guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 27 April 2011 01.02 BST <li class="history">Article history
Pepe Reina said the Liverpool owners [Fenway Sports group] have a 'convincing' project at Anfield. Photograph: Tom Jenkins
The Liverpool goalkeeper Pepe Reina has eased fears at the club that he may try to leave this summer by talking openly about his desire to stay and "fight for titles" at Anfield.
The Spain international had suggested previously this season that he might try to further his career away from Liverpool, like Xabi Alonso and Fernando Torres, if the club failed to meet his ambitions. But the 28-year-old, who is believed to have a £20m release clause in his current five-year contract, now appears to see a future for himself at a club that has been rejuvenated under the caretaker manager, Kenny Dalglish.
"I am happy, calm and comfortable here," Reina told the Spanish radio station Cadena Cope. "[I am] looking towards the future which I reckon will bring a lot of happiness and hopefully the new project with the new American owners [Fenway Sports Group] will be a convincing one.
"Obviously [Rafael] Benítez brought me here but that doesn't mean that I'm unhappy with [Kenny] Dalglish, quite the opposite. I think he's the ideal man for Liverpool at this moment.
"It's my understanding, and based on what I've gathered from the people here, that we will be bringing in some important players, continuing to grow and hopefully in one or two years we will be in the place that Liverpool deserves to be, which is fighting for titles."
Reina had been linked with Manchester United but moved to ease Liverpool fans' concerns that he might be an option to replace Edwin van der Sar at the end of the season. "I am not going to Manchester, that is not my intention," he said. "I don't know if I am a candidate for them; I am sure that they have evaluated a lot of goalkeepers, not just [David] De Gea or Reina."
Few would have expected Schalke to reach the semi-finals of the Champions League – certainly not after losing their first four games at the start of the season. But the German club have knocked the likes of Internazionale and Valencia our of Europe's top competition since then, hence the apprehension writ on Alex Ferguson's face Photograph: Carl Recine/Action Images
Few would have expected Schalke to reach the semi-finals of the Champions League certainly not after losing their first four games at the start of the season. But the German club have knocked the likes of Internazionale and Valencia our of Europe's top competition since then, hence the apprehension writ on Alex Ferguson's face Photograph: Carl Recine/Action Images
13 Apr 2011
The former Real Madrid striker scored the first goal and set up the second as Schalke made it into the semi-finals of the Champions League for the first time
12 Apr 2011
Lionel Messi ended any hopes of a Shakhtar Donetsk comeback with a well taken first-half goal in the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final
6 Apr 2011
Manchester United took a 1-0 lead in their Champions League quarter-final with Chelsea thanks to Wayne Rooney's first-half goal at Stamford Bridge
27 Apr 2011: Richard Williams: Manchester United's Mexican prodigy showed all-round skills beyond the striker's gifts that would have impressed Schalke's Raúl 17 comments
27 Apr 2011: Paul Hayward: Barcelona and Real Madrid, the two highest-earning clubs in world football, send out the game's two finest players for a place in a Champions League final at Wembley 17 comments
26 Apr 2011: Daniel Taylor: Sir Alex Ferguson can depend on Fabio, Nani is not always necessary and Michael Owen may as well pack his bags now 369 comments
Video (2min 10sec), 26 Apr 2011: Sir Alex Ferguson admits apprehension ahead of Manchester United's Champions League semi-final against underdog German team Schalke 04
25 Apr 2011: Schalke have said they will make a late decision on defender Benedikt Höwedes's fitness for their Champions League first leg against Manchester United
13 Apr 2011
The former Real Madrid striker scored the first goal and set up the second as Schalke made it into the semi-finals of the Champions League for the first time
12 Apr 2011
Lionel Messi ended any hopes of a Shakhtar Donetsk comeback with a well taken first-half goal in the second leg of their Champions League quarter-final
6 Apr 2011
Manchester United took a 1-0 lead in their Champions League quarter-final with Chelsea thanks to Wayne Rooney's first-half goal at Stamford Bridge
27 Apr 2011: Richard Williams: Manchester United's Mexican prodigy showed all-round skills beyond the striker's gifts that would have impressed Schalke's Raúl 17 comments
27 Apr 2011: Paul Hayward: Barcelona and Real Madrid, the two highest-earning clubs in world football, send out the game's two finest players for a place in a Champions League final at Wembley 17 comments
26 Apr 2011: Daniel Taylor: Sir Alex Ferguson can depend on Fabio, Nani is not always necessary and Michael Owen may as well pack his bags now 369 comments
Video (2min 10sec), 26 Apr 2011: Sir Alex Ferguson admits apprehension ahead of Manchester United's Champions League semi-final against underdog German team Schalke 04
25 Apr 2011: Schalke have said they will make a late decision on defender Benedikt Höwedes's fitness for their Champions League first leg against Manchester United
Javier Hernández of Manchester United, left, shakes off the challenge of Schalke's Joël Matip at the Veltins Arena. Photograph: John Peters/Man Utd via Getty Images
A couple of minor demons were put to flight in Gelsenkirchen. Wayne Rooney, who made the first of Manchester United's goals and scored the second, will no longer be required to think of the Veltins Arena as the place where his dismissal prefaced England's exit from the 2006 World Cup. Meanwhile his manager was taking a big step towards ending a run of defeats at the hands of German teams – Borussia Dortmund, Bayer Leverkusen, Bayern Munich – for United under his command in two-legged Champions League knockout rounds.
