The Beautiful Game http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com Imagine Cristiano Ronaldo playing for Brighton & Hove Albion. He'd just get in the way. posterous.com Wed, 25 Nov 2009 11:58:00 -0800 Arise Sir Jimmy Bullard?! http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/arise-sir-jimmy-bullard http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/arise-sir-jimmy-bullard

There is always someone who comes from nowhere to have a real impact on a tournament.

With the World Cup Play-offs and Henry-gate behind us the world's eyes are now focusing on Cape Town next Friday evening and the draw for the 2010 World Cup. Who will be in the group of death? (it could be England, ivory coast, USA and Portugal!) who will win the golden shoe? Who will walk away with the trophy?

In terms of England the predictions for the team are virtually agreed (pending david James and his knees) but there is still debate over the final 23 and there are a few names that will make a late surge - and who knows could end up being our star player.

There are bound to be metatarsals snapping and groins tweaked as we near the end of the brutal English season and you can be sure that Rooney apart Capello will not take anyone who is not fit, so here are a few scenarios and a few heros;

Frank Lampard gets injured building IKEA furniture. In steps Jimmy Bullard.

An exceptionally talented footballer and he will be the reason that Hull City will be playing Premier League football next season. Great technique and more consistent than Beckham with set pieces and would also bring some Gazzaesque charm to a pretty strict squad.


Ashley Cole gets arrested. In steps Kieran Gibbs.

One mistake aside Gibbs had a great start to his Arsenal career and has been quality for the U-21s. If anything happens to Cashley it would not surprise me for Capello to give the number 3 shirt to Gibbs over the very average Wayne Bridge and see if the boy can make a real name for himself.

Gareth Barry becomes an Abu Dhabi National and is makes himself ineligible (but he has not done it for the money). In steps Phil Neville.

The much ridiculed P.NEV has been much more consistent at Everton and does have the ability to do the simple things very well - could be the perfect foil for Lampard and Gerrard.

Wayne Rooney has to stay in England to babysit. In steps Michael Owen.

He probably will not make the final 23 if everyone is fit (which I disagree with) but he has scored in World Cups before and is capable of doing so again. In fact I wonder what the odds on Owen winning the golden shoe are...

 

 

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/78701/dn.jpg http://posterous.com/people/1bjAmKwVXb3 David Norris david.norris David Norris
Thu, 19 Nov 2009 01:33:12 -0800 Thierry is not the French cheat - it is Platini http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/thierry-is-not-the-french-cheat-it-is-platini http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/thierry-is-not-the-french-cheat-it-is-platini

Last night Thierry Henry won the tie for France by gaining an advantage and using his hand to keep the ball in play. Nine times out of ten the referee would see it, award a free-kick and Henry a yellow card. However, last night the referee and assistant missed the key moment and the cat calls from the media this morning have been that Henry is a disgrace and a cheat and should be thrown out of the Finals.

Let's not forget this is the same player who graced the Barclays Premier League and earnt the respect of fans, media and players across England.

Personally, I do not think that Henry is the real cheat - sure he gained an advantage but you can think of hundreds of examples where players instincts have taken over and they have gained an advantage. Think Michael Owen in France '98, think about any Goalkeeper coming off their line on a penalty, think of anytime you may have been the one trying to clear the ball off the line. It happens all the time, sure this was a big moment with World cup Qualification at stake, but I do not believe that any player in that scenario would stop his nation celebrating and announce that he had touched the ball with his hand. That is the referee's job, not the player.

For me the real shame here is that this tie even happened. The Republic of Ireland had an amazing qualification and were easily on a par with France on their qualification performance. The fact that Platini and Blatter created the seeding for these play-offs is the real cheating, it created a bias towards the bigger teams of France and Portugal - and stars such as Henry and Ronaldo - and was not in place until they realised which teams were in the Play-offs and the prospect of France v Portugal.

The Republic played great last night, but instead of looking at Henry as the cheat I think there is another Frenchman who should take the real blame.

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Thu, 29 Oct 2009 11:49:00 -0700 Predict the performance of your team http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/predict-the-performance-of-your-team http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/predict-the-performance-of-your-team


Ever been tempted to change you fantasy football team on the eve of a big weekend? Certain that Stevie G is due a big match and feeling like Lampard is struggling in the new diamond formation under Ancelotti?

More often then not I look back gutted as the player I put in failed to deliver and the guy subbed out, well he ends up having the game of his life.

Usually this is based on my gut instinct - and I am sure that others who dabble in fantasy football, or even betting do the same - make a call based on instinct or what the chap on BBC Sport is saying.  Even when going down the pub I always want to look out for, and be armed with that killer shout and prediction for the match. I love being right, and especially when it comes to football.

