BREAKING NEWS: PSG beat Barcelona to Wijnaldum capture

By Sports Desk June 10, 2021

Georginio Wijnaldum has agreed a deal to join Paris Saint-Germain despite looking poised to link up with Barcelona for several months.

The Netherlands international has signed a three-year contract at Parc des Princes, with his salary said to have been increased dramatically by the Parisians.

Wijnaldum joined Liverpool from Newcastle United in 2016 and quickly established himself as a key man for the Reds, only failing to appear in 11 Premier League matches over that five-year spell.

Liverpool had tried to keep the 30-year-old but he acknowledged last month that the two parties had been unable to agree on a new contract.

It seemed a given he would subsequently turn up at Barcelona, with transfer links between the two emerging as early as last year when Ronald Koeman replaced Quique Setien in August.

He was expected to be Barca's third free transfer of the close season after Sergio Aguero and Eric Garcia, with Memphis Depay – who, like Wijnaldum, played under Koeman for the Oranje – expected to follow.

But PSG have pulled off something of a coup, luring Wijnaldum to Paris as the club's patchy relationship with Barca is thrust into the spotlight again.

Wijnaldum bolsters PSG's central midfield options that already include Idrissa Gueye, Leandro Paredes, Ander Herrera, Danilo Pereira and Marco Verratti.

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    Mason said: “When I go on my summer holidays I would hope and expect that everyone inside of our training ground knows who I am, who my team is and what we stand for.

    “The hope and expectation is that you guys and everyone else sees that too. I know we’ve done a great job. I really do.”

    Tottenham fought back from 2-0 down to draw 2-2 with Manchester United at home in Mason’s first game back in charge and have since won two and lost three of their last five matches.

    The 31-year-old former Spurs midfielder, whose previous stint in temporary charge came after Jose Mourinho was sacked in 2021, replaced previous interim boss Christian Stellini with six games remaining.

    Tottenham had sacked Antonio Conte at the end of March and while they were then fourth in the table, they had exited all the cup competitions and weary fans had grown disillusioned over their team’s playing style.

    “The circumstances were very difficult,” said Mason, who urged the club to get get their next managerial appointment right.

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  • A closer look at how managers to lead both Chelsea and Tottenham have fared A closer look at how managers to lead both Chelsea and Tottenham have fared

    Mauricio Pochettino’s appointment at Chelsea on a two-year contract continues the strong managerial connection between the Blues and Tottenham.

    The Argentinian becomes the fifth man to manage both clubs in the Premier League era and here, the PA news agency looks at the records of his predecessors.

    Glenn Hoddle

    Chelsea 1993-96: P157, W53 (33.7 per cent), D54, L50

    Tottenham 2001-03: P104, W41 (38.3 per cent), D18, L45

    The long-time Spurs midfielder finished his career as Chelsea player-manager for two seasons before a third solely in the dugout. His sides never finished higher than 11th in the league but reached an FA Cup final, losing 4-0 to Manchester United, and semi-final as well as a Cup Winners’ Cup semi-final.

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    Andre Villas-Boas

    Chelsea 2011-12: P40, W19 (47.5 per cent), D11, L10

    Tottenham 2012-13: P80, W44 (55.0 per cent), D20 L16

    After their success with Jose Mourinho, Chelsea once again turned to Porto to recruit Villas-Boas, who had worked as part of Mourinho’s staff. He was unable to work similar magic as manager, lasting just 40 games and less than a season in the role.

    He lasted twice as long at Spurs but narrowly missed out on Champions League qualification in his first season and was dismissed with the club lying seventh shortly before Christmas in his second, having failed to make the most of the then-world record fee received for Gareth Bale’s move to Real Madrid and lost 6-0 to Manchester City and 5-0 to Liverpool in his last five league games in charge.

    Jose Mourinho

    Chelsea 2004-07, 2013-15: P321, W204 (63.6 per cent), D69, L48

    Tottenham 2019-21: P86, W44 (51.2 per cent), D19, L23

    Announcing himself as a “Special One”, Mourinho lived up to that billing in his first spell at Stamford Bridge with back-to-back league titles, an FA Cup and two League Cups. His unbeaten home record in the league lasted 77 games in all and into his second spell, when he won the Premier League and League Cup for a third time each.

