Author Archives: 1960s: Days of Rage

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About 1960s: Days of Rage

Bill Davis - 1960s: Days of Rage

Lyon through as Liverpool teeter

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Paolo Caliari, Persée délivrant Andromède
“A last-minute leveller from Lisandro fired Olympique Lyonnais into the UEFA Champions League knockout stage for the seventh season running, cancelling out Ryan Babel’s superb strike and delivering a major blow to Liverpool FC’s qualifying hopes.” (UEFA)

Liverpool’s Champions League situation a ‘disgrace’, says Pepe Reina
“Pepe Reina has said it is ‘disgraceful’ that Liverpool no longer have their Champions League destiny in their own hands following the 1-1 draw against Lyon. The Premier League side now have to win their final two games and hope the French side take something from their game at Fiorentina.” (Guardian)

Sloppy Liverpool punished as Lyons refuse to roll over
“Just when all those alchemic powers in Europe seemed to have served him once again, Rafael Benitez’s makeshift and ramshackle Liverpool defence was revealed for what it is last night. That it held to together with glue and sticky tape for 90 minutes only compounds the despair he will feel as a second injury-time goal in successive encounters with Lyons sends them all but out of the Champions League. Dreams of Madrid in May are fast being revised to Hamburg, and a Europa League final at best.” (Independent)

Reds’ hearts broken late on
“Liverpool’s hearts were broken by a cruel last-minute equaliser that has all but ended their Champions League dreams for a traumatic season. The much-maligned Ryan Babel had scored a wonderful goal with just seven minutes left and if Liverpool could have hung on to that lead they would still have had a realistic chance of reaching the last 16. But Liverpool’s season has been littered with shattering luck and bitter body blows, as well as beach-ball goals.” (ESPN)

Dirk Kuyt: Liverpool’s Champions League draw with Lyon feels like a defeat
“Liverpool were leading 1-0, thanks to a superb 25-yard strike from Ryan Babel, right up until the dying seconds before Lisandro Lopez snuck through to equalise, sending Lyon into the knockout stages of the Champions League and tipping the Anfield club towards the Europa League of Everton and Fulham. Liverpool are now five points behind second-placed Fiorentina with two rounds of games to play.” (Telegraph

Pepe Reina: Liverpool’s uncertain position in the Champions League is ‘disgraceful’
“Pepe Reina believes it is “disgraceful” that Liverpool’s destiny in the Champions League will not be decided by their own results. The Merseyside club could win their final two matches in group E and not qualify for the knockout stages after they drew 1-1 away to Lyons last night. The French club must avoid defeat against Fiorentina in their next match for Rafael Benitez’s side to stand a chance of qualification and this situation does not sit easily with Reina.” (TimesOnline)

Milan’s No. 10 Responds to Times Readers

“A day after he played in A.C. Milan’s 1-1 draw with Real Madrid in the UEFA Champions League, Clarence Seedorf answered readers’ questions from Milan. This is the the third edition of Seedorf’s monthly discussion with Times readers. You can read earlier discussions here.” (NYT)

Rampla Juniors 1956

“Uruguayan club Rampla Juniors embarked on a huge global tour in 1956. Over the course of 71 days they played 24 games in 8 countries. They visited Brazil, Spain, France, Germany, Denmark, Israel, Turkey as well as England. They recorded 11 wins, 6 draws and only 7 defeats, a quite remarkable record given that they averaged a game every 3 days.” (footysphere)

Rubin’s Bukharov predicts frantic finale

“Having once again upset the odds to claim a creditable goalless draw with FC Barcelona and simultaneously enhance their UEFA Champions League Group F credentials, FC Rubin Kazan forward Aleksandr Bukharov insisted the Russian champions are “not afraid” of competing at Europe’s top table.” (UEFA)

Champions draw blank and face uphill struggle
“Rubin Kazan followed up their shock victory against Barcelona a fortnight ago with a defensive masterclass to leapfrog their Catalan opponents in Champions League Group F ahead of the evening game between Dynamo Kiev and Inter Milan.” (ESPN)

