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    Lionel Messi reveals Barcelona’s transfer plans in PSG press conference as he confirms their interest in Verratti

    LIONEL MESSI revealed Barcelona tried to sign Marco Verratti for ‘many seasons’.Messi will instead play alongside the Italian midfielder at Paris Saint-Germain – rather than at the Nou Camp.
    Barcelona tried to sign Marco Verratti during Lionel Messi’s time at the Nou Camp, the Argentine said to reportersCredit: AP
    The Italian has been one of the best midfielders in the world over recent yearsCredit: The Mega Agency
    The superstar Argentine, 34, addressed the media this morning as he was unveiled as a PSG player following his free transfer after leaving Barca.
    But during the press conference, he admitted his former side had tried to lure Verratti to Spain time and time again.
    Messi said: “Marco has shown that he is a huge player, one of the best in the world in his position.
    “In Barcelona, we wanted him for many seasons.
    “In the end, it’s me who comes to play with him at Paris. It’s a phenomenon.”
    Verratti, 28, broke through at Pescara before joining PSG in 2012.
    He has racked up 346 games for the club across nine seasons so far – with 28 trophies.
    And the Euro 2020 winner will be confident of adding more trophies this season now he is playing alongside the six-time Ballon d’Or winner who he met up with on holiday in Ibiza last week.
    ‘INCREDIBLE TEAM’
    Messi expressed his excitement at joining up with his new team-mates and repeatedly insisted he was in Paris to win silverware.
    Asked about playing alongside Neymar and Mbappe, the new No30 said: “It’s crazy. I am very happy sharing day to day life with them and all the squad.
    “Really there are some amazing transfers – the team is incredible.
    “I want to train and compete now because I’m going to be playing with the best players in the world and that’s always good.”
    Messi continued: “Neymar did a lot and was important in my decision. Neymar and I know each other very well.
    “I hope we will be stronger together and with all our team-mates.
    “I know a lot of the players from Argentina: Di Maria, Paredes etc.
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    “I know the coach Mauricio Pochettino very well. The fact that he is Argentinian helped from the start, it was important in my decision making.
    “I am impatient. I still want to win trophies, we can fight for them, that’s why I have come here.
    “It’s all been crazy, my arrival – it was a surprise. I’ve never experienced anything like this.”
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    He spoke in Spanish as he addressed the media with his family watching onCredit: Reuters
    Verratti has won 28 trophies with PSG after joining from Pescara in 2012Credit: AFP or licensors
    Messi is reportedly earning £650,000-a-week at PSG
    Messi speaks about the prospect of playing with Kylian Mbappe and Neymar at PSG More

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    Barcelona legend Andres Iniesta admits ‘it will hurt’ to see Lionel Messi at PSG after he completes blockbuster move

    ANDRES INIESTA admitted ‘it will hurt’ to see Lionel Messi ‘in another team’s shirt’ after the Barcelona legend completed his move to PSG. Messi confirmed his free transfer to the French giants, officially ending his 20-year stay with boyhood club Barca.
    Andres Iniesta admitted ‘it will hurt’ to see Lionel Messi ‘in another team’s shirt’Credit: Reuters
    Lionel Messi has confirmed his move to PSG
    Iniesta spent 14 of those with the Argentine, with the pair winning nine LaLiga titles and four Champions League trophies together.
    But Messi’s time at the Nou Camp has now come to an end after LaLiga’s financial fair play rules left the player unable to renew his contract.
    And with the six-time Ballon d’Or winner now announced as a PSG player, it has left former team-mate Iniesta, 37, heartbroken.
    He told AFP: “I don’t know what happened internally, nor how things unfolded, but the club will need to recover from this transfer.
    “It will hurt to see him in another team’s shirt. Leo personifies Barcelona. He was everything, he’s a player who transcends the team.
    “I’ve never seen a player like him and I don’t think I ever will.
    “[Barcelona] will continue to be one of the best teams, one of those that has to be on the summit.”
    Messi, 34, has signed a two-year deal PSG with the option to extend it for a further 12 months.
    He was pictured in his new colours for the first time and will wear the No30 shirt – his first number at Barca.
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    Messi said: “I am impatient to start a new chapter of my career in Paris. The club and its vision are in perfect harmony with my ambitions.
    “I know how talented the players and staff are here. I am determined to build, alongside them, something great for the club and for the fans.
    “I can’t wait to set foot on the Parc des Princes pitch.”
    PSG confirm Lionel Messi has signed a two-year PSG deal after leaving Barcelona More

