isn't equivalent to involvement in the European Championship or World Cup. The tournament spans just 16 days, from August 4-20. That's about half the duration of this summer's Euros, which began on June 10 and will end on July 10.
Moreover, the Olympics are limited in terms of the wear and tear they cause on players due to the fact that there is an age restriction. Under-23 athletes may be physically mature, but there will be plenty of teenagers at the tournament. And many of the big guns will have weakened squads due to participation in Euro 2016 and the CopaAmerica.
Germany, for example, have prioritized the Euros and will send a more or less under-21 squad to the Olympics. As well, Argentina will be without Lionel Messi after their talismanic forward participated in theCopa. Costa will have to play hard to lift Brazil to glory, but the intensity of football should be a cut below the Champions League.
Having established that the Olympics will not be quite as strenuous as other summer competitions, the potential rewards of Costa's participation can be assessed.
The most obvious benefit for Costa is a huge boost of confidence. He has a good chance of being the stand-out star of the tournament, or at least one of the very best players. And although it might be a case of a big fish in a smaller pond, a gold medal is a gold medal. It would be a meaningful honor for Costa personally and for his country.
There is an obvious downside of missing pre-season and an introduction to Ancelotti's system, but the Olympics can serve as a pre-season of sorts for Costa, who showed last year he can adapt to a new environment without much trouble.
Another benefit of Costa's Olympics participation is that the Brazilian will not immediately be in conflict with Franck Ribery. Last season, it appeared that the veteran lost his starting role to Costa whilst injured. And when Ribery became fit again, an injury to Arjen Robben meant that Costa and Ribery could start in the same team. Yet with Ribery,Robben and Costa probable to be fit as the 2016-17 club season approaches, the presence of Costa would likely have kept Riberyrelegated to the bench.
With Costa away, Ribery will have a chance to show what he still has left in the tank. It's good for Bayern and Ancelotti to know what to expect of the veteran, who otherwise may not have been able to make his best appeal. It's not ideal for Costa's situation at Bayern, but Riberyand the club overall stand to benefit.
The final point, and one not to be underestimated, is that letting Costa attend the Olympics without any protest is avoiding conflict with the player. Had Bayern opposed his decision, it could have backfired with disastrous effect. Consider when Rafinha experienced resistance fromSchalke ahead of the 2008 Olympics. A Court of Arbitration for Sport decision (as reported by Deutsche Welle) ruled that clubs were not required to release their players for the Olympics, but Rafinharepresented Brazil nonetheless. Per SportBild (h/t Chris Ives ofSkySports), Schalke fined him a record €700,000 for breaching his contract, resulting in some seriously bad blood between the player and club.
Costa means too much to this Bayern team for the club to risk muddying the water, and it seems the Bavarians have no intent to. It may be partly good intention from the Bavarians, but there must be a certain amount of self-preservation in mind. 
At first glance, it seems a negative that Bayern will be without Costa for the opening weeks of the 2016-17 season, but in reality, what appears obvious may not be very much so. They have enough depth to manage without Costa for a short while, and it's a good chance for Ribery to prove himself. And although Costa will miss the pre-season withBayern, he won't likely return too fatigued and could well come back full of confidence. That might well be worth his temporary absence atBayern.

Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 5, 2016

How will Pep Guardiola affect the Three Lions?

Leicester City’s historic title win was savoured by many but there isn’t much time for lingering emotion in football. The prospect of Pep Guardiola in England is one many a neutral is looking forward to. Tiago Estêvão poses the question of what effect the famed Spaniard can have on the Three Lions.
Manchester City Team Blog

