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Hisham is a graduate from Institute of Technology MARA (UiTM) majoring in culinary arts. Since his early days at the Hotel Istana, Hisham embarked on an adventurous journey honing and shaping his culinary skills working at JW Marriott Kuala Lumpur, Villa Danieli Restaurant at Sheraton Imperial Hotel, SHOOK Restaurant @ Starhill Gallery, Prince Court Medical Center and Azamara Cruise Line under the parent company of Royal Caribbean International Cruise Line, to name just a few. So you guys already knowing me. Come On, Join Me Talking @Mamak

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Monday, 30 April 2012

Toyota Aurion 2012 gallery

Aurion Presara 2012

Design and Performance

New Aurion combines understated elegance with advanced aerodynamics. Aero corner bumpers and stabilising fins on side mirrors and under the car, work to increase stability and reduce drag. Presara model shown.
Aurion Presara luxury dash

Spacious Interior

A spacious interior along with leather-accented seats, real stitching and meticulous attention to detail, creates a comfortable and refined driving environment. Leather accent on all models except AT-X, SX6. Presara model shown.
Aurion Sportivo ZR6 rear spoiler

Rear Spoiler emphasizes a dynamic sporty look

A wide stance along with an aggressive wing-type rear spoiler (standard on Sportivo models), reflects Toyota’s motorsport heritage and adds a dynamic edge to the look of the car. Sportivo ZR6 model shown in Silver Pearl.
Aurion Presara Side 2012

Bold, sporty styling

The roof and shoulder line of new Aurion create a flowing, aerodynamic, wedge shape which gives the impression of movement even when the car is standing still. Presara model shown in Eclipse Black.
Spacious interior with woodgrain accent. Presara model shown.

Comfortable Posture Supporting Seats

The seats are designed to increase support and help all occupants maintain good posture. This means more comfortable, less fatiguing journeys. Overseas models shown.
Plush seats sculpted for ultimate comfort.

Electric Driver's Seat

The driver's seat is electrically adjustable with lumbar support to help create the perfect driving position; on Prodigy, Presara, Sportivo ZR6 models, it also 'remembers' your preferred position and side mirror settings. Presara model shown.
Quick response paddle shift technology (available on Sportivo models)

Paddle Shift Technology on Sportivo

Quick response paddle shifters mounted on the steering wheel enable smooth, quick upshifts and "throttle-blipping" downshifts. Paddle shift technology in Sportivo models only.
Reverse camera[B4] standard across range

Reverse Camera

A reverse camera[B4] to help make reversing easier and safer is fitted standard across the Aurion range. Reverse camera with back guide monitor on Presara model shown.
Electric Driver’s seat with lumbar support standard across range (Sportivo ZR6 model shown)

Sports Front Seats

Sportivo models feature sports front seats that provide support from the hips to the shoulders, increasing holding performance.
Sportivo ZR6 with Raizen leather accent interior shown.
Dual exhaust system featured across Aurion range.

Dual Exhaust

A Dual Exhaust system across the range, contributes to power and torque. Sportivo models also feature an aggressive rear spoiler and sport diffuser. AT-X model shown.
Sports mesh and silver accented trim emphasise the dynamic, sporty style of Sportivo models

Sporty Interior Trim on Sportivo

Sports mesh and silver accented trim emphasise the dynamic, sporty style of Sportivo models. Sportivo ZR6 model shown.
Aurion Presara Woodgrain Trim

Luxurious Finishes

Curved surfaces and a high quality woodgrain-look finish in new Aurion Presara/Prodigy's spacious interior give the vehicle a moulded, sculptural feel. Presara model shown.

New Toyota AURION 2012 Australia







































































































































































                          

Liverpool FC’s North America Tour 2012

The dates and locations for Liverpool’s North America Tour this summer have now been finalized, with Toronto confirmed as the third destination, adding to Boston and Baltimore.

Fenway Park: The historic home of baseball’s Red Sox
 
The Reds will kick off their tour against MLS side Toronto on July 21st, then entertain Italian side AS Roma at the home of the club’s owners FSG at Fenway Park in Boston on July 25th, before facing fellow Premier League side Tottenham in Baltimore, Maryland on July 28th.