Through Twitter I picked up a notification about the Castrol Rankings, and think I may have found my answer to my friday dilemma. Is Gerrard in form? Should I pick Gareth Barry? Or who is going to make the difference in the UEFA Champions League next week? You can compare players, look up form over the season and also read up on some interesting predictions based on stats and facts (interestingly they even support one of my previous blogs about Manchester City).

Apart from the site being grey - its a pretty interesting resource and if like me you like to tinker with your fantasy team, or look out for that prediction before the game then well worth checking out.. www.castrolfootball.com

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Fri, 23 Oct 2009 07:29:15 -0700 The lottery of life as a football manager http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/the-lottery-of-life-as-a-football-manager http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/the-lottery-of-life-as-a-football-manager

Poor old Gareth Southgate. He got crucified pretty much week in, week out last season as Boro got relegated from the Barclays Premier League. The media were after him, his players were moaning and the crowds were gutted to be losing their place in the North East elite (made only slightly better by the fact Newcastle were also relegated).

However, there was one bright shining light for Southgate. It was not all doom and gloom. His chairman and champion Steve Gibson was going to back him to bring the young squad back to the top level of English Football. Southgate was determined and spent the summer earning the club cash by selling the likes of Downing and Huth but consolidating his squad and setting his ambitions for the season ahead. If one thing can be said of Middlesbrough they have a great local spirit and have always had loyalty in their managers.

It had been a bit of an up-and-down start to the campaign. A couple of miserable home defeats were alongside some decent away performances and after beating Derby County 2-0 on Tuesday Southgate's team were sitting pretty in fourth place in the league looking in good shape in what will always be an erratic league. Then came the axe. Game over for Gareth Southgate.

It just does not make any sense to me. I could understand it if he was Roy Keane at Ipswich and his team was still looking for their first win, but in team playing pretty well overall and up near the top-end of the league?

If you were going to sack him, why not do it after the team had been relegated? A new manager will not be able to buy any players till January and will take crucial time to get to know his players and how to get the best out of them. I can't say I am the biggest fan of Southgate but I can't help but feel like he has been merked by Steve Gibson.

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Mon, 12 Oct 2009 13:36:11 -0700 Will it be the World Cup of the team, not the Superstar? http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/will-it-be-the-world-cup-of-the-team-not-the http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/will-it-be-the-world-cup-of-the-team-not-the

As the qualification process winds down and more and more countries learn their fate ahead of the World Cup draw in Durban on December 4th – a true nightmare is potentially going to happen for FIFA.

We are not talking about riots, or issues with South Africa’s infrastructure – we are talking about the potential for the two best players on the planet not being present next summer. That very outcome is hanging over Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi. Not only is this a massive issue for FIFA’s PR and Marketing team, but it is also a massive blow to all those who love the game.

Firstly, Ronaldo’s Portugal have struggled throughout their Qualification Group and look like sneaking into the Play-offs at the expense of Sweden. However, that will mean immense pressure and some very strong teams in the Play-offs - potentially the winker might not get the chance to play on the greatest stage of all when in the form of his life. He may be arrogant, he may fall to the ground easily but he is an amazing talent, and the most expensive footballer in history. Although Portugal have knocked out England in recent times, I would love to see Ronaldo lighting up the tournament, at least up until the Quarter Finals.

Secondly, the shambles that is the management style of Diego Maradona looks likely to condemn Argentina to miss their first FIFA World Cup in 39 years. Late, late, late in to Saturday night a last minute goal by the 57 year old striker Martin Palermo (okay, 35) meant Argentina scraped a victory against Peru (the same Peru team that had played eight games, lost them all, scored two goals and conceded 24). They now have to look to their final match away against Uruguay and hope results go their way to clinch the last Qualification spot or even the South American Play-Off place. Maradona has used a staggering 70-something players during Qualification and by no means is he left with an easy fixture as Uruguay have a phenomenal record at Montevideo.

He seems to make impulsive decisions before and during matches. If Messi ends up missing the 2010 FIFA World Cup, not only will Adidas be smarting (he is their lead global athlete) but the tournament will feel like something is missing – now imagine if both were to miss out.

What this could mean is a real shift in the perception of the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Usually a tournament is talked about through the players. The Ronaldo World Cup of 2002, the Baggio World Cup of 1994, Pele 1958, Maradona 1986.

The 2010 FIFA World Cup could change that and move from superstar flair players, to organised and combative teams – working together towards the common goal. Victory.

 This will give the likes of Germany and excellent chance in South Africa, and also should see Brazil do well as Dunga has evolved a team of eleven isolated players in 2006 into a physical and powerful unit, with a hint of flair.

I can’t wait for next summer, but I just hope that come December 4th Portugal and Argentina are in the hat and we avoid a FIFA World Cup being remembered as per Euro 2004 – the Greek Tragedy.