Ever since Guardiola’s agreement with Manchester City was announced, everyone has been speculating about whom will the Spaniard bring in and who will he let go off to revolutionize the team. Just like everyone else, I also enjoy speculating and I too am wondering about his title winning chances in England, for example. But Pep’s influence goes way beyond club level football: wherever he establishes himself as a coach, he brings an entirely new perspective and philosophy to the sport in the country.
Let’s go on a bit of a journey through the years, in Pep’s career. The Catalonian got in charge of Barça for the 2008/09 season and he changed a lot of things around the club – sold some of the stars, promoted some youngsters and built a team with its foundation on Spanish talent. Seven trophies later (including a Champions League title and two La Liga ones), the 2010 World Cup in South Africa came along. As everyone is well aware, Spain won the tournament despite a lot of changes in the squad that had one the Euros just two years prior.
Guardiola Man City 2016
These changes came not just from the managerial swap from Aragones to Del Bosque, but also through the rise of the Catalonian giants under Guardiola. The final’s starting eleven for the Spaniards had the Barça backbone and, consequently, Barcelona’s style of play in it. Puyol, Iniesta, Xavi, Busquets and Piqué were all in the side, with the latter two only being “Culés” upon the arrival of Pep to the club. Without trying to undermine the work of Del Bosque, the new City manager’s influence was undeniable.
Fast forward a couple of seasons and we saw the coach moving to Munich. The Spanish coach had a terrific time with the Bavarian giants and, while one could argue that not winning the Champions League could be big dent in the project, he won every other possible trophy with the club. And only after being in charge for one silverware packed season, the Brazilian World Cup came along and the German national team took most of his stars with it. Lahm, Boateng, Neuer, Schweinsteiger, Muller and Kroos (who left FCB that summer) were all starters in the final against Argentina, and Mario Gotze came from the bench to score the match winning goal. But the connections, once again, don’t end in the players – the style of play of the World Cup winners had deep connections to the one Bayern played that year. Germany ended their campaign as the team with most passes (4157) and an astounding 82% completion rate, very un-German of them. Conclusion: Guardiola has massive influence wherever he coaches so…with the Catalonian jumping ship to Manchester, how can he affect English national football?
Well, if we look at City’s squad we can find a clear difference from the one that Barça or Bayern had pre-Pep, the sky-blues don’t have many Englishmen in their main ranks. With that said, I expect the new boss to buy a couple of talented British players in the midst of the revolution he’s set to make in the summer. Not only that but also promote a couple of the talents who are graduating from the club academy. Looking at the squad at the moment, we can highlight only a couple of English players. Hart and Delph are the first of them. While, the talented goalkeeper will definitely keep his place, there are more questions around the midfielder’s future at the club. Brought in last year from Villa, the center mid didn’t break through this season but I also do not see him leaving just yet. Expect both Toure and one the Brazilian midfielders to leave in the next few months and, despite the chance of Thiago coming in, Delph will most likely stay as a utility player. Another one I want to shine a bit more of light on is Raheem Sterling.
As someone who thoroughly enjoys watching footballers develop and improving their craft, I’ve got extremely high hopes for Raheem. Despite the good start, Sterling ended up having an average season for his talent and quality, to the point of many not even seeing him as a Euro starter. He was often unfit and, much like his team, was too inconsistent in the latter stages. My feeling is that next season might just be his – I can see him develop under Pep similarly to the way Douglas Costa did, becoming one of the club’s creative wall breakers. The 21 year-old Golden Boy winner has the talent to become world class under Guardiola and will hopefully add the necessary work ethic to do so. The English national team needs at least one stand out star, one player that represents the country’s football talent, goals, skills, brilliance – considered by many as a “Golden Generation”, this generation has several individuals who can carry the team on their backs in dire situations and can be those stand out stars. No matter how the performance in the Euro ends up being, players such as Alli, Kane, Dier and Barkley will keep on developing after the tournament. The Man City winger will keep on doing so as well and I’m predicting him to “explode” under Guardiola, becoming “the” player for England.
Other than that, it doesn’t seem like the manager will be able to affect the Three Lions that much, even less so if we have in account that most – if not all – players that will arrive in the summer will be foreign. Not all hope is lost though, since City’s youth system is full of diamonds in the rough ready to be worked on by the Spaniard. Whether it will be Brandon Barker, Buckley-Ricketts, Nmecha, Marcus Wood or Charlie Oliver, I’m sure we’ll see some talented Englishmen breaking through in the next couple of seasons. Not to mention the incredibly talented Patrick Roberts – on loan to Celtic until the end of the 2016/17 season, the winger who was bought to Fulham has done his part to contribute to another Scottish title for Deila’s men. When the youngster comes back, I fully expect him to be in Guardiola’s plans – especially after already being in charge for a full season, the environment for talented youngsters to thrive might be even more beneficial.
Do you think City’s new manager can make an impact in the English National Team? City’s lack of national players will be detrimental but will that make it impossible? If he had to pull from a selection of Englishmen, which player do you think would be the perfect fit for the Citizens and – what will most likely be – their new style of play? Personally, I’d love to see James Ward-Prowse play under Pep – considering the tremendous amount of potential in the Saints youngster. The excitement to see Guardiola in the top British flight is building up and, no matter who he brings in, it will be extremely interesting to follow.