It is reported that Kenny Dalglish‘s side will use Boston as their base throughout their stay in North America and we expect promotional events for the new Warrior Sports kits to also be included on their stay.
For any Reds looking to take in the tour, you could start in Toronto and make the 550 mile trip east to Boston then the 400 miles down the coast to Baltimore. Of course, a stop in New York on the way between Boston and Baltimore would make good logic.

View LFC North America Tour 2012 in a larger map
Fixtures:
1) July 21st – vs FC Toronto (Rogers Centre, Toronto, Canada)
2) July 25th – vs AS Roma (Fenway Park, Boston, USA)
3) July 28th – vs Tottenham (M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, USA)

American broadcaster Fox Soccer announce LFC documentary series


 
American broadcaster Fox Soccer are to film a documentary series following Liverpool FC, entitled Our Liverpool: Never Walk Alone.

Filming will begin next month, in the lead up to the FA Cup Final, through the summer as the Reds’ tour North America and for the opening games of next season.
The show is described as providing a “first for any broadcaster in the world of football”, with access being granted to the team’s “locker room”.
LFC chairman Tom Werner said:
“This will be an amazing opportunity for our fans to see a new side of the club and for us to reach out to many more potential supporters around the world who will come to understand what makes Liverpool FC so special.”
An LFC statement said “Throughout this journey, Liverpool’s unique traditions will be highlighted, along with the club’s unparalleled history, and its heartfelt place in the fabric of the local community”.
Fox Soccer is a dedicated soccer channel in the United States, and the show is expected to be aired on the club’s official channel, LFC:TV too.

