Football transfer rumours: Mikel Arteta to Arsenal?

Today’s tell-all has wrassled more compliant ‘gators

Waking up under its first day of Tory rule for well over a decade with the dawn chorus cheeping an audible note of caution, the Mill felt a mild sense of trepidation. Nothing serious, mind, more akin to that nagging agitation brought on by not being sure whether or not you need to buy milk, than the full bowel-loosening terror of watching that bit in Saw VI where the file clerk has just been hanged by the barbed-wire noose and suddenly realising you’ve no idea how long is left before the merciful release of the closing credits.

Strange lady asleep on right-hand side of bed? Check. Hot water? Check. Clean socks and strides? Check. Tea bags? Check. Milk? Check. Street outside house not yet replaced by apparently bottomless void? Check. Expensive earphones still hopeless in the face of traffic noise or the raucous buzzing of any passing wasp? Check. Woman in London underground station newsagent surly and unable to count change? Check. Feelings of resentment because man sitting in adjacent seat is reading your newspaper for free? Check. Feelings of childish satisfaction that accompany knowledge abrupt page-turn curtailed his Jamie Carragher-World Cup-recall article enjoyment? Check.

In short, all was well in the world. A little over 12 hours into the new regime the Mill’s day-to-day existence remained serenely unaffected by Downing Street’s new Axis of Smug. At least it was until we saw the vast mountain of transfer speculation there is to round-up. If this is a portent of things to come under a Tory-Lib Dem government, the Mill wants Gordon Brown and Labour back.

The Sun reports that William Gallas is believed to be unhappy with Arsenal’s meagre offer of a “one-plus-one year deal on a reduced salary, with the second year dependent on the number of appearances he makes next season”. And while the number of appearances required is not revealed, chances are we’ll be able to figure it out by totting up how many he makes next season, then adding one. “Something seems broken between William and Arsène and it looks possible he will not be at the club next season,” revealed a source “close” to Gallas, but obviously not close enough to have caught the something that got broken before it hit the floor.

Should Gallas leave, Arsène Wenger will maintain the requisite levels of Frenchness in his squad by signing the no-nonsense defensive midfielder Jeremy Toulalan from Lyon for somewhere in the region of £14m, while simultaneously doing his bit for brotherly love by reuniting his Ivorian midfielder, Kolo Touré, with brother Yaya, who currently plays occasionally for Barcelona. If, as many suspect, Cesc Fábregas goes the other way, Wenger will attempt to replace him with Everton’s Spanish midfielder Mikel Arteta.

Elsewhere in the Sun, it’s boldly reported that the Milan striker Alexandre Pato “would be happy to link up with Carlo Ancelotti again at Chelsea.” Quotes from Pato saying he’d be happy to link up with Carlo Ancelotti again at Chelsea? “I want to remain at Milan and win everything with them,” quacked the player they call the Duck. Make of that what you will. The tabloid’s claim that Chelsea would have no problem matching Manchester City bid for bid in their efforts to land Fernando Torres is equally spurious, with neither the word “Fernando” nor the word “Torres” featuring in the 103-word quote from Chelsea’s chief executive Ron Gourlay that’s provided by way of proof.

It may only be Wednesday, but it’s already been a week to forget for Owen Hargreaves. Not content with pronouncing the word “about” in that funny Canadian way that makes it sounds like something you’d wear on your foot, the midfielder is rumoured to have stormed out of Old Trafford in a huff after being left “oot” of the Manchester United side to face Stoke City on Sunday and has now failed to make England’s provisional World Cup squad despite strong rumours that he’d get a Capello wild card. Now his future at Old Trafford looks in doubt, if talk linking Real Madrid’s French midfield enforcer, Lassana Diarra, with a £21m move to Manchester United is to be believed. Dimitar Berbatov’s mooted move to Bayern Munich could help finance the deal.

