Celtic sign Joe Ledley from Cardiff but move for Jimmy Bullard stalls

• Ledley available for free after his Cardiff contract ended
• Bullard loan deal scuppered by his financial demands on Hull

Celtic have confirmed the signing of Joe Ledley on a four-year deal from Cardiff City, but their proposed loan move for Hull City’s Jimmy Bullard appears to be dead after he failed to reach a financial agreement with his employers.

Ledley’s contract at Cardiff had expired after the end of last season, and he had been linked with a number of Premier League clubs including West Bromwich Albion, Liverpool and Blackburn Rovers. Ledley is Neil Lennon’s third signing of the summer following the arrival of the full-backs Charlie Mulgrew and Cha Du-ri.

“Celtic is a massive club. I’m looking forward to the season and working with Neil and his coaching staff,” he told Celtic’s online Channel 67. “I want to come here and win trophies. This is a great club and I’m looking forward to playing in front of a Celtic’s great fans every week. This is the right time to leave Cardiff and look at my career. Hopefully we can win the league and cups and it gives me the opportunity to play in Europe too.”

Cardiff would have expected upwards of £2m compensation if Ledley had signed for another team in the English leagues but Fifa’s cross-border transfer rules mean he is able to move to Celtic for free. It is believed Celtic delayed confirmation of his signing until after the World Cup final to ensure Cardiff were unable to claim so-called training compensation, which is due if a player aged under 24 leaves a club during the season.

“We really are delighted to welcome Joe to Celtic,” said Celtic’s manager Neil Lennon. “Clearly, there were a number of clubs very interested in signing him so we are very pleased he has chosen to come to Celtic, somewhere I think he can be a tremendous success.”

Celtic’s chief executive, Peter Lawwell, added: “We are pleased to have beaten off competition from a number of English Premier League clubs for his signature and we are sure he will be a great addition to our squad.”

Lennon had hoped to make Bullard his fourth acquisition and the midfielder, who has two years left on his lucrative contract at Hull, has made several visits to Celtic’s Lennoxtown training complex.

“The deal is off as far as we are concerned – because of absolutely ridiculous financial demands being made by the player,” Hull’s head of football operations, Adam Pearson, told the Daily Mail. “We have bent over backwards to try to make this happen and four weeks ago there was an agreement with Celtic in place over a one-year loan.

“But now it seems Jimmy wants extra cash on top as well and he has jeopardised the chance to play for a great club. He has had four weeks to make up his mind and has strung people along, frankly.”

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Dean Marney leaves Hull City to join Burnley

• Midfielder moves to Turf Moor for £500,000
• 26-year-old agrees three-year contract

Burnley have signed the midfielder Dean Marney from Hull City for an undisclosed fee thought to be worth around £500,000.

Marney, 26, has agreed a three-year contract at Turf Moor and is manager Brian Laws’s first new signing of the summer.

Laws said: “It is a good way to start and I am delighted we have got Dean. Midfield is an area we wanted to strengthen and for a young age he has a lot of experience.”

Marney began his career at Tottenham Hotspur. During his time at White Hart Lane he had loan spells with Swindon Town, Queens Park Rangers, Gillingham and Norwich City. He joined Hull four years ago and made 102 league starts for the club, scoring nine goals. He played 17 times as Hull were relegated from the Premier League last season.

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Five things we learned from the Premier League this weekend | Rob Bagchi

The improvement of Aaron Lennon’s crossing, Michael Essien’s advanced role and Sunderland’s discipline all dealt with

1. Tottenham Hotspur have Aaron Lennon to thank

Jermain Defoe has deservedly hogged the headlines after scoring five goals for Spurs against a shambolic Wigan Athletic defence, but the Latics’ destruction had twin architects. Aaron Lennon’s searing pace has long made him difficult to ignore as an attacking option for successive Tottenham managers since his transfer from Leeds four years ago, but in the past 18 months he has added control and greater perception of when to deliver a cross – not always immaculate – which makes him as devastating a right-winger as any in the Premier League since the heyday of Andrei Kanchelskis in Manchester United’s first Premier League title sides. The torment Lennon inflicted on Erik Edman bordered on sadism and exposed the visitors’ vulnerability that Defoe so clinically exploited. The striker, with his tongue wedged firmly into his cheek, was thankful he had decided to wear silvery-pink boots rather than the green ones his sponsors had provided. Defoe knows, though, that Lennon rather than any sartorial selection laid the foundations for him to be lionised by his manager this morning as “the best finisher in England”.

