Ross Barkley is a target for Manchester City next summer with the
champions valuing the midfielder at around £30m and viewing him as among
a select few English homegrown players who could slot instantly into
their team.
City were interested in buying Barkley in the
close season but would not countenance paying Everton’s asking price of
£50m. There is a recognition many of Manuel Pellegrini’s squad are at
their peak so the need to start building for the future is pressing.
To
do so, City require players who are either already established players
of the quality of Yaya Touré, David Silva, Sergio Agüero, Vincent
Kompany, Hart, Samir Nasri and Edin Dzeko, or have the potential to be
so, as with Eliaquim Mangala, who is 23 and cost £32m during the summer.
With the Premier League and Uefa demanding clubs should have
eight homegrown footballers in their squads for their respective
competitions, City have found it a challenge to find English players of
the requisite quality. In recent seasons Adam Johnson, Jack Rodwell and
Scott Sinclair were all bought to fill the berths, while Micah Richards
was at the club from a young age. All have left City apart from Sinclair
who remains on the fringes of the first team.
Although the
signings of Johnson, Rodwell and Sinclair are viewed as errors of
judgment – Richards has also disappointed and is on loan at Fiorentina –
there is a belief that Barkley is a far better player who can one day
replace the 31-year-old Touré, 11 years Barkley’s senior.
Though
City valued Barkley at £20m, they were prepared to pay a premium of
over £30m to secure his signing but Bill Kenwright, the Everton
chairman, quoted a price of £50m for the midfielder, and City decided to
put their interest on hold.
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