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Ronaldinho on wish list as City eye superstars

Marc Padgett
Sunday 20 April 2008 00:00 BST
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Manchester City are planning big-name close-season signings to ensure Champions' League football within the next two years, according to executive director Taweesuk Jack Srisumrid.

City's billionaire Thai owner Thaksin Shinawatra has his sights set on the Champions' League and wants the world's best players to ignite the club's growth overseas, Taweesuk said. "What we will look to do in the summer is to further boost the squad, bring in top-quality, internationally recognised players. Superstars would help fill the stadium and help our global branding. Primarily, we must win on the pitch – it can't be a gimmick."

One of those top names could be Barcelona's former world player of the year Ronaldinho, whom Taweesuk confirmed was a transfer target. "We've had discussions [with Ronaldinho] but we'll see how that pans out. We've looked at a host of players. Man City having discussions with superstar players used to be unimaginable, but not now. With investment, it's going forward.

"It won't be a galacticos strategy," he said, referring to Real Madrid's infamous transfer policy, "but older famous names. We want to build around the team we have."

Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin, ousted in a coup in 2006, bought City for £81.6 million while living in exile last July, a deal his critics dismissed as an expensive publicity stunt aimed at a return to politics.

The former policeman turned telecoms tycoon invested more than £40m in the squad, then saw City, who have gone three decades without a major trophy, record their best league start in more than a century, under new manager Sven Goran Eriksson, the former England coach whose future is said to be in doubt.

Taweesuk, a Harvard-educated businessman brought in by Thaksin ahead of the takeover, said the club's owner was ambitious and aiming for a top-eight finish this year, Uefa Cup qualification next season and a Champions' League berth by 2010.

He said City were in the process of building up contacts with foreign clubs and agents to bring in top players. The main target for City's growth and future funding will be Asia, he added, with player visits, fan clubs and academies planned initially for Hong Kong, China, Thailand, Japan and South Korea.

"We don't have the success of Manchester United but we can grow if we position ourselves as the Asian Premier League club," Taweesuk said.

"We have the finance for an initial investment period but we will need some returns at some point and that's where global branding comes in."

He insisted Thaksin was in it for the long haul with City and his investment was not politically motivated. "His circumstances were scrutinised," he said of Thaksin's assets seizure and corruption charges in Thailand, "[but] it's his love for football, and he wants to build his businesses up. He enjoys success but wants to work with football now."

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