Early birds: Bayern’s brilliant transfer policy

opinion
Bayern kicked the summer transfer season into motion by announcing two high-profile signings before the window even started. We take a look at the successful way in which die Roten handle transfers.
To say that transfers are an important aspect of the football business would not only be a massive understatement, but also quite obvious. Now more than ever, clubs throw massive sums of money at each other to poach good players. It is almost as if Florentino Pérez’s galácticos policy became the norm.
This has had many results. A worldwide diaspora of nationalities has globalised football greatly. The nationalistic identities of teams have become increasingly lax. For instance, a recent game between Inter and Udinese became the first-ever Serie A match not to feature Italians in either team’s starting lineups. Barely any English players start for sides like Manchester City.
Another effect is the inflation of the transfer market. The amounts that both clubs and fans consider normal for relatively good players have escalated exponentially in the last decade. Needless to say, Real Madrid have spearheaded this trend. Not only have they broken the transfer fee record regularly for the past fifteen years, but they have no problem in paying absurd amounts of money for lukewarm players.
Moreover, many players who attract the attention of several big clubs often become the centre of what can be best described as auctions. A club will flex its financial muscles as much as it can to lure a certain player in. Some other club says “Oi, we want this bloke too” and one-up the fee and wage. A dispute starts.
Perhaps the best-known recent case is that of Neymar. Real Madrid and Barcelona were at it for more than a year until the Catalans finally won the Brazilian over.
With this sort of panorama, it has become more and more important for clubs to anticipate their own needs and plan ahead. Swift and decisive action in the transfer market has become the deciding factor in getting great players’ signatures in contracts. Naturally, this is compounded by the reputation of teams’ sporting projects.
In this respect, Bayern have shown to be way ahead of the competition in recent years.
The difference a couple of months makes
To illustrate just how quickly a player’s value can rise under the right conditions, I will use the example of Toni Kroos’ and James Rodríguez’s respective transfers to Real Madrid for the 2014-15 season.
Now, both players transferred to Madrid after the 2014 World Cup having performed brilliantly at the tournament. Kroos not only won it. He was statistically the best player, according to FIFA itself. James led an inspired Colombian side to its best ever World Cup finals, attaining the Golden Boot and the competition’s best goal in the process.
Madrid paid €25m for Kroos and €75m for James (per Transfermarkt). Why is there such a massive difference between their price tags? If anything, Kroos should have been more expensive than James, having actually won the World Cup.
The difference is in when and how Real Madrid negotiated for the players.
Kroos was the star of a rather unpleasant tantrum at Bayern. He wanted a bigger wage than the club thought he deserved and was willing to offer. His agent decided to pressure the suits by offering Kroos to big-name clubs across Europe. This was widely publicised in the media. With Bayern unwilling to change their position, the issue became about where Toni would go, not if.
Needless to say, the whole thing was wrapped up before the World Cup started. Real Madrid paid a decent amount of money for a very good player. In the Kroos case, Madrid did what Bayern does 90% of the time. They identified an opportunity, moved quickly to stay ahead of the competition, and got a good signing for a good price.
With James, it was the complete opposite. You could call his signing a knee-jerk transfer operation. Real Madrid took notice of him only after he had turned in such a fantastic performance in the World Cup. With a Golden Boot, a best-goal award and credit for being the leader of his country’s best World Cup performance, Monaco could (and did) charge Real Madrid almost whatever they wanted to.
Kroos was signed before June for less than thirty million Euros. James was signed after July for upwards of seventy.
That’s the difference a couple of months makes.

The Bayern way

This leads us to how Bayern handles their transfers. Obviously, there is a set of deep differences between the whole philosophy of transfers Bayern has and Real Madrid’s. People do not think of Bayern as a club that signs players with marketing high in the priority list. Real Madrid, on the other hand, seem to make some signings with marketing as the only priority.
First off, I think it is pretty evident that Bayern dislike lengthy transfer sagas. A case in point is Javi Martínez. Athletic Bilbao were an absolutely nefarious institution to try to negotiate with. They forced Martínez to deposit a large amount of the fee Bayern paid for him, himself. This created a huge problem, in terms of taxes and legally speaking. As a result, he had to forego much of his salary from the Basque club.
The whole deal was distasteful, at best, and Bayern refuse to take further part in anything similar.
Instead, Bayern opt to sniff out good opportunities in the transfer market before anyone else does. Douglas Costa, for instance. At least according to the media, none of the usual transfer market upsetters took notice of him. He was not the subject of a multinational financial competition. Bayern sneaked in, quickly negotiated with Shakhtar Donetsk, and for a decent fee, Costa packed for München.
Early deals are also part of Bayern’s transfer strategy. Xherdan Shaqiri’s transfer was announced in February 2012, almost five months before the Swiss international joined. This year, both Mats Hummels and Renato Sanches followed that same trend. This no-nonsense approach ensures that the club gets good talent ahead of others. Alternatively, if other clubs refuse to negotiate, the Bavarians have time to seek other options.
A crucial component of the success attained by Bayern’s transfer policy is the sporting project. Bayern’s reputation as one of Europe’s top clubs precedes them. When players sign for Bayern, they sign for a team that contends for all three major titles every season. Even if it is only on paper, that is an exciting prospect.
Clubs like Manchester United, Manchester City, Chelsea and even Real Madrid themselves are in a different position. While they boast a massive wallet – certainly larger than Bayern’s – they do not have the same competitive status as Bayern. Their overbuying tendencies make them look like they lack an actual project to build on.
Players who are serious about their career aspirations know this. While it may be generally less than the aforementioned teams, Bayern does not exactly offer rubbish wages. But they offer something they do not: a bigger chance to compete for everything there is to win. Domestically and continentally.
This is why, when Bayern does get tangled in a competition to sign someone, players like Renato Sanches move to the Allianz Arena instead of Old Trafford or the Santiago Bernabéu.

