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Posts Tagged ‘Portsmouth’

Finnan moves to Pompey

Portsmouth have signed Steve Finnan on a free transfer after the former Liverpool defender terminated his contract with Espanyol. The Republic of Ireland right-back struggled to settle in Spain and has been keen to return to the Premier League for some time. Pompey want Finnan to fill the void

Liverpool and Real agree Arbeloa fee

Alvaro Arbeloa

Liverpool have agreed a fee with Real Madrid to sell right-back Alvaro Arbeloa to the Spanish club.

The move is subject to a medical and worth about £3.5m to the Reds, who signed the 26-year-old for £2.6m from Deportivo La Coruna in January 2007.

Spain international Arbeloa had one year left on his Anfield deal so could have left for free next summer.

Defender Glen Johnson’s June arrival from Portsmouth paved the way for Reds manager Rafael Benitez to sell Arbeloa.

Switzerland international Philipp Degen is fit again after rib and lung injuries so is another option for Benitez at right-back, while Jamie Carragher can also play in that position.

Arbeloa, who began his career at the Bernabeu, scored two goals in 99 games for Liverpool and speculation had suggested he could join Real in a joint deal that would result in Xabi Alonso also leaving the Merseysiders.

606: DEBATE
What do you make of Arbeloa’s prospective exit

However, a question mark over midfielder Alonso’s future still remains as the club’s players enjoy a three-day break before returning on Thursday.

Benitez has spoken to Alonso and urged him to stay at Anfield.

"I talked to Xabi and told him, as he can see here, that the fans love him and said to him ‘Maybe you have to stay," said Benitez recently.

"You can see he is a really good player and I’ll be really pleased if he stays. All the players and his team-mates want him to stay. If we keep Xabi I will be very pleased."

Liverpool striker Fernando Torres is also keen for his Spanish international team-mate to stay at Anfield.

"It would be a bad piece of work if Xabi left – he plays his cards close to his chest so I don’t know what is going to happen," Torres told The Sun.

"I’d put Xabi’s own wishes ahead of everything else, of course, but he’s got three years left on his contract with us and I’d love it if he stays.

"It would be a serious loss for Liverpool if he left this summer." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Ray LaMontagne Fall Tour: Symphony Orchestra & Solo

RAY LAMONTAGNE ANNOUNCES FALL TOUR SCHEDULE

Shows With Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, As Well As Solo Acoustic Performances


Ray LaMontagne

Ray LaMontagne announced his North American fall tour schedule today, starting with two dates with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra on October 15 in North Bethesda, MD followed by an October 16 show at Meyeroff Symphony Hall. Following the orchestra shows, LaMontagne’s next dates will offer a polar opposite experience in which the Maine singer-songwriter will play stripped-down solo acoustic shows, starting November 1 at Atlanta’s Fox Theatre.

LaMontagne is also working with Tickets-for-Charity® to offer fans a unique opportunity to buy front row seats while supporting leading charities. A portion of each package purchased on www.TicketsforCharity.com will automatically benefit The National Children’s Cancer Society plus up to three partner charities of the fan’s choice. LaMontagne is proud to be collaborating with this charitable platform to provide fans with an easy way to access prime concert seats while supporting the causes they care about in the process.

This will not be the first time LaMontagne has played accompanied by an orchestra; he recently appeared in front of a sold-out crowd earlier in July at the Hollywood Bowl with the Bowl’s Orchestra.

The tour marks LaMontagne’s third tour in North America in support of his top 5 album Gossip In The Grain. Along the way he has also done a tour of the biggest shows on TV including Saturday Night Live, The Late Show With David Letterman, The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien, Late Night with Conan O’Brien and most recently The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson. While in L.A. for the Hollywood Bowl, LaMontagne stopped by KCRW’s highly influential “Morning Becomes Eclectic” where he performed and chatted.

