February 2013 Archives

Not Rafa, Chelsea fans: It's Abramovich, go after him

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Chelsea fans, this is the man you ought to despise!

The news is Rafa Benitez survived his rant at the club supporters and his interim status. The Chelsea board voted to let him continue.

What one doesn't get is why fans are lining up against Rafa? Probably because he is low hanging fruit. Their ire should really be directed at Roman Abramovich who's hiring and firing seems driven by something more picayune than any futuristic vision.

Andre Villa-Boas if he had been granted his second season at the club with the present talent at his disposal, would have been challenging Man Utd for the title. After a slow start, Spurs are the brightest spark in the league buoyed by a young coach and his philosophy and eagerly accepted by younger, fresher faces. You can see the shared excitement of a new discovery. This is not a cabal of cynical, brainwashed veterans who decide who they will play for and when. Even Jose Mourinho was shunted out after a player revolt led by John Terry who went up the chain straight to Peter Kenyon and said in gist, "Its my way or the highway."

AVB's predecessor Carlo Ancelotti, an AC Milan legend, despite winning them the league and the FA Cup found himself out of a job in the midst of his second season, after his assistant was bewilderingly axed. His cerebral approach typified by the arching left eyebrow did not sit well with the new chain of command. The manner of his firing should sit in first place in the hall of shame. Now, he's settled at PSG, Chelsea's very, very near East version, with a less whimsical group of owners. Doing well, one might add.

With the constant parade of managers traipsing in and out, even after three league titles, a couple of FA Cup, and the glittering Champions League prize, almost a decade after Abramovich's takeover, Chelsea feels curiously stillborn. What exactly have they accomplished? An enviable style of football? A quarry of homegrown talent that they can mine? Their pixilated goals include resuscitating a £50m boondoggle. Casting envious eyes at Bayern spiriting away Pep Guardiola. Crashing out of the CL the following season, a new low for Europe's champions.

Stamford Bridge is the King's Landing. With a Game of Thrones mentality, is it any wonder a coach worth his salt would consider Chelsea his home? Rafa was foolhardy taking this job, rusty after being out of one for a couple of years. He's not at fault. The owner who has poisoned the well, is. Take him on. Boo him, berate him, direct your fire and brimstone at him.

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Marca and the Real Madrid media hail Copa Del Rey victory

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The Real Madrid love flows. Barcelona "humiliated". Messi was "caged in" by the Real Madrid defense. Cristiano Ronaldo "won the game" and Rafael Varane was "consecrated." Alberto Undiano Mallenco, the referee was "perfect." The media hailed the biggest win for the Merengues at the Camp Nou in 50 years.

There was doom and gloom at Barca with Marca gleefully reporting that Messi had developed a fever and both he and Xavi had not reported training while Iniesta and Dani Alves were caught soul searching.

Absent in this lovefest, was praise for the entrenador, Jose Mourinho. It took a player, Varane to dedicate this win to his coach. The tea leaves point to Mou leaving this summer.

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Barcelona might well become the 2013 Liga champions but it is going to be well tarnished by the way they were exposed today at Camp Nou by a ruthless Real Madrid side. On the lips of every Blaugrana fan: What happened to our team? Their tiki taka was creaky caca and their defense clearly stank.

Carles Puyol has been a lion for Barca over the years but the way he was exposed by Angel Di Maria on that second Ronaldo goal clearly shows the need for fresh legs. And Cristiano Ronaldo had the measure of Gerard Pique having difficulties spying where the fleet footed winger/ striker was headed upended him for a PK. Which CR7 put away with contemptuous ease. In Rafael Varane, Real Madrid have found a half back who can do everything, including save and score goals in the same match. That was some leap for the third goal as the Barca defense stood around earthbound.

Barca's consolation was a Jordi Alba goal from an Iniesta long ball that dropped in his doorstep. It was too little, too late. Leo Messi was nondescript for the AC Milan match and he disappeared for this one too.

One of the hallmarks of a rampant Barca attack was their recycling qualities as they pinged the ball around the box stretching the defense out and then suddenly Xavi would mail Pedro a gorgeous through ball. I remember reading an article by Jonathan Wilson where he mentioned their suffocating possession camped out in the opponent's half was their form of defense. But that was when they had the lead and needed to kill the match off. This is new to them. And it's proving too slow and futile.

