PEP GUARDIOLA TARGETS ANTOINE SEMENYO AS MANCHESTER CITY OPEN JANUARY TRANSFER WINDOW TALKS
Manchester City have opened talks with Antoine Semenyo. Pep Guardiola looks to trigger the winger's £65m January release clause.
Word on the street is that Manchester City is chatting with Bournemouth's winger, Antoine Semenyo, says sources.
City's just one of a bunch of big Premier League teams looking to trigger Semenyo's exit clause, which is somewhere between £60 million and £65 million.
Liverpool, Manchester United, and Tottenham are also seriously trying to make January deals for the Ghana player.
talkSPORT says that Arsenal might jump in if they get rid of a winger next month, but they're not expecting a busy transfer period.
City's got a head start on other teams by beginning talks with Semenyo two weeks before the winter window even opens.
Their manager, Pep Guardiola, is currently missing wingers Jeremy Doku and Oscar Bobb because they're injured, and Omar Marmoush is playing for Egypt in the AFCON.
Semenyo will be around all winter since Ghana didn't make it to AFCON.
This season, the 25-year-old is tied for the third-highest scorer in the Premier League, with seven goals in 15 games.
He signed a new five-year contract with Bournemouth earlier this year. Even with all the rumours, he's said to be cool about what's next.
Semenyo just scored again in that wild 4-4 game against Manchester United, after not scoring for eight games.
Bournemouth’s manager, Andoni Iraola, has had to dodge questions all season about what's happening with Semenyo.
Back in November, he said, Antoine is our player, and he's staying our player. Ask me about the market in January, not now; I’m not sweating it.
I hate talking about this stuff in August or January—when the market’s open. November, though, is no time for these discussions.
I care more about the guys who are playing tomorrow, the short-term stuff; that’s what matters. We'll talk about the rest in January.
talkSPORT says:
Semenyo's going to be a hot topic, at least for the first part of January.
We broke the story that he's got an exit clause in his contract that kicks in during the January window.
There's a deadline, around the middle of the month, for clubs to use it.
Liverpool's interested. Richard Hughes, their sporting director, is the one who brought Semenyo to Bournemouth from Bristol City.
Manchester United's definitely in the running, too, along with Tottenham—though I'd say Tottenham's a long shot right now.
"I’M UPSET" PEP GUARDIOLA’S HILARIOUS RESPONSE TO MANCHESTER CITY’S TRANSFER BUDGET
Pep Guardiola hits back at "big spender" claims, revealing six clubs have higher net spends than City. Get the full injury news.
Pep Guardiola couldn’t resist poking fun at Manchester City’s big-spender label, joking that he’s annoyed with the club’s bosses for not splashing out even more in the transfer market. City did bring in Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi in January, bumping their spending over the last year to £430 million. But here’s the thing—City have also raked in hundreds of millions from player sales, and if you look at net spend over the last five years, six Premier League clubs, including Newcastle (who they’re facing in the Carabao Cup semi-final), have actually outspent them.
Guardiola has pushed back plenty of times against the idea that City just buy their way to success. This time, he couldn’t resist turning the spotlight on the teams that have spent even more. “Honestly, I’m a bit sad and upset because, in terms of net spend, we’re only seventh in the league over the past five years. I want to be first—I don’t get why the club doesn’t spend more. I’m a little grumpy with them,” he laughed.
He kept going: “People say we only win because we spend tonnes of money, but now there are six teams ahead of us. So, they’ve got to win all the Premier Leagues, Champions Leagues, and FA Cups, right? That’s just the reality, not an opinion.
“You can argue about how we played against Spurs—good or bad, that’s up for debate. But these spending numbers? That’s just a fact. Good luck to those six teams ahead of us on net spend. Let’s see what they do. That’s a good quote, isn’t it?”
Right now, City has a 2-0 lead over Newcastle with one leg left in the Carabao Cup semi-final. They’re hungry for another trip to Wembley, but hanging onto leads hasn’t been easy for them this season.
“That’s our focus right now,” Guardiola said. “We’re one game away from making a fifth Carabao Cup final in ten years. Sure, I’d rather start 2-0 up, but we know how tough it is against Newcastle. They’ve got Champions League pride; they always fight.
“We’ve got to be ready. Let’s see how the players bounce back after that hard game at Spurs. We’ll play our football, with our fans behind us, and try to book our place at Wembley in March.”
THE 10-GAME DROUGHT OVER: HOW HAALAND FINALLY FOUND THE NET AGAIN TODAY.
Erling Haaland ends his 10-game goal drought as Manchester City beat Galatasaray 2-0 to secure a spot in the UCL Last 16.
Erling Haaland finally broke his scoring drought, and Manchester City squeezed into the last 16 of the Champions League with a 2-0 win over Galatasaray.
Haaland hadn’t scored from open play in ten matches, but he put that to rest with a calm finish. Rayan Cherki gave City their second just before halftime. Pep Guardiola’s team handled the Turkish side at the Etihad, but honestly, it wasn’t a smooth ride.
Other results went City’s way, so this win pushed the defending champions up to eighth in the league phase. That means they dodged the dreaded play-off round—the one that tripped them up last season.
After the final whistle, players, coaches, and fans were left waiting for results from other games. When word came through that Real Madrid had lost at Benfica, everyone in sky blue could finally relax. They’d done enough.
The night wasn’t all good news, though. Jeremy Doku, who lit up the first half and set up both goals, picked up an injury and joined City’s already long list of casualties.
Still, City will be relieved. They won’t have to deal with two extra games next month, and with four competitions on the go, every bit of rest matters.
Galatasaray’s travelling fans showed up in force. They packed city bars, marched through the streets, and set off fireworks on the way to the ground. But by the end, they were silent.
Their team, featuring old City faces Ilkay Gundogan and Leroy Sane, managed to cling onto a spot in the top 24. Not much to celebrate, but it’s something.
City came out flying. They nearly scored inside three minutes when Rayan Ait-Nouri whipped in a cross for Haaland, but the Norwegian headed wide.
He didn’t miss his next chance. Seven minutes later, Doku zipped through the Galatasaray defence and slipped a pass to Haaland, who raced clear. Bardakci couldn’t keep up, and goalkeeper Cakir had no chance as Haaland coolly chipped the ball over him.
The city pushed for more. Cakir had to tip over a rocket from Nico O’Reilly. The second goal arrived in 29 minutes—Doku danced into the box, pulled it back for Cherki, and Cherki swept it home.
That was Doku’s last big moment. After taking some rough hits in recent games, he picked up another knock and limped off.
Galatasaray barely threatened before halftime, apart from a weak effort from Victor Osimhen. But they found more energy after the break, especially after Kurdish demonstrators briefly paused the game.
Osimhen was their main danger man. He headed at Gianluigi Donnarumma, then forced a save with a first-time shot.
The city nearly added a third when Omar Marmoush found himself in a great spot but lost his footing at the crucial moment.
A clash of heads between Tijjani Reijnders and Davinson Sanchez brought a long stoppage. Both players got bandaged up and played on, but the tempo never really picked up again.
The game fizzled out, but City did what they needed to do. They’re through.