For Rooney this was a particularly satisfying night. Having spent the morning, according to his Twitter message, in his hotel room listening to the Beatles, he produced a display good enough to expunge the memory of the doleful figure who stumbled through the World Cup last summer and took months to emerge from some sort of personal slough of despond.
The arrival of Javier Hernández as an attacking partner seems to have reawakened the enthusiasm formerly aroused by the presence of Cristiano Ronaldo and Carlos Tevez. Once again Rooney is playing with optimism, as though anything is possible any time he has the ball. The return of Antonio Valencia may be another contributory factor, the Ecuadorian here providing United with a series of threatening raids that encouraged the forwards to make answering runs.
United made enough chances to have widened the margin considerably against a side whose coherence never came close to matching their spirit. You do not go away from home in the semi-final of the European Cup and expect to enjoy two-thirds of the possession and perhaps 90% of the chances. Come the end of the second leg at Old Trafford next Wednesday, however, it is unlikely that they will be rueing the number of opportunities they spurned here.
Rooney, Ryan Giggs, Fábio da Silva, Park Ji-sung and Michael Carrick might all have lit up the scoreboard in the first half. But the best chances fell to Hernández, who found an impenetrable foe in Manuel Neuer, Schalke's hero of the night.
The 22-year-old Mexican was quickly into his stride, darting through the Schalke defence with his increasingly familiar blend of persistence and a perceptive eye for fissures in the opposing defence. In the sixth minute he pulled away from his marker at the far post to meet a low, curling centre from Valencia with a shot saved by Neuer. Then he was scampering through to meet Park's prodded pass, only for Neuer to smother a shot from a difficult angle.
Sir Alex Ferguson bought Hernández in the summer but did not expect him to settle in so quickly. Before this match he had made 40 appearances in all competitions and scored 19 goals, a rate of return that has delighted not only his new manager but also United's support, responsive to his transparent eagerness.
Hernández is a terrific goal-snatcher, a prodigy in the mould of Michael Owen, who travelled with United's squad but was not even named among the substitutes here, and of Raúl González, once the prodigy of all prodigies at Real Madrid, who led Schalke's line for this match without reward.
Of their generation, born in the 1970s, Raúl, Owen and Filippo Inzaghi were the most lethal predators, all three with a gift for timing their sprints to confound the shrewdest defensive trap. Ferguson, who once admiringly joked that Inzaghi must have been "born offside", nurtures a particular affection for the breed, and now he has captured what looks very much like the latest example, similar in build and with an identical aim in life.
Here, given considerable responsibility alongside Rooney, Hernández was able to show other dimensions of his play as he held the ball up in the centre under pressure from Schalke's burly centre‑backs, Joël Matip and Christoph Metzelder, made occasional forays to the flanks and searched constantly for opportunities to create combinations with his attacking partner. From their different vantage points both Owen and Raúl must have been watching Hernández with a nostalgic ache as he fought a personal duel with the remarkable Neuer, who left the field at half-time to the sound of an ovation from the home fans behind his goal.
After surely the most one-sided 45 minutes of United's season, Schalke could have taken the lead in the first 20 seconds after the interval, and it was Raúl who should have accepted the opportunity, racing in at the near post but failing, under Rio Ferdinand's timely challenge, to match his old standards by making a clean connection with Jefferson Farfán's perfect slanting pass. Six minutes later Hernández finally had the ball in Neuer's net, hooking it home with a brusque left-footed volley, only to be given offside. It was not as futile a gesture as it might have seemed. "That broke the dam," Ferguson said later. "After that the players knew they could beat the guy."
Outside the stadium there were posters advertising a forthcoming Oldies Marathon, starring such museum pieces as Shakin' Stevens, the Rubettes, the Sweet, Smokie and Boney M. Eventually it was one of the golden oldies who broke the deadlock, Giggs cruising lethally on to Rooney's sweet reverse pass. But youth would not be kept down and two minutes later Hernández authored an equally cunning pass, from which Rooney suavely left the brave Neuer helpless once again.