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    Messi's Arrival in Paris Reflects a Troubling Time in Soccer

    He could not stay where he wanted; few teams could afford him. Even one of the best players of all time was not able to resist the economic forces that carry the game along.In those frantic, final hours in April, before a cabal of owners of Europe’s grandest clubs unveiled their plan for a breakaway superleague to an unsuspecting and unwelcoming world, a schism emerged in their ranks.One faction, driven by Andrea Agnelli, chairman of Juventus, and Florentino Pérez, president of Real Madrid, wanted to go public as quickly as possible. Agnelli, in particular, was feeling the personal pressure of acting, in effect, as a double agent. Everything, they said, was ready; or at least as ready as it needed to be.Another group, centered on the American ownership groups that control England’s traditional giants, counseled caution. The plans still had to be finessed. There was still debate, for example, on how many spots might be handed over to teams that had qualified for the competition. They felt it better to wait until summer.If the first group had not won the day — if the whole project had not exploded into existence and collapsed in ignominy in 48 tumultuous hours — this would have been the week, after the Olympics but before the new season began, when they presented their self-serving, elitist vision of soccer’s future.That the Super League fell apart, of course, was a blessed relief. That this week has, instead, been given over to a dystopian illustration of where, exactly, soccer stands suggests that no great solace should be found in its failure.On Thursday, Manchester City broke the British transfer record — paying Aston Villa $138 million for Jack Grealish — for what may not be the last time this summer. The club remains hopeful of adding Harry Kane, talisman of Tottenham and captain of England, for a fee that could rise as high as $200 million.And then, of course, dwarfing everything else, it emerged that Lionel Messi would be leaving — would have to leave — F.C. Barcelona. Under La Liga’s rules, the club’s finances are such that it could not physically, fiscally, register the greatest player of all time for the coming season. It had no choice but to let him go. He had no choice but to leave.Everything that has played out since has felt so shocking as to be surreal, but so predictable as to be inevitable.There was the tear-stained news conference, in which Messi revealed he had volunteered to accept a 50 percent pay cut to stay at the club he has called home since he was 13, where he scored 672 goals in 778 games, where he broke every record there was to break, won everything there was to win and forged a legend that may never be matched.As soon as that was over, there came the first wisps of smoke from Paris, suggesting the identity of Messi’s new home. Paris St.-Germain was, apparently, crunching the numbers. Messi had been in touch with Neymar, his old compadre, to talk things through. He had called Mauricio Pochettino, the manager, to get an idea of how it might work. P.S.G. was in touch with Jorge, his agent and father.Then, on Tuesday, it happened. Everything was agreed upon: a salary worth $41 million a year, basic, over two years, with an option for a third. As his image was stripped from Camp Nou, a hole appearing between the vast posters of Gerard Piqué and Antoine Griezmann, Messi and his wife, Antonela Roccuzzo, boarded a plane in Barcelona, all packed and ready to go.Messi and his wife, Antonela Roccuzzo, on their way to Paris on Tuesday.Instagram/Antonelaroccuzzo/Via ReutersJorge Messi assured reporters at the airport that the deal was done. P.S.G. teased it with a tweet. Messi landed at Le Bourget airport, near Paris, wearing that shy smile and a T-shirt reading: “Ici, C’est Paris.”This was not a journey many had ever envisaged him making. But he had no other choice; or, rather, the player for whom anything has always been possible, for once, had only a narrow suite of options.There is a portrait of modern soccer in that restricted choice, and it is a stark one. Lionel Messi, the best of all time, does not have true agency over where he plays his final few years. Even he was not able to resist the economic forces that carry the game