UEFA – ESPN Soccernet – Oct. 10, Oct. 11, Oct. 14
CAF
CONCACAF
CONMEBOL
Monthly Archives: October 2009
USA not worried by political situation in Honduras ahead of World Cup tie

“For all the jitters about security ahead of Saturday’s match, the scene appears to be pretty much normal. While there were military when the team’s flight arrived Thursday at Ramon Villeda Morales International Airport, it was only a fraction of the security force that blanketed the team at the last two World Cups in South Korea and Germany.” (Telegraph)
POLL – Will Argentina Qualify For World Cup 2010? The Lowdown on La Seleccion
“As regular readers of Just Football will know, Argentina are in real danger of not making it to the 2010 World Cup. Their last 2 qualifiers yielded exactly nil points, and as they teeter dangerously on the brink of elimination we want to know whether you think Diego Maradona and co will make it to South Africa. Cast your vote in our poll on the right hand side of this page. First though, the lowdown on how Argentina got into this mess in the first place…” (Just Football)
Paying Through The Nose Per View
“If you read our post on the subject earlier on in the week, you may have noted that the price of watching this weekend’s World Cup qualifier between Ukraine and England was listed as £4.99. As hopes of a last minute highlights package fade fast with rights holders Kentaro stating that they feel that the coverage should be “all about the internet”, it is worth pointing out to potential viewers that this price has already been raised to £9.99 (as of midnight last night), and that it will be hiked up again to £11.99 at midnight tonight.” (twohundredpercent)
Sin-Binning in South Africa? No thanks.
“After UEFA’s spectacular cock-up regarding the whole Eduardo diving affair recently, it looks like FIFA’s vice-prez Jack Warner wants in on the action. Warner suggested today that referees need to toughen up on players who dive or overact on the pitch and that in next year’s World Cup in South Africa, those judged to be attempting to con the referee could be sin-binned for five minutes.” (They think its all over)
Honduras Civic
“If a soccer game falls down in the woods does it make a sound? As outlined earlier in the week, when the U.S. travels to hostile Honduras Saturday night’s for the penultimate 2010 CONCACAF World Cup qualifier it will have a nice 1982 vibe to it for the fact that it’s only available in select closed circuit establishments. (And if it were 1982, a U.S. soccer match wouldn’t be televised and the computer you’re reading this on would be engaging the Russians in a game of nuclear chess.)” (That’s On Point)
Why does Fabio Capello have such a limited choice with England’s goalkeepers?
“Where have all the English goalkeepers gone? Why is Fabio Capello’s choice so limited? Here we look at the great men between the Three Lion’s posts over the years – and the limited choices available now. ” (Telegraph)
The race for South Africa

“Saturday is the pivotal day in Group One, with the top four playing each other. Regardless of the result in Denmark, Portugal or Hungary will be out of the running for an automatic spot as they play each other and a draw at the Dr. Magalhaes Pessoa would leave both all but out of the tournament; otherwise the losing team will be eliminated.” (ESPN)
The Joy of Six: classic World Cup qualifying deciders
“From France blowing it against Bulgaria to England holding out in Rome, we look at half a dozen classic qualifying deciders” (Guardian)
Trap’s date with destiny
“When Giovanni Trapattoni took the surprising decision to extend his remarkable managerial career and become Republic of Ireland boss last year, the date of October 10, 2009 would have been instantly circled in his diary. In the ambitious mind of this ceaselessly passionate 70-year-old, the visit of his native Italy to Dublin in the penultimate round of World Cup qualifiers was always likely to represent his date with destiny and, to an extent, that seemingly unlikely scenario has come to pass.” (ESPN)
Your Handy World Cup Qualifier Preview

