Barry Signing Shows Solid Manchester City Development Strategy
City's move for Barry is a good bit of business
When Manchester City were taken over last Autumn by foreign investors with pockets deeper than their oil wells, there was hysteria across the footballing world. The media whipped up a frenzy feasting on a seemingly endless list of managerial and transfer targets encouraged by ambitious and occasionally ridiculous club transfer targets.
Manchester City’s performance last season and failure to sign a cohort of superstars showed that money cannot buy you everything instantaneously. Whilst I am confident that Manchester City will become a Champions League calibre team within 3 years; much will depend on realistic ambitions, sensible planning and consistency by the owners.
Therefore it is evolution, not revolution, that is required. Despite the Kaka saga in January, things seem to be moving in the right direction for the Eastlands club.
The Manager
The backing of Mark Hughes despite a poor campaign is a sound decision. Whatever a team’s status, a manager must be allowed time to build a team and style of play. Frequent manager changes have played a clear role in the inability of Real Madrid and Chelsea to reach levels of Barcelona or Manchester United, whilst links can be made to the downfall of Newcastle United with managerial turmoil.
Manchester City cannot allow themselves to be sucked into the trap of trying to appoint a ‘brand name’ manager at the expense of progress; whether Hughes can deliver a title is unknown, but his success at Blackburn and ability to build a team make him the right man for the hot seat.
Hughes has shown that he is building a team, the headline signing of Robinho shows the clubs intent, but the signings of players such as Craig Bellamy, Shay Given, Nigel de Jong and Wayne Bridge show that the club has been realistic on many levels in the short-medium term. These players are not superstars but proven performers that the club need to build towards Champions League football.
The Players
Although parallels have been drawn to the Roman Abramovich takeover at Chelsea the Abu Dhabi consortium did not inherit a team anywhere near matching Chelsea’s in terms of league position or squad depth at takeover.
Without a Premier League or Champions League campaign on the horizon, attracting sufficient talent to Eastland’s to take the club forward is always going to be a challenge.
Enticing players at the pinnacle of the game will be difficult until the team qualifies for the Champions League; players at the top of the game are already millionaires in their own right and are more likely to be motivated by winning than money.
Obviously money will always be a factor and a bargaining chip, but why would players already living superstar lifestyles swap warmer climes and cosmopolitan cities such as Milan, Barcelona, Madrid or London for cold January mornings in Manchester without the carrot of on-field success?
Detractors may point to Manchester United’s stars or Robinho’s presence but it is Manchester United’s on-pitch success in the Premier League era that has allowed them to attract elite players It can be argued the Robinho signing is more a circumstantial anomaly than a general pattern, but if Kaka joins Madrid after snubbing Manchester City in January it will reinforce this view.
The strategy the club has adopted needs to be continued, obviously headline signings of star players of Robinho’s undoubted quality (if not his temperament), should be pursued there is a requirement for a squad nucleus built on realistic ambition to complement the superstars.
It is for this reason that Gareth Barry seems to be a very good signing for Manchester City, a versatile player with extensive Premier League experience, he is just what the doctor ordered. As an added bonus a reported fee of just £12m is 33% cheaper than the fee Aston Villa were demanding during last seasons ‘will he/wont he?’ debacle with Liverpool.
Surprisingly Manchester City were not forced to overpay for Barry unlike previous transfers, the ‘sugar daddy effect’ where players prices double on hearing of interest from a club with unlimited funds will plague Manchester City’s efforts to sign players.
To summarise, Manchester City have added an interesting facet to the make up of English football and indications show that despite their ambitions the owners seem to understand what is required to build the club. Whilst I expect that there may be approaches for many big name players this summer I also expect there to be a few more modest purchases.
Manchester City can only develop if ambitions and timelines are realistic. Money can buy most things but sometimes no matter what your resources, getting what you want takes time.








Great Article. Manchester City has to go for the slow build but you forgot that Barcelona won the treble with a manager who was appointed at the start of last season – Pep Guardiola.
I don’t think it shows anything of the sort! Barry has no connection to City. I thought he wanted to play in Europe for a top-4 side like ‘Pool or Arsenal. He’s gone there for money only as mercenary and I will be surprised if he has anything but his worst season ever at COMS.
My point is that Barry is a terrible purchase because he has gone for the wrong reasons. It was his last opportunity to move to a top-4 club and play Champions League. I think this move to city will even hurt his England career because he has now shown he has no sense or ambition.
Krisdlover6969xxx
complete tosh. It is a great signing. We have the the skipper of one of the best of the rest clubs. We have significantly strengthened our hand and weakened yours. M O’Neills complete lack of amibition in trying to win the UEFA cup was an embarrassment. Barry is now at a club that wants European success and will achieve it.
a bit of a nonsense singing, really. if they were smart, they would have picked players in specific areas that need strengthening. where are barry’s best positions…LB and as a holding midfielder. well, hes not as good as bridge at LB and hes certainly not as good as de jong. hell, i think michael johnson will be better than him within a couple of years. or, you could play him as a LW, as i am sure he will give robinho a run for his money. hahah.
point is, they just bought a player who will not strengthe their starting XI. they can play him as a left-sided midfielder, but i dont think he is better than elano or ireland. regardless, lets just see what they have in mind…
With Kompany or De Jong holding midfield, Barry and Ireland will complement each other perfectly. I am really excited by this midfiled trio.
People look at Robinho and say Real pushed him out the door and Man City swooped in with an opportunistic bid.
People look at Shay Given and say he was sick of the club turmoil and of having to keep bailing Newcastle out.
People look at Craig Bellamy and say, panic buy because they didn’t get Kaka in January.
Now people are looking at Barry and thinking, he’s in it for the money.
Many will also point that Man City have overpaid for these players – but they have to because all other clubs are playing hardball with them. My gut feeling is, while to us on the outside it looks like insane grandiosity (something my club is hardly foreign to), someone inside the club has a clear objective and a sensible plan to build the club towards it. Saying Barry is a mercenary pig might just be an easy way of ignoring the discomfort of not knowing what trick Man City’re going to pull next, because if we’re frank about it, Barry is a pretty astute signing.
David Beckham – “As far as I’m concerned, MAnchester United are the only team in Manchester” … So true
madridista, someone at city seems to have a plan to supplement the star chasing
Don’t forget that Guardiola has inherited a team of world class proportions. Would he have achieved the same at City? I very much doubt it. Hughes may get us there or, he may not. One thing is for sure though. He won’t do it if he ain’t given the time to!!!!
bobmagee….. you ought to know by now that Manchester United’s ground has always been in Stretford, Salford. City is the only PL team in the City of Manchester and what do footballers know (or care)about geography?