Barcelona insist Fabregas not for sale

Coach Tito Vilanova confident that former Arsenal midfielder wants to stay at Camp Nou

Cesc Fabregas (right) alongside Andres Iniesta at a Spanish training session last month. Photograph: Ricardo Moraes/Reuters
Cesc Fabregas (right) alongside Andres Iniesta at a Spanish training session last month. Photograph: Ricardo Moraes/Reuters

Barcelona coach Tito Vilanova has said that Manchester United target Cesc Fabregas wants to stay at the Spanish champions.

United yesterday made a bid for the midfielder, who has failed to secure a regular starting spot at Barca since returning to the club from Arsenal two years ago.

However, Barca insisted the 26-year-old was not for sale and Vilanova has now confirmed that Fabregas is not wanting to move on either.

Vilanova said at a press conference this morning: “I’m aware there have been offers, I had a conversation with him and he told me that he wanted to continue here and that he didn’t want to go to another big club.

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“He wants to succeed here.”

United manager David Moyes has made a €30 million offer for Fabregas and is also keen on raiding his former club Everton for Marouane Fellaini.

Moyes has identified the need for two midfielders, at least one of whom must be able to contribute goals, which Fabregas has proved he can do in the Premier League.

Moyes considered Real Madrid's Luka Modric before deciding on lodging an official offer for the former Arsenal captain.

Vilanova also claimed today that former colleague Pep Guardiola “wasn’t there for me” during his rehabilitation from cancer.

In the latest chapter of what has turned into an unseemly row between Guardiola and the club he served with such distinction as coach and player, Vilanova admitted he had been disappointed by the new Bayern Munich coach’s conduct.

Vilanova underwent treatment for salivary gland cancer earlier this year in New York, where Guardiola was taking a year-long sabbatical after leaving the Nou Camp hot-seat at the end of the 2011/12 season.

Barcelona president Sandro Rosell had previously suggested Guardiola had made little attempt to visit Vilanova in the United States, claims furiously contested by Guardiola, who then claimed the club were using the issue to “cause him damage”.

Rosell last night attempted to diffuse the row by calling Guardiola “the best manager in the history of the club” but Vilanova himself re-opened it today. He said at a press conference: “People aren’t interested in personal matters, but Pep got it wrong and I’m surprised by his comments.

“No-one on the board used my illness to attack him. The club tried to help me as much as possible.

“He visited me once in New York when I’d just arrived, but during my recovery from the operation . . . I was there for two months and I didn’t see him.

“He’s my friend and I needed him, but he wasn’t there for me. I would have done things differently.”

Vilanova disputed the suggestion the pair had fallen out after he succeeded him as Barca boss. “I talked to him and told him what I intended to do. It was him who encouraged me to become Barca coach,” he said. “I’ve known him for 28 years. He’s my friend. I’ve won titles with him and we had amazing times together.”