Anfield Redevelopment – Part 4: Greater Anfield

Liverpool supporter and architect, Peter McGurk, completes his look at the complexities involved with redeveloping Anfield, and some possible ways which the famous stadium can increase capacity.
This is the final part of the four-part series.
Part One // Part Two // Part Three // Part Four
Anfield redevelopment
don't give me pretty - scare them witless!
The purpose of design studies is to look at what-ifs. They are not designs. They are potential solutions to issues in the design. The studies here are based on publicly available information. They do not have the benefit of a detailed survey, for example. But they are enough to look at the issues in principle.
It’s also important to look at the long-term future. Whatever we do now should not lock us out of what we might want in the future. But ‘future-proofing’ for forever is enormously difficult (and expensive). Every study should look at what it means for the ground in 10, 20, 30 or 50 years time.
Safety and regulations are rightly onerous. There are regulations and guidelines for refurbishment and for new and for both together. Anfield has some of the highest standards and one of the most respected stadium managers in the country. There cannot be any compromises of safety for cost.  None.
It is therefore of the utmost importance to ensure that the existing stadium is not compromised by the new parts and that both meet the requirements of the legislation. As with any extension or expansion of any building this is subject to agreement with local building control. As important is compliance with Health & Safety regulations. Day one of any design process.
The first step is in any event to get a brief together. Perhaps parts of it can be derived (hence the previous million words) but right now, there isn’t one. FSG have their own financial and development criteria. The following is subject to all of that (and more).
***
WE LOVE ANFIELD
There’s a lot of sentiment washing around Anfield. It is after all our not-so-secret weapon in a tight corner. With our backs to the wall. 12th man and all that. And it is, or it can be.
And it does have a value as a sub-brand to the brand. Liverpool playing at Anfield is an event sold around the world. That makes a global difference.
But that barely registers at home. A redevelopment of Anfield at half the cost and ‘roughly the same income’ is just a hugely different financial story. A world better than a new stadium even with naming rights.
***
You can expect a surplus from a redeveloped Anfield as soon as it’s finished – not 15 more years away. It covers costs and makes a surplus. A redevelopment makes our money – the money we spend in the ground and that we spend to get into the ground – available for the club. It doesn’t bleed our back pockets for the benefit of a bank. Who wants to go back to that?!
Not only that but the surplus increases as each part of it is finished. And it could happen very quickly. There are any number of ways to go. Depending on circumstances and financial strategy.  It’s flexible. You can stop when you’ve got enough. you can keep going if you need more.
For a quick hit the club might focus on higher earning premium seats at the outset (the peak revenue per seat is at about 51,000). Not so good for the cheap seats at first but as it grows, and the revenue increases, the scope and financial leeway for cheaper seats and family and kids’ deals increases.
Upgraded seats could be ready in August. Hospitality suites at the same time. They could be earning money before a new stadium is even up.
Anfield could take an early lead with both cashflow and with revenue. A dual lead from which a new stadium might never ever recover. It could continue to net more than a new stadium all the way through the crucial medium term and make it to the ‘debt-free’ long term, sooner.
Anfield could beat a new stadium financially every step of the way. That is why it is the preferred option. Not because we love it (but we do – mostly…).
***
It’s also worth remembering that of the top ten richest clubs, seven have a redeveloped stadium. Three of the ‘finest’ stadia in Europe – The Bernabéu, Camp Nou and San Siro are all redevelopments. As is one of the most lucrative – Old Trafford. For whatever reason, two – Stamford Bridge and White Hart Lane – are struggling to make a new stadium work, even in London.
***
PRACTICALITIES AND DIFFICULTIES
There are design issues and practical working difficulties. The existing Anfield Road End is absolutely tight to the back of pavement line (and is severely compromised as a result) and the club have been involved in the rehabilitation of properties behind the Centenary stand only relatively recently – so don’t look there. Walton Breck Road runs directly behind the Kop and is a significant thoroughfare. The Main Stand is hemmed in by (derelict) properties.
