Carlos Tevez move to AC Milan from Manchester City still on - Galliani
- Published
AC Milan still want to sign Manchester City striker Carlos Tevez this month, according to the Italian club's vice-president Adriano Galliani.
The Serie A champions had abandoned talks with City over the Argentine's signing after Milan forward Alexandre Pato decided to reject a move to Paris Saint-Germain and stay in Italy.
But Galliani said: "Tevez wants Milan? We also want Tevez. We shall see.
"There are still seven days left until the end of the transfer window."
City remain hopeful a deal with Milan can be concluded for Tevez before the 31 January deadline.
However, Milan face stiff competition from PSG and city rivals Inter Milan to land the 27-year-old, who would prefer a move to the Rossoneri, according to reports.
Galliani claims his club will sign , also reportedly targeted by Fulham, if they cannot seal the Tevez deal.
He told Milan's official website: "If Tevez does not arrive, then Maxi Lopez will join us.
"Either one or the other, certainly not the two of them."
Inter president Massimo Moratti has previously conceded that he thought Tevez would join their rivals.
Galliani had been holding talks with City and Tevez's agent Kia Joorabchian in London, before Pato's proposed 拢29m move to PSG broke down.
City are holding out for a permanent deal for Tevez, and are not willing to let the striker leave on loan.
Manager Roberto Mancini said earlier this month he was confident Tevez would find a new club before the end of the January transfer window.
"I think maybe we can find a good solution in January, also because it is important for Carlos. Now it is three or four months that he hasn't played," he said.
"I know that there is Inter maybe [who are] interested because I read the newspapers, and [AC] Milan the same but I don't know the latest news."
Tevez has not played for City since they .
Mancini , while the player maintained there had been a misunderstanding.
An internal club investigation concluded that Tevez, who joined City in July 2009, was guilty of five breaches of his contract and he was fined four weeks' wages, reduced to two following intervention from the Professional Footballers' Association.
- Published24 January 2012
- Published22 December 2011