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    Antonio Conte

    Chelsea 2016-18: P106, W69 (65.1 per cent), D17, L20

    Tottenham 2021-23: P77, W41 (53.2 per cent), D12, L24*

    Conte brought a Premier League title and an FA Cup to Chelsea, but was sacked after they finished only fifth in the league in his second season.

    His volatile style never meshed easily with Tottenham and his exit in March, railing at “selfish players” and Tottenham’s “story” of failing to win trophies, has left them still searching for a permanent successor, Mason again at the helm after Conte’s assistant Cristian Stellini was remarkably sacked as interim manager.

    (*includes 3-0 loss to Rennes by forfeit in Europa Conference League, December 2021)

    Mauricio Pochettino

    Tottenham 2014-19: P293, W159 (54.3 per cent), D62, L72

    Chelsea: appointed 2023

    Unlike the other names on this list, Pochettino moves to Chelsea having first managed Tottenham rather than the other way round.

    He took Spurs to the 2019 Champions League final, where they lost to Liverpool, and his return was widely craved by sections of their fanbase – any notable success at Chelsea will therefore be all the more painful for their London rivals.

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    Mauricio Pochettino’s appointment at Chelsea on a two-year contract continues the strong managerial connection between the Blues and Tottenham.

    The Argentinian becomes the fifth man to manage both clubs in the Premier League era and here, the PA news agency looks at the records of his predecessors.

    Glenn Hoddle

    Chelsea 1993-96: P157, W53 (33.7 per cent), D54, L50

    Tottenham 2001-03: P104, W41 (38.3 per cent), D18, L45

    The long-time Spurs midfielder finished his career as Chelsea player-manager for two seasons before a third solely in the dugout. His sides never finished higher than 11th in the league but reached an FA Cup final, losing 4-0 to Manchester United, and semi-final as well as a Cup Winners’ Cup semi-final.

    After spells with England and Southampton, he took charge at White Hart Lane with similar results to his Chelsea spell – Spurs reached a League Cup final, losing to Blackburn, but finished ninth and 10th in the league before he was sacked six games into the next season.

    Andre Villas-Boas

    Chelsea 2011-12: P40, W19 (47.5 per cent), D11, L10

    Tottenham 2012-13: P80, W44 (55.0 per cent), D20 L16

    After their success with Jose Mourinho, Chelsea once again turned to Porto to recruit Villas-Boas, who had worked as part of Mourinho’s staff. He was unable to work similar magic as manager, lasting just 40 games and less than a season in the role.

    He lasted twice as long at Spurs but narrowly missed out on Champions League qualification in his first season and was dismissed with the club lying seventh shortly before Christmas in his second, having failed to make the most of the then-world record fee received for Gareth Bale’s move to Real Madrid and lost 6-0 to Manchester City and 5-0 to Liverpool in his last five league games in charge.

    Jose Mourinho

    Chelsea 2004-07, 2013-15: P321, W204 (63.6 per cent), D69, L48

    Tottenham 2019-21: P86, W44 (51.2 per cent), D19, L23

    Announcing himself as a “Special One”, Mourinho lived up to that billing in his first spell at Stamford Bridge with back-to-back league titles, an FA Cup and two League Cups. His unbeaten home record in the league lasted 77 games in all and into his second spell, when he won the Premier League and League Cup for a third time each.

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    Antonio Conte

    Chelsea 2016-18: P106, W69 (65.1 per cent), D17, L20

    Tottenham 2021-23: P77, W41 (53.2 per cent), D12, L24*

    Conte brought a Premier League title and an FA Cup to Chelsea, but was sacked after they finished only fifth in the league in his second season.

    His volatile style never meshed easily with Tottenham and his exit in March, railing at “selfish players” and Tottenham’s “story” of failing to win trophies, has left them still searching for a permanent successor, Mason again at the helm after Conte’s assistant Cristian Stellini was remarkably sacked as interim manager.

    (*includes 3-0 loss to Rennes by forfeit in Europa Conference League, December 2021)

    Mauricio Pochettino

    Tottenham 2014-19: P293, W159 (54.3 per cent), D62, L72

    Chelsea: appointed 2023

    Unlike the other names on this list, Pochettino moves to Chelsea having first managed Tottenham rather than the other way round.

    He took Spurs to the 2019 Champions League final, where they lost to Liverpool, and his return was widely craved by sections of their fanbase – any notable success at Chelsea will therefore be all the more painful for their London rivals.

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