Aston Villa to discuss James Milner’s future before World Cup

• Meeting scheduled for turn of the month
• Manchester City expected to increase £20m offer

Aston Villa will hold preliminary talks with James Milner and his agent before the World Cup to establish whether the England international wants to stay with the club. Villa intend to use the meeting to outline their plans as they seek to persuade the midfielder to agree a new contract and resist a lucrative move to Manchester City. Milner is keen to meet Villa to discuss broader issues, including the club’s direction and their ability to bring in players that would enable them to compete with the Premier League’s leading teams, before making a decision.

With free time at a premium because of Milner’s commitments with England, the meeting will take place on either 31 May or 1 June, after the friendlies against Mexico and Japan and before Fabio Capello’s squad fly to South Africa, on 2 June, for the World Cup finals. Paul Faulkner, Villa’s chief executive, will meet Milner and his agent, although it is unclear whether Randy Lerner, the club’s chairman, and Martin O’Neill, the manager, will attend.

Although Villa have spoken of their intention to offer Milner a contract to replace his existing deal, which has two years to run, the club have yet to put any figures in front of the player. Whether that changes when the parties get together remains to be seen, with Villa understood to view the meeting as an opportunity to gauge Milner’s mood rather than a chance to get him to put pen to paper. It appears that at best Villa hope to get a verbal agreement from Milner.

That scenario looks highly unlikely, however, with Milner expected to decide he has a better chance of fulfilling his ambitions by following his former Villa team-mate Gareth Barry to Eastlands. City have yet to make a second bid, after their opening offer of £20m was rejected on Wednesday, but their determination to sign Milner is such that it is a matter of when and not if they will test Villa’s resistance again.

Villa are determined to take a firm stance over the issue, as they did when Liverpool unsuccessfully pursued Barry two years ago, but the combination of City’s financial muscle and Milner’s head being turned means that they could be facing a losing battle this time.

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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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Portsmouth administrator hits out at Martin O’Neill over Europe exclusion

• Andrew Andronikou criticises Aston Villa manager
• ‘It smacks of pressure from one or two clubs,’ he says

Andrew Andronikou, the Portsmouth administrator, has fiercely criticised Martin O’Neill, the Premier League and Football Association, claiming that yesterday’s statement issued by the governing bodies which said the club could not make a late application for next season’s Europa League “smacked of pressure” from the Aston Villa manager.

“There was Martin O’Neill wagging and pointing his finger saying we shouldn’t be allowed because at the time Villa hadn’t qualified yet for Europe,” Andronikou said. “It smacks of pressure from one or two clubs.”

After Villa’s 2-1 victory at Portsmouth on 18 April, O’Neill said: “Would I have a problem with Portsmouth’s application to get into Europe? I probably would if we finished seventh, yeah.”

Villa can now finish no lower than seventh, so gaining the club entry to the Europa League, provided Portsmouth are not allowed to take up the place normally awarded to the FA Cup finalists if their opponents have already qualified. Portsmouth play Chelsea, who have already qualified for the Champions League, at Wembley next month.

Portsmouth missed the 1 March deadline imposed by the Premier League and FA to apply for a Uefa licence due to being in administration. Wednesday’s statement was an attempt from the governing bodies to clarify their position, after Andronikou had called their approach to the issue “quite a shambles”.

One part of the press release said: “The FA and Premier League made Mr Andronikou’s lawyers, who we had been asked to deal with, aware on 16 April that we would not accept a late Uefa club licence application from Portsmouth.”

That it understood to have been in the form of an email, although Adronikou said no correspondence had been received: “I can say there has been no official contact with our lawyers from the FA or Premier League. I’m very surprised they made this statement. I thought they would just stand back and allow normal protocol to proceed.

“All we want is a direct dialogue rather than have to conduct our business through the media. We’ve conducted ourselves in a professional manner.”

Asked why he thought the Premier League and FA had issued the statement, Andronikou said: “Look at the Premier League down the years; they never speak on such matters. Now they are saying it is all Portsmouth’s fault – we don’t need that. The Premier League represents the club, we still have a share in the Premier League.”

He admitted to feeling let down by the governing bodies. “I’m just amazed – we are very much the football family, I’d hope they’d support us in our hour of need but they’ve made a rod for their own backs. They are not even willing to listen and are making a mockery of the whole system. They’re happy enough in their ivory towers.”

Andronikou has said he will consider taking the case to the court of arbitration for sport. He claimed the cost in legal fees of such an action would be worth it but did admit that the chances of winning such a case might be slim.

“Our legal counsel says it’s a remote chance. But absolutely we can afford it – the funds would come from the administration [finance]. If we, as administrators, believe it’s financially beneficial for the club and creditors I don’t believe it’s cost prohibitive. And you are missing the point – the administration process is expensive so should that mean we should abandon that?”

Andronikou hopes to take Portsmouth out of administration by the end of next month. Rob Lloyd, who represents an unknown potential buyer, started due diligence at the start of this month.

Alhough Lloyd stated an offer would be made during the past week, Adronikou said he is yet to receive anything concrete. “I’ve had no contact with him for around two weeks. I understand he is in the process of making a formal offer in writing, but I have yet to receive this.”

Lloyd did not return calls today.

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