Roberto Mancini goes public over frustration at lack of Manchester City signings

 

Simon Stone
Thursday 26 July 2012 06:58 EDT
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Arsenal want more than £20m to allow Robin van Persie to leave
Arsenal want more than £20m to allow Robin van Persie to leave (Getty Images)

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Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini has shoved the responsibility for the lack of new faces at the Etihad Stadium this summer on Blues' football director Brian Marwood.

City are keen to sign Robin van Persie, with Mancini believing it is crucial to strengthen in order to defend their Premier League title.

So far though, with City unable to off-load any of their unwanted high earners, there have been no signings, with Arsenal snubbing an initial approach for Van Persie.

And, ahead of the Blues' friendly with Arsenal in Beijing tomorrow, Mancini, while not mentioning Marwood by name, made it clear where he feels the responsibility lies.

"For this question, speak to the man in charge," Mancini told reporters at a press conference in the Chinese capital.

"I am not in charge of this.

"It is important [to get players quickly] because, after what we did last year, we must continue to win.

"This year will be harder than last so we need to improve our team.

"We have a man who works for this and we hope that they can do a good job."

Mancini has previously made his admiration for Van Persie well known.

However, aware he will be facing Arsene Wenger tomorrow, the Italian opted to tread a delicate path.

"Van Persie is an Arsenal player, not our player," he said.

"He is a fantastic player, but we have four strikers and with those strikers we won the title last year.

"Van Persie is a fantastic player, but he is an Arsenal player."

Meanwhile, skipper Vincent Kompany has signed a massive six-year contract that could net him £60million at an estimated £200,000-a-week.

"We have laid the foundations and now we want to win more," the Belgian told http://www.mcfc.co.uk.

"If we do that then we can be one of the most successful clubs for a long time to come. That is the aim."

Given the vast changes that have taken place since Sheikh Mansour completed his buy-out in 2008, Kompany finds himself as one of the longest-serving members of Mancini's squad.

Former boss Mark Hughes spent what is now viewed as a bargain £6million for Kompany in August 2008, since when he has become one of Europe's best defenders.

He was named in the PFA Team of the Year in 2011 and won the City Player of the Year award last term, in addition to scoring the crucial goal against Manchester United in April that turned the championship battle their way.

"I have been here since the beginning and I have seen everything at the club change inside and out," he said.

"It is good to know that I can be at City for another six years. It is a compliment that the club feels so highly of me.

"Hopefully in the future I will have a bigger impact. My family is happy and there are so many more trophies to win at this club that is why it makes it so special."

Kompany is certainly not looking to rest on his laurels.

"This Manchester City project was probably one of the most difficult in Europe and so far we have all done a good job even though a lot of people said it (success) wasn't going to happen so quickly," he said.

"I like the kind of characters that we have in our team; I like the challenges we have ahead of us.

"Now is the time to build the culture of winning we are in the right time; we are in the right moment."

PA

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