However, there is room for some expansion behind the Kop and a lot behind the Anfield Road End where properties have now been cleared. And over the Main Stand car park. (for hospitality suites at low level).
The views are generally very good (some are very bad). The roof focusses the sound of the fans onto the pitch and everyone enjoys an intimacy with the action and an intense atmosphere.
The pitch itself is 4m too short for European football and lacks the necessary surrounding margin. Play takes place in those competitions by covering over several of the front rows of seating. On the other hand the proximity to the pitch is an important part of the atmosphere particularly in domestic competitions.
***
courtesy of ©Stuart Roy Clarke/www.homesoffootball.co.uk
Working ‘in occupation’ is never straightforward. However, we always think of Anfield as full and the area thronging with people. In fact it’s deserted for all but 6 hours a fortnight and the ground is pretty much empty in the working week (particularly since the offices moved into town).
The work can progress all-year around behind the existing stands. All the way up to and including roof level with turnstiles access at ground level protected by a deck built in the first closed season. Street level circulation and access for fans, coaches, valet parking and outside broadcast vehicles will run under the deck. The roof over the existing stands can be replaced in the last closed season. It would take two years to extend each stand and one stand opened every year after that.
So there need not be any loss of revenue in all that time. And you need only look back to realise that that is exactly how the Upper Centenary Stand was built.
***
Legroom is an issue. People are getting bigger. Of course you can’t build a new stadium for the very largest (or the very smallest). But the regulations are following the trend to larger seats.
For the average bloke in a new stadium this means the ‘crowd’ is getting less packed. But ‘being in it (closer) together’ is important to atmosphere. Sitting at Wembley can be like being at home with your mum.
The more space there is for each seat, the bigger the whole stand and the more expensive it is. A completely new stand would be about 25% bigger than an existing one of the same capacity. That’s at least an increase in prices of 30% right there (we want to make a surplus right?)
Then there’s the land needed. The bigger the stand, the more land needed. Again, the higher the ticket price. If we need one street to simply add to what we’ve got, we could need two to completely rebuild.
You might take the view that there would be so little left of the Anfield Road End that it would be worth going the whole hog and demolishing the lot. It would certainly be easier to extend the pitch. Construction could be sequenced to build the expansion of the Anfield Road End before removing and replacing the existing (so that revenue can be maintained throughout). And since that land is seemingly under the control of the club, it’s a fair point.
The Main Stand is different. The whole stand can be kept and control of the land behind the Main Stand is not as straight forward. And then there’s still the cost… a better way could be to add enough seats and upgrade what we need.
Either way is possible. We get what we pay for and we could lose what we like. The closeness and the intensity.
***
Outside of the financial commitment to £65k each a year, boxes are a waste of money. The price per head is the same as some premium seats and I don’t think we can sell many more. All those lifts, extra floor and ‘executive tier’, separate toilets and building them and pushing up the cost of the stadium itself…
But if boxes is want you want, boxes can be accommodated within the existing structure with outside seats (just like the Centenary Stand). As many boxes as you like really.
There’s hardly a practical limited. But 140 would give us the same ratio to capacity as Old Trafford.
***
A LONGER DAY
Anfield Redevelopment SectionIt’s all a bit weird in a box. I’d rather be able to eat and drink with mates before and after the game. I’d much rather bump into people I haven’t seen for a while, than be shut away in a box. Going to the match is a social event. In fact, most of us spend most of the time in the pub. We are used to turning up five minutes before kick-off. A quick pee and maybe a pie at half time and shooting straight off back to the pub after the final whistle.