“The interlull is the bane of the club soccer fan; it’s like an early bye week, a rained out game, and a west coast road trip all rolled into one. The potential for player injury is still there, the benefit for the club that’s actually paying the player is not, and international managers still need players in order to get results. On top of that, many of the matches are lopsided. Take Malta in Group 1 of the UEFA qualifiers; nine games in, they still have yet to score a goal, their goal differential is -22, and their best result is a scoreless draw with Albania. This is not always riveting stuff.” (Avoiding the Drop)
The Tuesday Ballbag
“Ok, so we didn’t quite break our eye socket blowing our noses but I bet it hurts just as much. As befitting a site the critics prefer above all others, Inside Left injured itself while out doing a wonderfully middle-class pursuit, namely skiing. On a green slope. On the last run. On the last day. Two years ago. Yes, as the evenings draw in and the weather gets colder, Inside Left’s old skiing injury is flaring up again. A particularly hard fall on the last day of our holiday has taken care of our tendons, leaving them inflamed and very, very sore. We’ve not slept for two weeks and we’re in constant pain, making typing a very painful and unpleasant experience. There’s no action in the SPL this weekend, so over at The Scottish Football Blog they have a very good ‘report card‘ on the season so far, thankfully – given our injury – saving us the effort of having to write it.” (Inside Left)
Top 10 Merseyside Derbies
“It might not live up to the halcyon days of the 1980s but the Merseyside derby still has the ability captivate a wider audience. The recent triple bill ending with Everton�s dramatic, late victory in the cup demonstrated this despite the efforts of ITV technicians. The sides first met in the League in 1894 with Liverpool triumphing 3-0 at Goodison Park. There have been 206 matches between the sides with Liverpool leading 79-65 in victories. The derby also holds the record as the most played FA Cup tie (22). The derby was at its greatest during the 1980s.” (midfielddynamo)
Being Brian Clough: Interview With Michael Sheen

“Brian Clough was one of British football’s most controversial characters. Brash, outspoken, and fiercely ambitious, the former Forest, Derby, and Leeds manager is one of the game’s great cult figures. Loved by fans but loathed by the football authorities, Clough was one of the biggest stars in seventies and eighties Britain. One of the first people to realize the link between football and celebrity, the opinionated North-easterner quickly became the television face of football, never missing an opportunity to pontificate, or even better, to needle his enemies.” (First Touch)
Actor Michael Sheen Talks English Football and “The Damned United”
“Michael Sheen is building a film career out of playing characters from British popular culture. First it was Tony Blair in ‘The Queen.’ Then came David Frost in ‘Frost/Nixon.’ Now in ‘The Damned United,’ which opens tomorrow in new York and Los Angeles, he’s taken on the role of one of the most charismatic characters in English soccer history: Brian Clough, the legendary coach at Derby County, Nottingham Forest, and briefly, Leeds United, where his tumultuous tenure forms the premise for the film.” (WSJ)
In ‘The Damned United,’ A Cocky Coach Is Doomed
“The bloody, bruising, take-no-prisoners world of English soccer in the 1960s and early 1970s is the backdrop for the new feature film The Damned United. But viewers don’t need to know a thing about soccer — or like it — to appreciate the remarkable man at the center of the movie: Brian Clough. Clough was the manager of a terrible team from Derby County in the basement of England’s professional soccer league. But Clough did two miraculous things.” (NPR)
Trapattoni Slams FIFA For ‘Killing Football’ With Playoff Decision
“The timing was definitely odd. Usually in professional sport, the norm is that you have the rules of the competition laid out for everybody before it begins. That way all involved know exactly where they stand and any room for misunderstandings is minimised. Pretty basic stuff, right? Well, if you are FIFA apparently not. Because, rather than get all the rules and criteria for World Cup qualification established early, Sepp Blatter and co waited until only two games of the European World Cup qualification group stages were left to announce that they will be using a seeding system for the European play-offs.” (Just Football)
How Old Is Too Old For A Footballer?
“I find myself asking it all the time: how old is that player? My last such quandary was over Arshavin (older than I would have guessed). Before that it was over Jovetic (younger than I would have guessed). When I’ m looking up a player’s age for an article or to settle a bet or for the hell of it and a date before 1980 pops up, my initial reaction is: ‘Wow, he’s getting old…’ But wait… I was born before 1980 (by nine months). I’m not getting old. Am I??” (EPL Talk)
50 Years of Bill Shankly
“For my money, the lesser of the great ’60s tranche of managers, but the better man of the lot of them. He reminds me of my Uncle John RIP.” (James Hamilton)
World Cup 2010 Qualification Update