Tour Dates

09/03/09 Thu Gaiety Theatre Dublin, IR

09/04/09 Fri Gaiety Theatre Dublin, IR

09/05/09 Sat Gaiety Theatre Dublin, IR

09/06/09 Sun Royal Theatre Castlebar, IR

09/08/09 Tue Usher Hall Edinburgh, GB

09/09/09 Wed Newcastle City Hall Newcastle, GB

09/10/09 Thu Civic Hall Wolverhampton, GB

09/12/09 Sat Sheffield City Hall Sheffield, GB

09/13/09 Sun Manchester Bridgewater Hall Manchester, GB

09/14/09 Mon Portsmouth Guildhall Portsmouth, GB

09/16/09 Wed Royal Albert Hall London, GB

09/17/09 Thu Royal Albert Hall London, GB

09/18/09 Fri Melkweg Amsterdam, NL

09/19/09 Sat La Cigale Paris, FRA

10/15/09 Thu Strathmore North Bethesda, MD

10/16/09 Fri Meyerhoff Symphony Hall Baltimore, MD

11/01/09 Sun Fox Theatre Atlanta, GA

11/04/09 Wed Wang Center Boston, MA

11/07/09 Sat Tower Theater Upper Darby, PA

11/09/09 Mon Beacon Theatre New York, NY

11/12/09 Thu Auditorium Theatre Chicago, IL

11/13/09 Fri State Theatre Minneapolis, MN

11/15/09 Sun Nob Hill Masonic Auditorium San Francisco, CA

11/17/09 Tue Ellie Caulkins Opera House Denver, CO

11/20/09 Fri Orpheum Theatre Los Angeles, CA

For more on Ray LaMontagne check our exclusive feature/interview here.


Countdown to kick-off

Portsmouth Abu Dhabi-based businessman Sulaiman Al Fahim’s protracted takeover of Portsmouth has affected the club’s potential for the coming season. With three weeks to go until they welcome Fulham to Fratton Park, Al Fahim has inherited a Pompey squad with only 15 senior professional

Swine flu threatens freshers’ week

Officials draw up contingency plans to postpone activities and close parts of campus if pandemic peaks at start of term

Universities are working on emergency plans to postpone freshers’ week activities and shut down parts of their campuses if the swine flu pandemic peaks when students return in September.

Contingency plans to slow the spread of the virus, or to cope if the illness cripples staffing levels, include podcasting lectures and quarantining infected students in their halls of residence.

There are fears that the start of term could exacerbate the pandemic, with nearly two million students starting or returning to university, and hundreds of thousands crossing the country to begin their courses.

University officials said they were preparing to cope with outbreaks on campuses, but stressed that they were awaiting advice from health officials closer to the start of term before taking any action.

Universities UK, the vice-chancellors’ umbrella group, is holding a conference next week for its members, called Coping with a Pandemic. An invitation to the event says it will consider the “possible escalation” of the pandemic as universities reopen.

Kate Dodd, director of student life at Birmingham University, is due to address the conference to offer advice on how to deal with swine flu on campus. She has seen details of dozens of universities’ contingency plans. Many are setting up “flu buddying” schemes, but some are also considering drafting staff from non-essential areas to deliver food and Tamiflu to students in quarantine, she said.

“We’re used to the idea that new students arrive, they get freshers’ flu and mumps outbreaks; it’s not unusual in the autumn term to have some sort of outbreak. We’ve all been there before, but there are greater risks attached to this and there will be more pressure on the system,” she said.

She warned that the Health Protection Agency was overstretched in some areas. “Universities are having to, in some cases, work quite hard to get the support and input and attention from the HPA that they need.”

Several universities contacted by the Guardian revealed details of their protocols for tackling the virus. All stressed they had no current plans to close or restrict their activity, but that they were readying themselves for all scenarios come the autumn.

• Imperial College London has already established a flu buddying scheme, and flu packs are being given out, which include face masks for buddies to prevent them becoming infected.

• Portsmouth University has considered ways to quarantine students in their accommodation. A spokesman for Portsmouth said: “We’re not in loco parentis but we have an obligation to students and staff and the wider public when students are moving to and fro and possibly spreading the virus.”

• Several institutions said their plans included periods of shutting down departments or part of their activities if public health officials ordered it.

• Queen’s University Belfast is reorganising exam halls for August’s re-sits to ensure all desks are more than 1m apart to prevent any spread. Students could be enrolled online instead of in crowded halls and the first semester’s work is being made available online in case there is widespread disruption. Denis Todd, the staff occupational health doctor at Queen’s, said: “The UK planning assumption is that the peak period of new cases will be somewhere between mid-September and mid-October and that’s exactly the wrong time for us.”