2. Chelsea’s title favouritism is richly deserved

Chelsea have now gone 10 games at Stamford Bridge since the visit of Hull City on the opening day of the season without conceding a goal. Their home defensive impregnability was never tested too severely by Wolves and the focus for praise fell squarely on Carlo Ancelotti’s midfield where, in the absence of Frank Lampard, Michael Ballack and Deco, in came Joe Cole, Florent Malouda and Mikel John Obi to demonstrate that the Blues have more match-winning options in their squad than any of their title rivals. Michael Essien, playing further forward than in recent games to accommodate Mikel at the base of the diamond, took the licence his manager had given him to disrupt Wolves’ containing strategy at every opportunity. Linking up brilliantly with the underrated Juliano Belletti, he repeatedly ran Wanderers’ midfield ragged and coupled with the fluid movement of Nicolas Anelka and Salomon Kalou, turned the match into a cakewalk. It also set the platform for Gaël Kakuta’s impudent cameo and he demonstrated with the subtlety of his touch just what all the fuss has been about. Chelsea’s critics highlight their lack of strength in depth but no other club enjoys the quality resources Ancelotti has at his disposal. They are rightly title favourites.

3. Manchester City and Liverpool are susceptible to sucker punches

Defensive frailty is still costing Liverpool and Manchester City dear. In particular, slackness at set pieces – Emmanuel Adebayor letting Martin Skrtel steal ahead of him to hook in the opener and the Togo centre-forward’s amends-making unchallenged equaliser – defined a lukewarm match. By the time the goals came, both sides were one starting centre-half down. But whoever the personnel, the lack of concentration remains far more culpable than any particular marking system and it continues to leave them susceptible to the sucker punch. If only horse placenta treatment came in Steve Foster-style headband form.

4. We’re in the midst of a veterans’ renaissance

The days when Lee Bowyer, David Dunn and Jimmy Bullard featured in England squads have long since passed but each in their performances at the weekend hinted that their recovery from injury, ennui and being cast to the peripheries may make them crucial to their clubs’ survival prospects. According to his former team-mate, Robbie Savage, Dunn’s unwillingness to track back has held back his career, but for Blackburn Rovers against Bolton Wanderers he was back to the barnstorming best that characterised his first spell at Ewood Park. Bullard seems to give Hull belief and perhaps his enjoyment, cheek and willingness to gamble has finally given the Tigers the on-field leadership they have lacked for more than a year. Bowyer fell further than his Blackburn and Hull counterparts in unproductive spells at Newcastle and West Ham but he looks a man reborn at Birmingham City and has harnessed his relentless running to become Blues’ most influential player and plays the sort of probing passes Barry Ferguson was bought to provide. Survival takes more than having a talisman but it’s a good starting point.

5. Sunderland extol the virtues of coherence and discipline

Sunderland’s midfield resilience in the absence of Lee Cattermole allowed them to stifle Arsenal and add another big four victim to their record this season. Having already defeated Liverpool and allowing Manchester United to emerge with only a lucky point, Steve Bruce’s side has shown the value that his organisational skills and eye for a player have brought to the Stadium of Light. The way in which Jordan Henderson stuck to his task of shadowing Cesc Fábregas and the responsibility Lorik Cana took on his shoulders to orchestrate a five-man midfield to harry Arsenal’s ball-players deserves respect and bore fruit when the lacklustre visitors were gradually worn down. Critics of Sunderland point to the fact they lead the Premier League in terms of fouls committed, but there is more to them than naked aggression and belligerent resistance. They have what a lot of teams lack – a coherent strategy and the discipline to exercise it.

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