“With the final set of World Cup 2010 qualifying fixtures coming up for many teams, David Scullion takes a closer look at which teams are on the brink of qualification. (SoccerLens)
Pro Vercelli: The Boneyard, Part III
“I thought about just posting the screenshot of the match report with no commentary, under the theory that what you fill in with your own imagination would be more intense than anything I could describe. But that isn’t really true, and besides, you don’t need this one to be made more intense. Even buffered in prose, this one is intense enough. Off we go.” (The Run of Play)
Summer suddenly a distant memory for Albion
“Can it be only two weeks since West Brom’s stunning 5-0 win at co-promotion favourites Middlesbrough? For since that game, which left many pundits regarding Albion as automatic promotion shoe-ins, an autumnal chill has descended on the Hawthorns, blowing away the sunny late-summer optimism.” (thetwounfortunates)
Donadoni Out at Napoli; Could Leonardo Be Next?

“With the Italian Serie A campaign not yet two months old, Roberto Donadoni is out of a job. The former Italy boss was fired as the coach of Napoli on Tuesday, days after a 2-1 loss to AS Roma. Donadoni, who was hired in March, was 2-1-4 in his brief stint in charge of Napoli, which is 15th in Serie A.” (NYT)
Rangers & Celtic: The Decline Of The Northern Empire?
“Arsene Wenger might think the Scots are still influential in Europe, but he’s about the only person left who does. It being October, it must be just about time for Scottish football pundits to do their usual soul-searching, surveying the wreckage of another failed qualification campaign for the national team, while both the Old Firm sit bottom of the European groups and all the various other qualifying round defeats are already forgotten along with most of the names of the East European teams who inflicted them. Plus ça change, as the French might put it.” (twohundredpercent)
The England and USA Games Will Not Be Televised
“Are you and England or USA fan? Planning to watch this weekend’s World Cup qualifiers on television? You better start making new plans then. Team USA is playing away to Honduras, and needs to keep picking up points in order to book a spot in South Africa.” (World Cup Blog)
Uruguay face tactical dilemma

“It’s South America’s newest force against the oldest when Ecuador meet Uruguay this Saturday in a crunch World Cup qualifier. It is a match with much to teach about the geography of the continent and the history of the game in this part of the world. Introduced mainly by the British, football first caught on in the South Cone, in Montevideo and Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo – a region that was going through large scale immigration and rapid urbanisation.” (BBC – Tim Vickery)
England: Non-League Football, attendance map for 4th October, 2009 (all clubs drawing above 600 per game- 45 clubs).
“Attendance in the Conference is up 10.5%. Last season, the final average attendance for the entire league as a whole was 1,857. This season, as of 4th October, 2009, the average is 2,051. The main reason is the huge gates, in Non-League terms, of Luton Town and Oxford United (in the 5,00o-6,000 range). The Oxford v. Luton match of 8th September (a Tuesday) drew 10,613. (!) Also, Mansfield Town, another former Football League club, is seeing a big upswing at the turnstiles, with a 40% increase from last season, to 3,392 per game. And one of the newly promoted clubs is AFC Wimbledon, who are seeing a 20% increase to 3,844 per game. Two more clubs in the Conference are drawing above 3,000 per game: Wrexham (3,734) and Cambridge United (3,032).” (billsportsmaps)
The Damned United: Exclusive Clip From The Film
“The Damned United debuts in American movie theaters this Friday, October 9th and, courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics, they’ve suppled the readers of EPL Talk with an exclusive clip from the film which features — without a doubt — the best line from the film.” (EPL Talk)
A Sinister, Merciless, Fickle Crowd
“At San Siro in Milan on a Saturday night, the game is three-quarters done, the team is not playing well, and the home crowd needs a focal point for its discontent. When Inter’s coach withdraws a player, he becomes the butt of their discontent. He is Sulley Muntari, and as his number is illuminated, the tifosi whistle and bay at him. Muntari’s tears are visible on the big screen. Sometimes we must ask, why must soccer be such a bear pit?” (NYT)
EPL Talk Meets Henry Winter