The Holy Trinity of transfers?

So, we end up with three important factors:
  1. A honed nose to spot talent before everyone else;
  2. An early-bird approach to signing targets;
  3. A veritable and reputable sporting project.
This may be a gross oversimplification of Bayern’s transfer policy. Nah, strike that. It isan oversimplification. Still, you cannot deny that these three factors, as well as the interactions between them, are a huge part of why Bayern can bomb the market with flash signings announced early. It is why die Roten can frustrate deals that other clubs saw as completed.
Bayern are not afraid to dish out large amounts of money when the players they buy warrant them. However, they are much smarter than other big clubs. Bayern’s most expensive signing ever was Javi Martínez at €40m. Real Madrid’s was Gareth Bale at more than twice that. Bayern have a treble. Real Madrid do not.
The only other club who have a similar approach is, oddly enough, Borussia Dortmund. The Bumblebees have made some terrific signings in recent years. Names like Henrikh Mkhitaryan, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Julian Weigl come to mind.
They were completely off everyone’s radar when they arrived at the Signal-Iduna Park. Now, they are almost household names for any knowledgeable football fan. They have added a tremendous amount of quality to Dortmund’s team.
Meanwhile, Manchester United broke an English transfer fee record for Ángel di María, only to sell him after a single disappointing season. Chelsea had to ship out Fernando Torres after he failed to meet the mark. Real Madrid gave Real Sociedad €40m for Asier Illarramendi. He was a chronic benchwarmer and returned to Anoeta for less than half the money.
Bayern (and Dortmund) are living proof that you do not need to show off your wallet every two seconds to build a proper team.