along.He could not stay where he wanted to stay, at Barcelona, because the club has walked, headlong, into financial ruin. A mixture of the incompetence of its executives and the hubris of the institution is largely responsible for that, but not wholly.The club has spent vastly and poorly in recent years, of course. It has squandered the legacy that Messi had done so much to construct. But it has done so in a context in which it was asked and expected to compete with clubs backed not just by oligarchs and billionaires but by whole nation states, their ambitions unchecked and their spending unrestricted.The coronavirus pandemic accelerated the onset of calamity, and so Barcelona was no longer in a position where it could keep even a player who wanted to stay. When it came time for him to leave, he found a landscape in which only a handful of clubs — nine at most — could offer the prospect of allowing him to compete for another Champions League trophy. They had long since left everybody else behind, relegated them to second-class status.And of those, only three could even come close to taking on a salary as deservedly gargantuan as his. He should not be begrudged a desire to be paid his worth. He is the finest exponent of his art in history. It would be churlish to demand that he should do it on the cheap, as though it is his duty to entertain us. It could only have been Chelsea or Manchester City or Paris.To some — and not just those who hold P.S.G. close to their hearts — that will be an appetizing prospect: a chance to see Messi not just reunited with Neymar, but aligned for the first time with Kylian Mbappé, who many assume will eventually take his crown as the best, and with his old enemy Sergio Ramos, too.That it will be captivating is not in doubt. And doubtless profitable: The jerseys will fly off the shelves; the sponsorships will roll in; the TV ratings will rise, too, perhaps lifting all of French soccer with it. It may well be successful, on the field; it will doubtless be good to watch. But that is no measure. So, too, is the sinking of a ship.Paris Saint-Germain supporters waited for Messi to arrive at Le Bourget airport, north of Paris, on Tuesday. Francois Mori/Associated PressThat the architects of the Super League arrived, in April, at the wrong answer is not in doubt. The vision of soccer’s future that they put forward was one that benefited them and left everyone else, in effect, to burn.But the question that prompted it was the right one. The vast majority of those dozen teams knew that the game in its current form was not sustainable. The costs were too high, the risks too great. The arms race that they were locked into led only to destruction. They recognized the need for change, even if their desperation and self-interest meant they could not identify what form that change should take.They worried that they could not compete with the power and the wealth of the two or three clubs that are not subject to the same rules as everybody else. They felt that the playing field was no longer level. They believed that, sooner or later, first the players and then the trophies would coalesce around P.S.G., Chelsea and Manchester City.It was sooner, as it turns out. P.S.G. has signed Messi. City may commit more than $300 million on just two players in a matter of weeks, as the rest of the game comes to terms with the impact of the pandemic. Chelsea has spent $140 million on a striker, too. This is the week when all their fears, all their dire predictions, have come to pass.There should be no sympathy, of course. Those same clubs did not care at all about competitive balance while the imbalances suited them. Nothing has damaged the chances of meaningful change more than their abortive attempt to corral as much of the game’s wealth as possible to their own ends.But they are not the only ones to lose in this situation. In April, in those whirlwind 48 hours, it felt like soccer avoided a grim vision of its future. As Messi touched down on the ground near Paris on Tuesday, as the surreal and the inevitable collided, it was hard to ignore the feeling that it had merely traded it for another. More

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    Miralem Pjanic close to sealing return to Juventus on loan from Barcelona after agreeing pay cut to complete transfer