• Leicester University is expanding its programme of podcasting lectures so students can watch them at home. The student union is also planning in case some freshers’ events have to be cancelled, the university vice-chancellor, Bob Burgess, said. “At this stage, it’s too early for us to know for certain what will happen given how things are changing,” he stressed.

• University College London is also planning for every eventuality, including the possibility of department closures so that it can be “fully prepared”.

Sir Andrew Haines, chair of the Universities UK health committee, and director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: “If it continues to be a mild infection we don’t need to be too alarmed. But every university is planning for every scenario in the new term.”

The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills issued universities with guidance last month asking them to “urgently” review their emergency contingency plans. It advised them to base their planning on the assumption that they will remain open, but said each institution should review its processes for “reducing operations, or for implementing its closure” as well.

Unite, the student accommodation group, said it was working with universities across the country on their contingency plans. A spokeswoman said: “We want to manage the situation and keep our properties operational. It’s unlikely we will close them because it’s people’s homes.” She said they would be very unlikely to close halls and send thousands of students, some of whom may be infected, back into the community.

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Prosthetic leg-waving rock fan spared jail

Rocker who lost part of leg in motorcycle accident given suspended sentence for attacking fellow concertgoer

Alice Cooper may be notorious for rollicking sets in which fake blood, very large snakes and even electric chairs feature heavily.

But those sitting near fan Andrew Miller when the American rocker appeared at the Southampton Guildhall must have been left wondering if the gothic horror show had somehow spilled into the auditorium too.

Rather than just sitting and enjoying the gig or perhaps indulging in a bit of middle-aged headbanging, Miller showed his appreciation by removing his prosthetic leg – decorated with an Alice Cooper motif – and waving it around.

When he was asked if he wouldn’t mind desisting by John Lynch, who was sitting beside him in the front row of the balcony, 46-year-old Miller attacked him, leaving his victim needing hospital treatment.

Wearing a sober blue shirt, tie and jacket rather than his leathers, Miller, who lost part of his right leg in a motorcycle accident, appeared before a judge at Southampton crown court today.

He was given a six-month sentence suspended for 18 months and a three-month curfew confining him to his home at night. He was also banned from the Guildhall for 12 months, ordered to pay Lynch £250 compensation ‑ and told that he really ought to know better.

Sentencing him, the judge, John Boggis QC, told Miller: “It’s perfectly clear you were making an exhibition and a nuisance of yourself.

“Mr Lynch asked you to be still and confine yourself to your seat but you would not have it so you hit him and injured him. You thoroughly ruined his evening and this sort of behaviour is unacceptable – you are old enough to know that.”

The judge told the court that Miller had previous convictions for violence, theft and drugs.

Miller, of Emsworth, near Portsmouth, was found guilty of actual bodily harm last month. The court was told that during the gig, which took place in July last year, Miller had stripped to his waist and removed his leg. He had been “shouting and whooping” and thrusting his elbow into Lynch’s midriff.

Lynch, who works with adults and children with disabilities, asked Miller to calm down but was grabbed by his hair and punched in the face up to 10 times.

Miller claimed he acted in self-defence and had only punched Lynch after he had hit him with his own motorcycle crash helmet. He also said he removed his artificial limb because it was more comfortable to do so. He suffered bruising to his shoulder, elbow and cuts and bruises to his head while Miller suffered a fracture to his right hand.

Giving evidence during the trial, Lynch said: “Sitting next to him was not a great experience. During the interval I asked him politely if he could remain in his own seat. But he responded in an aggressive manner.”

The incident has been reported around the world in music magazines and on websites. But, of course, it has not put off Alice Cooper, the self-styled architect of shock rock. He is touring his All New Theatre of Death Show from the end of this month.

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Sven confirmed in Notts County role

• Eriksson will be joined at Meadow Lane by Tord Grip
• ‘I am particularly attracted to this role’, the Swede said

Sven-Goran Eriksson last night made an extraordinary return to English football when he was appointed director of football at Notts County. In one of the game’s most staggering moves of recent times the former England manager was confirmed in the role at the League Two club after talks yesterday.