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Fri, 25 Sep 2009 04:38:26 -0700 Phil Brown and Paul Hart: Squeaky Bum Time http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/phil-brown-and-paul-hart-squeaky-bum-time http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/phil-brown-and-paul-hart-squeaky-bum-time It is a massive few weeks for Hull City and Portsmouth, and maybe even more so for Phil Brown and Paul Hart. With both teams struggling for any kind of form or goal threat it feels as if we are not too far away from the first managerial scalp of the season. I imagine Alan Curbishley is eagerly watching the results of these two.

Hull City: Phil Brown


They literally exploded in to the Barclays Premier League last season.  In their first 18 games they won 7 times including away at Arsenal, Spurs and Newcastle (while also taking a point at Anfield). They seemed well placed to see out the season in style and manager Phil Brown was being talked about as a genius and breath of fresh air - there was even talk of Brown being a future England manager in waiting. What a difference a few months make.

From the debacle of away at Manchester City on Boxing Day and his half-time team talk to trying to convince Alvaro Negredo that Humberside was the new Madrid his team just look poor. Michael Turner seems a big loss for them and they are shipping goals for fun. A game at Anfield has demolition written all over it and I fully expect Hull to get thumped again. The challenge for Brown is to get his troops in order for the games against Wigan, Fulham, Burnley, Stoke and a massive match at home against Portsmouth. If they continue to ship goals then Brown will be packing his bags - he even now has the public show of support from his Chairman (usually the first nail in the coffin).

Portsmouth: Paul Hart

FA Cup winners in 2007/2008. A complete shambles 2009/2010.

Paul Hart did a solid job keeping the side up last term, but the sheer volume of change and gulf in talent between the players who came in on the last day of transfer day against Distin, Crouch, Defoe, Kranjcar and co means he now needs to perform a miracle. I am sure that the win away at Carlisle in the Carling Cup did them good but they need to string a few results together in the league. If they stay up then Paul Hart deserves a medal. They have got a good run of fixtures against Wolves, Spurs, Hull, Wigan and Blackburn but think they might get ripped to pieces by Everton on Saturday. Time will tell but they need points, and they need them quickly to save Hart's job - mind you if he goes who would take it on?!

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Fri, 25 Sep 2009 04:34:32 -0700 Yes he will http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/yes-he-will http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/yes-he-will
Michael Owen makes the Beautifulgame's prediction come true

I love football.

What a game, and time will tell if my prediction was correct and if that goal will kick-start Owen's career at Old Trafford. Money on Owen getting a seat on the plane to South Africa?

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Fri, 18 Sep 2009 09:20:59 -0700 Will Owen teach City a lesson? http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/will-owen-teach-city-a-lesson http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/will-owen-teach-city-a-lesson

Forget the performance away at Burnley.

Forget the loss of Cristiano Ronaldo and Carlos Tevez.

I think Manchester United are about to kick-start their season. They got the result against Arsenal. They played some great stuff at Spurs and think the performance in the UEFA Champions League was just as good, a seemingly scrappy 1-0 win in Turkey should not be under-estimated.

And so to the most anticipated Manchester derby in decades.

If you want to prove that you have arrived in the Barclays Premier League and you want to be considered a real threat to any of the top 4 then you have to perform against United. Manchester City get that chance on Sunday and it will be fascinating to see how they get on.

City have been very impressive so far. Grinding out 1-0 wins, demolishing Arsenal and actually looking like a team but Mark Hughes will see this Sunday as a real watershed moment. Beating Arsenal at home is one thing, beating United on a previous encounter is another but beating United at Old Trafford when you actually seem to be about to break-through? Now that is a different story..

The loss of Adebayor is a massive blow to City and will mean they will lose that get-out ball from midfield which seemed to be working so well in the Arsenal match. I think it will be a fascinating match on so many levels and if City can get a result they will really be galvanised and thats before getting Robinho back and fit. They will approach the game full of confidence with an attack based on pure pace with Bellamy, Wright-Phillips and probably Petrov.

However, Spurs were flying till they got found out against United and I am sure that although Sir Alex Ferguson is expecting a tougher test - he will also be expecting the same result from his charges. On the day I think Manchester United will be too strong and with no Santa Cruz to replace Adebayor I do not think they can play their system. They usually take a while to hit their straps but not only do I expect United to beat City - I believe that they will look to make a statement and put City in their place.

I even believe this could be the match that will also kick-start Michael Owen’s Old Trafford career. It will be his first big match at Old Trafford and I would not be surprised to see United’s new number seven making the difference on Sunday.  