    MIRALEM PJANIC is reportedly set to become a Juventus player again with the midfielder on the verge of a loan move from Barcelona. It is thought the LaLiga ace – who was booed by Barca fans in a pre-season cup game – has accepted a wage reduction to seal a two-year return. 
    Miralem Pjanic is reportedly due to move back to Juventus as part of a temporary loan dealCredit: Getty
    This is despite the player arriving at the Nou Camp just a year ago as part of the £50.8million swap deal that saw Brazil ace Arthur Melo move to Turin. 
    Pjanic, who sealed a £45.8million July 2020 move to the Blaugrana, has fallen down the pecking order following Ronald Koeman’s arrival at the club in August last year. 
    He made just six first-team starts in 19 top-flight appearances for Barca, who play Real Sociedad in their first game of the new LaLiga season. 
    Spanish newspaper Sport claim the Bosnia & Herzegovina international has agreed to a 20 per cent pay cut to push through a Juve return.  
    It is suggested the move could be set up as a one-season loan with the addition of a clause that allows the Italian giants to extend the deal into the 2022-23 season. 
    Pjanic was an unused sub during Barca’s 3-0 defeat of Juve in the annual Joan Gamper Trophy clash between the sides on Sunday.   
    And the player, who spent four trophy-laden seasons at Juve following a 2016 move from Roma, was among the Barcelona aces jeered by the club’s fans at the Johan Cruyff Stadium. 
    Barca are thought to need to make savings of around £156million on wages, according to Catalan radio outlet RAC1. 
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    That has lead to the stunning departure of club icon Lionel Messi, who is closing in on a blockbuster move to Paris Saint-Germain.
    It is thought some supporters are angered that squad members have refused to leave despite reports of Barca offering to release them on free transfers to ease their salary bill. 
    Pjanic’s suitors Juventus are reported to have been using Aaron Ramsey and Danilo as their midfield shield in front of their back four. 
    It is claimed Max Allegri is looking to strengthen his central midfield options with the club set to face Atalanta in a friendly ahead of their season opener against Udinese.
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    Gianluigi Buffon makes world-class save aged 43 for Parma as Juventus legend proves he’s still got it More

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    Man Utd ‘in late Luka Jovic transfer discussions’ as Real Madrid set £35m price tag for flop striker this summer

    MANCHESTER UNITED are plotting a late transfer swoop for Luka Jovic, according to shock reports. The Serbian striker, 23, burst on to the scene at Eintracht Frankfurt before joining Real Madrid for £52million in 2019.
    Luka Jovic is a reported shock transfer target for Manchester United this summerCredit: Getty
    But he has flopped since his Bernabeu switch, scoring just two goals in 32 appearances before being shipped back to his former side on loan.
    AS reported earlier in the summer Real Madrid would demand £35m for the forward and are willing to take a significant loss.
    And now according to Tribal Football, United are considering making a move to sign Jovic.
    Ole Gunnar Solskjaer is a big fan of the centre-forward.
    The Old Trafford club asked about Jovic 18 months ago when they brought in Odion Ighalo and have monitored him since, the report adds.
    Marcus Rashford will be out until at least October after surgery on his problematic shoulder.
    That leaves 34-year-old Edinson Cavani as the only recognised senior striker although Anthony Martial and Mason Greenwood can play through the middle.
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    United have already spent more than £100m to bring in Jadon Sancho and Raphael Varane this summer – and it was thought their summer business was done after cooling their interest in Kieran Trippier.
    However, Real Madrid would be keen to sell Jovic to help fund a mega transfer for Kylian Mbappe.
    Los Blancos believe they can secure a deal with Paris Saint-Germain because the French side cannot afford to have Mbappe, Neymar and Lionel Messi at the same time.
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    The Serbain striker, pictured with Wag Sofija Milosevic, has scored just twice for Real Madrid in two yearsCredit: Instagram / @lukajovic

    Man Utd work hard in training ahead of the new season More

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    Kylian Mbappe transfer to Real Madrid ‘closer than ever’ as PSG ‘can’t afford three superstars including Lionel Messi’