Eriksson, whose most recent job was as coach of Mexico, has been lured to Meadow Lane by a Middle East-backed consortium that has taken over at the club, which has finished in the bottom half of League Two for the past five seasons. Those close to Munto Finance, the ambitious consortium which took control last week with plans to establish the club in the Championship within five years, say Eriksson is in for the long haul.

His financial package will be the subject of much conjecture but County said it would “largely be determined by the success of Notts County” on the pitch and that he will also be a shareholder. It would be naive to believe, though, that there is not a hefty basic wage. Eriksson, after all, does not work for pennies, even if he has received three seven-figure pay-offs in as many years, and there were suggestions last night, albeit unconfirmed, that he might pick up as much as £40,000 a week at Meadow Lane. His duties include overseeing training facilities and player development, the youth academy, transfer negotiations and scouting, and the health and fitness of the players. He will be joined by his trusted assistant, Tord Grip.

• Stuart James analyses Eriksson’s latest surprise
• Vote whether Sven will succeed at Notts County
• Test your knowledge on Sven with our daily quiz

Eriksson, who is due to be unveiled today, said: “I am particularly attracted to this role and the unique opportunity to help build a club over the longer term. I will be responsible for all aspects of the football side of the club and in line with the aspirations of the new owners, wish to build the club at the heart of the community. I started my football management career at a small lower division Swedish club and we managed to get them into the top flight.

“I can think of no better challenge than to attempt to do that again but this time with the world’s oldest football club, where we can add to a proud tradition and hopefully bring some richly deserved success. We hope to leave a long lasting football legacy for Notts County FC and its fans.”

Thirty years have passed since he oversaw Degerfors’ rise in Sweden and the majority of those have been spent at some of the most glamorous clubs in Europe such as Benfica, Roma and Lazio. Portsmouth seemed likely to be the next port of call after he was sacked by Mexico in April but instead Eriksson has checked in at a club that finished 87th on the football ladder in May. Ian McParland, the manager has been assured his job is safe despite the arrival of someone who spent five years in charge of England.

County’s chairman, Peter Trembling, said: “Sven and his team join us with an unrivalled football pedigree. Their knowledge of the game and contacts throughout the football world will significantly enhance Notts County’s prospects.

“Sven shares our vision, and to attract someone of his calibre is testament to the ambition that we all share for Notts County. This is a great day for everyone associated with the club.”

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Eriksson lands Notts County role

Sven Goran Eriksson

Former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson has joined Notts County as director of football.

The club’s website said Eriksson would be "joining his long-term assistant Tord Grip who will assume the role of general adviser."

The club added that his remuneration would be determined by the success of the team on the pitch.

Eriksson will take up his new role with immediate effect and will also be a shareholder in the club.

Massive coup

The 61-year-old, who spent five years in charge of England, was sacked as coach of Mexico in April.

Following his dismissal as Mexico manager he had been linked with a return to the Premier League with Portsmouth.

Speaking prior to the appointment being made public, former Notts County player Craig Short said the news took him by surprise when it was broken to him on Tuesday.

"I was absolutely shocked. I thought somebody was pulling my leg, to be honest," he told BBC Radio 5 Live.

Signing the Swede is a massive coup for the League Two club because of his record of success across European football.

ERIKSSON’S TEAMS

  • Degerfors 1977-78
  • IFK Gothenburg 1979-82
  • Benfica 1982-84
  • Roma 1984-87
  • Fiorentina 1987-89
  • Benfica 1989-92
  • Sampdoria 1992-97
  • Lazio 1997-2001
  • England 2001-06
  • Manchester City 2007-08
  • Mexico 2008-09

Eriksson made a name for himself in his homeland with IFK Gothenburg before moving to Benfica where he won two Portuguese league titles, a Portuguese cup and the team finished runners-up in the Uefa Cup.

A spell in Italy followed before he returned to Benfica, leading them to the final of the European Cup in 1990 where they lost 1-0 to AC Milan.

It was at Italian side Lazio where he achieved arguably his greatest success, winning every major trophy in Italy – including the Serie A title in 2000 for only the second time in the Roman club’s history – and the European Cup Winners Cup.