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Thu, 10 Sep 2009 11:38:47 -0700 Thanks Emile : Now let's give Carlton a chance http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/thanks-emile-now-lets-give-carlton-a-chance http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/thanks-emile-now-lets-give-carlton-a-chance

Last night at about 8:07PM I was able to begin to wipe from my mind the memory of the last time I saw Croatia play at Wembley on that dark, wet and miserable night back in 2007 when England were eliminated from qualification for UEFA Euro 2008. As Frank Lampard stepped up to convert the penalty it felt like it was going to be a great night. The team playing well, keeping the ball, creating chances and scoring goals - but there was one element which I was getting a bit stuck on. Good old Emile Heskey.

Before the game I was fully bought in to starting Heskey over Defoe. Sure Defoe has been on fire for Spurs so far this season, but the England team look so much more balanced and get the best from Rooney and Gerrard when there is a big guy who can hold the ball up. However, the two chances that Heskey missed in the first half are ones that I am confident Harry Redknapp's wife could of scored - and if we have designs on winning the FIFA World Cup then we need two strikers who can offer a goal threat.

He is great at doing his job, has pretty good movement and makes Rooney play well - but I think that now we have the luxury of secured qualification Fabio Capello should turn to Carlton Cole. We know Heskey can do the job well. However, could Cole offer the complete package that as well as the hard graft and link play delivers an eye for goal?

It stunned me to find this from the Daily Mail;

Cole is easily the best option to replace Heskey.

I believe that he should start, and finish, both of the remaining competitive FIFA 2010 World Cup Qualifiers. There are 9 months for the team to be developed and refined and you could argue that with a fully fit crop of players only the right midfield and partner for Rooney are the ones that do not pick themselves (assuming David James is fit and playing well). Lennon deserves a run in the team - and he should get that after his MoM last night - but if we do not give Carlton Cole the minutes on the pitch we will never know and then what happens if Heskey gets injured in the first match?

Come on Carlton, don't let me down

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Fri, 04 Sep 2009 08:53:00 -0700 Why has Platini got it in for the English Premier League? http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/why-has-platini-got-it-in-for-the-english-pre http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/why-has-platini-got-it-in-for-the-english-pre


We all know that there is previous between England and France. It started a long time ago and still seems to rumble on. With Michel Platini's surge to power at UEFA it seems as though each season there is something new to talk about that demonstrates his passion against the success of the Barclays Premier League.

Right now it is the amazing decision against Chelsea that will stop them buying any new players till 2011. The punishment was dealt out by FIFA after the club was found guilty of getting a young winger, Gael Kakuta to break his contract with Lens in 2007.

Since achieving UEFA Presidency in 2007 Platini has tried to launch, and shared an official opinion on a number of new ideas and innovations to the game. However, to me it seems that often these are born out of Platini trying to fight the dominance of the English game in Europe.

The vast TV Rights money, huge transfer fees, foreign ownership and clubs mounting debts has created an aura of negativity across Europe against the Barclays Premier League, and the Chelsea ruling seems to be the latest battle. I am sure that this kind of thing has gone on in football for decades and all the top teams from all the top leagues must be guilty of it. I am not saying that I agree with it, and think it is very harsh to punish the young player as well as the club, it is just that it always seems that English teams suffer most.

I grew up watching Italian, Spanish and English football and Eduardo's 8.0 against Celtic looked like a cruncher compared to other examples I have seen throughout European football. Yet it is Arsenal who suffer the ban. It would not surprise me if the paper talk is proved right and Manchester United are the next team to suffer the same kind of ruling as Chelsea, then probably Manchester City. With these two incidents the authorities have set the precedent, and they now have to enforce them each time - I can't wait to see what happens the next time there is a dodgy penalty award against Arsenal.

Platini has recently backed the 6+5 idea (six home international players and five foreign players) to be introduced in top flight team in Europe. Platini has also backed caps on wages and transfer spending - and all foreign ownership of clubs. He has stated that he wants to cut the number of Italian, Spanish and English teams in the UEFA Champions League to a maximum of three instead of four and has also talked about banning clubs from European competition based on the debts of the clubs. All are valid ideas, but it seems that English clubs will get hit the hardest.

Too much money, not enough home-grown talent, clubs built on debt and foreign ownership, money taking over the game, players running clubs. These are Platini's view of the English game and he seems set to try and disrupt it.

I love the Barclay's Premier League, and it is so great because of the big business it has become and I have enjoyed English clubs having success in Europe (and the benefits this seems to be having on the national side) and hope that an English team can lift the UEFA Champions League trophy in Madrid in May and see Platini grit his teeth and applaud.

Sod it, I even wouldn't mind if it's Chelsea.

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Tue, 01 Sep 2009 12:49:00 -0700 The underrated players of the Barclays Premier League http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/the-underrated-players-of-the-barclays-premie http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/the-underrated-players-of-the-barclays-premie

 

The Barclays Premier league has some of the most recognised and superstar names of the modern game. Rooney, Torres, Robinho, Drogba, Terry to name but a few.