    KYLIAN MBAPPE’S transfer to Real Madrid is ‘closer than ever’, according to reports.Paris Saint-Germain are on course to hand Lionel Messi a mammoth contract after his emotional Barcelona exit.
    Kylian Mbappe could make a dramatic transfer to Real Madrid this summerCredit: Getty
    And while that had fans dreaming of one of the greatest attacks ever alongside Neymar, they may not be so lucky.
    According to AS in Spain, there is no way the French giants can afford all three superstars at the same time.
    The report adds PSG need to make at least £152million in player sales this summer to balance the books for Financial Fair Play, even before Messi signs.
    Messi will become the top earner on £650,000 per week, Neymar second on £490,000 and Mbappe third with his £310,000-per-week wages.
    That totals almost £1.5m per week on just three players – plus a further six are on at least £200,000.
    With Neymar signing a new contract in May and Messi only just arriving, Mbappe is the obvious choice to depart – especially with the Frenchman out of contract next summer.
    Real Madrid are yet to contact PSG regarding a transfer – because Florentino Perez does not want to antagonise the Qatari board at the Parc des Princes before they can secure the deal.
    The Spanish side will wait until Messi’s arrival is confirmed in the coming days.
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    Los Blancos boss Carlo Ancelotti knows it will not take a record-breaking contract offer to convince Mbappe to come, instead confident the lure of becoming the latest Galactico will be enough of an incentive.
    Although the Bernabeu giants are tight financially, they believe they could get a deal done, the report adds.
    David Alaba has essentially taken on the wages freed up by Sergio Ramos’ departure and they still have a number of sellable assets in the squad including Martin Odegaard and Luka Jovic.
    Carlo Ancelotti is keen to bolster his attacking options at the BernabeuCredit: Getty
    Reports in Spain suggest the mega transfer is ‘possible’ and ‘closer than ever’
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    It’s hard to be unmoved by Messi’s tears after Barca exit, but he almost single-handedly brought the club to its knees

    DON’T cry for me, Barcelona.It would need a heart of stone not to be moved by the sight of Lionel Messi struggling to keep his emotions in check as he contemplated the end of a football era.
    Lionel Messi in tears as he left Barcelona – but his wages almost brought the club to its kneesCredit: Getty
    Nevertheless, it’s hard to have too much sympathy for the player whose wages have almost single-handedly brought one of the world’s greatest clubs to its knees.
    Not to mention providing the catalyst for the despicable European Super League project.
    So maybe the finest player of all-time should spare us his crocodile tears.
    Because the reality is that Messi has effectively bankrupted Barcelona and driven football to the brink of a financial abyss.
    When the Spanish newspaper El Mundo published the full details of Messi’s Nou Camp contract back in February, the whole world gasped in astonishment.
    It turned out that it was costing the club a ludicrous £2.35million per WEEK to keep the Argentine superstar in the style to which he has become accustomed once they had paid all his tax, image rights and various other bonuses.
    No wonder they reported a £405m loss in the last financial year and have debts in excess of £1billion.
    So when 34-year-old Messi announced he had agreed to a 50 per cent pay cut to extend his stay, he wasn’t exactly doing them a favour.
    And even that ‘discount’ wouldn’t have been enough to comply with LaLiga’s financial fair play rules which have also shackled the mighty Real Madrid.
    That is why the Spanish giants are refusing to give up on the idea of the breakaway Super League, which briefly threatened to tear football apart.
    Their presidents were reported to have met with Juventus chairman Andrea Agnelli this week to discuss ways to revive a scheme which was hastily abandoned by their co-conspirators earlier this year.
    Their desperation is borne out of the need to find a new way of financing their out-of-control wage bills.
    “Clubs like Manchester City, PSG and Chelsea are financially doped and infecting the rest.”LaLiga president Javier Tebas
    Not that Messi needs to worry about that.
    He’s off to Paris Saint-Germain, where he will be slumming it on £650,000-a-week alongside Neymar and Kylian Mbappe.
    It is no wonder Barca are trying to block the move on the basis that PSG’s FFP ratio is even worse than theirs.
    LaLiga president Javier Tebas recently claimed: “Clubs like Manchester City, PSG and Chelsea are financially doped and infecting the rest.”
    It’s hard to argue with that assessment when they are breaking the bank to sign the likes of Messi, Jack Grealish and Romelu Lukaku.
    Fortunately for PSG their president, Nasser Al-Khelaifi, is also the new chairman of the European Club Association, who are working to update Uefa’s FFP regulations.
    Meanwhile, Barca and Real are doing everything in their power to prevent LaLiga selling off ten per cent of its commercial rights to an investment fund for £2.3bn.
    For though it might benefit each top-flight team to the tune of £210m, it could also threaten a Spanish TV deal which is currently massively skewed in favour of the two biggest clubs.
    The bottom line is that absolutely nobody comes out of this squalid affair smelling of roses.
    Messi has undoubtedly given Barca the greatest years of its life. But what a price they have paid.

