As
we gradually head to the end of the transfer window let’s take a look at some
of the great signings that the premier league has seen in recent years.
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer
Arriving
at Manchester United when the fans where expecting Alan Shearer, the baby-faced
assassin had a lot to do to prove himself. However, 126 goals later including
the famous Champions League winner against Bayern Munich, I guess it’s fair to
say that the Norwegian striker gave a great introduction of himself.
Patrick Viera
For
just £3.5m the French man was one of the
best buys of The Professors prolific coaching career. From playing reserve
football at San Siro to becoming one of Arsenal’s all-time greats with four FA
Cups and Three Premier League titles.
Van
Persie
I was asked recently what it took United to
win the Premier League last season and I said it took a lot of brain washing
from Sir Alex and £22.5m.
Very few had predicted that the forward would
end up at the Theatre of Dreams, yet after 30 goals in only 48 matches in his
debut campaign in the north-west, the Scot’s move for RvP was rightly
considered to be the catalyst behind United retaining the Premier League that
season.
Peter Schmeichel
Signed from Danish side Brondby in 1991 for
just £505,000, the blond keeper went on to play 393 matches for the Red Devils
in the following eight years, winning five Premier League titles, three FA Cups
and the UEFA Champions League in the process.
The
great Dane can rightfully lay claim to be the club’s greatest-ever goalkeeper,
with manager Alex Ferguson subsequently describing Schmeichel's capture as "the bargain of the century."
Gianfranco Zola
For some still-unfathomable reason, Parma
head coach Carlo Ancelotti did not rate the little Italian during their brief
time working together at Emilia–Romagna in 1996, probably because he kept on
insisting on utilising the playmaker as a left winger.
However, Chelsea were
only too happy to take the attacking genius off the Serie A outfit’s hands in
November 1996 for just £4.5m, with Zola having since gone on to be voted the
Blues’ greatest-ever player by the club’s fans in 2003.
Mascherano
In the January transfer window of 2007, Reds'
manager Rafa Benitez pulled off a major coup by luring the Argentina
international from Upton Park to Anfield, initially on loan, before the player
then agreed a four-year deal with the Merseyside giants a year later.
The total cost of the
transfer, including the holding midfielder’s salary, was just £18.6m. When you
consider this was the captain of the Argentina national team, it was quite some
achievement by the Reds.
Ronaldo
Everyone knows the story by now of how a
young Ronaldo caught the eye of United’s players during a pre-season friendly
in Lisbon in the summer of 2003, with the likes of Ryan Giggs then urging
manager Alex Ferguson to move fast and sign up the young Portuguese.
Luckily for the Scot,
United acted with haste and beat rivals Arsenal to the wide man’s signature,
with Ronaldo arriving at Old Trafford for a fee of just €15m later that summer.
Six years later, he was sold on to Real Madrid for a world-record £80m.
Bergkamp
Back in 1995, big-name players from the
continent just did not sign for Premier League clubs, so Arsenal’s capture of
the Oranje forward in June of that year was a major coup for the Gunners.
Do not forget either
that this was still the pre-Arsene Wenger era at Highbury, with Bruce Rioch at
the helm in North London at the time, making it an even bigger accomplishment
by the club.
And to think that the
Nerazzurri were happy to let Bergkamp depart the San Siro because they had
Maurizio Ganz waiting in the wings...
Makelele
The French water carrier helped los Blancos
win everything there was to during his time at the Santiago Bernabeu. However,
there was one major problem and that was that Makelele’s face was just not
recognisable enough to sell Madrid shirts around the world.
As
a result, club president Florentino Perez offloaded the holding midfielder to
Chelsea in the summer of 2003 for just £16.8m, sending the player on his way
with these parting words:
We will not miss Makelele. His
technique is average, he lacks the speed and skill to take the ball past
opponents, and ninety percent of his distribution either goes backwards or
sideways.
He wasn't a header of the ball
and he rarely passed the ball more than three metres. Younger players will
arrive who will cause Makelele to be forgotten.
Madrid have failed to
win the UEFA Champions League in the 11 years since Makelele’s departure, while
at Stamford Bridge the defensive midfielder continued his reputation as the
best player in his position on Planet Football.
Cantona
This was a move that happened by accident
when Leeds boss Howard Wilkinson made an inquiry about United full-back Denis
Irwin, only for his opposite number at the time, Alex Ferguson, then to ask
whether the Frenchman was available.
To Fergie’s great
surprise, United’s arch-rivals were indeed happy to let the mercurial forward
move to Old Trafford, with Cantona signing for the Red Devils for just £1.2
million on Nov. 26, 1992.
And the rest, as they
say, is history..
Lets see who makes the buy of the season this
January. Until next time guys stay true to the Beautiful Game.