The Swede became the first foreign manager to take charge of the English national side when he was appointed as Kevin Keegan’s successor in 2001.

He spent five years at the helm, leading England to the quarter-finals of the 2002 and 2006 World Cups, as well as a place in the last eight at the 2004 European Championships.

Eriksson announced his decision to step down as England manager before the 2006 World Cup in Germany – two years before his contract was due to expire.

A year out of the game followed before he joined Manchester City, where he spent only one season before being replaced by Mark Hughes.

In June 2008 Eriksson replaced Hugo Sanchez in the Mexico job, the legendary striker having been sacked three months earlier, but he lasted less than a year. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Eriksson offered job at Notts County

• Eriksson expected to accept director of football position
• Ian McParland would remain as County manager

So Sven-Goran Eriksson was thinking of Meadow Lane when his agent revealed a couple of months ago that the Swede “would love to work in England again”. Anyone predicting such a return before yesterday’s remarkable developments would have risked being carted off to the nearest psychiatric ward but put a consortium from the Middle East and Eriksson’s name in the same sentence and you start to believe that anything is possible.

This time, however, the investors offering to line Eriksson’s pocket are not fake sheikhs seeking to bring down the England manager but Notts County board members intent on pulling off one of the more staggering football appointments in recent times.

Eriksson is expected to be unveiled as the League Two club’s director of football on Wednesday following talks which presumably did not dwell too much on the 61-year-old’s knowledge of County’s promotion rivals next season.

Quite what was going through Ian McParland’s mind when he learned of the bid to lure Eriksson is anyone’s guess, though the current Notts County manager has been assured that his job is safe despite the imminent arrival of someone who spent five years in charge of England. That period should have prepared Eriksson for most things but there could still be a few shocks in store if he makes his way around the League Two circuit next season.

Whether he will be required to negotiate those kind of trips remains to be seen, with his involvement at one of the world’s oldest football clubs likely to be more advisory than hands-on. Either way those close to Munto Finance, the ambitious Middle-East backed consortium that took control at Meadow Lane last week with plans to establish the club in the Championship within five years, say Eriksson will not be here today and gone tomorrow.

Eriksson does have experience of working at a lower level before when he started out on his managerial career with Degerfors in Sweden but 30 years have since passed and the majority of those have been spent at some of the most glamorous clubs in Europe such as Benfica, Roma and Lazio. Portsmouth seemed likely to be the next port of call after he was sacked by Mexico in April but instead Eriksson has checked in at a club that finished 87th on the football ladder in May.

His financial package will be the subject of much conjecture but it is thought to be strongly linked to the club’s progress, although it would be naive to believe that there is not a hefty basic wage. Eriksson, after all, does not work for pennies, even if he has received three seven-figure pay-offs in as many years, and there were suggestions last night, albeit unconfirmed, that he might pick up as much as £40,000 a week at Meadow Lane.

What a turnaround from 5½ years ago when County, mired in financial trouble, narrowly escaped the threat of expulsion from the Football League. There have been more tough times since, including the last five seasons finishing in the bottom half of League Two, but the loyal supporters that have remained faithful to the club that will celebrate its 150th anniversary in 2012 can be forgiven for waking up with a smile this morning.

“We have a vision of success now,” said Glenn Rolley, the chairman of the supporters’ trust. “We stand in the shadow of our neighbours. Appointing Sven will reverberate around the football world. I can only compare it to when Notts County signed Tommy Lawton from Chelsea in the late ’40s.

“He was England’s No 1 centre-forward. This is comparable. I’ve been a supporter for 45 years and this is proud day. It’s quite romantic really.”

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Eriksson holds Notts County talks

Sven Goran Eriksson

Former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson is in talks with Notts County about becoming director of football, BBC Radio Nottingham understands.

The Magpies, who have recently been taken over by a Middle-Eastern consortium, are refusing to confirm or deny the reports.

Earlier newspaper reports had linked Eriksson with the club’s manager role.

The 61-year-old, who spent five years in charge of England, was sacked as coach of Mexico in April.

BBC Radio Nottingham’s Colin Slater said: "Claims that Notts are to appoint Eriksson as manager are wide off the mark.

"It is far more likely Eriksson will be brought in as director of football."