Straight off to post-match interviews in the pub and replays, Match of the Day and bed. Fifteen minutes on top of the ninety and we’re gone. Not the three hours of Baseball or even the four of NFL.
And it’s hard to sit together where you used to stand together.
But if the pub is the culture, the stadium can bring the pub into the ground. Space to have a beer, go to the chippie, enjoy a meal – inside the ground. Watch the game before. See the replays after – extending the ‘core experience’ – the TV schedules are made for it. A real day of it – the whole mates and pub thing – but inside the ground. An hour before and maybe one or two after.
There is plenty of room under the new sections of stand. In fact there’s enough room for a seat at a table or a place for a drink under the stand for every seat in it, plus more ‘stand-up’ bars, a concourse and parking! Up to three floors directly accessible behind three stands (no, the Kop can stick with the pies – if you want a glass of wine in the kop, you need to take a good look at yourself) with food and drink stands, snack bars, sports bars, sky bars, fancy restaurants, ‘hospitality suites’ all looking over wall-size TV screens.
If you want it, there’s room for it, you can have it. If it’ll pay, it’ll be there.
***
DESIGN STUDIES
Many, many studies of individual pieces of the design have been boiled down to three options.
In all three, all of the obstructed views would go. The Main Stand would have a new column-free roof. All of the corner roof supports would go. The Anfield Road End would be built over the existing roadway and great as the views are, the upper tier would go to make that possible. And with it, the shockingly poor views at the back of the Lower Anfield Road End. There are two procedural ways to do that. Via the Highways Agency or via Planning. The nearest example is Union Road (Old Trafford).
In a go-for-it world, the Kop could similarly be extended backwards to Walton Breck Road or even in part, cantilevered over it. But anyway, back in the more immediate future…
***
Anfield Redevelopment Viewing DistancesBetter than minimum sightlines (‘c-values’) are achieved throughout.
The existing c-values are in some cases just acceptable, just. Adding more seats would kill them. Two birds with one stone… raising the pitch (by a small amount) means you can make the pitch bigger to meet UEFA standards (hard to explain but obvious if you think about it) and you can alter the viewing angle so that seats can be added. For those at the back of the Upper Centenary it would also make it slightly closer.
There are two sets of arcs set out to define maximum and optimum viewing distance. The inner circle is the ‘optimum’ – a set distance from the centre spot. Boxes should aim to be about or within this distance. The four outer arcs are the recommended maximum. Most bigger capacity stadia are up to and in some cases over this maximum.
Keeping the existing seats at Anfield means that most of the viewing distances can be well within the UEFA recommended maximum. Something to consider from the back of the Centenary Stand.
***
Clearly you’ll get what you pay for for legroom and those with improved seats will no doubt be asked to pay the improvement price. But you can upgrade all of the seats at Anfield if you want to.
There would be no major structural implications and it can be done without closing a stand down.  The ‘trick’ is a lightweight alteration of the steps on top of the existing steps.   Like an ‘overshoe’. That and the carefully manipulation of the dimensions that go into the calculation of sightlines to produce an acceptable result. The technology would be similar to that used to convert standing areas to seating areas in Germany (not ‘safe-standing’).
***
As said, boxes aren’t worth the candle. But you can have hundreds of boxes if you want. The right height is at the optimum viewing distance or just over half way up the main stand. The highest prices are in line with the halfway line. The lowest in the ends. Looking at it now, all the boxes could come out but the studies show they can be there if needed.
***
And to an extent you can play mix and match between the options (between two of them anyway).  Only Option B is mutually exclusive.
Anfield Redevelopment Option BOption B is a flash-in-the-pan. The swirling lines and sloping roof are to impress and inspire. But it’s stupidly expensive. Very little value for its 60,000 capacity. It’s the curved lines of seating terraces and inclined oval roof. The whole roof is cantilevered from behind the stands and can be prefabricated in a kit of parts but no chance of getting built. It does however go some way to answer the question, what-if money (almost) didn’t matter. more images for Option B