Javier Hernández of Manchester United, left, shakes off the challenge of Schalke's Joël Matip at the Veltins Arena. Photograph: John Peters/Man Utd via Getty Images
A couple of minor demons were put to flight in Gelsenkirchen. Wayne Rooney, who made the first of Manchester United's goals and scored the second, will no longer be required to think of the Veltins Arena as the place where his dismissal prefaced England's exit from the 2006 World Cup. Meanwhile his manager was taking a big step towards ending a run of defeats at the hands of German teams Borussia Dortmund, Bayer Leverkusen, Bayern Munich for United under his command in two-legged Champions League knockout rounds.
For Rooney this was a particularly satisfying night. Having spent the morning, according to his Twitter message, in his hotel room listening to the Beatles, he produced a display good enough to expunge the memory of the doleful figure who stumbled through the World Cup last summer and took months to emerge from some sort of personal slough of despond.
The arrival of Javier Hernández as an attacking partner seems to have reawakened the enthusiasm formerly aroused by the presence of Cristiano Ronaldo and Carlos Tevez. Once again Rooney is playing with optimism, as though anything is possible any time he has the ball. The return of Antonio Valencia may be another contributory factor, the Ecuadorian here providing United with a series of threatening raids that encouraged the forwards to make answering runs.
United made enough chances to have widened the margin considerably against a side whose coherence never came close to matching their spirit. You do not go away from home in the semi-final of the European Cup and expect to enjoy two-thirds of the possession and perhaps 90% of the chances. Come the end of the second leg at Old Trafford next Wednesday, however, it is unlikely that they will be rueing the number of opportunities they spurned here.
Rooney, Ryan Giggs, Fábio da Silva, Park Ji-sung and Michael Carrick might all have lit up the scoreboard in the first half. But the best chances fell to Hernández, who found an impenetrable foe in Manuel Neuer, Schalke's hero of the night.
The 22-year-old Mexican was quickly into his stride, darting through the Schalke defence with his increasingly familiar blend of persistence and a perceptive eye for fissures in the opposing defence. In the sixth minute he pulled away from his marker at the far post to meet a low, curling centre from Valencia with a shot saved by Neuer. Then he was scampering through to meet Park's prodded pass, only for Neuer to smother a shot from a difficult angle.
Sir Alex Ferguson bought Hernández in the summer but did not expect him to settle in so quickly. Before this match he had made 40 appearances in all competitions and scored 19 goals, a rate of return that has delighted not only his new manager but also United's support, responsive to his transparent eagerness.
Hernández is a terrific goal-snatcher, a prodigy in the mould of Michael Owen, who travelled with United's squad but was not even named among the substitutes here, and of Raúl González, once the prodigy of all prodigies at Real Madrid, who led Schalke's line for this match without reward.
Of their generation, born in the 1970s, Raúl, Owen and Filippo Inzaghi were the most lethal predators, all three with a gift for timing their sprints to confound the shrewdest defensive trap. Ferguson, who once admiringly joked that Inzaghi must have been "born offside", nurtures a particular affection for the breed, and now he has captured what looks very much like the latest example, similar in build and with an identical aim in life.
Here, given considerable responsibility alongside Rooney, Hernández was able to show other dimensions of his play as he held the ball up in the centre under pressure from Schalke's burly centre‑backs, Joël Matip and Christoph Metzelder, made occasional forays to the flanks and searched constantly for opportunities to create combinations with his attacking partner. From their different vantage points both Owen and Raúl must have been watching Hernández with a nostalgic ache as he fought a personal duel with the remarkable Neuer, who left the field at half-time to the sound of an ovation from the home fans behind his goal.
After surely the most one-sided 45 minutes of United's season, Schalke could have taken the lead in the first 20 seconds after the interval, and it was Raúl who should have accepted the opportunity, racing in at the near post but failing, under Rio Ferdinand's timely challenge, to match his old standards by making a clean connection with Jefferson Farfán's perfect slanting pass. Six minutes later Hernández finally had the ball in Neuer's net, hooking it home with a brusque left-footed volley, only to be given offside. It was not as futile a gesture as it might have seemed. "That broke the dam," Ferguson said later. "After that the players knew they could beat the guy."
Outside the stadium there were posters advertising a forthcoming Oldies Marathon, starring such museum pieces as Shakin' Stevens, the Rubettes, the Sweet, Smokie and Boney M. Eventually it was one of the golden oldies who broke the deadlock, Giggs cruising lethally on to Rooney's sweet reverse pass. But youth would not be kept down and two minutes later Hernández authored an equally cunning pass, from which Rooney suavely left the brave Neuer helpless once again.