G
grumpyoldb
Guest
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/m/man_city/7431155.stm
Mark Hughes has been appointed as the new manager of Manchester City after signing a three-year contract.
Hughes held talks with the City hierarchy in London on Tuesday evening and agreed to leave Blackburn after a second round of talks.
City's only serious concern was a late move by Chelsea after they were snubbed by AC Milan coach Carlo Ancelotti.
But owner Thaksin Shinawatra has landed the man he claimed was his top target after Sven-Goran Eriksson's sacking.
Shinawatra said: "He's an outstanding manager who has achieved many things with Blackburn.
"Mark was always the first choice of our new executive chairman, Garry Cook. Together they will make a great team. They will both prove to be excellent acquisitions, I'm sure."
Thaksin also sent a message to City fans still angry at the sacking of Eriksson, saying: "These are exciting times for Manchester City and I hope the supporters can understand that I share their goals.
"That sometimes means making ruthless decisions. Now we can go forward to a new era, with a new management structure and great hope and ambition."
The Welshman has guided Rovers into Europe twice, but recently indicated his long-term ambitions might not be satisfied at Ewood Park.
Hughes is prepared to risk swapping the stability of Blackburn for the volatile regime that saw Eriksson sacked at City because of the bigger stature of the Eastlands club.
And Thaksin is willing to back his new manager with major transfer funds, while he always worked within a limited budget at Blackburn.
And another temptation is the lure of European football, with City in the Uefa Cup, and the attraction of managing a team that plays in front of 40,000-plus crowds on a regular basis.
A Blackburn statement on Monday said City had made an approach to talk to Hughes.
"Mark has made it clear to the board he would like the opportunity to talk to Manchester City," it said.
"In view of this, the board have decided reluctantly to give permission subject to terms and conditions acceptable to Blackburn Rovers being agreed with Manchester City in advance."
Former Wales boss Hughes has impressed during his three-and-a-half year spell at Ewood Park, guiding Rovers to seventh in the Premier League last season.
He also led the club to its first FA Cup semi-final in 40 years in 2004 and another in 2007.
Earlier this year, the former Manchester United and Chelsea striker was one of the front-runners to succeed Sam Allardyce as Newcastle manager before Kevin Keegan took the job.
Hughes's former Wales team-mate Dean Saunders feels he may be better off staying at Ewood Park.
Mark Hughes has been appointed as the new manager of Manchester City after signing a three-year contract.
Hughes held talks with the City hierarchy in London on Tuesday evening and agreed to leave Blackburn after a second round of talks.
City's only serious concern was a late move by Chelsea after they were snubbed by AC Milan coach Carlo Ancelotti.
But owner Thaksin Shinawatra has landed the man he claimed was his top target after Sven-Goran Eriksson's sacking.
Shinawatra said: "He's an outstanding manager who has achieved many things with Blackburn.
"Mark was always the first choice of our new executive chairman, Garry Cook. Together they will make a great team. They will both prove to be excellent acquisitions, I'm sure."
Thaksin also sent a message to City fans still angry at the sacking of Eriksson, saying: "These are exciting times for Manchester City and I hope the supporters can understand that I share their goals.
"That sometimes means making ruthless decisions. Now we can go forward to a new era, with a new management structure and great hope and ambition."
The Welshman has guided Rovers into Europe twice, but recently indicated his long-term ambitions might not be satisfied at Ewood Park.
Hughes is prepared to risk swapping the stability of Blackburn for the volatile regime that saw Eriksson sacked at City because of the bigger stature of the Eastlands club.
And Thaksin is willing to back his new manager with major transfer funds, while he always worked within a limited budget at Blackburn.
And another temptation is the lure of European football, with City in the Uefa Cup, and the attraction of managing a team that plays in front of 40,000-plus crowds on a regular basis.
A Blackburn statement on Monday said City had made an approach to talk to Hughes.
"Mark has made it clear to the board he would like the opportunity to talk to Manchester City," it said.
"In view of this, the board have decided reluctantly to give permission subject to terms and conditions acceptable to Blackburn Rovers being agreed with Manchester City in advance."
Former Wales boss Hughes has impressed during his three-and-a-half year spell at Ewood Park, guiding Rovers to seventh in the Premier League last season.
He also led the club to its first FA Cup semi-final in 40 years in 2004 and another in 2007.
Earlier this year, the former Manchester United and Chelsea striker was one of the front-runners to succeed Sam Allardyce as Newcastle manager before Kevin Keegan took the job.
Hughes's former Wales team-mate Dean Saunders feels he may be better off staying at Ewood Park.