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Saturday, March 5, 2011

Sport Changes Shape Just an Ocean Away


The Galacticos

European Footballs structure of acceptance with regards to the monopoly of power of the 'Big Clubs' Vs. The American semi-socialist sporting philosophy

http://www.slate.com/id/2285073

Match Previews: March 6th




Liverpool V Man United

This is, quite simply, the biggest game of the English football season. Form will go out the window when the two most successful clubs in the history of England lock horns at Anfield on Sunday. Just as well for as Daglish’s boys are coming of the back of a spanking at Upton Park last week while the league leaders suffered a demoralising defeat to Chelsea on Tuesday. This game could see the much-anticipated Liverpool debut of the most expensive British footballer of all time, Andy Carroll. He has times his return perfectly as he will have to face neither of United’s first choice centre-backs with Ferdinand and Vidic both unavailable. The leaders will look to Wayne Rooney for inspiration given his recent run of form and his well-documented dislike for the opponents. He will relish the chance to inflict more misery on the Kop. Liverpool have nothing to lose and beating United at Anfield would add a bit of gloss to an otherwise forgettable season. Fergie might just take a point given Arsenal’s slip up at home to Sunderland. He may be lucky to get it, United have looked very shaky away from home this season.

Verdict: 1-1

Wolves V Spurs

There can be no denying Spurs will have one eye on the return leg with Milan on Wednesday as they travel to the Midlands to face struggling Wolves. Key players Bale and Van der Vaart will not be risked given their recent injuries and without them its difficult to see where the goals are going to come from for Spurs given Defoe’s monstrous league drought stretching back to the tail end of last season. Wolves have picked up victories over five of the top seven so far this season. Spurs are one of the two exceptions. Mick McCarthy’s side always seem to up their game when the big guns visit Molineux as United and Chelsea found out to their cost. If Spurs are genuine Champions League contenders they need to pick up wins against the struggling sides on a regular basis. They won’t have it all their own way this time though.

Verdict: 2-1

Friday, March 4, 2011

Matchday Preview: 5th March


 Birmingham V West Brom
The Blues will be looking to avoid a ‘cup hangover’ following their first success in 48 years at Wembley last Sunday. On the flip side, the Carling Cup victory could act as a springboard to propel Alex McLeish’s side away from the drop zone. West Brom will look for similar inspiration as they look to avoid a fourth relegation in five Premier League campaigns. Carlos Vela looks an invaluable loan signing from Arsenal with two late equalisers in his short stint at The Hawthorns so far. Both sides desperately need the three points and will be going all out for the win. This midlands derby should be a cracker.
Verdict: 2-1

Arsenal V Sunderland
Arsenal are in sensational form in the league and Arsene Wenger was deservedly named manager of the month on Friday. The Gunners squad is stretched thin at the moment with seven first team players unavailable and with one eye on the date with destiny in the Camp Nou on Tuesday you could be forgiven for thinking this could be a potential banana-skin for Arsenal. However Sunderland don’t seem to be able to win at all at the moment. Arsenal should win easily without over-exerting themselves.
Verdict: 2-0

Bolton V Aston Villa
A thumping win for Villa over Blackburn was followed with a lame defeat to City in the cup on Wednesday. It’s hard to know which Villa side will show up at the Reebok on Saturday. Both sides will be looking to the strikers they aquired in January to fire them to victory and it may well come down to Sturridge versus Bent in front of goal.
Verdict: 2-1

Fulham V Blackburn
Fulham are in excellent home form whilst Blackburn have been shocking on the road. Its hard to see this going any other way than a win for the Cottagers. Hopefully this game will see the return to league action of one Bobby Zamora who has missed the best part of six months with a broken leg. Fulham do need an in-form striker to ease the goal-scoring burden on winger Clint Dempsy.
Verdict: 1-0

Newcastle V Everton
Two seriously inconsistent teams. Both still in with an outside shot of a Europa League spot so now would be a good time to put a run of form together. The loss of Fellani adding to Cahill will affect Everton in a big way but with Beckford finally hitting form and Saha staying relatively injury-free they are in decent shape to push on. Newcastle will be buoyed by the return of Ameobi to the strikeforce as well as the possible return of Joey Barton to the mid-field to give them that extra bit of creativity. I fancy them to get a result to be honest.
Verdict: 2-1



