Premier League transfer window – who needs whom?

A club-by-club guide to the ins and outs of the transfer window so far

Arsenal

Laurent Koscielny and Marouane Chamakh have arrived to bolster defence and attack. Arsène Wenger still needs a goalkeeper as he remains unconvinced by the current No1, Manuel Almunia. Mark Schwarzer is favourite but Manchester City’s Shay Given may interest the manager, who has up to £15m to spend

Who they have signed

Laurent Koscielny (Lorient, £9.7m), Marouane Chamakh (Bordeaux, free)

Who they still want

Mark Schwarzer (Fulham), Shay Given (Manchester City)

Aston Villa

It is difficult to see much activity at Villa Park unless a permanent manager is appointed before the window closes. With Stephen Ireland arriving as part of the James Milner deal and several promising youngsters emerging, Villa’s squad looks reasonably strong, although a prolific goalscorer would be a welcome addition

Who they have signed

Stephen Ireland (Manchester City, part-exchange)

Who they still want

No targets at present

Birmingham City

Alex McLeish has endured plenty of frustration since making a couple of early signings. The arrival of Matt Derbyshire has increased McLeish’s attacking options but the Birmingham manager still feels his squad lacks depth and quality. A left-winger, such as Charles N’Zogbia, remains high on his list

Who they have signed

Ben Foster (Man Utd, £6m), Nikola Zigic (Valencia, £6m), Enric Valles (NAC Breda, free), Matt Derbyshire (Olympiakos, loan)

Who they still want

Charles N’Zogbia (Wigan)

Blackburn Rovers

A prospective new owner is talking up a £100m war chest for Sam Allardyce and, alarmingly, the prospect of bringing David Beckham to Ewood Park. Back in the real world, Allardyce is continuing his exhaustive search for an inexpensive striker to rectify last season’s glaring weakness

Who they have signed

Hugo Fernández (Unión Deportiva Cornellà, nominal), Mame Biram Diouf (Man Utd, loan)

Who they still want

Ivelin Popov (Litex Lovech), Benjani Mwaruwari (free agent)

Blackpool

A chaotic summer has now seen Blackpool’s chairman, Karl Oyston, step down, leaving Ian Holloway and his players with little inkling of what the future holds. A £10,000 a week wage ceiling makes recruitment tricky

Who they have signed

Craig Cathcart (Man Utd, £500k), Chris Basham (Bolton, £500k), Marlon Harewood (free agent), Elliot Grandin (CSKA Sofia, undisc), Ludovic Sylvestre (Mlada Boleslav, undisc), Malaury Martin (Monaco, free)

Who they still want

Anyone Holloway can get his hands on

Bolton Wanderers

Owen Coyle hopes mainly to trim his squad, with Danny Shittu and Jlloyd Samuel among those available, but he will explore the loan market towards the end of the window. The priority is a passer in midfield after recruiting Jack Wilshere on loan from Arsenal last season

Who they have signed

Marcos Alonso (Real Madrid, £1.6m), Tom Eaves (Oldham, £350,000), Robbie Blake (Burnley, free), Ivan Klasnic (Nantes, free), Martin Petrov (Man City, free)

Who they still want

Tom Cleverley (Man Utd)

Chelsea

Carlo Ancelotti began the summer wanting to bolster his midfield and attack, and following Ricardo Carvalho’s departure for Real Madrid he now appears light in central defence, although he says he will not be strengthening that area. If he can add the Brazil forward Neymar he will be content

Who they have signed

Ramires (Benfica £16.3m), Yossi Benayoun (Liverpool, £5m), Matej Delac (Zapresic, £2.7m), Tomas Kalac (Sigma, undisc)

Who they still want

Neymar (Santos)

Everton

Ideally, David Moyes would love to add a top goalscorer and a quick right-midfielder to his squad. The reality is that he has no money to spend unless he sells Yakubu Ayegbeni, Joseph Yobo and, more reluctantly, Steven Pienaar. The approach to Craig Bellamy shows Moyes has not given up hope of a late solution

