Football transfer rumours: Charles N’Zogbia to Birmingham?

Today’s guff is kicking back

The Sun reports the surprising news that reliable waddling packhorse Dirk Kuyt doesn’t really want to play for Liverpool any more and would like to be reunited with his goateed personal organ grinder Rafa Benítez at Internazionale. Kuyt’s agent Rob Jansen said: “The clubs continue to talk but Dirk has told Liverpool he no longer wants to be involved as this is something that he regards his career and life.” Which became much more interesting when The Mill imagined it being said by a moustachioed man in a belted trenchcoat with a really strong Dutch accent.

Birmingham have made a £9m bid for Wigan wing sulk Charles N’Zogbia, despite the fact the club’s parent company Birmingham International Holdings Ltd is about to collapse under the weight of its debts, which is all probably just a small misunderstanding and something to do with that nice Mr Yeung having not transferred some funds between his accounts when he meant to, or his car insurance coming up at the same time as someone’s stag weekend, and no indication whatsoever of impending Portsmouth-style financial meltdown.

West Ham will sign the Inter winger Victor Obinna today. “Av bags a Bin man,” the Sun says. His name contains the word “bin”. And bin men use bags. Therefore he is “a Bin man”; but also capable of being “bagged”, despite the fact it is usually household rubbish which is bagged and bin men that dispose of it. Inter have finally made a proper offer for Javier Mascherano. “I sent an offer to Liverpool by fax on Tuesday and am waiting for a reply from them,” sporting director Marco Branca said last night, switching on his Betamax player, firing up the Calor Gas heater and wondering if he should pop outside now to crank start his 1920s T Model Ford.

Twig-like Brazilian whiz-kid waif Neymar “will become a Chelsea player eventually” according to Pini Zahavi, who is allowed to say things like that. Pele has been campaigning for Neymar to stay at Santos. Mark Hughes is about to sign Carlos Salcido of PSV Eindhoven for Fulham, who may in turn replace Paul Konchesky, who has been linked with the revolving disappointing-Liverpool-left-back slot. Sam Allardyce wants to sign non-playing goal ace Benjani on a short-term deal just in case it’s still 2007.

In the Mirror, West Ham are after David Trezeguet of Juventus. Liverpool, West Brom, Aston Villa, Real Zaragoza and sandal-wearing, fig leaf-clad club-wielding warriors Hercules are also in the hunt. Grant also wants Spurs right-back stripling Kyle Walker on loan. And Everton and Blackburn are both after the Newcastle defender Stephen Taylor, who has all sorts of agent-related, wage-parity, Fabricio Coloccini-on-£80,000-a-week-and-I’m-still-sailing-a-third-hand-yacht-type problems. Sam Allardyce is “chasing a Swedish goal machine”. In a tractor, across the cheese fields of the remote circumpolar region, waving his butterfly net. The £2m-rated Denni Avdic has scored 17 goals in 20 games for Elfsborg this season. Blackpool are still keen on Sheffield Wednesday striker Marcus Tudgay.

In the Daily Mail Chelsea have made a £10m offer for cartwheeling, high-stepping, forward-capering Bayern Munich defensive heebie-jeebie-giver Martín Demichelis. He wants to go to Sevilla instead. Sven-Goran Eriksson is “interested” in becoming the manager of Ukraine, a nation he always supported as a boy and no let’s not talk about money just yet shall we actually let’s talk about money shall we and oh sorry look at that my hand is on your ha ha you have very beautiful nostrils. Juventus want to eventually pay £13m for on-loan midfield bystander Alberto Aquilani. Robinho and Roque Santa Cruz, neither of whom play for Manchester City any more, are both set to leave Manchester City.

And according to Goal.com Ronaldinho thinks Zlatan Ibrahimovic should join Milan. But then again Ronaldinho thought the UK should enter the ERM, Neville Chamberlain should cut a deal with that nice Führer chap, JFK should go for a nice quiet drive in Dallas with the roof down, Rodney Marsh should join Manchester City, Des Lynam would reignite his career by joining ITV and that he, Ronaldinho, would be a much better player if about three years ago he decided to eat lots of hot dogs, wear a headband, and simply caper about grinning and occasionally taking free kicks.

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Is this the least drawtastic season in top-flight history?

Plus: the first team to field players from six continents; the 1972-73 Arsenal Uefa Cup mystery; and players going out in a blaze of glory. Send your questions and answers to knowledge@guardian.co.uk

“There have been remarkably few draws in the Premier League this season,” notes Pete Andrews. “Are we on for a record?”

There have indeed been a mere nine draws in the Premier League so far this season, from 76 games this season, a total of just 11.8%. In contrast La Liga has seen 13 in 60 games (21.6%), Ligue 1 17 from 80 games (21.3%), Serie A 23 in 70 games (32.9%) and the Bundesliga 18 from 80 games (22.5%).

A statistical trawl through the archive shows that we are indeed on course for a Premier League record (yes, we know football existed before 1992, but our eyes are swimming with figures just having gone back 17 years, so it’ll have to do).

As you can see from our excellent and informative table on the left, no season since the Premier League began has had so few draws at this stage of the season. The memorable 1999-2000 season comes closest, with 13 draws (the numbers in brackets indicate the number of games played – the untidy nature of the fixture list means it’s impossible to compare exactly like-for-like). Last season there were 15, in 1995-96 17, and so on and so forth. You can order the table by ascending and descending orders by clicking on the headers.

In terms of the final reckoning, the 2005-06 season had comfortably the fewest stalemates (helped in no small part by the fact that Chelsea and Manchester City registered just four apiece all season) at 20.3%. But if we project this season’s current 11.8% over the course of the campaign, our rudimentary GCSE maths leads us to believe that come May we’ll see a season-long tally of around 11.8%.

Would that be a top-flight record? Only just we reckon. Back in 1890-91 there were only 16 draws in the 132 matches — a total of 12.1%.

WORLD XI

“When was the first time that a club fielded a starting XI with at least one player from all six continents (or major confederations)?” wondered Chris Cuomo last week.

Well, with the famous “galaxy of stars landing on Planet Premiership” post-1994, you’d expect this to have happened a while ago, yet the oldest suggestions we’ve had date back only to 2007.

Elliot Jacob suggests the Blackburn that lined up against Derby in December of that year. Rovers included Brad Friedel (Concacaf), Ryan Nelson (OFC), Aaron Mokoena (Caf), Brett Emerton (AFC), Roque Santa Cruz (Conmebol) and a host of players from the Uefa zone.

On a more geographical bent, Niel Butler suggests a similar team from two months earlier, with Emerton representing Australia the continent and Tugay and Zurab Khizanishvili representing Asia.

Stuart Meney reckons he can gazump both with a Middlesbrough team from March 2007, though he has stretched his suggestion to include substitutes: Lee Dong-gook (AFC), Yakubu (Caf), Jason Euell (Concacaf), Julio Arca (Conmebol), Viduka (OFC, at the time at least) and Stewart Downing and co for Uefa.