Real Madrid’s Raúl spurns Spurs to sign new two-year deal with Schalke

• Free transfer to Bundesliga ends Spurs’ hopes
• ‘He will be an inspiration. His qualities will help us’

Real Madrid’s Raúl has signed a two-year deal with Schalke, the Bundesliga club have confirmed, despite considerable interest shown in the forward by Tottenham and Newcastle. The player commented earlier this week: “My future lies in Germany or England.”

Raúl bid an emotional farewell to Madrid on Monday, bringing the curtain down on a 16-year career at the Bernabéu. He had long been expected to go to Schalke on a free transfer, despite speculation that he may move to England, and has now completed his move.

The Schalke coach Felix Magath told the club website: “It’s great news for FC Schalke 04. I am pleased that we have succeeded in such an exceptional footballer and world-class striker switching to the Bundesliga. He will be an inspiration. His qualities will help us.

“His commitment is a crucial step in our efforts to strengthen the squad for future tasks, and to restructure. I look forward to working with this good professional.”

Raúl was a key part of one of Madrid’s most successful sides ever, winning three Champions League trophies and 16 titles in total, but was only a bit-part player last season and has decided to end his career elsewhere.

The former Madrid captain had been at the Bernabéu since joining their youth team in 1992 and is the club’s all-time top goalscorer, with 323 goals in 741 games.

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Danny Rose blossoms as Tottenham benefit from Chelsea’s loss

• Teenager looks to carry on against Blues on Saturday
• Rose could have joined Chelsea instead of Spurs in 2006

Rarely have left-footed English players been more vilified than in the week that Danny Rose was born. The winger who introduced himself to Tottenham fans with a ferocious volleyed goal on his Premeir League debut against Arsenal on Wednesday came into this world two days before Stuart Pearce and Chris Waddle botched penalties in England’s 1990 World Cup semi-final defeat by West Germany.

Rose’s remarkable burst on to the scene has come too late for him to be given any chance of avenging those misses in South Africa this summer but tomorrow against Chelsea he may at least get an opportunity to prove again he is a player with both a bright future and an auspicious past.

Rose turned down the chance to join Chelsea in 2006. He was one of three players at Leeds United’s academy that Ken Bates claimed the London club attempted to “tap up”. The other two, Michael Woods and Tom Taiwo, eventually decided to move to Chelsea but Rose figured his career would not be advanced by a switch to Stamford Bridge. The experiences so far of the duo who did depart suggest he was right: Woods has yet to make a single senior appearance while Taiwo was sold in January to Carlisle United, having spent the previous six months there on loan.

Rose never featured in the Leeds first team. He was named as a substitute for a League Cup game against Barnet in 2006, after which the manager Kevin Blackwell was sacked. Under Dennis Wise he did not get a look-in, but his promise was recognised by plenty of other observers and when Leeds’ financial problems intensified in 2007 Tottenham prised him away for a reported £1m.

He spent the tail-end of last season on loan at Watford and, although he impressed there, his breakthrough at Tottenham still seemed a long way off as Harry Redknapp suspected he lacked focus. He was sent out on loan to Peterborough, only to return in November after a change of manager at London Road. Redknapp, however, discerned an improvement in the player – “His attitude has changed, he’s worked hard,” the manager said in January – and gave him his first start in the FA Cup match against his old team, Leeds United.

Then came another frustrating wait for first-team action. Even though he knew David Bentley was injured the 19-year-old Rose was taken by surprise when the manager chose to blood him against Arsenal. “I was confused really,” he says. “We played Portsmouth a few weeks ago and I would have liked to have thought I could have got a few minutes there and he has just thrown me in against Arsenal, third in the league, a north London derby. It doesn’t come much harder than that really. He just told me there was no pressure on me, to just do what I’d been doing in training and to try to press the left-back as much as I can.”