When Mourinho won against them in the CL semi-final in 2010, Inter's performance was hailed as the epitome of what a defense could do as Walter Samuel and Thiago Motta turned in the performance of their lives against that hitherto unstoppable side. Now, Mou has Barca on the run, winning all the important matches making it almost too easy. Yet, lest we forget at this fading stage, Barca's greater service to the sport preserving their enviable cantera to produce legends while Real has bought its overseas stars at enormous cost. When Real have won the way Barca have won preserving their nucleus of homegrown talent then we can talk of an equivalence.


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Inflatable bananas, racist fans

A mere slap on the wrist as the club was fined €50,000 for fans who rained racial abuse, waved inflatable bananas, and displayed offensive banners against former players Mario Balotelli and Sulley Muntari.

Balotelli himself got docked €10,000 for some perceived offensive gesture (raising a finger to the lips, wtf). Go figure. Got to love that balance of justice though, eh? He should have walked off the pitch with his team following him. I heard that gesture got plenty of accolades a month ago.

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Leo Messi tries his hand at cricket

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Here is an explanation for Leo Messi's subdued, tired performance against AC Milan at the San Siro. He's playing all this cricket, an energetic sport that leaves you drained. Tongue firmly in cheek.

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Copa Del Rey 2011: A Mallencolic night for Barcelona losing to Real in the final

The referee Alberto Undiano Mallenco will be the most scrutinized person on the pitch. Barca interim coach, Jordi Roura has already whined about decisions that have gone against them under his officiating and he's been backed up by the Barca board. The 2011 Copa final held at the Mestalla was particularly bitter for the Blaugranas as they went down to Real, 0-1.

Undiano Mallenco turned down a goal by Pedro for being millimetres offside and then refused to entertain a red or any kind of punishment for Alvaro Arbeloa's blatant stamp on Villa. There were eight yellow cards issued in that foul plagued final which went to extra time. On Jan 19th, this year Barca's unbeaten run came to an end after a loss to Real Sociedad, in a match seemingly under control till Gerard Pique was sent off by Undiano Mallenco in the first half for a touchy feely tackle on Carlos Vela. As Tito Viilanova said in every match there were 200 of the same that would not raise an eyebrow.

That didn't take long in all the jousting. Jose Mourinho hit back against Barca's complaints.

" I'd rather go with the lessons we've learnt from Barcelona in the past. Lessons about sportsmanship, about not pressuring the refs, not surrounding them, not trying to get opponents booked, and obviously about how to play football, which it does very well."

Both Real and Barca have some injury concerns for today's match. Kaka could be dusted off for Angel Di Maria while David Villa might be in for Cesc Fabregas.

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Gerard Pique was spied upon by Pep Guardiola

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In The Lives of Others, the East German stasi spies on a couple, prominent in artistic circles; coming under suspicion for national security reasons. A highly recommended movie. The Cold War was full of these stories and back here at present we have the Patriot Act and its many extensions that gives all kinds of creepy powers to the US government to probe our lives. But Barcelona, a soccer club, spying on its own players?

In a report by El Confidencial (how's that for irony?), Pep Guardiola is alleged to have kept tabs on his players off hours through a detective agency. This surveillance program was the brainchild of the sinisterly named Director of Security and now director general of Penitentiary Services for the Generalitat, Xavier Martorell. Yes, that is right. State sanctioned spying.

Much of it centres around Gerard Pique who came under increased scrutiny after his relationship with Shakira took off. We always knew Pep Guardiola was a micro-manager who would go to extra-ordinary lengths to get the best out of his players but this is carrying it a bit too far. Even Bill Belichik, martinet extraordinaire and all round sourpuss, knows it's the opponents you spy on. Rob Gronkowski didn't exactly get grief from Belichik for all this, did he?

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Baleful Spurs smash and grab win over West Ham, 3-2

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Bale force winds look to threaten the Gunners this coming weekend. Gareth Bale is redefining spectacular, his first strike made to look ordinary by his second goal which rocketed forward a ridiculous number of yards with a minimum of backlift and swerved away from Jussi Jaaskelainen. Who could have stopped that? That was his eighth goal in 6 matches. Bale is a beast and he's turning it on at the right time for Spurs.

