Friday, 21 October 2011

Football: United-City Title Race Locked In For Next Decade

"All derbies are big now, that is the nature of the landscape."
                                                                                             Sir Alex Ferguson, October 4

It has taken just six weeks of the Premier League season for a consensus to emerge that the battle for the title will be a two-horse race between Manchester United and Manchester City. Noisy neighbours no more, Roberto Mancini's men have made the expected step up this season, matching United stride for stride, win for win and goal for goal.

With the Manchester derby more hotly anticipated than ever before, the rivalry has huge potential. The combined star power is mind-blowing. City have dominated the transfer headlines over the past few years by splashing out more than £150M on the quartet of Yaya Toure, Sergio Aguero, Edin Dzeko and Carlos Tevez, with plenty more arrivals also boosting the club’s trophy hunt. But it is easy to forget that United's big guns Wayne Rooney, Ashley Young, Nani, Jones and improving goalkeeper David De Gea did not come cheap either over the years.

And closer examination of the two squads and the two transfer budgets confirms that their title scrap this season will not be a one-off. Neither club is fading off the map any time soon - if anything, both will be stronger next year and even stronger the year after. With Chelsea unquestionably aging despite their solid start, Arsenal forced into an overhaul of their squad and Liverpool still one or two stars short, the future looks distinctly red and sky blue.

United provided a glimpse of the future in the second half of the Community Shield when Ferguson turned to his youngsters and sent out a team with an average age of 22. Young, at 26, was the oldest player in a red shirt until Dimitar Berbatov came off the bench late on.

Phil Jones, 19, has adjusted so seamlessly at the centre back that Rio Ferdinand is struggling to regain his place for club and country. Chris Smalling has proved that he is an option at both right back and centre back, Tom Cleverley is the closest United have come to a Paul Scholes replacement and Danny Welbeck has forced his way ahead of Berbatov and Michael Owen in the pecking order with his lively displays. This second coming of the Fergie Fledglings has caught England boss Fabio Capello’s attention too.

Over at the Etihad Stadium, City also have a youthful look, with goalkeeper Joe Hart showing maturity beyond his years, Aguero having the biggest impact of any summer signing and even Mario Balotelli producing displays that suggest he is growing up.  Throw in Samir Nasri and Adam Johnson, who are both just 24, and Mancini has a core group that could lead the City charge for at least the next seven or eight years.

To read the rest of this article, visit http://www.insidefutbol.com/2011/10/20/man-city-and-man-utd-set-for-decade-of-premier-league-domination/51183/ 

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