It is often these players that get the adoration of the press, often lifted up on high after a match winning performance or a goal out of nothing.

The thing that I always found as a amateur player was a brilliant performance can often go unrecognised if it was just a case of performing your role perfectly. The guy who broke up play to create the chance is forgotton for the man who tucked it away from the edge of the box. This pattern is true throughout the game with most of the big teams having players who are crucial to their team, but who often miss out on the adoration of the media and most fans.

I am not saying forget the guy who scores the goal, but just to take a step back when thinking about your favourite players.

Here are a few names I think don't get the credit they deserve;

Darren Fletcher, Manchester United

An excellent footballer who is now in pole position to be the leader of United's midfield. He was the player they missed most in the UEFA Champions League final to break up Barcelona and turn defence into attack. He is an intelligent player who takes up some great positions, he runs all day, can pick a pass and is also cabable of big goals. I expect him to grow into a permanent fixture for United over the next couple of years and hopefully step more into people's attention.


Jussi Jääskeläinen, Bolton wanderers

A goalkeeper always left out of the 'best in the league' debate. A consistent performer (he has been at Bolton for 12 years), great shot-stopper and a player that if it were not for the team he plays for would be right up there and considered one of the greats. A goalkeeper is a harsh position - all glory or despair - but for his consistency over such a long period of time should be commended.

Gareth Barry, Manchester City

A strange choice maybe considering he is an established England international and has recently made a multi-million pound move to Manchester City. However, the fact that Barry moved for the same price as Michael Turner from Hull City is a joke. He would have added to any of the top four teams and provides great balance to a side, especially one looking to attack. Reliable, able to set the pace of a game and comfortable with the ball at his feet - and a great penalty taker. I think Rafa might end up regretting this one.


Phil Neville, Everton

Okay, so I am shooting myself in the foot here (think Romania in UEFA Euro 2000),  but it should be acknowledged that Phil Neville made his debut for Manchester United 15 years ago, has 59 England caps and is still captain of a top Barclays Premier League team. Disciplined, professional and a great leader for the Toffees.


Bobby Zamora, Fulham FC

This is not a pure sign of loyalty to Brighton & Hove Albion (Zamora scored 76 goals in 126 appearances) but Zamora is a player in my opinion. Okay, he does not bang the goals in but his strength and hold up play can make the difference. At West Ham United he showed glimpses of his ability (playoffs 2004/2005 season;) and Fulham could really benefit from sticking by him this summer. He is strong, and when confident a brilliant finisher, I expect more people to be talking about him come the end of the season

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Tue, 25 Aug 2009 13:28:00 -0700 Premier League: The reign of the Big Four coming to an end? http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/premier-league-the-reign-of-the-big-four-comi http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/premier-league-the-reign-of-the-big-four-comi



So Liverpool are out of the title race. Spurs are going to win the league and Everton are going to get relegated.

Well that is the story of the Barclays Premier League table if you look at it today. The first three matches have been played and there have been more than a few shocks. Manchester City look a tight unit, Burnley are world beaters and Michael Owen has forgotten where the goal is.

However, that is the classic knee-jerk reaction that some Fantasy Football managers would adopt when they pick Abou Diaby from Arsenal because he scored two against Portsmouth at the weekend (he only scored 4 goals in 36 matches in 2008/2009). The football season throws up numerous shocks at the start, players gaining fitness and learning to play new systems and with new team-mates. Just think about Hull last season in the Barclays Premier League.

What I think is the interesting thing this year is that the difference between the top teams and the rest of the division is becoming less, and the competitiveness of the 'mid-table' Barclays Premier League teams is growing each season. The TV cash and sponsorship is still growing the game at the elite level and will continue to do so as brands invest more in players and passions (of which football is one of the greatest) and broadcasters pin more and more of their strategy on top tier live rights.

But for me the big change has come with the power shift to Spain's La Liga as Manchester United and Liverpool have lost two key players to that league and although Chelsea are still strong (and I believe will be Champions) they have not been able to strengthen as more and more players choose La Liga over the Barclays Premier League. Meanwhile, Manchester City have eaten away at the Arsenal Squad with the signings of Adebayor and Toure.


With the Big Four not being able to strengthen as much as they would like, and emerging teams like Spurs, Sunderland, Aston Villa and Manchester City all spending big I expect more of the Big Four to lose games.

I still believe that the usual suspects will be there or thereabouts come May, with maybe Manchester City crashing the party, but I can see the required points total for the champions being lower than recent seasons and more teams taking points off the Big Four, I think the United, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool will each lose 4-5 games. I might even be so bold as to say within a couple of seasons it will be more a Super Seven...  