How Did Barca Fare in Russian Test?
“Rubin Kazan has Barcelona’s number. The Russian champion held the European champion to a goalless draw in sub-freezing temperatures in the Tatar capital, a week after upsetting the Blaugrana in Spain.” (NYT)

Great And…Not Great – Zinedine Zidane

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Zahra777
“Has any other player been so frustratingly brilliant as Zinedine Zidane? The Frenchman kept a quiet private life to his credit, but his transgressions on the pitch alternate between a rap sheet and a rhapsody. His feet could take down a 40 yard pass like a feather, yet in the blink of an eye bludgeon a Saudi player. Genius, yes. But deviant. Devlishly deviant. Zinedine Zidane, known as ‘Zizou,’ the French-born son of Algerian immigrants, plied his trade in France and Italy, making his name at Juventus, where his dizzying roulettes dazzled the catenaccio faithful. And his play for the French (les bleus) captivated a nation and a world.” (futfanatico)

Turkey: 2009-10 Super Lig.

“On the map, I have included a photo of each club’s stadium. If possible, I selected an exterior shot of the stadium, to give a view of the surroundings of each location. Kayserispor’s Kaydar Has Stadyumu is brand new; the photo I used is from last winter, and shows the now-completed structure about three-quarters finished. Here is a photo of the interior of the stadium {click here (TinyPic.com; photo by Serkam Erdogan)}. The stadium will be one of the main assets in Turkey’s bid for hosting a European Championship in the future.” (billsportsmaps)

Soccer Coaches Sweat With Mancini in Play

“The news broke late Friday afternoon. It was the kind of information which, had it emanated from Wall Street, would have been said to move markets. Former Inter Milan coach Roberto Mancini had terminated his contract with the club, freeing him to take another job. In a matter of hours, rumors were swirling around those clubs among Europe’s elite with embattled managers, particularly Liverpool (Rafa Benitez) and Real Madrid (Manuel Pellegrini).” (WSJ)

Rangers & Their Influential 10% Shareholder

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“It’s not what you own, it’s what you’re owed – this is how the balance of power currently lies at the Rangers Football Club. Lloyds Banking Group is owed far more than they own, and they are prepared to take drastic measures to get what they are owed – up to and including administration, if reports of Rangers’ mid-October board meeting are to be relied upon. The immediately subsequent appointment to that board of “corporate recovery specialist” Douglas Muir was the clearest indication that Lloyds wanted their money, about £30m of it, but even those in Scotland who knew that something like financial implosion was coming Rangers’ way weren’t prepared for amount of figures thrown at them recently, concerning the debts and borrowings which have kept them just within touching distance Celtic over the latter part of the decade.” (twohundredpercent)

UEFA Needs a Lyricist

“Sometimes, when you hear a specific piece of music, the words fail to register in your head. Usually, this is background stuff; you hear it on hold, or it’s in an radio ad you hear a lot, or it’s just so damn catchy that, years later, you’re remembering that damn ‘Garfield-1-2-3-2-3’ jingle that haunted Cleveland for about ten years and wondering how the hell that’s even a phone number.” (Avoiding the Drop)

Losing a few games is not a crisis

“‘The crisis of yesterday is the joke of tomorrow,’ HG Wells once wrote. Not that you’d have found anyone at Anfield on Sunday laughing about the previous day’s defeat at Fulham, or players and coaching staff at Real Madrid last week watching footage of the 4-0 defeat at Alcorcon in the Copa del Rey, and sitting around clutching their sides at a defensive performance that lead to arguably the most humiliating result in the club’s history. For the rest of us, of course, the hilarity is there from the start, whether we are laughing at the results, or whether we are laughing at the idea of teams like Liverpool and Real being in ‘crisis’.” (WSC)

Serie A looks wide open this season

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BillSportsMaps
“Where have all the wonder teams gone? There was a time – perhaps there still is that time – when the Serie A championship was totally dominated by the three superpowers: Internazionale, Milan and Juventus. Not only have this trio won 26 of the last 33 league titles, they have also tended (at least one of them) to utterly dominate the season, home and away.” (WorldSoccer)

