Showing posts with label Patrice Evra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrice Evra. Show all posts

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Evra pinpoints Bursaspor win as moment that turned the season

Patrice Evra says that Manchester United’s victory over Turkish club Bursaspor in October was a monumental moment in the season.
The Red Devils got over Bursaspor 1-0 in an unconvincing performance in the Champions League group stage but it was the events prior to the game which really brought the squad together.
Wayne Rooney had announced that he wanted to leave the club, later rescinding those comments, but at the time Evra said it was a point where the champions really kicked into gear.
"The year twisted on that game against Bursaspor," he said.
"We won but everyone was criticising us. [But] for all the trouble that was around the club, I felt then the team was more of a unit.
"I just knew Man Utd were going to come together."
But besides that, Evra felt that United were always in control in the run-in to the title.
"Although we were dropping points I never felt anyone was better than us," he added.
"It was always our fault. Every time it was us making the mistake.
"I wasn't sure about Chelsea. They won their first two matches easily [6-0 against both West Brom and Wigan] and it led people to say they would win the title.
"I wanted to see what happened when they had their first real test. They got it at Man City, and they lost.
"After that I thought we would do well."

Evra: Park can run all day with Barcelona star Messi

Patrice Evra has highlighted Park Ji-sung's influence on their second-half of the season success.
Evra admitted his friend could be a key figure in the Champions League final against Barcelona.
"Ji's unbelievable," Evra told MUTV. "I was just laughing when I was watching the game when he was running, because it was unbelievable.
"It must be the Korean food. I try to do the same, sometimes I go to his house and eat the same food. But [seriously] I think Ji is an example to every player. He runs for everyone. Sometimes if I'm tired I know I'll be okay because Ji will run for me.
"I think he's one of the most important players in the team because he doesn't stop running, he can run all day. It's funny because when we reached the final, some fan said, 'Yeah, we're going to win against Barcelona because Ji is going to run all day with Messi.'
"I made some joke with Ji in the dressing room afterwards, saying 'People now think you're a defender'."

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Spartak Moscow rejected chance to sign Man Utd star Evra for nothing

Former Spartak Moscow sports director Yuri Pervak admits they came close to signing fullback Patrice Evra.
Pervak says they could have signed the French ace for nothing.
He revealed: "Evra was available on a free transfer from Monaco.
"All that we needed to do was to pay his agent, but the people responsible said he had a bad temper and refused to buy him."

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Evra feels SAF has found Rooney's best position

Patrice Evra feels boss Sir Alex has found Wayne Rooney's best position after victory at Schalke.
Operating in his newly adopted position behind strike partner Javier ‘Chicharito’ Hernandez, Rooney excelled against the Germans, playing with a sense of freedom that allowed the England star to dictate the game from various areas of the Veltins-Arena pitch.
It's a position he has made his own, according to Reds team-mate Evra: “I think Wayne has found his position. When he’s a little bit behind the striker, he gets more touches of the ball.
“I also think Wayne can play as a number 10. He likes to give good balls, and he scores. From behind, maybe he’s more dangerous. I think Wazza is happy to play there as well.”

Evra wants to follow Giggs in Yoga class!

Patrice Evra hailed the performance of Ryan Giggs after victory at Schalke.
Speaking in the aftermath of United’s win, Evra told French broadcasters the reason behind the Welshman’s fine form:
"Giggs? He must stop talking about his yoga!
"He says it makes him run faster. I will have to sign up immediately!
"He is 37 years old and he runs more than almost everyone else on the pitch, and he is decisive. What can I say?!!"

Monday, February 21, 2011

Evra inks new Man Utd deal to 2014

Patrice Evra has signed a new deal to 2014 with Manchester United.
The France left-back confirmed the agreement today.



"Ever since I arrived at United, it's been a dream come true playing here," he said.
"The fans, the players, the manager and the staff all work hard to make this club the best in the world.
"I have won a lot in the last five years, but I want to win more and I know that's the mentality of everyone here."


United boss Sir Alex is delighted Evra's future is sorted.
"Patrice is unquestionably one of the world's best left-backs," said the Scot.
"He has developed into a key character in the dressing room and it is great that he has committed himself to the club.
"His experience and skill will be increasingly important to us."

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Man Utd to offer Evra and Berbatov a new contract.

The Red Devils are desperate to hold on to their star left-back and have offered him a new deal.

Manchester United have offered French left-back Patrice Evra a new deal to prolong his Old Trafford stay until the end of his career, according to The Sun.

