Barcelona's Samuel Eto'o could soon be joing the Manchester City project at Eastlands. Photograph: Josep Lago/AFP/Getty Images
Manchester City's chances of signing Samuel Eto'o appeared to have increased last night when the Barcelona president Joan Laporta admitted that the Catalan club was open to offers for the Cameroon striker.
Eto'o
has only one year left to run on his contract at the Camp Nou and
Barcelona have not yet offered him an extension. There are no plans to
present him with a new deal and Eto'o is understood to be prepared to
see out his contract and leave as a free agent at the end of the season.
He
would be able to negotiate formally with other clubs from 1 January
2010. But with Barcelona searching for a new striker, both the coach
Pep Guardiola and sporting director Txiki Beguiristain believe that it
would be beneficial for him to depart this summer.
Laporta, who
personally signed Eto'o and has been his greatest defender,
particularly during the Cameroonian's clashes with the Brazilian
Ronaldinho, has accepted that it is time for him to move on – and his
comments, during which he described Eto'o as "much sought after" can be
read as a thinly-disguised call for clubs to prepare bids for the
striker.
He said: "It would be lovely if Samuel could finish his
career here. But the market is very dynamic and there could be
surprises in store. Eto'o is one of those players for whom you get
important offers."
This is the second time Barcelona have
attempted to offload the Cameroonian. Last summer Guardiola announced
publicly that it would be "better" for the striker to move on and the
club searched for a buyer, even going so far as to open talks with a
club in Uzbekistan. No clubs came in with a satisfactory offer and
eventually Eto'o stayed. Having won over Guardiola and his team-mates,
who pleaded with the manager to give him a second chance, he finished
the season with a treble and 30 La Liga goals.