Bayern Munich's big spending might not be as foolish as critics thought

Spending big on new players for the coming season has long been a tried and tested method to overcome disappointment in Bavaria. There's nothing like a bit of retail therapy to shift from introspection and frustration to optimism and looking forward to the next season.
Tuesday's double signing of Mats Hummels (from Borussia Dortmund) and Renato Sanches (from Benfica) for a combined fee of €70 million (plus possible add-ons) once again did the job. The post-Champions League exit doom at Säbener Strasse has been replaced by a sense of anticipation about Carlo Ancelotti's new starting XI. It's an easy enough trick, albeit a little expensive these days.
The media agenda has changed too. For the first time since Guardiola's arrival in June 2013, the Catalan has ceased being the main story. You can almost sense the relief among some commentators: They'll no longer have to discuss the finer points of possession play and counter-counterattacking measures. They can once again employ some classic Bayern tropes to rile supporters and enemies of the German champions alike.
Die Zeit, usually one of the more nuanced voices in German football, lamented Wednesday that the Bavarians were "forming their team by the chequebook" and "both transfers allow for great doubt as to whether the FC Bayern head buyers are investing the club's money wisely. Shopping is fun, but spending money is an art."
The money spent on Sanches might seem excessive, given his youth, but it's actually cheap, given the current market.
Both 18-year-old Sanches (transfer fee: €35 million with add-ons worth a maximum €45 million, in case he wins the Ballon d'Or, etc.) and Hummels did not represent value for money, the broadsheet argued, because the methodology behind the transfers was flawed and skewed by two classic Bayern (mis)behavioral patterns. Buying Hummels was "a demonstration of power" designed to reinforce the Bundesliga status quo and diminish a direct rival, whereas Sanches' capture was one of those cases in which the player had done so well against Bayern -- the midfielder shined in two games against the Germans in the Champions League quarterfinal -- that he elicited a bid from the Reds.
"You might as well throw the money out of the window," the clickbait headline read.
It's true, to a point: Over the past four decades, Bayern have done their best to undermine their own position as the richest team in the league by signing plenty of players for the wrong reasons mentioned and for the wrong fees. It's much harder to make that claim since Michael Reschke's arrival in 2014, however. The former Leverkusen technical director was hired to unearth better players in less obvious places for reasonable money. By and large, he has fulfilled that brief.
Bayern's scouting has become much more sophisticated. It's completely disingenuous to pretend, for example, that Brazilian Douglas Costa was bought from Ukraine on the back of two strong performances against Bayern in the previous season. The 25-year-old was in fact utterly anonymous on the ball in the 7-0 aggregate defeat of Shakhtar Donetsk in the last-16. The only column inches he created had come courtesy of some petty thuggery that should have resulted in dismissal.
Although it's eminently reasonable to question an outlay of €70 million on a single day, the notion of "value" has become incredibly complex. First, it's strictly relative. Mainz were over the moon to sell Shinji Okazaki to Leicester City for €11 million, but the fee delighted the Foxes just as much. One man's extortionate price is another one's bargain, especially if the player in question helps you achieve sporting ambitions.
Paying €35 million for the 27-year-old Hummels, who had only one year left on his contract and isn't the quickest of defenders, looks very expensive by most objective measures, but such measures don't really apply to Bayern. They see the World Cup winner as an upgrade on the injury-prone and unsettled Medhi Benatia (who'll be sold back to Italy for roughly €20 million), the perfect partner to Germany teammate Jérôme Boateng, a natural dressing room leader and, more importantly, a Munich-raised, Bayern-educated player who will ensure the starting XI doesn't become too cosmopolitan and devoid of local identity.
Buying Hummels is a power move by the Bavarian side, but his local roots should help keep them grounded.
Over the course of a four-year deal at the Allianz Arena, the cost for all of that amounts to roughly €21 million per year in wages and transfer fee amortization. It is a gamble probably worth taking to win the Champions League, from Bayern's point of view, regardless of whether Dortmund end up weaker or stronger (as some sympathetic reporters believe) without their captain.
The Black and Yellows, incidentally, have played a bad hand masterfully. By going public with Hummels' wish to move south (ostensibly to adhere to stock market rules), insisting on an all-or-nothing fee and briefing that the player might yet be persuaded to stay, they forced Bayern to agree to a swift resolution strictly on BVB's terms. If recent history is anything to go by, sporting director Michael Zorc will make good use of the money.
The Sanches transfer also illustrates how the very concept of "value" is being reshaped by another factor: the Premier League TV deal. Last year, Bayern Munich were interested in Anthony Martial of AS Monaco and had intended to make the teenager an offer this summer. Manchester United scuppered that plan with a €50 million deal (plus add-ons) in August. The Germans feared that history could repeat itself and thus splashed on Sanches now, in May, wise to the fact that fees will reach only more astronomical levels later this summer (€50 million is the new going rate for a Champions League-level player), and young players will be almost impossible to sign once successfully installed at Premier League clubs.
Critics will say this course puts Bayern in danger of wildly overpaying, just like those English clubs we Germans love to belittle. "SEM: 'Stupid English Money,'" is how Der Spiegel referred to Premier League transfer policy in a recent piece. But in a hyper-inflationary world in which crazy is about to become the new normal, spending stupid money more quickly (and hopefully better) than the competition might be the only sensible option left.

Neymar, Willian, Miranda set for Brazil Olympic call-up


RIO DE JANEIRO, May 15 (Xinhua) -- Brazil coach Dunga has reportedly chosen Barcelona forward Neymar, Chelsea midfielder Willian and Inter Milan centre-back Miranda as his three experienced players for the Olympic Games in August.
According to the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper, Neymar and Willian have been cleared to compete in Rio by their clubs, who are not compelled to release their players for the tournament.
But it is understood Inter Milan manager Roberto Mancini is yet to give his approval for Miranda.
In the event Mancini vetoes Miranda's participation, Dunga will forgo an experienced defender by calling up Bayern Munich winger Douglas Costa, the report said.
Under Olympic football rules, teams are allowed only three players over the age of 23 in their squads.
The Olympic men's football tournament begins on August 4, just five weeks after the final of the centenary edition of the Copa America in the US.
Brazil were forced to leave Neymar out of their Copa America squad after Barcelona refused to allow the 24-year-old to play in both tournaments.
An Olympic gold medal is the only major international football accolade that Brazil have never won and Dunga has been told by the country's football confederation to make the tournament his top priority this year.
The Selecao have been drawn in Group A of the Rio 2016 tournament alongside South Africa, Iraq and Denmark.