With Real Madrid and Inter Milan showing interest in the former France captain, manager Sir Alex Ferguson would like to put an end to rumours and tie Evra down.

The 29-year-old Frenchman still has 18 months left on his £70,000-a-week deal in Manchester and the table-toppers will reportedly award him with an improved contract until 2014.

After offering left-back Patrice Evra a new contract, it has been reported that Manchester United will follow suit with Dimitar Berbatov .

The Red Devils will apparently offer the Bulgarian, who has one-and-a-half seasons left on his current contract, a new three-year deal.

The Sun says the new contract would see the 30-year-old’s wages rise from £100,000 a week to around £120,000 a week.

Berbatov was linked with an Old Trafford exit in the summer, but he has been in excellent form this season.

The striker has scored 19 goals and set up two for the Premier League leaders, including two hat-tricks and a tremendous five-goal haul against Blackburn.

He has a league efficiency ratio of a goal or assist every 82 minutes.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Evra admits he would leave Man Utd only for Real..

Patrice Evra admits he would be prepared to leave Manchester United for Real Madrid.
United boss Sir Alex Ferguson has concerns over Evra's contract situation and is aware of Real and Barcelona's interest.
Quoted in the Spanish media byIntergoles, Evra revealed: "I am very happy in Manchester and I have not thought about leaving, but if Alex (Ferguson) wants to use me to buy another player, then I admit that Real Madrid is the best alternative to Manchester United.
"If that option comes and Manchester United is positive about the operation, then I would accept with pleasure."
But Evra insisted his first loyalty was to United.
"I have a contract until 2012 with Manchester United and if people think I'm upset about being here, they are wrong."

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Evra vowed to push Obertan into becoming a star!

Patrice Evra has vowed to push Gabriel Obertan into becoming a Manchester United star.

Evra was delighted with the way fellow Frenchman Obertan, 21, finally announced himself to the United faithful with a spectacular goal in Tuesday's 3-0 win away to Bursaspor.

The moment was a long time coming following Obertan's £3million move from Bordeaux last July.


Injuries have plagued him since and the odd run-out suggested nothing of what came from his right foot on Tuesday.

Evra said: "It was his best performance and I'm really pleased with him as he's working hard.

"I keep talking with him every day and tell him to take his chance.


"He showed his potential at Bursaspor but now the most difficult part is coming.
"I keep telling him 'It's not easy at United but you are still young and have a lot of quality'.

"He is like my younger brother and that's why I hope he doesn't get too sleepy because now is the time to show he has the potential to play for Manchester United."

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Patrice Evra has been handed a month off

Patrice Evra has been handed a month off by Sir Alex Ferguson to help him recover from his World Cup nightmare and marathon season.

Manchester United players involved in South Africa, including Wayne Rooney, have been given three weeks’ holiday before they need to report back for pre-season training, but manager Ferguson believes France international Evra needs an extra week off.


Left-back Evra, 29, played more matches than any other United player last season and, including internationals, clocked up 60 games.

His season ended on a low note as captain of the disgraced France team that went home early from the World Cup after failing to win a game. Their campaign was marred by bust-ups between players and much-maligned coach Raymond Domenech.


Ferguson believes the France squad were out of order for their training boycott, but hopes the month away from the game will help to re-charge Evra’s batteries for the new season.

New France coach Laurent Blanc, meanwhile, says he will not punish the players who refused to train during the World Cup.


“I was shocked by some behaviour, but I’m not the bogeyman. It is not my responsibility to take disciplinary action,” said Blanc.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Patrice Evra REVEALED he will never the forget the abuse he received in Senegal

Patrice Evra is happy to be back in Africa - but he will never forget the abuse he received in his native Senegal.

The Manchester United defender sparked fury back home in 2002 when he opted to play for France's Under-21s rather than the country of his birth.


Evra is now poised to captain Les Bleus when they start their World Cup campaign against Uruguay in Cape Town on Friday.

The left-back, 29, explained: "I grew up amid a Senegalese culture at home.
"But we became Westernised very quickly and when I had to choose between playing for Senegal or France my father told me to follow my heart.

"I opted for France, as that was where I had grown up, but I then came in for lots of abuse in Senegal.

"I was called a monkey who grovels before the white man and labelled a money-obsessed traitor to the nation. But my parents helped me get through it.

"I had not been back to Senegal since the age of 10.