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Sat, 15 Aug 2009 04:37:00 -0700 The Premier League: Who will be celebrating come May?! http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/2047929 http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/2047929

For the last few weeks there has been endless speculation about the coming season. Will Manchester United suffer without Tevez and Ronaldo? Can Burnley continue to beat Barclays Premier League opponents as they did in last seasons Carling Cup? Will Carlo Ancelotti unite the Chelsea millionaires?!

Almost daily there have been predictions on what the final outcome will be come May, and following the flurry of interest that surrounds Fantasy Football League selections it felt that I should also host my own prediction. So here goes..

Champions: Chelsea. Without losing any key squad members and the momentum from the back end of last season when all seemed lost I can see Chelsea winning back the title. In Terry, Lampard and Anelka they have a strong core and additions of Zhirkov and Sturridge will add an extra dimension to their attack. Solid, consistent and a winner at the helm. Think United will push them close but it's Chelsea for me.

 

Champions League: Manchester United, Liverpool and Manchester City. The City prediction is a bold one, and fully dependant on their start. They have lots of goals in them, Barry and Toure are great signings and if Hughes can sign one transfer window central defender they have a strong squad. A lot depends on the first few games. If they get a good start and get confident and the pressure eases then its game on and think they can break the top four.

Surprise Package: Sunderland. I think Steve Bruce has bought well and Kenwyne Jones, Fraizer Campbell and Darren Bent will score goals - Lee Catermole is also one step and learning to control his agression away from a senior England place. Bruce has a great knowledge of South American football and da Silva could prove the difference to his defence. I see them causing a few upsets and going close in both the domestic cups.

Relegation: Hull City, Portsmouth and Birmingham. Poor old Pompy, too many good players have left and unless they get loads of cash in January they are going to be in trouble. Think even by then it could be too much for them. Hull showed great spirit last season but by the turn teams had found them out, and sadly for Phil Brown that will continue and the new boys in town will push on and survive. Well, that said apart from Birmingham. I just dont see them having the firepower to stay up. It will be close but think they will always be there or thereabouts and get sucked in towards the end of the season.

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Tue, 21 Jul 2009 12:31:00 -0700 Chelsea, Man City and now Notts County. Who will be next?! http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/chelsea-man-city-and-now-notts-county-who-wil http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/chelsea-man-city-and-now-notts-county-who-wil

Notts County, one of the former giants of the English game are plotting a dramatic revival and charge towards the Premier League - thanks to yet more foreign investment in English football. Okay, this is not quite on the scale of Man City but in a week when UEA investment saved Portsmouth from becoming the first Barclays Premier League club to go into administration, Notts County are also finding a new lease of life under foreign ownership. Indeed, when was the last time Notts County were finding the back pages?!

The reason for all the excitement and media coverage?

The link to former England Manager Sven Goran Eriksson to become either Manager or Director of Football at the club (the latter being more likely).

Quite a journey for a man who has managed at club sides Benfica, Lazio, Sampdoria and Manchester City, led England to two World Cups and recently had a spell with Mexico. Next stop: Coca-Cola League Two.

It is quite a phenomenon for English football, that so many clubs are rapidly finding new hope and optimism. It seems that right through the game big money foreign investment is shaping the future of the English Football League. It is no longer just about Chelsea, this is happening at clubs from QPR to Southampton and now Notts County. I would imagine a number of club chairman are hoping and praying that they are somehow in the shop window..

Not long ago the news was only ever about struggling clubs, knackered by lack of TV money from the collapse of ITV Digital (did Setanta learn nothing?!) and struggling to survive. Now headlines are dominated by the big money that is flowing through the game from Ronaldo to Rodgers as the lucky clubs get a new credit card to use.

I wonder if Brighton & Hove Albion have had any calls?

Actually I’m happy with Tony Bloom as I think the foreign bubble could well burst leaving a lot of clubs struggling and knackered once again

 

 

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Mon, 13 Jul 2009 09:21:00 -0700 Espanyol: The new Barcelona http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/espanyol-the-new-barcelona http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/espanyol-the-new-barcelona

Later on this season I shall be making a football pilgrimage to the home of the holders of the UEFA Champions League, FC Barcelona. Over the coming years I plan to visit all the major footballing arenas across the globe. From Wembley Stadium to the San Siro to the Estadio Santiago Bernabéu and one day the Estádio do Maracanã in Brazil. The list goes on. It is a long one, but a great one and my plan was to take in a match at Camp Nou this Autumn.

However, the logistics of my trip have clashed with the recent La Liga fixtures and instead of witnessing the Messi and Pep show at the Camp Nou I will instead be heading over to the other side of Barcelona and taking in RCD Espanyol v Tenerife. Some may see this as a disappointment, others a failure of organisation and planning and frankly a bit of a waste of time.