“Henry Winter is one of Britain’s most respected football journalists and currently works for the Daily Telegraph. His career started at the Independent and he moved to The Telegraph in 1994. A familiar face on Sky’s Sunday Supplement, Henry was been kind enough to have a quick chat with us about himself and football.” (EPL Talk)
The Brazilian Darren Fletcher
“Liverpool, by any measure, have had a stuttering start to the season. Three losses in the league(more than last season already we are consistently told – although it wasn’t Liverpool’s losses last year that caused them to come 2nd in the league… rather the number of draws against weak opposition. Liverpool, after all, came top of the top four table by quite some margin. It did not matter a jot) and a poor, poor performance against Fiorentina can at best be called stuttering, at worst a crisis but is probably a shade closer to the former than the latter.” (Left Back in the Changing Room)
Top 10 Scottish Club Nights in Europe
“Scotland’s clubs have had many glory nights in European football history. To mark Rangers reaching the quarter final of the UEFA Cup in 2008 we’ve put together a Top 10 of the best of them. The dates perhaps reflect the waning influence, not just of Scottish clubs in Europe, but of all small nations. The behemoth that is the Champions League has seen to that. All the notable, recent achievements by Scottish sides have been completed by the Big 2 in Glasgow. Indeed, Celtic’s 2003 UEFA Cup campaign, knocking Barcelona and Liverpool out en route, came very close to inclusion.” (midfielddynamo)
Update
“Apologies for the relative silence here. The book – 2-3 years away at best – is taking up most of my erstwhile blogging time. Congratulations are in order to Tiberius for this, which is long overdue.” (James Hamilton)
For 90 Minutes, a Break From a Political Crisis in Honduras

“While Honduras finds itself increasingly isolated after its president was deposed in a coup d’état, the poor Central American nation is gaining respect in another area of consuming international interest — soccer. A home victory against the United States on Saturday would virtually assure Honduras of qualifying for the World Cup for the first time since 1982. Barring a dramatic incident, the country’s 7.8 million residents will — for two hours at least — be largely focused not on the continuing political crisis but on perhaps the most anticipated sporting event ever held in Honduras.” (NYT)
Videos: Top World Cup Goals by Appearance
“This is a video list of World Cup goals that have something to do with player appearance. Starting out are the top 5 bald player goals, followed by Bad Haircut, Baby-Faced Assassin, and Mustachioed Goals.” (The Best Eleven)
Premiership Conclusions
“1. Draws Galore. Despite what some people might say, there’s nothing innately boring about a sports match ending in a draw. While I’ve heard many arguments for penalties to decide league matches as well as many even worse ideas, a good hard fought draw between two evenly matched sides can be a great sporting spectacle. However, it had seemed so far this season, that the draw may have been on its way out, as in the first seven ’rounds’ of this season (i.e. before this weekend) there had been only four drawn fixtures. …” (They think its all over)
Talking a good game
“One of punditry’s perpetual rhetorical teasers is to ask how the players of certain eras would fare in today’s game. It’s a bit like wondering how Henry the Eighth would govern modern Britain or what sort of script Shakespeare might have produced if he’d been commissioned to write an episode of Doctor Who. Given the futility of musing on how Tom Finney would fit into a 4-5-1 aimed at grabbing a 0-0 away draw, you’d think that former players would know better than to get involved in such discussions.” (WSC)
Chelsea 2 – 0 Liverpool: Absolute Fiery Throbbing Red-Hearted Romance
“What did Big Phil do to those guys? For a long time—say, from the latter days of Mourinho through the start of the Hiddink Intercession—the Chelsea dressing room was a hive of choler and pique. The players visibly didn’t like each other, didn’t trust their manager (whoever he happened to be), and generally had the air of passengers who have all privately concluded that the ship they are on is sinking as they eye the exits and edge toward the only lifeboat.” (Run of Play)
Chelsea give Reds the blues