West Ham V Stoke
Fighting back from 3-0 down to snatch a point at the Hawthorns. A comprehensive victory over Liverpool last weekend. West Ham seemed to have finally got their act together. Their squad is better than its league position shows. Stoke are struggling for form recently and conceding a late equaliser to West Brom on Monday will have hurt them and they will be desperate to record a win over one of the other relegation candidates. Something they need to do if they have higher ambitions than mid-table mediocrity.
Verdict: 1-1

Man City V Wigan
City will have been rocked this week after the news that former captain Kolo Toure failed a drugs test. It will be interesting to see how this affects his brother Yaya who has been in good form lately and has become a key part of the team at Eastlands. Wigan took a hammering last week from a Manchester club and they may be in line for a similar fate on Saturday. Now rooted to the bottom of the table, the Latics time at the top table may be coming to an end.
Verdict: 3-0






Scottish Masters


On the Radio in 1988

The Dalglish/Ferguson fued myth can finally be put to bed.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/blog/2011/mar/04/kenny-dalglish-sir-alex-ferguson

Thursday, March 3, 2011

5 of the Best: Goalkeepers


Schmeichel in Full Flight


1.       Peter Schmeichel

What else can be said about the great Dane, guardian of the infrequently bulged net at Old Trafford for most of the nineties, possessor of the quarter-back throw, red-nosed star0jumpoing maniac that he was. Behind the decidedly immobile Bruce and Pallister, Schmeichel added a stability Les Sealy and Jim Leighton had been unable to provide for United as they went on to win the very first Premier League title in 1993. He, single handedly at times, dragged them through a huge amount of tricky fixtures, most notably away to table-toppers Newcastle in the 96-97 season and in the San Siro against Inter Milan in the treble winning season of 98-99. Simply a legend.

2.       Iker Casillas
The cult of Casillas is well documented but I think the reverence he is shown in Europe should not detract from the fact that he is a dam fine keeper. Having made his debut at age just 17 he went on to oust Bodo Illgner from between the sticks and make the position emphatically his own, playing in, and winning, a Champions League Final two years later and going on to be nominated for the Ballon d’Or twice. League titles, Galacticos, European Championships and a World Cup triumph later, Casillas is still only 30, an age when many goalkeepers begin to find their form. A phenomenon in the modern game, the fact that he consistently keeps Valdez and Reina out of the Spanish team is all the evidence needed.

3.       Neville Southall
Not an obvious choice for many, but to someone who only really saw him play consistently in the twilight years of his career, he was a triumph of physics. A big man, not exactly blessed with a sportsman’s physique, Southhall had incredible agility, an instinctive knack for being in the right place at the right time and the ability to frighten the life out of opposing forwards. He spent most of his career at Everton, keeping goal during one of the most successful periods in the Toffees history, as well as playing internationally for Wales. My lasting memory of Southall is his man of the match display for Everton against Manchester United in the FA Cup Final at Wembley in 1995 as he collected the last winners’ medal of his professional career.

4.       Gianluigi Buffon
Another, like Casillas, to have been a teen prodigy at his club, albeit it at a lesser team, Parma, Buffon would also go on to captain his country to World Cup victory and develop his very own cult of invincibility. Still the most expensive goalkeeper in the world following his transfer to Juventus in 2001, Buffon is so highly regarded not only for the obvious fact that he is an incredibly dominant goalkeeper, especially with regards to his aerial ability and his success rate in one on one situations, but also because he has come to prominence at the end of Italy’s age of superstars. In the mid-90’s the Italian league was the place to be and at any one time Italy could call upon the likes of Vieri, Baggio, Maldini, Baresi, Signori, Vialli, Del Piero, Zenga, Peruzzi and Pagliuca, however by the time Italy arrived at the World Cup in Germany in 2006 their superstars were either retired or old. The fact that a solid defence, built on Cannavaro and Buffon, dragged an incredibly average Azzurri to success. Buffon will go down, with Dino Zoff, as Italy’s greatest goalkeeper.
5.       Packie Bonner
There is literally a dozen other goalkeepers I could have chosen to make up the fifth, but I plucked the big Donegal man from obscurity to stand tall amongst his peers. He spent his whole career at Celtic, in a period of mixed success for the Hoops, but it is his international form for which he is remembered. His height and physical strength meant that he commanded his box well, and the style of play Ireland played under Jack Charlton meant his kicking and distribution from hand were vitally important. During the 19988 European Championship and the 1990 World Cup, with Ireland somewhat of a wildcard, it is not an exaggeration to say that he was among the best goalkeepers at both tournaments. Not bad at saving penalty’s either.