download All Football App

Man City tried to poach John Terry from Chelsea in 2009

  /  autty

Manchester City tried to prise former Chelsea captain John Terry away from Stamford Bridge back in 2009, former Etihad chief Garry Cook has revealed.

Cook worked as City's chief executive during their free-spending spell, when they used newfound riches to close the gap on the biggest clubs in the Premier League.

During his tenure City made an audacious bid to partner Terry with captain Vincent Kompany, with Cook confirming Chelsea gave their Premier League rivals permission to speak to the centre back.

'We went through the process (of signing Terry),' Cook told the Transfer Talk podcast.

'(Chelsea chief executive) Peter Kenyon was there at the time and we had conversations with him, saying we'd like to do it and we'd like to have a conversation.

'I think he was probably more confident that he (Terry) wasn't going anywhere.

'We had conversations with John and he decided to stay where he was, and quite rightly so. But there was never a document ready to sign.'

Terry rejected the move and remained at Chelsea until 2017, amassing 703 appearances during an trophy-laden spell in London.

Under Mark Hughes, City instead forked out more than £40million on centre backs Joleon Lescott and Kolo Toure during a expensive summer that also saw the likes of Carlos Tevez and Emmanuel Adebayor move to the Etihad.

But Cook believes Terry would have taken  Hughes's side to a whole new level. He added: '(Terry) is a true leader and the dressing room needed leadership.

'He had Premier League and Champions League experience, he was an England player and that was admittedly as good as all of the other names we were chasing.

'Somebody like Terry would have added a whole different dimension to the growth of Man City, but unfortunately it wasn't to be.'