Premier League countdown: Where to see your team in pre-season

Pre-season fixtures for the Premier League teams ahead of the 2010-11 season

Arsenal

17 July v Barnet (A) 3pm

21 July v Sturm Graz (A) 6pm

27 July v SC Neusiedl 1919 (A) 6pm

31 July v Milan (H, Emirates Cup) 4.20pm

1 August v Celtic (H, Emirates Cup) 4.20pm

7 August v Legia Warsaw (A) 3pm

Aston Villa

24 July v Bohemians (A) 3pm

27 July v Walsall (A) 7.45pm

31 July v Feyenoord (A) 9.15pm

1 August v Benfica (A) 9.15pm

6 August v Valencia (H) 7.45pm

Birmingham City

18 July v Hong Kong League Selection Team (A) 3pm

21 July v Beijing Guoan FC (A) 7.30pm

24 July v Liaoning Hongyun Football Club (A) 8pm

31 July v Derby County (A) 3pm

3 August v MK Dons (A) 7.30pm

7 August v Real Mallorca (H) 3pm

Blackburn Rovers

10 July v Sturm Graz (A) 5pm

17 July v Fleetwood Town (A) 3pm

20 July v Preston North End (A) 7.45pm

21 July v Huddersfield Town (A) 7.45pm

25 July v Rangers (N, Sydney Festival of Football) 3pm

28 July v AEK Aens (N, Sydney Festival of Football) 6pm

31 July v Sydney FC (A, Sydney Festival of Football) 7.15pm

7 August v Hearts (A) 3pm

Blackpool

16 July v Tiverton Town (A) 7.30pm

20 July v Accrington Stanley (A) 7.30pm

22 July v Kilmarnock (A) 8pm

27 July v Crewe Alexandra (A) 7.30pm

31 July v Bristol City (A) 3pm

Bolton Wanderers

14 July v Charlotte Eagles (A) TBC

17 July v Charleon Battery (A) TBC

17 July v Bamber Bridge (A) 3pm

21 July v Toronto FC (A) TBC

23 July v Chorley (A) 7.30pm

24 July v Rochdale (A) 3pm

27 July v Curzon Ashton (A) 7.45pm

28 July v Morecambe (A) 7.45pm

30 July v Fleetwood Town (A) 7.45pm

31 July v Falkirk (A) 3pm

2 August v Johnstone (A) 7.45pm

4 August v AFC Fylde (A) 7.45pm

6 August v Osasuna (H) TBC

7 August v Barrow (A) 3pm

Chelsea

17 July v Crystal Palace (A) 3pm

23 July v Ajax (A) 8pm

1 August v Eintracht Frankfurt (A) 3pm

4 August v Hamburg (A) 8pm

Everton

10 July v Sydney FC (A) 7.30pm

14 July v Melbourne Heart (A) 7.30pm

17 July v Brisbane Roar (A) 7.30pm

24 July v Preston North End (A) 3pm

31 July v Norwich City (A) 3pm

4 August v Everton Chile (H) 8pm

7 August v Wolfsburg (A) 4pm

Fulham

14 July v Brentford (A) 8pm

17 July v Bournemouth (A) 3pm

31 July v Portsmouth (A) 3pm

Liverpool

17 July v Al Hilal (A) 6pm

21 July v Grasshopper (A) 6.30pm

24 July v Kaiserslautern (A) TBC

1 August v Borussia Mönchengladbach (A) 1.30pm

Manchester City

23rd July v Sporting Lisbon (A, New York Football Challenge) 8pm

25 July v New York Red Bulls (A, New York Football Challenge) 3pm

28 July v Club America (A) 8pm

31 July v Internazionale (A) 8pm

4 August v Borussia Dortmund (A) 8pm

Manchester United

16 July v Celtic (N) TBC

21 July v Philadelphia Union (A) 7.30pm

25 July v Kansas City Wizards (A) 5pm

28 July v MLS All-Stars (N) 6pm

4 August v League of Ireland XI (N) TBC

Newcastle United

17 July v Carlisle United (A) TBC

24 July v Norwich City (A) 3pm

31 July v PSV Eindhoven (H) TBC

7 August v Rangers (A) TBC

Stoke City

22 July v Nantwich Town (A) 7pm

22 July v Notts County (A) 7.45pm

24 July v Newcastle Town (A) 2.30pm

27 July v Derby County (A) 7.45pm

31 July v Burnley (H) 3pm

3 August v Bristol Rovers (A) 7.45pm

6 August v Wrexham (A) 7.45pm

Sunderland

17 July v Darlington (A) 3pm

Tottenham Hotspur

10 July v Bournemouth (A) 3pm

17 July v San Jose Earquakes (A) TBC

29 July v Villarreal (H) 8pm

3 August v Benfica (A) 7.45pm

7 August v Fiorentina (H) 3pm

West Bromwich Albion

20 July v Crewe Alexandra (A) 7.30pm

24 July v Bristol Rovers (A) 3pm

West Ham United

24 July v Burton Albion (A) 3pm

Wigan Athletic

20 July v Oldham (A) 7.45pm

4 August v Real Zaragoza (H) 7.45pm

8 August v Dundee United (A) 3pm

Wolverhampton Wanderers

17 July v Bohemians (A) 3pm

20 July v Walsall (A) 7.45pm

24 July v Charleroi (A) TBC

27 July v Reading (A) 8pm

30 July v Cheltenham Town (A) 7.45pm

31 July v Leeds United (A) 3pm

3 August v Hearts (A) 7pm

7 August v Athletic Bilbao (H) 3pm

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Tottenham consider offer for the Aston Villa defender Curtis Davies

• Spurs look to bolster injury-plagued defence
• Aston Villa could use funds to invest in midfielder

Tottenham Hotspur are interested in signing the Aston Villa defender Curtis Davies in a deal that could mean Jermaine Jenas moving in the opposite direction. Spurs were monitoring Davies before he moved to Villa Park three years ago and the former West Bromwich Albion and Luton Town player is interesting them again after Martin O’Neill indicated he was willing to listen to offers for the 25-year-old.

