According
to reports in Spain and England, Manchester United have been linked
with Barcelona midfielders Cesc Fabregas and Thiago Alcantara as new
manager David Moyes looks to add some creativity to the midfield.
We have all watched Fabregas during his
time at Arsenal and know what he can do, but what about his younger team
mate? Could he be the answer to Manchester United’s lack of creativity
in midfield? Could he be long term successor for Paul Scholes?
Who is Thiago Alcantara?
Considered the jewel in the crown at
Barcelona’s famous La Masia academy, Thiago Alcantara is widely believed
to be the natural heir to Xavi. Son of previous World Cup winner
Mazinho, Thiago could have opted to play for one of three different
nations. Born in San Pietro Vernotic, Italy, while his dad was playing
with Lecce, and as such, qualified to play for the Azzurri along with
his dad’s native Brazil. He moved back to Brazil with his father
briefly, before relocating to Spain as a three-year-old, where he has
lived since. Both the Italian and Brazilian national teams had their
eyes on him, before he put his allegiances beyond doubt when he made his
senior team debut for Spain in a friendly against Italy.
Thiago possesses all the technical
ability you would expect from a Brazilian, and has all the qualities in
him to succeed at the Camp Nou and on the international stage. Described
as Spain’s brightest talent by Real Madrid legend Fernando Hierro, he
has been on the fringes of the first team ever since making his debut in
August 2011. He has played more than 100 times for Barcelona (League
and Cup) since making his debut as a substitute in May 2009, but has
struggled to establish himself in the starting lineup. He scored his
first goal for the Catalan giants in the 4-0 win over Racing de
Santander at the Camp Nou in Febraury 2010 after coming as a substitute
for Yaya Toure.
Thiago has been very successful with the
Spanish youth teams having represented them at the U16, U17, U18, U19
and U21 levels. He helped them win the 2008 UEFA European Under-17
Championship in Turkey, 2011 UEFA European Under-21 Championship in
Denmark and most recently the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Championship
in Israel. He was also named as the Man of the Match in the final in
Denmark (against Switzerland) and in Israel (against Italy).
Why is he linked to Manchester United?
One of the main reasons that the
22-year-old is being linked so heavily to Manchester United this summer
is due to the release clause in his contract. He has had his release
clause reduced because he has not featured for a minimum of 30 minutes
in 60% of Barcelona’s matches this season.
“Release clause is a clause in a player’s contract which sets a minimum fee that a club must bid in able to buy that player. If a club bid’s the minimum fee set in a player’s contract, his club cannot block the bid and must allow the bidder to talk to the player.”
All player contracts in Spain have
release clause, a result of a previous agreement between the union and
the clubs. Most of them are reasonable and according to player’s talent
and potential, while other are simply inserted to make the player
unbuyable. For example, Lionel Messi’s is €250million (£213million) and
Cristiano Ronaldo’s at Real Madrid is around €1billion (£870million).
Getting back to Thiago. Before the start
of this season, his release clause was €90million (£76million).
Obviously no club would have matched that. Now, it has fallen down to
just €18million (£15million). It is exactly the type of price range that
clubs such as Manchester United can easily afford. It is even less than
what they paid for Anderson and Owen Hargreaves.
Considering that Barcelona had the
league wrapped up by March, had an easy group in he Champions League
(Celtic, Benfica and Spartak Moscow) and had plenty of Copa Del Rey
matches to play, people might think it is ridiculous and it shows
negligence on their part that they couldn’t give him atleast 30 minutes
in 60% of their games this season. But that’s not true. Thiago didn’t
merely sit out because Tito Vilanova didn’t want him to play, he sat out
a lot of games through injury. He missed pre-season, he missed the
start of the season, and he missed a large chuck of matches after
picking up another knee injury against Sevilla in September. So it’s not
Barcelona’s fault.
Why should he choose Manchester United?
According to reports in Catalan
newspaper (Sport), Thiago has informed Barcelona of his intentions to
leave after having discussions with Vilanova. There is no secret about
Manchester United’s interest in him, but there has been recent
speculation that Bayern Munich may also be interested in the midfielder.
If he is keen on leaving Camp Nou in search of regular first-team
action, then a move to the Bavarian club with a midfield containing the
likes of Bastian Schweinsteiger, Javi Martinez, Toni Kroos, Mario Gotze,
Thomas Muller and Luiz Gustavo makes very little sense, even if his
former Barca manager Pep Guardiola is set to take over this summer. The
same goes with Manchester City and Chelsea as he won’t be the first
choice in midfield in either of the teams.
At United, Thiago would take centre
stage and almost be guaranteed of regular action because there is no
midfielder in the whole squad that is anywhere near to his level.
Michael Carrick and Shinji Kagawa come near to him, but the former would
merely be a player that compliments the Barcelona youth graduate rather
than impede his path to regular first-team football, while the later
plays in a different position. He would easily be the first choice in
midfield ahead of Tom Cleverley, Anderson and Darren Fletcher as they
lack the quality and creativity that the young Spaniard possesses.
How will he fit in at Manchester United?
Manchester United fans might be thinking
at this point “if he can’t even get to play 30 minutes of 60% of games
at Barcelona in a season, then how could he be a great signing for us?”
The answer is because he is simply good enough. Thiago is one of the
best young midfielders in world football and has the talent to start for
any club in Europe. As stated by Xavi, he is “the future Barcelona”,
and it is only his presence that is keeping the young Spaniard out of
the starting eleven at the Catalan club.
He is actually the type of player
Manchester United need. He has a wider range of passing than any other
United player, is capable of playing all across the middle of the pitch,
can dictate the tempo of the game, has very good energy and is composed
under pressure. He is very quick and covers the ground easily. He is an
athlete who has very high technical skills and that’s what you usually
expect from a La Masia graduate. United don’t have anything like him in
their whole squad. He is more dynamic and multidimensional than Carrick
and could easily slot in the midfield two alongside him. He would make
an ideal partner for him and they both would compliment each other
perfectly. He is a mixture of young-and-old Paul Scholes. He has the
action-packed, athletic game of a young Scholes, along with the
awareness and vision of an older version of Scholes.

If Manchester United are to beat the
likes of Chelsea, Manchester City, Real Madrid, Barcelona and Bayern
Munich in the near future then they need someone who can grab hold of
the game and dominate possession. Thiago Alcantara is the answer. He is
at a stage of his career where he is ready leave Barcelona and even
Spain in search of regular first-team football. Signing him for just
€18million (£15million) would be a bargain and be a huge statement of
intent from United and David Moyes.


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