Ten Emerging Talents in the Championship

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Chris Burke (Cardiff City)
“Among the performers who have lit up this burgeoning Championship campaign are some familiar names. Michael Chopra has so far justified every last dime of his weighty fee, Kevin Nolan has buckled down and rehabilitated his reputation as an all purpose midfielder-cum-forward, and Adam Johnson’s sleek skills on the Middlesbrough wing have helped Smogheads forget the injured Stewart Downing. But who are the emerging stars of the league? Which players have burst on the scene and chalked up their greatest achievements this season?” (thetwounfortunates)

Video Of The Week: Steel City Blues (1984)

“More than a decade before “The Full Monty”, the decline of the city of Sheffield and the effect of the collapse of the city’s steel industry was already well documented. This week’s Video Of The Week goes back to 1984. “Steel City Blues” traces the decline of the city and ties it together with Sheffield Wednesday’s attempts to get back into the First Division for the first time since 1970.”
(twohundredpercent)

The two sides of Lionel Messi

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“The candidates were announced last week for the Fifa World Player of the Year award. Am I the only one out there who’s not too interested? My problem with the thing is that this concentration on the individual can tend to overshadow one of the fundamental truths of the game – the stars shine brightest when the collective balance of the team is right. The point is proved by a brief look at the performances this year of one of the favourites. Based on what he has done for Barcelona, Lionel Messi would be a worthy winner – but that would certainly not be the case if the criteria was restricted to his form with Argentina. How can this be true?” (BBC – Tim Vickery)

Hansen on Liverpool

“Rafael Benitez’s future as Liverpool manager is again the source of speculation – and while all that I am hearing from the Anfield hierarchy suggest he is in no danger of losing his job, results dictate everything. I will never advocate the sacking of any manager because I was someone who never had the bottle to do the job, but Benitez is under pressure. This is not me saying it – the facts, in the shape of poor results, are saying it.” (BBC)

A tale of two cities

“One of the most intriguing aspects of Spanish football is the way in which the different sets of supporters around the country react to defeat. It’s becoming better known nowadays that Spain is really a loose collective of chalks and cheeses, where you can cross a regional border and suddenly feel as though you are on a different planet – so it comes as no surprise that each football club in the country is un mundo (its own world). The Spanish themselves accept these differences as part of their own cultural mix, and have a fixed set of perspectives on everyone else.” (ESPN)

Lies, Damn Lies, Statistics and ‘Soccernomics’

“In their new book ‘Soccernomics,’ to be published in the United States on Tuesday, the author Simon Kuper and the economist Stefan Szymanski do for soccer what ‘Moneyball’ did for baseball. It puts the game under an analytical microscrope using statistics, economics, psychology and intuition to try and transform a dogmatic sport.” (NYT)

Historical Football Kits – Celtic

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Stanley Matthews
“In the mid-1880s, the success of Hibernians FC had inspired Irish communities throughout Scotland to form their own clubs, usually with ‘Hibernian’ or ‘Harp’ in their name. With a quarter of a million people of Irish descent living in and around Glasgow, it was only a matter of time before a powerful club would emerge.” (Historical Football Kits – Celtic)

My Favorite Football Podcasts

“A couple of months ago in the midst of a conversation with my friend Bill Turianski he mentioned a radio show he listened to and a reference to the competitiveness (or not) of Major League Soccer. I followed up asking what podcasts he listened to and he gave me a couple of suggestions to get me started. I duly followed and have been truly blown away. I had no idea what I’d been missing. It’s somewhat nebulous I guess but just listening to footy-focused talk shows on a regular basis has made me feel so much more connected to this great big game of ours.” (albion road)

Football Weekly: Lyon or bust for Rafael Benítez and Liverpool?