With three other senior central defenders – Richard Dunne, James Collins and Carlos Cuéllar – the Villa manager is willing to sacrifice Davies, who was a £9m signing from Albion but could leave for little more than half that sum, to raise funds to strengthen his squad. O’Neill has targeted central midfield, which will be severely weakened if he loses James Milner to Manchester City, and up front as the two areas he would most like to improve.

Jenas could therefore be attractive to O’Neill, who has also looked at West Ham United’s Scott Parker. Jenas endured a frustrating season at White Hart Lane, making only nine Premier League starts and dropping behind Tom Huddlestone in the pecking order for club as well as country, although it remains to be seen whether he would be willing to leave Spurs at a time when the club has finally broken into the Premier League’s top four.

Tottenham see Davies as providing cover in defence. Although Redknapp has five centre-halves, Ledley King and Jonathan Woodgate missed large chunks of last season through injury. In the case of Woodgate there are genuine concerns about whether he will play again. Redknapp admitted this month that the 30-year-old, who has not made an appearance for Spurs since November, was “at a very low point in his life” as he battled to overcome persistent groin injuries.

Davies, whose availability has also been at West Ham, has been in a couple of Fabio Capello’s England squads but he has yet to win a senior cap. He scored in Villa’s 3-1 win at Liverpool last August, but then had a spell on the sidelines following shoulder surgery and was unable to dislodge Dunne or Collins when he returned to fitness.

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Manchester City offer £20m for Aston Villa’s James Milner

• Villa owner, Randy Lerner, has said midfielder is not for sale
• Milner in World Cup squad after PFA young player award

Manchester City tabled a £20m offer for James Milner that Aston Villa are expected to flatly reject. Randy Lerner, the Villa chairman, made it clear last week that the Midlands club have no intention of selling the England international and City will have to significantly increase their bid for that stance to change.

Milner enjoyed an exceptional season at Villa, which culminated in him winning the Professional Footballers Association young player of the year award and catching the eye of a number of leading clubs, including Manchester United. The Guardian, however, revealed last month that Manchester City were the frontrunners in the chase to sign Milner and their interest has now crystallised into a formal bid being lodged. City were waiting for a response from Villa.

Brian Marwood, City’s football administrator, has long admired Milner’s qualities. He has known the midfielder ever since he burst onto the scene as a teenager at Leeds United, having worked closely with him during his previous employment as head of UK operations for Nike, which sponsors the 24-year-old.

Whether Marwood is able to convince Milner to leave Villa, however, remains to be seen. Sources close to the player claim that he feels a debt of gratitude to Martin O’Neill for the perseverance the Villa manager showed when he signed him from Newcastle United a little under two years ago.

Villa paid £12m for Milner, a fee that many considered to be over the odds at the time, although that now looks to be a shrewd investment.

Having won his first England cap against Holland in August, Milner has since gone on to become a regular in Fabio Capello’s set-up and is certain to be part of the squad that will go to the World Cup finals. Although he impressed Capello while playing on the right for Villa, O’Neill’s decision to move him from the flank to a central midfield role midway through last season proved to be a masterstroke and allowed Milner to blossom into one of England’s brightest prospects.

With that in mind, there is no indication that Milner will agitate for a move to join his former Villa team-mate Gareth Barry at Eastlands. Instead, the onus is likely to be on Villa and whether Lerner, who has talked of a “sell-to-by” policy this summer, can continue to resist City’s overtures. O’Neill would be deeply upset to lose Milner but the Villa manager will also be aware that his chairman has spoken about a “sell-to-buy” policy this summer and, as a result, a more substantial bid from City could prove much more difficult to turn down.

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