"I have still not returned. It is 19 years now and I need an incentive to make me go."
Evra is dreaming of going all the way to glory in Johannesburg on July 11.

He added: "I have two wishes. I want to win it for France and hope it is a huge party for football and all Africa with no security problems.


"This World Cup will be very important to my family as well as myself. I was born in Dakar to a Senegalese father and a mother from Cape Verde.

"But we moved to Brussels when I was just a year old, because of my father's job with the Senegalese Embassy.

"I just had time to mess a few nappies before I was on the plane.

"We stayed in Belgium for two years before moving to Les Ulis in the Paris suburbs.

"I often talk about the World Cup with my father. He is now 81 and badly asthmatic.

"He says seeing me lift the World Cup would be the greatest present he could have before he goes to heaven."


Saturday, May 1, 2010

Honest Patrice Evra revealed everything in exclusive interview


Patrice Evra is a wonderful raconteur. A deep, intelligent thinker who in the hour or so we spent together at United's Carrington training base this week articulated as well as anyone during Ferguson's 24-year tenure what it means to play for the world's most famous club, for arguably the world's greatest manager.


Fluent in five languages and now working hard to master Korean so that he can converse with his close friend Ji-Sung Park, he tackles a variety of subjects.









Evra on....Sir Alex's retirement



'The manager will die on the bench,' he declares with a broad smile. 'It is his destiny.'


Earlier this season, Ferguson addressed the subject of retirement with his players. 'It was before a game,' Evra says.


'He just started talking about how people had been saying he was going to retire. And he asked us if we seriously thought he would just be sitting in his house watching the TV, listening to the radio and doing nothing.

'He said, "No chance. I have worked all my life and I will work until I die". For a moment he laughed. And then he said, "This is my victory. I cannot walk away from this".




Evra on...how Sir Alex motivates them

'Before a game he always tells a small story. Sometimes he talks about when he was the Aberdeen manager. Another time he went round the dressing room and talked about the different players. The fact that here we were, from Korea, France, Serbia, Bulgaria, from different parts of England and the world, and how we had all come together to be in the same place. 

He talked about our stories. The different obstacles we had overcome to get here. It gave the players this huge lift.'

Evra recalls the first time he incurred his manager's wrath. It was his debut, a difficult encounter with Manchester City that United lost 3-1.

'He took me off after 45 minutes,' says Evra.


'I could tell he was angry. He just looked at me, deadly serious, and said, "Mr Evra, now just watch and see what is English football. And learn".'



Evra on..how he transforms himself into a true United player

Evra did more than that. He decided to learn about United, too. 'I got a load of DVDs,' he says.
'About the Munich disaster and the Busby Babes, about Bobby Charlton, George Best and Denis Law, about Cantona. The whole story of the club. 

You meet these people around the club and I wanted to know who they were. What they had done for the club. Out of respect. Because when you shake the hand of Sir Bobby Charlton you can feel the legend.

'All the young players here need to understand the history of the club. After I watched those DVDs I realised I needed to respect the shirt. I needed to respect the story. 

Every time I play that is in my head. What a privilege it is to play for Manchester United. 


When you pull on the shirt you are pulling on history, and I say thanks to God that I play for this club. To be able to come in and train here. To work with legends like Ryan Giggs and Paul Scholes.

'When I arrived here people asked me what excited me most. I said it was not training with Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney but players like Giggs and Scholes. They are the history of the club. Giggs trains like a player who has never won anything in his career. His hunger. His desire to win, even on the training pitch.'



Evra on...Sir Alex hair-dryer treatment

The same desire remains in Ferguson. Even at 68, after everything he has won.
'Alex Ferguson is a culture,' he says. 'And he is a winner. Football is like a pyramid. To reach the top is easy. It is staying there that is difficult. He does not let you rest. He is always hungry for the next game.

'I remember one match when we were winning 2-0 by half-time and he still gave us the hair-dryer because we should have been four or five up. He reminded us that people had paid money to watch us. "Why don't you respect them?" he screamed.

'He demands the highest standards. If you play a good game for United, you sit on the bench. Only if you play an amazing game do you stay in the team. Those are the rules and the players accept them.'


Even in this modern era of millionaire footballers, they also accept that infamous, aforementioned hair-dryer.

'After the Christmas party we had a couple of years ago, when there were the stories, he called us to a meeting and just killed everyone,' he says.