    HEADING FOR THE HISTORY BIN
    IF YOU are at a loose end today, can I recommend you go and watch Keith Houchen’s 1987 Cup final winner, Alan Shearer’s goal against Bayer Leverkusen and Duncan Ferguson’s 2005 effort against Manchester United.
    Because the way things are going the flying header will soon be consigned to the dustbin of history.
    New guidelines issued by the FA, Premier League and EFL recommend that players should be restricted to ten ‘higher force headers’ per week in training.
    It’s a worthy move aimed at reducing the risk of early-onset dementia.
    But I’m not sure how the authorities will enforce the rule and it does not seem to apply during matches — for now.
    Still, it’s a great excuse for teams conceding a last-minute winner from a set-piece.
    “Sorry boss, I couldn’t head it clear because I’d used up my weekly allowance.”
    Alan Shearer’s flying header against Bayer LeverkusenCredit: PA:Press Association
    KENN YOU DELIVER?
    TRACK CYCLING royalty Jason and Laura Kenny have extended their Olympic gold medal haul to 12 — two more than the entire 1.36billion population of India have so far managed.
    If and when the golden couple finally decide to call it a day, there’s a lucrative career awaiting with Just Eat.
    Imagine how many takeaways they could deliver while ignoring traffic lights and peddling the wrong way down one-way streets.
    Track cycling royalty Jason and Laura KennyCredit: Rex
    JUR HELL
    LIVERPOOL boss Jurgen Klopp is understandably holding his breath as he awaits the results of Andy Robertson’s scan.
    The Reds left-back suffered an ankle injury during Sunday’s 1-1 friendly draw against Athletic Bilbao and fears he could miss his first Premier League match for more than a year.
    And if Klopp thought that replacing Virgil van Dijk was a tough ask last season, coming up with a stand-in for Robertson will be even more of a challenge.
    It was Liverpool’s lack of options which wrecked their title defence last time out.
    Klopp will pray that Robertson is only a short-term absentee.
    Andrew Robertson suffered an ankle injury during Sunday’s 1-1 friendly draw against Athletic BilbaoCredit: Getty

    BORN TO RUN
    SEEING rock idol Bruce Springsteen’s kid Jessica win a showjumping silver last week, I couldn’t help thinking that she had missed a trick.
    Surely she was born to run.
    Jessica Springsteen of the US riding Don Juan van de Donkoeve in the equestrian’s jumping team finalsCredit: AFP More

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    Jack Grealish admits he teared up just like Lionel Messi did after leaving Aston Villa in £100m Man City transfer move