Liverpool are considering a bid for Valencia’s lank-haired 21-year-old Argentine midfielder Ever Banega; £8m would be enough to bring the reformed bad boy to Anfield, which is approximately £7.9m more than the skint Merseyside club is believed to have sluicing around in its club coffers. The Daily Mail reports that Liverpool are also prepared to “offload” the frail Italian Alberto Aquilani at a huge loss, a move that seems a bit unlikely considering the £20m midfielder has shown a fair amount of promise on the few occasions he’s been given chances to impress at Anfield.

Now that they’re able to promise the prospect of at least two matches worth of not-quite-Champions League football to prospective signings, Tottenham Hotspur will endeavour to prise the Dutch striker Klaas Jan Huntelaar away from Milan for £12.7m. Observer columnist David James is also being linked with a move to White Hart Lane. Again.

Meanwhile at Stamford Bridge, Ricardo Carvalho, Deco, Joe Cole, Juliano Belletti and Paulo Ferreira are about to be shipped out to free-up dressing room pegs for Manchester City’s midfielder Stephen Ireland and Notts County’s goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel, who must both wear a lot of clothes.

Manchester City’s manager, Roberto Mancini, wants to get rid of Jo, Valeri Bojinov and Felipe Caicedo, and is eager to draft in Napoli midfielder Marek Hamsik and the controversial Inter striker Mario Balotelli as replacements.

Rather than leave Aston Villa for Liverpool, Martin O’Neill has hatched a controversial plan to gradually dismantle the Merseyside club and bring it to Villa Park. He’ll start by signing industrious Israeli winger Yossi Benayoun, but may face opposition from La Liga side Sevilla, who are wise to his caper.

Birmingham City like the cut of the West Ham striker Carlton Cole and the Fulham full-back Paul Konchesky’s respective jibs, while Fulham’s manager Roy Hodgson and Blackburn’s manager Sam Allardyce are set to go head to head in a bidding skirmish for the services of Portsmouth’s striker Frederic Piquionne.

And finally, newly promoted West Brom have sent a posse to Sunderland with specific instructions not to return without full-back Phil Bardsley, while rhythm magnates David Gold and David Sullivan can’t decide whether to replace freshly-fired manager Gianfranco Zola with Glenn Hoddle or Avram Grant.

And … breathe.

Transfer windowEvertonArsenalBarry Glendenningguardian.co.uk

Roberto Mancini hopes to avoid touchline ban for Manchester derby

• Mancini faces FA after altercation with David Moyes
• Italian apologised and expected to escape with a fine

Roberto Mancini is keen to avoid a touchline ban that could force him to watch the Manchester derby from the stands at Eastlands this Saturday.

The Manchester City manager, who accepted a charge of misconduct after an altercation with Everton’s David Moyes during City’s 2-0 defeat on 24 March, will point to his clean record and the fact that he apologised to the Everton manager quickly after the incident when he attends the Football Association regulatory commission today.

Moyes was not charged but was sent a written reminder of his responsibilities. Mancini was sanctioned because he was seen to be the instigator of the incident.

The Italian is likely to receive a fine and a written warning.

Manchester CityDavid MoyesEvertonRoberto ManciniEverton Gayleguardian.co.uk

Everton 2-2 West Ham United | Premier League match report

The survival prospects of West Ham United and perhaps Gianfranco Zola received a critical lift this afternoon as the substitute Araujo Ilan’s outstanding 86th‑minute header rescued a deserved point at Everton.

David Moyes’s European hopefuls appeared to have heightened the pressure on the beleaguered Italian in the most cruel manner when Yakubu gave the home side the lead for a second time in the 84th minute. Within two minutes, however, Ilan threw himself at Julien Faubert’s cross to score his second goal for West Ham and potentially one of their most important of the season as they strive to avoid the drop.

Everton, as was to be expected, were industrious and dominant in possession yet had hardly tested Robert Green in the visitors’ goal when dreadful defending allowed them to take the lead midway through the first half.

Three times West Ham had the chance to clear Leighton Baines’s deep cross from the left, and three times they messed it up. First, Jonathan Spector headed the cross skywards inside his own area rather than clear it away with any conviction. Manuel Da