'The experienced players. The young players. It was our fault and he told us, and reminded us of the responsibility we have. He managed that situation with his temper, but he doesn't always have to because the players here have so much respect for him. If he thinks the team is sleeping he will still use the hair-dryer, though.'



Evra on...his transfer to Manchester United

Back in January 2006, after his move from Monaco to United for a £5.5million fee in what now has to rank among Ferguson's finest buys, Evra was having a tough time.

'Playing for Manchester United was something I was not prepared for,' he says.

'At Monaco I was playing in front of 7,000. At United I was suddenly playing in front of 76,000. Not even a Champions League final and playing for France prepared me for it. When I got to Manchester I discovered a new job. It's not just football. In that first game, against City, I don't think I made too many big mistakes. 


But I remember standing by the post for a corner thinking, "Wow, football is so quick here". I realised if you want to play in England first you need to be strong. After that you enjoy the football.

'I was down afterwards, but not to the point where I didn't think I could succeed here. I still had confidence in my ability. But joining in the January did not make it easy. And it was not easy for my family. My son was three months old, we were living in a hotel in central Manchester for five months and the weather was not the same as Monaco! It was like a big slap in the face.'



Evra on..his embarrassing moment

He remembers being dropped for a game against Liverpool.

'The manager told me I would not be playing but, because my English was not so good, I didn't fully understand. I got changed and I went out for the warm-up on the pitch. Then Carlos Queiroz calls me over. "Patrice, what are you doing? You are not on the bench today." It killed me. It was so embarrassing.'



Evra on..after being overlooked for 2006 World Cup squad

A difficult six months cost him a place in the France squad for the 2006 World Cup.

'I was so angry with myself, seeing my team there without me,' he says.

'I thought, "That's it. I need to do something about this". I needed to get stronger for English football. So over the summer, I worked hard in the gym to make myself stronger. I was so hungry that by the time I arrived back for pre-season I was ready. I didn't need a pre-season. 


When we went to South Africa for a tournament, I played very well. Mike Phelan pulled me to one side and said, "Now you are a United player".'




He soon became a regular, securing a place ahead of Gabriel Heinze and Mikael Silvestre.




Evra on..his thought of quitting Manchester United

'It was the only bad memory of the season,' he says.

'A few days before the game (against Chelsea) a story appeared in the papers - an interview with someone from my quartier (Parisian neighbourhood) - and it was all about how I had escaped a life of drugs and crime by becoming a footballer.

 It was not true but I remember the boss and Carlos that morning. "You won't be able to play in the final now," they said, laughing. "We have to protect the reputation of the club".

'They were joking, but when it came to the morning of the final the manager told me he was playing Heinze for tactical reasons. I have no doubt it was for that but I was gutted. He told me not to worry, that I would get to go on and win the game for us. 

After 10 minutes he told me to warm up, and for 80 minutes I stayed on the touchline. I was on fire. But I never got on. I had played every game that season, been voted the best left back by the PFA. Suddenly I was ready to quit the club.


'But then I calmed down, and I thought, "Maybe this is a test. This is life at United. You cannot expect to always be in the team". It is something I tell the younger players. I tell them that story.'



Evra on..Carlos Tevez

He never had to tell Carlos Tevez, a player who remains among his closest friends and someone he believes should still be at United.


'When he was playing for us he was such a professional,' says Evra.

'He played with his heart. I know him. I still go to his house and I know he still loves United. I don't want to make a problem for him with City, but it suited his identity here.

'Even when he wasn't playing, he would come on and change the game. He would always fight. I tell him he should still be with us. 


If, one day, he wins the championship and the Champions League with City, I will say, "Fine, you made a good move Carlito". But until then... I just speak the truth.'



Evra on..as a kid and family

Born in Senegal but brought up in the same Parisian suburb as Thierry Henry - his father worked for the Senegalese Embassy - Evra is the product of a huge family where you clearly had to be heard to be seen.

'I am one of 25 brothers and sisters,' he says.

'I think it is fair to say that my father (married and divorced three times) did not watch a lot of TV!' 


For Evra it was only ever football. 'It was all I wanted to do,' he says.

'I would be out there, in the street, in the rain and snow, on my own. I never wore a shirt. Never really had a team. I liked Romario but I never had an idol. I just loved to play. I had this passion for the game.

'It was not easy for me. I had to fight to get where I am today. I never went to Clarefontaine or anything like that. Never went anywhere where they gave you everything. Your boots, your kit. I was from a tough area, Les Ulis. Not a bad area. As I said, it is not true that I had to escape a life with gangsters. I am proud of where I am from and my parents provided for all of us.