Valentin de Boulogne, Soldiers Playing Cards and Dice (The Cheats)
“Second-half goals from Nicolas Anelka and Florent Malouda gave Chelsea a deserved 2-0 victory over Liverpool and put them two points clear at top of the Barclays Premier League. The France international struck first in the 60th minute when he finished off a sublime low cross from Didier Drogba as Chelsea defied their critics with a performance of grit and quality.” (ESPN)
Chelsea 2 – 0 Liverpool
“Nicolas Anelka and Florent Malouda sent Chelsea back to the top of the Premier League as their second-half goals gave Carlo Ancelotti’s side a deserved victory over Liverpool at Stamford Bridge. The enigmatic Didier Drogba – who mixed theatrics with threat in an encounter that was competitive rather than compelling – won the battle of the strikers with Liverpool’s Fernando Torres to make decisive contributions and set up Chelsea’s win.” (BBC)
Henrique Hilário proves he is no laughing stock
“Chelsea were supposed to be saddled with a weak link here though, if Liverpool had arrived sensing vulnerability, their confidence ultimately proved misplaced. Henrique Hilário made his first Premier League start of the season, and only his second since New Year’s Day 2008, against the Merseysiders with Petr Cech suspended, many of the home fans still pining for their departed regular understudy Carlo Cudicini and the visitors smelling blood. It says much for the Portuguese that he appeared to take all of this in his stride.” (Guardian)
Crisis, what crisis? Rafa tells everyone to calm down
“Manchester United, after losing at Burnley, and Arsenal, following two defeats in Manchester, have heard talk of an early-season crisis and come through it. Now it is the turn of Chelsea and Liverpool, who go into their meeting at Stamford Bridge today on the back of a performance or two that fell below expected standards. Carlo Ancelotti’s team were out of sorts in defeat at Wigan and scarcely much better against Apoel Nicosia; Rafa Benitez’s, beaten by the three decent sides they have faced, were as poor as he had known them in the first half against Fiorentina. Both managers raised their voices with unusual force.” (Independent)
Nicolas Anelka takes Chelsea back to the top of the Barclays Premier League
“Nicolas Anelka scored for the first time against former club Liverpool and Florent Malouda added a second in stoppage time to take Chelsea back to the top of the Barclays Premier League. Anelka was left with a simple tap-in on the hour after Didier Drogba capped a superb break with a wonderful cross from the left and the Ivorian was provider again in the 91st minute, escaping the clutches of Jamie Carragher on the opposite flank to set up Malouda.” (TimesOnline)
English Premier League, La Liga
Miller double downs Bhoys
“Two goals from Kenny Miller slashed Celtic’s lead at the summit of the Scottish Premier League to a single point as Rangers claimed victory in the first Old Firm derby of the season.The striker returned to haunt his former club once again with two early goals to put the Scottish champions in the driving seat at Ibrox.” (ESPN)
Stage set for McCourt
“Big games often produce new heroes and matches don’t come any bigger than Old Firm clashes. But is there anyone lurking in the shadows at Rangers or Celtic destined to make a real surprise impact in this weekend’s Glasgow derby?” (ESPN)
Rangers 2 – 1 Celtic
“Rangers survived a spirited second-half onslaught by Celtic to win the first Old Firm match of the season. Kenny Miller showed pace and poise to meet a Kris Boyd through ball and slot past Artur Boruc in eight minutes.” (BBC)
3 To See – Rangers, Chelsea, Sevilla

“Last week’s ‘3 To See’ brought wins for Schalke 04, FC Porto and Independiente in a weekend of derby matches and bitter rivalries. This week 5 of the 6 teams chosen were in Champions League action in midweek, with mixed results. How will they fare heading into what are some big, tasty looking games?” (Just Football)
1990-91 English First Division Season Review: Video
“Ever wonder what the old English First Division was like before it became the Premier League? Thanks to YouTube and a tip from reader Chris, we’ve uncovered the one-hour review show of the 1990-91 First Division season when Leeds United won the title. The video review (broken into six 10 minute segments) is incredible to watch for many reasons.” (EPL Talk)
UEFA Europa League 2009-10, Group Stage, with clubs’ average attendances from their domestic leagues.
“There are 48 clubs in the Group Stage of this the inaugural Europa League competition. The biggest difference between the Europa League and the competition it replaced, the UEFA Cup, is that the group stage now consists of 12 4-team groups playing home-and-away matches against the other 3 teams in the group. The UEFA Cup had 8 5-team groups playing single matches against the other 4 teams in the group.” (billsportsmaps)
Fernando Torres chases more goals in burning desire for first club trophy
“Shortly before kick-off at Stamford Bridge tomorrow Fernando Torres will lower his haunches and stare impassively at the ranks of blue ahead. He performs the ‘crouching Torres’ act in front of thousands every week but ask the Spaniard why and a man comfortable to open up on fatherhood, family and life in the public eye recoils.” (Guardian)
‘The Golden Age’ and ‘Goal Dreams’: Two Football Documentaries, Two Very Different Pictures