Who they have signed

Magaye Gueye (Strasbourg, £900k), João Silva (Aves, £500k), Jermaine Beckford (Leeds, free), Jan Mucha (Legia Warsaw, free)

Who they still want

Marat Izmailov (Sporting Lisbon)

Fulham

Mark Hughes’s squad is light on fresh faces and, if Mark Schwarzer moves to Arsenal, he will need a goalkeeper. A central defender is also a requirement due to Philippe Senderos’s six-month layoff with an achilles injury. Hughes’s budget extends to around £12m

Who they have signed

Moussa Dembélé (AZ Alkmaar, £5m), Jonathan Greening (West Brom, free), Philippe Senderos (Arsenal, free)

Who they still want

Shay Given (Man City), Paul Robinson (Blackburn), Curtis Davies (Aston Villa)

Liverpool

Roy Hodgson has confirmed he will not be seeking marquee names if a takeover does materialise very soon. “We are looking to add one or two players,” he said this week. Priorities are a striker and a left-back are the priorities

Who they have signed

Christian Poulsen (Juventus, £5m), Brad Jones (Middlesbrough, £2.3m), Danny Wilson (Rangers, £2m), Jonjo Shelvey (Charlton £1.7m), Joe Cole (Chelsea, free), Milan Jovanovic (Standard Liège, free)

Who they still want

Paul Konchesky (Fulham), Nacho Monreal (Osasuna), Ola Toivonen (PSV Eindhoven)

Manchester City

Roberto Mancini has said City’s summer spending – six players at a total cost of £126m – is now finished and there is no reason to disbelieve him but the club’s financial position means they will always be in the market if a top player suddenly becomes available. Saturday’s draw at Tottenham demonstrated there are still areas of the team that need improvement, particularly in defence but also the need for a target man in attack Who they have signed

David Silva (Valencia, £26m), James Milner (Aston Villa, £26m), Yaya Touré (Barcelona, £24.5m), Mario Balotelli (Inter, £22.5m), Aleksandar Kolarov (Lazio, £16.5m), Jérôme Boateng (Hamburg, £10.5m)

Who they still want

David Luiz (Benfica) and Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Barcelona) are possible targets

Manchester United

Sir Alex Ferguson has spent around £25m this summer and it is difficult to imagine the Glazers releasing any more transfer funds given the club’s financial position. United are the best in the business, though, when it comes to pulling off under-the-radar deals, so it cannot be completely ruled out. Mesut Ozil was a genuine target until it became clear he favoured Real Madrid

Who they have signed

Chris Smalling (Fulham, £10m), Bébé (Vitória, £7.4m), Javier Hernández (Chivas, £6m)

Who they still want

Raúl Meireles (Porto) is a possible target

Newcastle United

Chris Hughton has been constrained by the general policy directive – breached in Sol Campbell’s case – to sign promising under-25s as cheaply as possible on salaries lower than £25,000 a week. Lack of cover in defence and a shortage of creativity needs addressing

Who they have signed

James Perch (Nottm Forest, £1.4m), Sol Campbell (free agent), Dan Gosling (Everton, free)

Who they still want

Hatem Ben Arfa (Marseille), Victor Anichebe (Everton), cover at left-back

Stoke City

Tony Pulis was linked with a bid for the Wigan Athletic striker Hugo Rodallega, but news that Kenwyne Jones’s injury is as not as serious as first feared means that the deal is unlikely. Pulis’s main task for the remainder of the transfer window is to offload several fringe players who are contributing little beyond adding to the wage bill

Who they have signed

Kenwyne Jones (Sunderland, £8m), Florent Cuvelier (Portsmouth, undisc)

Who they still want

Nobody

Sunderland

Recruiting a physically imposing target man to replace Kenwyne Jones is Steve Bruce’s priority, although Charles N’Zogbia is also very much wanted on Wearside

Who they have signed

Marcos Angeleri (Estudiantes, £2m), Simon Mignolet (Sint Truidense, £2m), Titus Bramble (Wigan, £1m), Cristian Riveros (Toluca, free), Nedum Onuoha (Man City, loan), Danny Welbeck (Man Utd, loan)