Anfield Redevelopment Option AOption A is a straight up and down, get as much in for the least cost. Thank you very much. Job done. Except it’s not quite big enough (capacity just under 60,000) and couldn’t be without taking stuff down and going again. But with elements of Option C it could be increased to the club’s ‘sweet spot’ of 60,000 to 65,000. more images for Option A
In that respect Option C is better…

Anfield Redevelopment Option COption C is for a big future and a careful present. The stadium would be expanded stand-by-stand until demand is met – at 50k, 60k, 70k, 80k or even a wildly ambitious 90k. The end of that road might not ever be reached but nothing done now would stop us getting there more images for Option C

***
LEARNING FROM ANFIELD (and Westfalen and Wembley)
We all believe that UK stadium regulations are some of the most overtly safe there are and there is every good reason for that.
But the combination of regulation and commercial model produces excruciatingly dull stadia. The soulless bowls. The combination of safe viewing calculation and the infamous ‘ring of silence’ (lower tier, boxes, upper tier) produces low, laid back design. The increase in height produced by the boxes pushes the lower tier down and as a result further away from the pitch.
UEFA guidelines (and FIFA’s, more so) push the fans away from the pitch and are making the seats themselves bigger and the legroom bigger. As the footprint of the stadium gets bigger and bigger, so does the roof. As it does so and unless you’ve got the budget for a close-able roof, it gets lighter and lighter. And as it gets bigger and bigger per seat, it gets more and more expensive to pay for a ticket. The facts of stadium economics and affordability.
The heavier intimidating roof is one of the reasons why everybody likes the Millenium Stadium (and less so the lighter, dainty Emirates).
***
On the other hand, everybody loves Westfalen Stadium – a real ‘football ground’. Apparently steep. Close to the pitch. Big, cohesive sections of stand. In fact, just a bit like Anfield.
It is a redevelopment and most significantly expanded and re-roofed for the World Cups in 1974 and 2006. But it is built on a completely different financial model. It is cheaper to get in and there are less ‘corporate whizzbangs’. It’s a model which puts the fans first and matchday revenue second. To make that happen, it puts greater effort into commercial revenues. In short, it has few of the things that are killing our football grounds.
We’ve been to the Emirates and now that we’ve been to Wembley, we know we’re not that keen on modern stadia in the UK. Even if one of them did cost £890m.
***
Even the old Wembley was a ‘difficult’ place to sing a song.
The well-known or single-word chants can work The set-piece Fields of Anfield Road or YNWA would have worked at the peaks of excitement. But your average (or averagely complicated) getting-the-team-going Scouser Tommy or the one-off witticism – forget it.
The old Wembley was too big. Singing mates split up by ticket allocation or jumping from section to section to get back together and the long echoes all around and in between.
***
The new Wembley is impressive – certainly. The views – good. It’s got a nice arch (because it matters…). Atmosphere? Singing? … so much worse. Yet it gets away with it  because of the occasion. It’s always a big deal.
For all its failings the old Wembley was in big chunks. A big crowd. A mass of people.
The new Wembley is in bits. Section this. Section that. Sections miles apart and seats miles apart. And the whole thing split into Lower, Executive and Upper by the infamous ‘ring of silence’. The prawn-sandwich brigade. The private boxes. Just like the Emirates.
And actually, and as a result, the views are not that good. Putting private boxes into modern calculations of sightlines produces a god-awful geometry for the ordinary joe. The lower tier is too low and the upper tier is too far away.
The top of the lower tier is going on for level with the back of the old Wembley. There used to 39 steps to the Royal Box. Now there are 107 – go figure.
***
But Wembley has a ‘trick’. The trick is to have a very deep lower tier and a very big margin around the pitch. This means the middle and upper tier can oversail the tier below to a significant degree. It means the height is immense (there are no Lower Anfield Road end views at Wembley) but it also means that the front edges of the tiers are closer to being directly above one another.
So the whole stadium looks steeper even though it’s not. The penalty is viewing distance. Not only on the horizontal but up in the air. All that takes, to do is money. £890m.
One other thing. There aren’t that many boxes. There’s a huge lesson there. The ‘Bobby Moore (hospitality) Suite’ is massive but there are no boxes to it.
***
So for those without that kind of billion to spend, the boxes and the rules have changed the experience. We sit in low-slung boring stadia like the Emirates (and no, we can’t have the steep tiers of Spain, or Italy. The rules are different).
We aren’t the 12th man any more. We’re armchair critics. Apparently we are the sort of people that need over-weaning announcers and song sheets and probably plastic flags. And this it seems is the way the FA and UEFA and FIFA like it and the way they like stadia to be designed. They do not want participation. They want spectators. Sit down, pay up and shut up.
***
But figure this. We must have boxes to make a new stadium work back at Anfield. Actually no.
Boxes only produce about 5% of ‘gate’ money at a very disproportionate cost. Not only to build them (with their lifts and carpets, individual toilets and parking and service pantries and corridors and special floors) but also because they push up the overall height and strength of the structure.
And when you work out the ticket price of a box per head, it can be about the same as a premium seat hospitality package. So, same income from a box but more cost and a stadium and atmosphere cut in two by a ring of silence. Next.
***
Anfield Redevelopment New AnfieldIf you’re going to build new, forget the HKS design (the one that brought the design ‘up to date’ ie., with boxes added, lower tiers lowered and NFL injected). Forget the second AFL design and even the first, the 2003 design.
If you’re going to build new, forget the boxes. Drop the small sections of seating. Lower the cost, maybe (I wish) lower the prices. Produce large sections of seating at steeper angles. Ok, far enough from the pitch to keep UEFA happy but two fingers to FIFA and their ten metres (how much additional cost for maybe two World Cup games in a life time?)
Stick with the minimum legroom (still more than we have now) and the minimum seat width. Provide much, much better food, beverage and hospitality facilities for all. Make the day longer. Build a more compact, lower, flatter and more rectilinear roof to keep in the sound. Make sure every fan can see every other fan. ‘Lean in’ to the pitch. Get close and in your face and scare the opposition witless. Prettiness we don’t need. Intimidation is what we want.
What would it look like? A bit like the Millennium Stadium, a lot like Westfalen. Perhaps even a bit like Anfield.
***
But if you want to redevelop, we’re already two-thirds of the way there.

 http://www.thisisanfield.com/2012/04/anfield-redevelopment-part-4-greater-anfield/

Welcome To Anfield

This is Anfield (Liverpool Football Club badge) - Liverpool Football Club

Leaked Nike Design Malaysia Away 2013


Leaked Nike Design Malaysia Home 2013

Jersey baru Malaysia

Affaley on the way to anfield

 


Kenny Dalglish is interested in taking the Holland international on loan and the Catalan club could be willing to let him leave for a year.
The 26-year-old has been absent through injury since September last year and is looking to get some first team football to regain match fitness, something that Liverpool clubs are willing to offer.
Afellay joined Barca in January of last year from Dutch side PSV Eindhoven, the club where he came through the youth ranks and then established himself as a key first team player.
Before his injury, a cruciate ligament tear, Afellay had been unable to force his way into the first team and was used mainly as a late substitute.