People thought I was crazy to pursue this dream (becoming a footballer) . At school I remember completing a paper about what I wanted to do for a job. I put footballer and the teacher told me that being a footballer is not a job. She told me only one in 300 kids make it as a footballer. And she would say, "Do you think you will be the one?" And I said, "Yes, I do". And my classmates would sit there and laugh at me. I ignored them.'



Evra on..his journey to be a professional footballer

Although there was a flirtation with the youth system at Paris St Germain, it not until he was 17 that he really got noticed.

'I was a striker playing in a tournament organised by my local sports centre,' he says.
'There was this Italian there and he asked me if I would go to Torino for a trial. They were in Serie B.

'I gave him my phone number and three days later he called and spoke to my mum. She said, "No way, we have no idea who this guy is". But then my brother said, "Look, Patrice is doing nothing, let him go".


'I spent 10 days there, they asked me to stay as a member of the youth team. But then I was approached by a scout from Marsala, a team from Sicily in the third division, and he offered me the chance to become a professional. He said I would get a house, and I said OK.

 I remember arriving at their training camp and putting on the tracksuit and the flip-flops and looking at myself in the mirror. It was like paradise.

'To this day it is the best feeling I have had in football. Not winning the championship or the Champions League but that moment, when I was 17 years old, and I had finally become a professional footballer. I had made it. I had proved people wrong. It was an amazing club. Like a big family.

 I was the only black guy in the club and there were people asking to have their picture taken with me because they had never seen a black guy. But I could be walking down the street and I would be invited into people's houses to join them for a meal.'

From Marsala he went briefly to Monza and then to Nice, where he was deployed at left back for the first time.

'It was my first game there and I was on the left wing when the left back got injured,' he says.

'The manager, Sandro Salvioni, asked me to play there and then told me I'd be there again for the next game, against Strasbourg. I said no way, that I was a forward. "If you want to be in the team you play there," he said, so I agreed.'

Nice were promoted that season, with Evra named the best left back in Ligue 2.


'We won the championship and then I was signed by Monaco, by Didier Deschamps,' he says.
'I still wanted to play left wing but Deschamps said, "No, you are a good left back". And I was voted best left back in that division, too. We did well, reaching the Champions League final in 2004; the same year I made it into the France team.'



Evra on..his relationship with Prince Albert of Monaco

At Monaco his sparky personality caught the attention of Prince Albert, Evra forming what his team-mates considered an unlikely friendship.

'They could not believe he would send me text messages,' he says.

'But we got on well, and before the Champions League final he said he hoped we could win it for his father. Sadly we lost and Prince Rainier died the next year, but I dedicated our Champions League win in 2008 to him.'



Evra on..the incident at Chelsea training ground

Not that Evra has ever lost touch with his roots; with his identity. In his mind he will always be the fighter from the streets. Someone in whom the fire still rages.

'I still have the fire inside,' he says.

'And I'll admit that sometimes I can't always control it. You can talk about the altercation with the groundsmen at Chelsea as an example, although that day I think I managed to control my fire a bit.


'It seems every time I play against Chelsea there is something wrong. But really, it is coincidence. I love to play against Chelsea and I love to win against them because they are a massive rival for the trophies. But I also respect Chelsea.

'I remember Eric Cantona saying that while he sometimes could not control his fire he would not have been the same player without it. I am the same. I need the fire.



Evra on..calling Arsenal players-babies

 I am not a bad boy. When I go into a challenge I go to win the ball. Never to hurt someone.

 It's why I was upset when Fabregas did it to me at the end of last season. It was probably why I said afterwards that Arsenal were like babies. 


I was upset because of the challenge. If you want to hurt someone, you invite them outside, away from the pitch, away from people and the referee. Just me and you. You don't try to hurt people on the pitch.'



Evra on..respect

For Evra it is simply a matter of respect. He respects Ashley Cole as another brilliant left back, even if he does point out that he has again been voted the best in his position in the Premier League by fellow professionals.

 But most of all he respects United. The club, the players, past and present, and the manager. Never has he been prouder in his four years at the club than when Ferguson first asked him to be captain. 'What pleased me most was not being captain but that my team-mates were so happy for me,' he says.


'From the moment I arrived here it felt like it was my destiny, because it was only when I became a United player that I found my true identity. This place suited my character. The people here were on my wavelength and I was able to be me.'