However, to me it is a footballing opportunity.



A chance to watch true La Liga football in Spain, with passionate and dedicated fans. This will not be the package trip to Madrid to sit in the corporate boxes or along-side the tourists, this will be real football. With all the glamour of the top 4 Premier League teams and the cash lighting up Madrid - I think more people should turn to the 'mid-table' teams if they really love the game.

Chances are that RCD Espanyol/Tenerife, Fulham/Wolves, Genoa/Bari or Cologne/Vfl Bochum would provide a clearer indication of the power of the top European leagues than the standard matches that happen at the tail end of the UEFA Champions League. Sure the players are not considered as good (they are probably earning a lot less than Cristiano Ronaldo) and get less headlines but that does not mean they can not play. We are still talking about elite professionals. For example, I will get to see Iván de la Peña, Carlos Kameni and Shunsuke Nakamura play for RCD Espanyol - all International footballers.

I am excited by RCD Espanyol v Tenerife and the true experience at the new Estadi Cornella-el Prat stadium, and I encourage others to not always be drawn to the flame of the glamour clubs - there is more out there to experience and enjoy within the game we all love.

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Thu, 09 Jul 2009 05:42:00 -0700 Carlo Ancelotti: The new comedian of the Premier League http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/1139686 http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/1139686

Finally Gordon Strachan has made a comeback to the Premier League. He has
been appointed the new chelsea boss.
 
Okay, that's a lie, but Carlo Ancelotti seems set to replace the little
scott as the funnyman of the premier league.
 
Ancelotti held his first press conference as Chelsea boss just after the
recent john terry rumours and sure enough the first question he was asked
by the press concerned his skipper.
 
This is where I became a fan of Ancelotti, he opened with jt being the main
man, and basically the foundation chelsea are built on. He then quoted that
he was however "not sure if jt would be his captain" 
  
Cue dramatic pause from Carlo and excitement from the press as they smell a
headline...
 
Then Carlo breaks out into a smile to announce that of course "I like-a to
joke with the press"
 
Good start carlo, bring on MOTD

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Fri, 03 Jul 2009 02:07:00 -0700 Michael Owen: Has Fergie lost his marbles? http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/michael-owen-has-fergie-lost-his-marbles http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/michael-owen-has-fergie-lost-his-marbles


Manchester United are on the verge of signing Michael Owen on a free transfer from  Newcastle United.



Just weeks after announcing that they would only sign young talent, Sir Alex seems set to take a gamble on Owen. Has he lost his marbles?

Yes this is the player who has a record of 40 goals from 89 England caps - but he is also the player who was dropped last season by manager Alan Shearer (and even by caretaker boss Chris Hughton) when his team were desperate for goals. He has only managed about 30 odd appearances a season across the last two years and was even rumoured to be looking at retirement.

His career seemed to be set for  bit of a nose-dive, his advisors sent out a glossy brochure of his talents and marketing appeal but only a potential offer of a 'dream' move  to Hull City or Stoke materialised - hardly what Michael is used to from his days with Liverpool and Madrid.

Yet out of nowhere come the reports that he is to undergo a medical at Manchester United. Now Fergie is obviously confident in Owen's mentality and believes that if he can get the boy fit then he will guarantee goals. But it is very unlike Ferguson to sign injury prone players. Only once before has he taken such a gamble with the signing of Owen Hargreaves......who is currently out for 24 months undergoing a leg replacement operation.

It seems like a huge risk, and is one that not even Blackburn Rovers are willing to take.

However, I can see the logic. When you look at what Ferguson has lost from Ronaldo - Pace, width and goals - he needs to reshape his squad. Ideally he wanted Ribery and Benzema but it seems that no French players are allowed to sign for anybody other than Real Madrid since Zidane was appointed chief scout. That has meant that Fergie needs to get creative in the market.

The recent signing of Valencia will provide the pace and the width on the right flank, but the Equadorian is unlikely to reach double figures on the scoresheet. The massive hole for United to try and fill comes from the goals Ronaldo brought to the team. Okay, Wayne Rooney is an unbelievable talent but he is not a goalscorer. Not of the type that United's success has been built on. He is not a Cole, Yorke, Van Nistelrooy or Ronaldo. United need goals, and Ferguson obviously sees Owen as the answer.

If Owen stays fit for the season he will easily score goals at United. He will have two great incentives, one will be the obvious clause related contract he will be on, and the other will be the FIFA World Cup. If he plays well for United, scores goals and builds an effective partnership with Rooney then Capello will not ignore him, and maybe he can repeat his epic performance from 1998.

Only time will tell if Fergie has lost his marbles, but I have a feeling he likes the odds of this bet..