Liverpool Offer £16.3m deal for the midfielder


I hope we will get him....All I can say WELCOME TO ANFIELD

Liverpool are believed to have made a £16.3million bid for Bologna midfielder Gaston Ramirez, according to the player's agent Pablo Bentancur.

The Uruguayan is being tracked by a number of leading clubs across the continent having enjoyed an excellent campaign in what is an under-performing side.
The 21-year-old signed a new deal with the Serie A club earlier this season and has scored six goals in 30 league appearances this term.
Bentancur has revealed an offer has been lodged by un-named Premier League club, believed to be the Reds.
And a decision will be reached at the end of this season, according to reports in the Metro.
He told Italian TV station TMW: 'Bologna have received an offer near to 20million euros from an important club in the Premier League,'
'Bologna will decide at the end of the season what they are going to do.'

Liverpool is finalizing the deal of £8m AZ Alkmaar midfielder

Anfield boss Kenny Dalglish is believed to be contemplating a swoop for the Sweden international playmaker as he looks to rebuild his side for a push for the Premier League title


Rasmus Elm, AZ
Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish is believed to be tracking Swedish midfielder Rasmus Elm as he looks to rebuild his squad for next season, according to The Sunday Mirror.
Elm currently plies his trade with Dutch outfit AZ Alkmaar and has been in scintillating form this season, bagging 12 goals to fire his side to second in the Eredivisie.
Dalglish has been impressed with the scout reports on the 24-year-old and sees him as the ideal player to strengthen the side’s midfield core.
The Scot has claimed that he will have money available in the summer but a spree may be unlikely after seeing £75 million spent on Andy Carroll, Jordan Henderson and Stewart Downing alone in the past 15 months.
The Swede is approaching the final year of his contract and could be available for £8m but Liverpool will face competition for the signature of the highly-rated star as clubs in Spain, Italy and the Premier League are all thought to be showing an interest.

Is this your choice ENGLAND Fans?

Roy Hodgson
Hawthorns man is apparently the only manager the FA have in mind for the vacant position.Now the fans can cancel the trips to EURO 2012. It will just a waste of time and money if you still go for it. What happened to Harry deal? Is someone in the English FA is DRUNK? .....What is the FA think? There is so many Managers available....get the one that really will give England a Chance in EURO...


Roy Hodgson approached by FA over England manager’s job
West Bromwich Albion have granted the Football Association permission to talk to Roy Hodgson about the vacant England manager’s position.
Hodgson, 64, has already spoken with FA chairman David Bernstein about replacing Fabio Capello.

Bernstein said: “Roy is the only manager we have approached and we remain on course to make an appointment within the timescale we set out.
“Further conversations will now take place with Roy.”

LFC goes for Japanese!!!! Cool...

Shinji Kagawa 4 COS
Anfield side set to launch bid for Shinji Kagawa.

Kenny Dalglish is showing an interest in Borussia Dortmund midfielder Shinji Kagawa and will reportedly look to make a bid for the talented Japanese international this summer. The 23 year old has enjoyed two incredibly successful seasons at the Bundesliga side but has told his club’s owners that he wants to leave for pastures new.
Kagawa has been an instant hit in Germany ever since he arrived from Cerezo Osaka and has helped Jurgen Klopp’s side clinch back to back domestic titles in the process. During his two seasons at the Westfalenstadion the Kobe born attacker has notched up 28 goals and 12 assists in 68 games in all competitions a very healthy return for a player who cost Dortmund just £300k.
Kagawa has been the subject of interest from a number of clubs and having seen team-mate Nuri Sahin move to Real Madrid the Japanese international appears keen to Borussia Dortmund side and interest from the Anfield side could well prove tempting.
Liverpool could well do with more creative talent to help boost their firepower having struggled for goals for much of this season. Dalglish has spent a great deal on new additions over the past 18 months but the Merseyside club’s American owners are ready to hand the Scot significant funds when the transfer window re-opens.