That left-back was Gaël Clichy. Another of Tottenham’s alumni from Leeds academy gave Rose a tip on how to trouble the Frenchman. “Since I have been down here Aaron [Lennon] has been like an older brother to me and looked after me massively. Even before the game he told me to relax. He’s played against Clichy a lot of times and he told me to take him on his inside because he doesn’t like it. He struggles defending there.”

Alhough he admits he was “very nervous” before the game Rose applied the advice he had been given. However no one suggested that he try shooting the ball into the net from 30 yards and, indeed, he has never done such a thing before. “When I was at Leeds aged about 12 I hit a nice 20-yarder but that one definitely tops it,” he says of his spectacular strike.

“I’d like to think it will be up there when it comes to goal of the season but I haven’t seen it yet. I hope my mum has taped it for me. I just didn’t know what to do [after the goal]. I ran one way, then another to look for my dad, Nigel, and all of a sudden they were kicking off. So I forgot about it straight away and I ended up defending.”

Rose had to hobble off with a slight knee injury following a tackle from Denílson but he still managed to swap shirts with Theo Walcott at full time – “for my little brother,” he hastens to add.

He is unsure whether he will retain his place for the visit of Chelsea. One man who certainly will is the Spurs goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes, whose series of outstanding stops against Arsenal did as much as the goals to keep alive Tottenham’s hopes of qualifying for the Champions League. The goalkeeper also hopes they will have helped earn him a place in Brazil’s World Cup squad. “I think Dunga watched the game and I hope to keep going like I am now and to try to do my best to make the World Cup squad,” he said.

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Portsmouth’s Kevin-Prince Boateng savours his role in FA Cup win

• Midfielder ‘will never get bored’ of watching his penalty go in
• ‘It was the second-best feeling of my life’ says ex-Spurs flop

Kevin-Prince Boateng admits he will never tire of watching replays of the penalty he scored to book Portsmouth’s place in the FA Cup final at the expense of his former team Tottenham.

Pompey’s long-suffering fans were finally given something to cheer about yesterday when their side emerged 2-0 winners from an open game which went into extra-time at Wembley.

Portsmouth, relegated from the Premier League on Saturday, went ahead through Frédéric Piquionne before Boateng beat Heurelho Gomes from the spot to seal Pompey’s second FA Cup final appearance in three seasons.

Boateng, who started just 10 games in a two-year spell at Spurs, admits he will relish watching the moment he held his nerve to stroke the ball past Gomes for years to come. “It was the most important goal of my career,” the midfielder said. “I have a lot of friends who will have recorded the match so I will watch it tonight and then again tomorrow, I’ll never get bored of watching it go in.

“There were so many emotions that came up when I went to take that penalty that it was unbelievable. I didn’t have much luck when I was at Tottenham so that also made it a little bit more special. It was the second-best feeling of my life after my son being born. It was the perfect day for me.”

Portsmouth’s win, which came against the club’s old manager Harry Redknapp, set up a final date with the Premier League leaders, Chelsea, next month.

Last month Carlo Ancelotti’s men tore Portsmouth apart 5-0 at Fratton Park but Boateng insists his side can still pull off a shock when the two sides meet at Wembley on 15 May.

“I can promise you that we won’t be beaten 5-0 again,” said the 23-year-old. “We won’t be the same team when we go out there. It’s a big game, we’ll stick together and focus and they won’t beat us 5-0. It’ll be a full house again and if we have the supporters behind us again like they were today in the final then it’ll be 50/50. It’s a cup final and we can win it.”

Boateng had been sidelined with an ankle injury since early February and he saluted his manager, Avram Grant, for providing him with the inspiration to get through the 120 minutes of play after more than two months out of action.

“I have no idea how I managed to get through today,” Boateng admitted. “I think I just had the confidence in my head because the gaffer was behind me. He told me I could do it.

“He asked me if I was OK after 90 minutes and I said I was, so he replied: ‘OK, now I want to see you do more.’ That’s what he’s like. He always wants to see more and that’s what made me believe I could make it.”

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