“‘The Golden Age’ is a Queens, NY league of mostly Latino players over 40 – it is also the title of a brilliantly filmed and edited documentary celebrating the global game and its particularly migratory character within the US. The film makers manage to capture the skill and energy of the players who slog out their season in Corona Park/Flushing Meadows, on the grounds of the 1964 Worlds Fair – I have never seen a documentary about the grassroots game that actually captures what it feels like to play and participate in a league like this one. And the documentary fleshes this out with terrific portraits of la cultura futbolística in the countries in which many of these guys grew up (Chile, Paraguay, Colombia). In many ways, the hour-long film is a pure luxury. You can watch it at voces.tv.” (From A Left Wing)
Top 10 Spanish Hard-men
“Anybody regularly watching La Liga since Sky popularised it in recent years would be led to believe that the Spanish game is based purely on fancy media-puntos, jet-heeled wingers and silky-skilled strikers. And they’d be about right. But back in the 70’s and 80’s the same skill and flair was on show but was counterbalanced with a number of brutal defenders, the likes of whom would make modern day so-called football hard-men run off crying to their Mummies…” (midfielddynamo)
Saturday Evening Football Newspapers
“In the early 90s, for me no Saturday evening was complete without getting the Football newspaper, giving a comprehensive match report on Cardiff City’s latest embarrassing away defeat. This was before the internet so the only news you could find on the match came from the vidiprinter on Grandstand (just the result) or fifteen or so lines on Ceefax/Teletext. But like Ceefax and Teletext, these newspapers are becoming a thing of the past and have effectively been replaced by the internet and rolling news footage from Stelling and co. on Sky Sports News.” (mirkobolesan)
The Greatest George Best Video
“I have three principle memories of Best there, and these are: (1) he was always in Marsh’s company (2) he was otherwise left as alone as anyone else (3) I never saw him drink any alcohol. Those were the last days of lunchtime drinking, and we usually put away a couple of pints each. Not him.” (James Hamilton)
In Praise Of… Floodlit Football

“Since the start of the new season, there has hardly been week go by that hasn’t seen a full roster of midweek matches take place. This, however, hasn’t ever been thus and until surprisingly recently football under floodlights was all but barred by the Football Association. Much as many of us feel that three o’clock on a Saturday afternoon is the ‘natural’ home for matches, there remains something special about matches played in the evening. Floodlights have the effect of lending an air of theatre to a football match. They enhance the senses in a very literal sense. Colours are brighter and stand out more. The blackness of the sky acts as a roof, bringing the crowd closer to the match. Nothing can quite match the intensity of a Tuesday evening match being played at full pelt in front of a baying crowd.” (twohundredpercent)
Polish Fan’s Last Will Aids Hutnik Krakow in Their Last Gasp
“Their players have only just received their first income since July, and even that is still not enough to make a decent living: this is not the Premier League, not even Portsmouth. But even this small mercy for the players was all thanks to one fan, whose last will was to donate some money to his beloved club. The story of Hutnik Krakow’s faithful fanbase doesn’t start there, though.” (Pitch Invasion)
Classic Celtic v Rangers – Scottish Cup 1980 Final
“Celtic visit Rangers this Sunday in a top of the table clash even though Celtic have opened up a 6 point lead going into October. You can watch Celtic v Rangers live here.” (Soccer Lens)
Real Madrid makes crashing return
“If you happen to find any typos in here, I sincerely apologize. I’ve been squinting for the past 48 hours trying to follow the action on DirecTV’s Champions League Mix channel on a way-too-small, non-high def TV. Don’t get me wrong, I love the fact that I now have the luxury of being able to watch literally every Champions League game — but man, are my eyes killing me.” (SI)
Nasty, brutish, short – the off kilter side of Scotland
“Nasty, brutish and short is how Thomas Hobbes described the life of man. It is also how a friend of mine described Noel Edmonds but that need not detain us now. The complete Hobbes gag is actually even darker, mentioning such joys as ‘continuall feare and danger of violent death’, building up to the punch line where life is labelled ‘solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. Good stuff, Tom but I wouldn’t open with it.” (Guardian)
The Manager

