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Saturday 21 March 2015


Carrick signs United contract extension



Manchester United midfielder Michael Carrick has signed a one-year contract extension, the Premier League club said on Friday.
The 33-year-old has been at Old Trafford since 2006, winning five Premier League titles and becoming a cornerstone of the United midfield with his cultured passing and disciplined defensive work.
"He is, for me, my second captain behind Wayne Rooney and he can also read the game as a team player so that's very important," manager Louis van Gaal told the club website.
"He has also an excellent pass forward. I like, as a manager, forward passers so that's very important for me."
Carrick, who started his career at West Ham United before moving to Tottenham Hotspur, has played nearly 400 games for United.
He has also made 31 appearances for England and was named in Roy Hodgson's squad this week.

LVG turns whistleblower before Reds tie



Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal has been refereeing training games to help his players keep their emotions in check for the Premier League top-four showdown with Liverpool at Anfield on Sunday.
The Dutchman has a reputation as a disciplinarian who keeps his players on a tight leash but has seen emotions boil over in big games this season with Chris Smalling sent off against Manchester City and Angel Di Maria seeing red against Arsenal in the FA Cup.
With Anfield proving a traditionally hostile environment for visiting United sides and only two points separating the teams in the battle for a top-four finish, Van Gaal was keen to lay down the law.
"I have been the referee on the training pitch and I have whistled when they have to control their aggression, for example, to prepare already for the atmosphere," the Dutchman told reporters on Friday.
"Control of emotion is also a talent."
The United boss has been heavily criticised for his side's frequently negative playing style this season, but there were few complaints after last weekend's emphatic 3-0 win over Tottenham Hotspur.
For all the talk of long-ball tactics and a move away from United's traditions of attacking football, Van Gaal seems to have stumbled across a formula that could yet appease the purists.
Despite still focusing heavily on the ruggedly physical attributes of Marouane Fellaini, there was plenty of attacking verve on show against Spurs.
Yet it will count for nothing, Van Gaal said, unless they can build on that performance at Anfield.
"I think we played very good in the first half – it was also good to have an evolution that is very positive," he said.
"(But)it says nothing when you lose the next match. Liverpool is not a ground where Manchester United have won a lot.
"When we have won at Liverpool, that will have shown we have improved further."
Both teams come into the game in superb form with Liverpool having won five league games in a row and eight of their last nine while United have won three in succession and are undefeated in 17 of their last 19.
With United desperate to keep their noses ahead in the top-four battle, Van Gaal described it as a game they dare not lose.
"I want to win against them again. It's very important," he said.
"I think every player knows the importance of this game. We are in a very crucial stage and cannot lose."

Cahill wants Blues to seize title initiative



Gary Cahill believes Chelsea will take a major step towards winning the Premier League title if they can secure victory at Hull on Sunday.
Jose Mourinho's side head into the latest round of matches with a commanding six-point lead at the top of the table, having played a game less than their main rivals.
Their Champions League exit at the hands of Paris Saint Germain means Chelsea's focus is trained solely on the domestic championship as they attempt to add to their success in the League Cup earlier this season.
Mourinho believes the lack of European action will ensure his side are not affected by fatigue during the closing weeks of the season, and England centre-back Cahill agrees this should boost the club's hopes of claiming a first English title since 2010.
"Of course we're disappointed to go out of the Champions League, we wanted to go all the way in the competition. Unfortunately it wasn't to be and we can't go back in time, so we switch our minds now with 10 games to play and a huge prize at the end of it," Cahill said.
"We have a bit of a luxury in that we can prepare for a full week for most games now, and train as a group more than we usually can do. Hopefully that can benefit us as well."
-BREATHING SPACE
The Blues faltered last weekend when they were held at home by Southampton, but a shock defeat for second-placed Manchester City at Burnley meant the London club still managed to strengthen their position at the top.
And with the international break to come, three points this weekend will provide more breathing space as the countdown to the end of the season continues.
"The title is in our hands," Cahill said.
"We have a lot at stake but we're in a fantastic position. We also know there is hard work ahead. We're in the run-in and we all want to achieve the same thing.
"We're definitely in a good place. At the start of the season if we'd been offered being six points clear and a game in hand, we'd have been absolutely delighted.
"We're in a fantastic position but there's a lot of hard work still to be done.
"It's a huge game on Sunday and going into the internationals we want to have a feel-good factor, so we need to perform well in the Hull game beforehand and make sure we're not disappointed when we go away."
Struggling Hull will be without Nikica Jelavic after the Croatian striker underwent an operation on a knee that has troubled him for most of the season.
The rehabilitation process is expected to take at least six weeks but it could be that Jelavic misses the remainder of the season.
Jelavic is Hull's leading scorer with eight goals and manager Steve Bruce has challenged Abel Hernandez to take the chance to finally make his mark.
Hernandez moved to Hull for a club-record £10 million ($14.9 million, 13.8 million euros) from Palermo in September but has scored just three goals since.
"Now is the time for Hernandez to fill the role," said Bruce, whose side are only three points above the relegation zone.
"I have been very pleased with him, especially over the last three or four weeks.
"He looks far more settled. He looks as if he is happier round the place. He is learning the language and looks used to being in England."