 

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Tue, 30 Jun 2009 02:18:00 -0700 Different tournament, different squad, same story. England fail again. http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/different-tournament-different-squad-same-sto http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/different-tournament-different-squad-same-sto
England Under-21 goalkeeper Scott Loach
Loach's mistake left England facing an uphill struggle

A picture says a thousand words.

Stuart Pearce said that England needed better in-tournament tactics, they needed to be smarter "like the Germans" was his quote earlier in the week. Smart we were not.

Silly bookings meant the suspension of Hart, Agbonglahor and Campbell. It left England toothless up-front and inexperienced in net (I don't think Scott Loach will be troubling Fabio Capello's squad selection).

Hopefully lessons have been learned, and the Senior England team will be smarter this time next year and we will have to be beaten by somebody, and not by ourselves

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Mon, 29 Jun 2009 04:55:00 -0700 Team USA: Defeat was not just on the pitch http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/team-usa-defeat-was-not-just-on-the-pitch http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/team-usa-defeat-was-not-just-on-the-pitch


Team USA.

Fit, disciplined, quick, tactical, skilled and they carry a goal-threat. Maybe a dark horse for next summer?!

Sadly they can't close out a game, last nights epic surrender of the FIFA Confederations Cup Final demonstrated a lack of belief that they could actually win it. From the moment the second half kicked off they looked like a team ready to lose, not one ready to win. 46 seconds later and Luis Fabiano had scored his 4th goal of the tournament and Brazil were back in it.

Team USA tried to maintain the level of the first half when they achieved their  2-0 lead, but another Luis Fabiano strike and a thumping header from Lucio and the match had turned. Brazil were the Champions.


Sadly we will never know if Team USA had actually managed to win an international tournament if it would have caused a shift in the American 'soccer- psyche' and if it would have achieved any significant media exposure in the US. The game still struggles to get past the monsters of Basketball and Baseball and potentially winning something could help change that, especially if they actually became legitimate 'World Champions' in a sport next summer.

For example, the homepage of the New York Times sports section does not lead with the thrilling encounter in Jo'Burg - oh no it is about a Baseball pitcher throwing four-in-a-row. However, even if the Baseball story is spectacular (which I am sure it is to those in the know) the football story falls way down below the fold, its even below the pecking order of a Pete Sampras interview!.



 
Surely the only way things will change in America will be for them to win something. If David Beckham can't do it, then maybe victory will be the only way to success for football that side of the pond. It seems that last night in Jo'Burg Team USA lost a football match. Maybe the real loser was the sport in America - not the squad of 23 in South Africa.

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Wed, 24 Jun 2009 06:34:00 -0700 Resting Players? Good, bad or ugly.. http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/resting-players-good-bad-or-ugly http://thebeautifulgame.posterous.com/resting-players-good-bad-or-ugly


Each season, more and more players are involved in more and more fixtures. There has been a big debate around Theo Walcott and his involvement in the seniors prior to the UEFA U-21 European Championships , and that he will end up without any rest before getting stuck back in to pre-season training.

However, that has now gone away (although bound to resurface if he gets any injuries next season), and the fact that Gerrard plays 65 games in a season does not surprise anyone anymore. It is always going to happen as the game continues to grow and be the global power that it is. What is interesting to me in these days of huge squads (and teams with a number of star players) is whether resting players actually helps the team.



You hope by resting players they will be fresh, focused and up for it when the big matches come along. There is a crucial game for England's U-21 team on Friday where hopefully this will be the case.

It is the semi-finals of the UEFA U-21 European Championships and England go into their match against Sweden having rested players fully (England rested 10 players in their last Group Match). Now Stuart Pearce believes this will give his team an edge as he has a rested squad to pick from. Their opponents are co-hosts Sweden, and they had to play a  tough and intense last Group Match to get to this stage. If they lost they were out. They had to win to qualify, and win they did. Sweden now have momentum, England do not.

I wonder if Sir Alex Ferguson looks back on the end of last season's campaign with regret at resting his stars against Hull in the last game of the Barclays Premier League season. In the UEFA Champions League Final his side looked leggy and tired, and struggled to chase down and win the ball back from FC Barcelona. Perhaps United would of been better to of play the Hull game with the same intensity to carry into the final against FC Barcelona. We will never know.

Maybe Managers should be avoiding rotation and resting players as it interrupts the rhythm of the team and could even cause players to lose their focus. Look at Liverpool - last season was Benetiz's first where he played regular line ups and formation, and were it not for the injury to Torres I believe they would of ended up walking off with the title in May.

I think over the course of a season it makes sense to rest players when they are tired, but in big tournaments and just before big matches I would always rather my team approached the game with the same mentality and the same line up to maintain that momentum and energy into the final matches.

I just hope that Stuart Pearce does not look back and rue the decision to rest his players after they had already qualified. We will find out on Friday.

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