Who they still want

Charles N’Zogbia (Wigan), Asamoah Gyan (Rennes), Roque Santa Cruz (Man City)

West Bromwich Albion

The flaws in Roberto Di Matteo’s squad were exposed in the 6-0 defeat at Chelsea. The manager is keen to bring in a defender, central midfielder, winger and centre-forward

Who they have signed

Nicky Shorey (Aston Villa, £1.5m), Boaz Myhill (Hull, £1.5m), Gabriel Tamas (Auxerre, £800k), Pablo Ibáñez (Atletico Madrid, free)

Who they still want

Marc Wilson (Portsmouth), Cheick Tioté (FC Twente), Peter Odemwingie (Lokomotiv Moscow)

Tottenham Hotspur

Harry Redknapp is ready to ship out Robbie Keane and Jermaine Jenas to accommodate new personnel. With Ledley King a perennial injury concern and Jonathan Woodgate’s season in doubt, he would like to sign a central defender. He was also keen on Craig Bellamy, suggesting he wants a forward

Who they have signed

Sandro (Internacional, £6m)

Who they still want

William Gallas (free agent), Brede Hangeland (Fulham), Loïc Rémy (Nice), Scott Parker (West Ham)

West Ham United

Avram Grant has bought in bulk but is still in the market for a right-back and is keen to sign a 15-goal-a-season man. Kieron Dyer made yet another comeback in the reserves recently so may give the squad a welcome boost

Who they have signed

Pablo Barrera (Pumas UNAM, £4m), Winston Reid (Midtjylland, £3m), Frédéric Piquionne (Lyon, £1m), Thomas Hitzlsperger (Lazio, free), Tal Ben Haim (Portsmouth, loan)

Who they still want

Nigel Reo-Coker (Aston Villa), Roque Santa Cruz (Manchester City)

Wigan Athletic

The loss of Titus Bramble has destabilised the defence and manager Roberto Martínez desperately needs to replace him. Keeping the likes of Hugo Rodallega and Charles N’Zogbia is also crucial

Who they have signed

Mauro Boselli (Estudiantes, £6.5m), Ronnie Stam (FC Twente, £3m), James McArthur (Hamilton, £500k), Antolín Alcaraz (Brugge, free), Ali al-Habsi (Bolton, loan)

Who they still want

Franco Di Santo (Chelsea, loan), Steven Caldwell (free agent)

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David Moyes reads riot act after sloppy Everton bow to Blackburn

• Tim Howard’s blunder ends Everton’s long unbeaten run
• Nikola Kalinic sheds puppy fat to become lean and mean

So intense is the battle for the top four expected to be this Premier League season that on its eve the learned campaigners Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsène Wenger both put forward Everton as potential gatecrashers. Not on the evidence presented at Ewood Park, however, and David Moyes acknowledged as much.

Such was their vibrancy at the end of 2009-10 – including a sumptuous and rare away victory on this very turf – that Everton would not have wanted the season to end. Unbeaten in their final 11 matches, momentum was clearly with the blue half of the Merseyside divide.

Yet despite the return of recuperated limbs, which has them at optimum strength, Everton hit a buffer upon the top-flight’s resumption and the club’s longest sequence without defeat for 24 years was terminated when Nikola Kalinic’s predatory instinct exposed Tim Howard’s clanger for the only goal.

There were still 76 minutes remaining for Everton to muster a response and failure to do so irked Moyes most. Their attacking play, awesome in April, was abject in August. Of suggestions they can mount a serious challenge akin to Tottenham’s monopoly-busting campaign of last year, Moyes said: “I think we can be but not on this performance and I have let the players know. I’m setting the bar really high. It wasn’t what I wanted and it wasn’t enough. We didn’t show enough invention going forward and our play was too sloppy.

“I don’t think anyone can say we deserved to lose but the point of the matter is that we didn’t do enough and I want my team to go out to win. What it reminds you of is that whoever you play in the Premier League you are going to have a hard task.”