John Hughes
“From anonymous secretaries to superstar millionaires, Guardian sports writer Barney Ronay looks at the changing role of the football manager over the last century…”
The manager: made in Arsenal.
The manager: the rise of the bastard
The manager: taking the game to new countries
The manager: the rock and roll years
The manager: the showman and the bootroom
The Manager episode six: The uber manager and the billionaire owner
Jeu du Jour Week 7: And then there were two
“Lyon and Marseille are making Bordeaux’s Ligue 1 title defence rather too easy this season. While Bordeaux continue to churn out one victory after another (and not always comfortably so), their main title rivals seem all too happy to drop points to ensure a safe passage for Laurent Blanc’s men.” (spaotp)
Decisive Dublin derby
“While every derby is touted as ‘must win’ for those involved, tomorrow’s match in Dublin between Bohemians and Shamrock Rovers may give the term a more important weight. Current champions Bohemians lie one point ahead of Rovers at the top of the League of Ireland with only seven games left to play. But it is not just the destination of the league title that could be decided – the result may be crucial in determining the immediate future of Bohemians given their current financial jeopardy.” (WSC)
Pro Vercelli: The Boneyard, Part II
“Before the climax, the anticlimax. Battered beyond the point of collapse by Roma’s thug tactics, we crawled toward the end of the league season leaving bloody handprints all over the linoleum. If we won just one of our two remaining matches—against Atalanta and Bologna, 16th and 14th in Serie A—we’d win the title, but we were in no shape to practice, much less to play a competitive game.” (The Run of Play)
Story of the Day Being Overshadowed by the Story of the Day

“The story of today is Milan. Milan and their complete faceplant to start the season. And while the criticisms are deserved, and Leonardo fully on his way to the unemployment office, sometimes we pay a bit too much attention to the fall of the big teams and not enough to the rise of the small ones. So with that in mind…” (The Offside)
Milan’s humbling defeat to FC Zurich sends them lurching deeper into crisis
“Forty minutes into a game that made Milan look like they needed a great big hole in the San Siro to swallow them up, the TV cameras cut away to a pair of faded stars on the substitute’s bench. Dida, the Brazilian goalkeeper, was ranting with the disgust of a man who has just found his car vandalised mindlessly for the umpteenth time. Next to him Ronaldinho resembled a nine-year-old stuck in a maths lesson whose mind could not stretch beyond his bubble gum.” (Guardian)
Zürich shock Milan with Tihinen magic
“FC Zürich pulled off one of the shocks of the UEFA Champions League group stage as Hannu Tihinen’s tenth-minute goal earned the Swiss titleholders a memorable win at AC Milan.” (uefa)
Sky the limit for jubilant Zürich
“Alain Rochat conceded FC Zürich rode their luck at times, but said their momentous 1-0 victory at AC Milan has given the Swiss champions the confidence to push on to the knockout stages. “If we can win here, we can win anywhere,” the defender said.” (uefa)
UEFA Champions League Video Highlights – Wednesday, September 30, 2009
“The UEFA Champions League wrapped up its second set of group stage matches on Wednesday with 8 matches. Real Madrid continued to show they are ready to challenge with a 3-0 win over Marseille. Cristiano Ronaldo has taken no time in adjusting to Madrid as he scored two goals. In England, Manchester United came from behind to defeated VfL Wolfsburg 2-1. Chelsea held onto a 1-0 win at APOEL and in the upset of the day FC Zurich beat AC Milan 1-0 at the San Siro.” (The 90th Minute)
Standings
(uefa)
Top 25 goal celebrations: best and worst
“Following Emmanuel Adebayor’s knee slide against Arsenal, Telegraph Sport looks back at 25 of the most memorable celebrations ever.” (Telegraph)
FIFA 10 Review

“Adding hundreds of subtle features is all well and good, and the team has done that this year, but, I’ve been thinking, there’s no one revolutionary gameplay feature left for the team to implement that would result in a significant step up. I knew FIFA 10 would be good. Great, even. But I doubted it would be much more than a roster update with a few new bells and whistles. I was wrong.” (videogamer)
South African rivalry threaten to undermine World Cup planning
“FIFA is worried that the World Cup organisers could take their eye off the ball in the run-up to, and in the aftermath of, the South African FA presidential election at the end of September. Confusing and upsetting all the world authority’s carefully laid plans is the association’s presidential battle between the local World Cup organising chairman, Ivan Khoza, and the organising chief executive, Danny Jordaan.” (WorldSoccer)