“Chelsea powered on and Arsenal humbled Tottenham, but Liverpool were plunged deeper into crisis after losing 3-1 to Fulham. Is Rafa Benítez’s job on the line in their Champions League clash with Lyon on Wednesday? Your Football Weekly pod squad is split – and they’re also not sure whether or not to back Hull’s Phil Brown a million percent. His new chairman doesn’t seem overly confident either.” (Guardian)

Osasuna 1 – 1 Barcelona

Zlatan Barca
“League leaders Barcelona were denied victory in dramatic circumstances at Osasuna tonight as Gerard Pique put through his own net deep into injury time to give the hosts an unexpected point. Pique was attempting to clear after a Rafa Marquez error had let in Javier Camunas, but the Spain defender could only divert the ball into his own net and Barca were forced to settle for a draw which sees their lead at the top of the Primera Division cut to just a point after Real Madrid beat Getafe earlier in the evening.” (ESPN)

Osasuna vs Barca Highlights on 31/10/09
(All About FC Barcelona)

Hull City’s Finances Show The Downside Of “Ambition”

“Football fans have become better educated in the mysteries of football finances over recent years out of necessity as much as anything else, but just occasionally old naiveties come to the fore. It might just be that they can’t believe that things could be as bad off the pitch as on it at the moment, but Hull City fans are less concerned than they should be about the lack of financial information coming out of their club in recent times, and now that the information has come out and has proved as grim as one may have feared, they still don’t sem to believe that things can be as bad off the pitch as on it; despite the phrase “significant doubt over their ability to continue as a going concern” appearing not once, but three times in a relatively short annual report and statement of accounts for the Tigers’ promotion year.” (twohundredpercent)

Plymouth Defeat means Tough Decisions to come

“Well, that showed me, didn’t it? A hopelessly limited Plymouth Argyle team came to the Riverside, put ten men behind the ball, defended deep, soaked up the pressure and hit us on the break. Comparisons between this and the similar 1-0 defeats at home to Leicester and Watford can’t be avoided, and demonstrate that Gordon has some tough decisions to make in turning the side into a winning one.” (SmogBlog)

Red mist descends at Craven Cottage

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The Fire in the Borgo , Giulio Romano
“Rafael Benitez grimaced on the touchline as nine-man Liverpool were given a mauling in a humiliating defeat at Craven Cottage. Liverpool defenders Philipp Degen and Jamie Carragher were sent off for reckless fouls and by the end the Fulham crowd were chanting ”Easy, easy” as Liverpool resembled a shambles. Goals from Bobby Zamora, Erik Nevland and Clint Dempsey gave Roy Hodgson’s side a deserved victory with Fernando Torres grabbing the one consolation for Liverpool.” (ESPN)

Premier League: Liverpool crash at Fulham
“Liverpool’s hopes of a revived push at the Premier League title collapsed in spectacular fashion at Craven Cottage where a 3-1 Fulham win made it five league defeats from just eleven games played.” (ESPN)

Clint Dempsey crowns a fine win for Fulham after nine-man Liverpool implode
“Rafael Benítez grimaced on the touchline as nine-man Liverpool were given a mauling in a humiliating defeat at Craven Cottage. Liverpool defenders Philipp Degen and Jamie Carragher were sent off for reckless fouls and by the end the Fulham crowd were chanting “Easy, easy” as Liverpool resembled a shambles. Goals from Bobby Zamora, Erik Nevland and Clint Dempsey gave Roy Hodgson’s side a deserved victory, with Fernando Torres grabbing the one consolation for Liverpool.” (Guardian)

Lucas: ‘The boos at Anfield were my worst moment’
“Lucas Leiva cannot suppress a smile when he is reminded of the moment, 18 minutes into the game against Manchester United on Sunday, when he clattered into Paul Scholes, won the ball and played in Dirk Kuyt who almost scored. It was the moment that said Lucas was not going to be pushed around.” (Independent)

Fulham 3 Liverpool 1: match report
“Liverpool suffered their sixth defeat in seven outings in embarrassing fashion, finishing with nine men after both Philipp Degen and Jamie Carragher were sent off against Fulham. After the jubilation of the 2-0 win over Manchester United, Liverpool stumbled to another loss ahead of next week’s crucial Champions League trip to Lyon.” (Telegraph)