Winning at venues such as Blackburn and Stoke are, as Spurs discovered last season, what Champions League qualifications are made of. But a lack of fluency, significantly contributed to by Blackburn’s robust harrying in central areas, ensured Everton began their quest with a setback.

“Expectations are good, it’s what we have wanted so we can’t complain about them being higher now,” the captain, Phil Neville, said. “We wanted a big squad, we wanted two players for every position and now we have it we can’t go into our shell and become fearful. We have to show our mettle and whether we have what it takes to get into that top four.

“There’s a lot of disappointment in that dressing room – we wanted to start with a good result and this is a kick in the teeth.”

Blackburn might have been in front inside two minutes when Morten Gamst Pedersen’s cute ball allowed Martin Olsson to beat the offside trap, but his chip cleared the onrushing Howard and the crossbar.

In a game of few chances, the hosts also missed the best: Steven Nzonzi and Ryan Nelsen both off-target when unmarked in the second half. Sam Allardyce’s team tenaciously clung to what they had, however, and although ruffled in the final quarter-hour, when Phil Jagielka’s long-ranger was palmed out by Paul Robinson and substitute Diniyar Bilyaletdinov thrice flirted with the goal during a goalmouth scramble, secured three points thanks to their new-look Croat. Kalinic, 22, now cuts quite a contrasting figure to the spindly £6m striker snapped up from Hajduk Split last summer.

“Strength-wise we’ve done core weights with him ever since he’s been here,” Allardyce said. “He was like a little boy when he first came, with rolls of puppy fat on him. We’ve tried to turn him into a man and you can see that physical presence now.”

Man of the match Phil Jones (Blackburn)

Premier LeagueBlackburn RoversEvertonRichard Gibsonguardian.co.uk

Blackburn Rovers 1-0 Everton | Premier League match report

Everton’s longest unbeaten run for 24 years was unpicked by a goalkeeping blunder from Tim Howard as Blackburn avenged defeat in this fixture four months ago.

The Croatian Nikola Kalinic will not score an easier goal all season than the 14th-minute effort gift-wrapped to him when Howard dropped the ball under no pressure. It terminated Everton’s 11-game sequence without defeat, their best since 1986.

Lacking the slickness of their 3-2 win on the same turf, David Moyes’s visitors – back in rude health following an injury-blighted 2009-10 campaign – could not muster an equaliser to preserve their dominance over Rovers.

Blackburn even had to overcome the early loss of their pivotal midfielder David Dunn, who lasted nine minutes before succumbing to what appeared to be discomfort in his left groin.

Martin Olsson, operating in an advanced role down the left, had already gone close by that stage. Wandering off the flank within seconds of kick-off to beat the offside trap, he nicked the ball over the advancing Howard, but his chip from the edge of the penalty area lacked the dip to creep under the crossbar.

Despite the loss of Dunn, their most obvious source of creativity, Blackburn secured victory with the first goal of the Premier League season. There was no apparent danger when El-Hadji Diouf’s innocuous header forward was collected chest-high on the edge of the area by Howard. But the ball somehow squirmed from the American’s grasp as he planted his feet and the alert Kalinic swivelled to guide the ball inside the far post.

Everton struggled to replicate their sublime April performance when they consigned Blackburn to their only home league defeat of 2010. Only twice did they force Paul Robinson into action in the first half but shots from Tim Cahill and Stephen Pienaar lacked venom.

There was no lack of it in Morten Gamst Pedersen’s late challenge on Mikel Arteta, however, which merited the first caution of the afternoon. Significant previous between the pair – Arteta poked the Norwegian in the eye in April’s victory – spiced things up whenever their paths crossed and the referee, Phil Dowd, took exception to a tread on the standing boot.

Blackburn’s first clean sheet on the opening day for eight years was confirmed when Robinson fisted out Phil Jagielka’s late drive.

Premier LeagueBlackburn RoversEvertonRichard Gibsonguardian.co.uk