Ferguson on future spending

Sir Alex Ferguson has admitted Manchester United may well have to dig deep to replace the players who are coming to the end of their careers at Old Trafford (United 1/6 – 90 minutes v Rangers).

United have never been shy to spend big and land quality players, with £29m spent on the acquisition of Rio Ferdinand from Leeds back in 2002, but they have also brought a number of quality players up through the ranks over the past 15 years.

The likes of David Beckham, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, Nicky Butt and the Neville brothers, were all nurtured by Ferguson, who was blessed with an incredible pool of home-grown talent developing at pretty much the same time.

Gary Neville, Giggs and Scholes are still playing their trade at the Theatre of Dreams in the mid-30s, but Ferguson is aware that they will not go on forever, and it may be that transfer fees will have to be paid to replace the legends of United’s golden era.

“There may be a time in the next couple of years where we have to stretch ourselves, particularly when Ryan, Paul and Gary retire,” he said. “Then, it is a possibility we would need to get really top players in to galvanise the younger ones coming through.

“But at the moment we have the experience. We have players who have been through the whole gamut of emotions at this club and know how to deal with it.”

Whether or not funds will be available to buy the best players in the world is open to question as doubts surround the long-term involvement of the Glazer family amid rumours of huge debts at the club.

But the 68-year-old tactician was quick to point out that he had money to spend in the transfer window but preferred, by and large, to keep his power dry and trust the current crop of players at his disposal.

“We have no financial restrictions,” he added. “If I hadn’t been confident maybe we would have done something. But there was only one player I would have brought here and that move was sealed off quite early by the club he went to.”

United begin their Champions League campaign with the visit of Rangers on Tuesday evening and are strong favourites to take all three points (Rangers 18/1 – 90 minutes v Man United).

Star striker Wayne Rooney looks set to play some part in the match after missing United’s weekend trip to Goodison Park as the manager opted to protect him from the spotlight due to his current off-field problems.

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Birmingham eye spending spree

Birmingham City boss Alex McLeish with goalkeeper Ben FosterBirmingham are 9/4 to finish in the top 10 of the Premier League and Blues boss Alex McLeish is hoping to boost their chances of doing so by adding another four players to his squad.

The Blues were one of the surprise packages of last season when, after winning promotion from the Championship, they managed to finish in the top 10.

Many had them down as relegation fodder but McLeish built a side that upset the form book and the Scot is now hoping for much of the same in the new campaign.

McLeish has already made a couple of shrewd signings when drafting in Nikola Zigic and Ben Foster but he wants more and is also keen on Wigan winger Charles N’Zogbia.

The Blues boss admits that the Frenchman might be out of his reach for now but the ambition is there and McLeish is clearly intent on trying to move the club on to the next level.

“That one looks as if it is dead at the moment,” he said of the N’Zogbia move. “I’m not saying totally dead, but it looks like a difficult one, given the asking prices.

“Whether we can go to that level I’m not so sure, so maybe that’s for another day. We are looking at three or four other situations.”

McLeish has the backing of new owner Carson Yeung and the money is there for him to spend where he sees fit. The main problem for the Blues is that other clubs in the Premier League have much more and trying to bridge the gap with the top clubs is becoming almost impossible.

It is not too long ago that clubs like Birmingham could start the season with a real hope of making the top seven, which could lead to a place in Europe, but now it looks as though the top seven are starting to forge a gap between themselves and the rest.

Manchester City, Aston Villa and Tottenham have emerged as serious Champions League contenders and when you add them to the ‘big four’ that have dominated in recent seasons, it is hard to see Birmingham getting into Europe via the league.

The Blues are 22/1 to make it into the top six but that looks highly unlikely unless the likes of Villa have a shocking campaign and Birmingham capitalise.

McLeish will no doubt say that staying in the Premier League is the number one objective but he will have his sights set high again and a top 10 finish will again be the order of the season.

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