Nine-man Liverpool return to losing ways
“Liverpool manager Rafa Benitez endured another day to forget after his side were beaten 3-1 at Fulham and had two men sent-off at Craven Cottage here on Saturday. Defenders Philipp Degen and Jamie Carragher were both shown straight red cards in the space of two second half minutes as the good work the Reds achieved in reviving their Premier League title challenge during last week’s win over Manchester United was undone.” (TimesOnline)

Pro Vercelli: The End, Or Is It

“A new version of Football Manager is released today, which makes this, in my house at least, a time of hushed reflection. The old era is passing away, the new era is rising up before us. Everything we knew and loved is sliding into the sea, while before us, like a mountainous country, is thrust a terrifying and exhilarating possibility. Just like every day, really, but the arrival of a new FM makes it that much clearer. Here is the past, there is the future. Eurogamer gave it a 9, but wished more had been done to fix the press conferences.” (Run of Play)

Pro Vercelli – Brian Phillips

Fluminese’s troubles continue

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José Roberto Torero
“Rooted to the foot of the table and staring relegation in the face, these are dark days for fans of Fluminense who had looked forward to this latest season with so much expectation. With national team striker Fred having been enticed home from French side Lyon to lead the attack and 1994 World Cup-winning coach Carlos Alberto Parreira at the helm, things got off to a flying start with a 1-0 win over Sao Paulo – champions for the last three years.” (WorldSoccer – Tim Vickery)

The Pandemonium Of Football Away From The Pitch

“Every weekend football will consistently highlight the inconsistency of the game, whether it is Liverpool’s return to form against Ferguson United or Real Madrid being thumped 4-0 by village team Alcorcorn in the Spanish King’s Cup. Like a good thriller or horror film the weekend’s football action can leave you unsure of which way the action is going to turn right up until the final curtain falls. Away from the field of play though the bizarre twists and turns of everyday life can be just as fascinating and this week football has seemingly stepped out of its comfortable isolated bubble that it normally inhabits and has joined the struggle and annoyance of everyday of life.” (Three Match Ban)

Capello rouses Italian clubs to take power back from Ultras

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“England manager Fabio Capello breezed into the school of excellence at Coverciano on Monday with the air of authority that comes from having won everything there is in the club game. He was there to give an inspirational speech to the school’s students who want to follow in his footsteps. Instead, Capello launched an unexpected and scathing attack on the state of Italian football, telling the assembled audience that the game on the peninsula is now being held hostage by the Ultrás. “It’s impossible to stop the Ultrás running the game and no one has the courage to stand up to them. In England the grounds are always full.” (SoccerLens)

Gordon adds Bent to Boro

“So stated Gordon as he begins the arduous and ten million percent necessary task of stockpiling bodies into the Boro squad. Even the most die-hard Southgate apologists must be impressed. Days into the job and the new manager has already clinched his first signing, with more to follow as he tries to add fresh impetus to our promotion campaign. According to the Gazette, Gordon has taken Marcus Bent on loan from Birmingham City. Though an official announcement is yet to be made, it’s felt that Bent could make the squad for tomorrow’s game against Plymouth, one that currently sees Boro capable of fielding two first team strikers only.” (smogblog)

Taxi for Laszlo?

“As the saga at Rangers continues towards a potentially horrid (or amusing, depending on your allegiances) conclusion, Walter Smith is not the only one concerned at the lack of progress. Over in Edinburgh things are not going according to plan for the Maroon half of the city, as Hearts gaffer Csaba Lazslo says he’ll consider his options unless transfer funds are made available to help his struggling strikers.” (Inside Left)

Scandals & murder taint Mbombela stadium

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The Story of Aristaeus, Niccolò dell’Abate
“Mbombela is one of the most atmospheric new stadiums built for next year’s World Cup, nestled among the beautiful hills of northeast South Africa and supported by orange pylons that resemble giraffes. But the almost 1.3 billion rand ($172 million) stadium has been tarnished by a string of scandals, including the murder, apparently by professional hitmen, of a municipal official who blew the whistle on alleged corruption and malpractice.” (FourFourTwo)