The former Manchester City manager is not the only high-profile name to be linked with the job.

Slater added: "My understanding is that Eriksson is not the first high-profile personality to be linked with the newly created post as director of football.

"Former England manager Glenn Hoddle has also been in the frame."

Following Eriksson’s dismissal in Mexico, he had been linked with a return to the Premier League with Portsmouth.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Eriksson linked with Notts County

• New Middle East owners have targeted Swede, claim reports
• Lucrative financial package expected to be on offer

Notts County are believed to have approached Sven-Goran Eriksson to see whether the former England manager would be interested in taking a role at the club.

If Eriksson were to take on a role it could be as a consultant or in an advisory position that would mean the manager Ian McParland would keep his job. BBC Radio Nottingham have reported there is a possibility he could be named director of football.

A club spokesman said today: “We are neither confirming or denying speculation.”

The reports have centred on the club’s new Middle East owners, the Munto Finance consortium, who it is claimed have put together a proposal to get the Swede involved in Notts County.

They have also been linked with an approach to another former England manager, Glenn Hoddle.

Eriksson was sacked by Mexico earlier this year and has previously managed the England national side, Manchester City, Lazio, Sampdoria, Fiorentina, Roma and Benfica. He was linked with a managerial role at Portsmouth, although it appears that Paul Hart will continue in the role for next season.

However, the new financial clout of the club that finished last season 19th in the bottom division may now be used to entice him to Nottingham.

In 1996 Eriksson was lined up to take over at Blackburn but, instead, chose to move to Lazio at the eleventh hour. His first jobs in management were at Degerfors and Goteborg in his native Sweden.

Munto Finance have outlined a 10-year plan to return Notts County to the top-flight as the club aims to put bankruptcy, poor form and low crowds behind them. The club’s new chairman Peter Trembling hopes the new owners can herald a reversal in the club’s fortunes.

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Villa complete £12m Downing deal

• Middlesbrough winger signs four-year deal at Villa Park
• Sylvain Distin next on Martin O’Neill’s list of targets

Aston Villa have completed the signing of the Middlesbrough winger Stewart Downing for a fee in the region of £12m. The England international has joined Martin O’Neill’s side on a four-year deal after passing a medical.

Downing is O’Neill’s first summer recruit but will be unable to play a part in the Villa first team until October at the earliest and may not be fully fit until December after breaking a foot in the penultimate league game of last season. He will have an operation to remove a steel pin from the fractured bone in September before stepping up his fitness programme.

The 24-year-old felt he had to leave Boro following the club’s relegation to keep alive his hopes of playing at next summer’s World Cup with England. “Leaving Boro feels strange because I have always been at the club,” he said. “I supported them when I was young and I will always be a Boro fan.

“But I hope the fans will understand that I’m ambitious and want to win things. This move gives me a chance of that. Also, I definitely want to play at next year’s World Cup, so that’s my aim – to get back to full fitness, get back playing and get myself in the England team for the World Cup.

“I don’t just want to go there to sit it out this time either. I want to be in the team. I loved the last World Cup, it was brilliant, but I want to play a bigger part this time. I have to be with a good Premier League side if I want to do that.”

Downing had no hesitation in accepting Villa’s offer. “When it became apparent that Villa were interested I was very excited,” he said. “I wanted to come as soon as I met Martin O’Neill so I am delighted it’s now sorted out. As soon as I spoke to the manager at the training ground, I wanted to play for Villa and I wanted to play for him. He has great ambition and wants to build a good squad to take the club forward. I want to be part of that.

“As an outsider looking in, it was obvious that Villa were a club on the up. You can see a chairman and manager who want to build great things. They have done that over the past few seasons, particularly by finishing sixth last time around, which was great. But once you get here and see the stadium, the training ground, the people behind the scenes and the manager with his ambition and hopes for the future, it’s even better than you realised.”

Villa have agreed to pay £10m up front and a further £2m depending on appearances, and the winger’s arrival should spell the end of O’Neill’s interest in Tottenham’s David Bentley.

O’Neill will now turn his attentions to bolstering his back line, with Sylvain Distin a key target. Villa are understood to have made a £3m offer for the Portsmouth centre-half.

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