    JACK GREALISH admitted he teared up like Lionel Messi as he bid farewell to his boyhood club Aston Villa.Grealish watched Messi break down as he left Barcelona after 20 years at the club.
    Jack Grealish was unveiled in front of hundreds of Man City fans on Monday nightCredit: AFP
    Grealish was publicly unveiled outside the Etihad despite having already played for Manchester City in the Community ShieldCredit: AFP
    Lionel Messi broke down in tears after announcing he would leave BarcelonaCredit: Getty
    And Grealish, 25, said he knew exactly how the Argentine legend felt.
    Grealish said: “Everyone has seen the way Messi was at his final press conference and that is the exact way I felt myself. Before I left, I spoke to the team at the hotel and teared up a bit myself but I felt it was time for me to move on.
    “I have been an Aston Villa fan since I was four years old, I had a season ticket when I was four, and went to the club when I was six so there will always be links. The big family I have, everyone is Villa fans. It has been a crazy few days.
    “Something I haven’t experienced before, I have been at Aston Villa my whole life so this has been different. Going into a new changing room, I have not done that in my career before.
    “It was one of the toughest decisions I have ever had to make. It came down to a few things. It was something I just thought I couldn’t turn down – the chance to play Champions League football, to challenge for trophies to play next to Kevin De Bruyne who I have looked up to for the last few years and to play for best manager in the world.
    “I have always said I wanted to play Champions League football and I couldn’t do that at Villa this year.
    “I am at a club here that has so much potential and is the most successful English side of the last 10 years. They showed so much faith in me and I felt it was the right time.”
    It has taken just a couple of training sessions to convince him that Pep Guardiola can take his game to the next level.
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    Grealish becomes the most expensive British player of all time after his £100m moveCredit: AP
    The 25-year-old said hello to his new fans outside the stadiumCredit: Getty
    He said: “You see what he has done with players here, the likes of Raheem Sterling and Phil Foden.
    “A few years back people were saying Phil should go out on loan and now he has transformed him into one of the best talents in the world and Raheem is one of the best wingers in the world now.
    “I think I am different to every player in this squad. The manager said I can play as a winger or an eight or number 10 or even a false nine. I feel like I can bring a lot to the team.
    “I feel like he can take my game to the next level. I am going to be learning from him every single day. I can’t wait to learn from him. The way he is in training is unbelievable.
    “Some of the tactics he has are just out of this world. Everyone here is so desperate to play under him, so Pep was obviously a massive factor in me coming here.”
    Grealish believes he will be afforded a new freedom at City which he didn’t have at Villa.
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    As their main threat opponents would try and mark him out the game, but you can’t do that with so much attacking threat throughout the City team.
    He said: “Sometimes at Villa I did get doubled up on. Because there is so much talent in attacking areas it might be harder for teams to double up on me now. That will give me more space and freedom to attack players one-v-one.
    “It can take time to find chemistry with these players but I feel after a few weeks I will have it with all the players.”
    Of course he already knows some of them from his time with England and their exciting march to the European Championship final.
    Phil Foden, Raheem Sterling and Kyle Walker all played their part.
    Jack Grealish has signed a six-year deal with City, keeping him at the club until 2027Credit: Getty
    Grealish is also thought to be earning a mind-boggling £200,000+ per-week at the EtihadCredit: Getty
    Now they will be in the same team at club level and Grealish believes Three Lions boss Gareth Southgate can only benefit.
    He said: “I spoke to these guys at England about Manchester City and they had nothing but good words to say but it takes time to build that chemistry. If you play with them week in week out you build that.
    “I think that is something Gareth would probably like. We are all young and ‘Walks’ has the body of a 20-year-old the way he is so fit and fast.
    “We are all striving for success with the national team and our clubs. I think that is something the England manager would love.”

    Grealish was used as an impact substitute during the Euros but he wants a starting spot in next year’s World Cup and believes top performances for City will get him that.
    He said: “I want to be a regular starter for England and I believe I can be. We have so much talent in the national team, people that didn’t even go to the Euros.
    “But I feel if I am performing for Manchester City week in week out and playing in the Champions League and performing the way I can I feel it could set me up to have a brilliant future with the national team and try and start in the World Cup and in the qualifiers.”
    It is fair to say Grealish is very much ready for the next step.
    Jack Grealish says he is over the moon as he signs for Manchester City More