Serious soccer back in South Africa

“With less than eight months until the 2010 World Cup, the South African national team has made a change. Joel Santana was removed as coach and replaced by fellow Brazilian Carlos Alberto Parreira, who had resigned some 18 months earlier. It could be a forward step. It might be a backward one. It’s certainly proving controversial. Many in South Africa are happy to see Santana go, but unhappy at the return of Parreira. They have not been impressed by the results under the Brazilian pair, and think that the time has come to put a local man in the top job. (SI – Tim Vickery)

Fan Diary # 13: 2-0 Over United

“My normal pre-match bravado wasn’t at full strength after the four-game losing streak (Liverpool’s worst run since the Spring of 1987) and going into the fixture against Manchester United Sunday I was a sleepless bag of frenetic nerves. We tend to play our best against the strongest opposition (I thought our outing against Chelsea was one of our best performances of the season except for – of course – the two moments that led to their two goals) and Fernando Torres was on the starting team sheet. These thoughts came as desperately needed consolation as did the return of Glen Johnson. But still: this was United. Even if they were on a forty match losing streak and we’d just broken Arsenal’s unbeaten record, I’d still lose sleep the night before fretting over the outcome of this match.” (EPL Talk)

Déjà vu strikes Ramos’ Russian reign

“October 26 is a date that may send a shiver down Juande Ramos’ spine. Exactly a year to the day since his unceremonious sacking from Tottenham, the Spanish boss was relieved of his duties at CSKA Moscow, after just 47 days, although the reasons for his exit are slightly more complex than the poor run of results that saw his tenure at White Hart Lane come to an end.” (ESPN)

A Brief History of Football Kit Design in England and Scotland

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“The first rules of football were laid down by English public schools to govern inter-house competition and fell broadly into two groups; the handling game developed at Rugby School and the dribbling game that emerged from Eton, although other schools such as Harrow, Winchester, Uppingham, Shrewsbury, Marlborough and Charterhouse all had their own versions. When the young men from these schools went up to university they formed football clubs but games descended into chaos as there was no consensus on the rules. The first attempt to draw up a uniform set of rules took place at Cambridge University in 1848.” (Historical Kits)

Valero and Vieri: the future and the past

“West Brom fans, and indeed many others, may be a bit surprised about what they are about to read next, but on Saturday night I think I might have seen the next great European midfielder. His name is Borja Valero and he plays for Real Mallorca. Yes, you did read that right. The very same Borja Valero who was the Baggies’ record signing for £4.7 million from Mallorca at the start of last season before enduring a miserable dysfunctional season which ended with West Brom being relegated.” (BBC)

Football Cup Primer: The CONCACAF Champions League

“We’re usually busy during Champions League weeks writing about, well…the Champions League. Like most soccer fans, the purveyors of this establishment watch UEFA’s iteration of this tournament pretty intently. While doing this, however, we’re mostly ignoring CONCACAF’s version; being an off week (and because I already did one of these on the Carling Cup, which resumes today), I figured we’d spend a little time getting our learn on. Your subject: the CONCACAF Champions League.” (Avoiding the Drop)

Doctor Battles to End Warfare on the Field

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 Iraq, Sept. 18, 2008
” ‘If you come to Bruges,’ said the Belgian doctor, ‘I have something to show you that will make your spine run cold.’ In Bruges, he handed over a video that he, the senior medical officer for a game played by 260 million people around the world, has put together. It is a catalogue of fouls of such ferocity, such crude intent to harm, that do indeed numb the senses. Dr. Michel d’Hooghe said nothing. He watched his visitor as the video ran. A foul in the Newell’s Old Boys versus Rosario Central derby in Argentina, in which the boot was raised deliberately into the head of an opponent at fearsome speed. A foul by a Glasgow Celtic player who landed one boot on the neck of a fallen opponent, and at the same time the other boot on his victim’s ankle.” (NYT)

Liverpool beats Manchester United 2-0 – Recap and Video Highlights – Sunday, October 25, 2009

“The biggest match of the weekend in the English Premier League was on Sunday with Liverpool hosting Manchester United. Liverpool has been struggling of late and needs a win at home against Manchester United. So, who won the match and what happened? Here’s a recap of the match along with video highlights.” (The 90th Minute)

Beckham’s on his way to Milan… and the World Cup

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“So AC Milan chief executive Adriano Galliani has assured the world that the loan deal to take David Beckham back to the red half of the San Siro in January is ‘100% done’ and ‘The only thing missing is the signatures’ which simultaneously confirms that he’s lying (let’s face it, unless it’s signed and sealed, it isn’t 100% done) and that David Beckham will almost certainly be part of England’s World Cup squad in South Africa next year.” (They Think Its All Over)

Liverpool Apply A United Shaped Sticking Plaster

“Crisis over at Anfield, then. Blimey, even David Ngog scored. Maybe it is because of such miracles that all the sensible advice from pundits about how “just one win” wouldn’t alter Liverpool’s dire on and off-field straits has gone through the defenestration process. Liverpool were almost everything against United that they weren’t against either Sunderland or Olympique Lyonnais. They were committed, organised and, most significantly of all, with Fernando Torres up front. Manchester United, however, were terrible.” (twohundredpercent)

Diego Maradona must learn to channel his emotions

“When Diego Maradona was appointed national coach, many in Argentina felt his mere presence on the bench would be enough to drive the players to new heights. All went well until his fourth match in charge, when a 6-1 defeat in Bolivia proved that motivational slogans were no substitute for effective planning for playing at altitude.” (WorldSoccer)

Managers who stoically shrug in the face of fate

“Post-match interviews with players are mostly dull because reporters only want to talk to the goalscorers, during which we learn that the player concerned is indeed quite happy to have successfully done his job. Managers, though, are interviewed as a matter of course, regardless of the game’s outcome. Again, not so interesting when the manager’s side has won but much more compelling after a defeat or a lost lead. A glance at this past weekend’s quotations presents an instructive picture of the several different ways of talking away failure.” (WSC)

Crisis in the capital

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Francesco Guardi, Canal Grande e Ponte di Rialto
“A mixed week for Spanish fortunes, with the country’s leading European lights (at least in statistical terms), both slipping up in the Champions League, although Sevilla continued to make it look like child’s play with a 3-1 win at Stuttgart. Champions League? They’re ‘aving a laugh. Chelsea had one as well, predictably stuffing Atlético Madrid 4-0 and condemning their manager, Abel Resino, to the social security queue.” (ESPN)

Can European managers succeed in South America?

“‘Would any South American nation,’ asks reader Craig Thompson, ‘consider appointing a European coach (specifically Italian), and would the coach succeed with a South American team?’ There are a few precedents here. Jack Greenwell from England took Peru to victory in the 1939 Copa America. More recently, Xavier Azkargorta from Spain qualified Bolivia for the 1994 World Cup. And at around the same time Dussan Draskovic from Montenegro played an important part in the early stages of Ecuador’s rise.” (BBC – Tim Vickery)

Video: Ibrahimovic Free Kick Goal Against Zaragoza

“Due to popular demand, SFS posts the ZLATAN IBRAHIMOVIC free kick goal from yesterdays FC Bareclona 6-1 win over Real Zaragoza. The Swede has already 7 goals in the Spanish Liga.” (Spanish Football Sports)

Xavi: All is well at Barca
“Barcelona midfielder Xavi hopes his side’s 6-1 demolition of Real Zaragoza is more than enough proof that all is well at the European champions.” (ESPN)

Keita hat-trick as Barca hit Zaragoza for six
“Seydou Keita hit a hat-trick and Zlatan Ibrahimovic netted twice to lead Barcelona to a 6-1 thrashing of Real Zaragoza and send the La Liga champions three points clear of Real Madrid on Sunday.” (ESPN)