Guy Demel's interception of Lewis Holtby's pass ended up at the feet of Bale and a few strides later the ball was dispatched at an angle too acute for Jaaskelainen. The marvelous thing about Bale is his penetration is so swift with such little preparation to pull the trigger, it leaves virtually no time to throw a block.

The Hammers equalized after Scotty Parker caught Andy Carroll on the follow through as he tried to get to the ball. Howard Webb had no second thoughts and the pony tailed one made no mistake with the spot kick. West Ham went ahead after Joe Cole in a lovely bit of skill controlled a long ball with his right foot, turned around and tapped the ball past Hugo Lloris. Poor defending by Jan Vertonghen. A topless celebration followed for which he was carded.

A free kick by Bale led to a goalmouth scramble as West Ham bodies got in the way and Caulker caught in the thicket came down prone with the ball bouncing on his back and trickling down which Adebayor crashing through aimed at for the mother of all air kicks. Sigurdsson was at hand to tuck away the ball past Jaaskelainen.

West Ham would have willingly settled for a draw as Jaaskelainen, the much busier of the two goalies had to come up with some big saves. But Bale obviously had different plans.

Bobby Moore was remembered before the match. The legend passed away 20 years ago, the captain and one of three Hammers instrumental in winning England its only World Cup in 1966.

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The Swans thoroughly outclassed Bradford at Wembley to take their first big title in their 100 year history. The scoreline tells you the story as much as the other stats. 78% possession to 22%, 10 shots on target to just the one, 8 corners to just the one.

Matt Duke was sent off for his challenge on Nathan Dyer and as he was walking off, Dyer started a jawing back and forth with Jonathan De Guzman on who would take the penalty providing the most tense moments of this already decided final. Dyer had a strong case because he was on a hattrick but De Guzman was the designated penalty taker. Michu had to mediate, counseling the diminutive Dyer to back off. Fortunately, De Guzman managed to convert otherwise this could have been a locker room talking point.

Now comes the hard part on retaining Michael Laudrup who has been linked with a number of clubs ranging from Chelsea to Real Madrid. He's also on the wishlist of many Arsenal fans.

By the way, the final was not shown in any of the networks here. The focus was firmly on the Premiership. That is utterly bollocks.

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Mario Balotelli responds to Inter fans racist abuse

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The ugly side of Italian football resurfaced again. Unsurprisingly, the target once again was Mario Balotelli subjected to racist abuse by a section of Inter fans as he faced his former club for the first time since his return in January. Serie A authorities are considering sanctions against the side and its fans.

He's already been called a house n*gger by his boss's son, subjected to racist songs by Inter fans during a match against Chievo for which the club was fined, and yesterday in the Milan derby, fans waved inflatable bananas and made monkey sounds. Just ugly and deplorable behaviour.

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Millwall supporter Daniel Day Lewis wins record third Oscar

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That was a polished acceptance speech by Daniel Day Lewis, something we have come to expect as much as his Oscar winning performances, this time for Lincoln. The only actor to win three of those familiar statuettes. While the rest of the prize winners sounded either entirely too earnest or distressingly vacuous, DDL's speech included the word "apex" and tongue in cheek connected with Margaret Thatcher and presenter Meryl Streep, in a witty interlude that livened up a rather staid Oscar ceremony. Well, Quentin Tarantino will take exception and Jennifer Lawrence's trip on her way to the stage provided a bit of a gasp.

Streep, the grand dame of Hollywood, no stranger to record breaking accolades herself, moved off the podium hand in hand with DDL, looking pleased as punch at being acknowledged by a peer.

His persona is so removed from the terraces of Millwall FC, long one of the redoubts of British hooliganism and still proudly stoking the embers of that ugly legacy. DDL was one of them in the early 80s and he credits that spinal stiffening experience as critical to his artistic success.

"I supported Millwall with great gusto and was on the terraces every Saturday with the rest of the lads."

That experience was central to his taking on roles that pushed boundaries.

" It was such an important part of my life that, give my parents their due, they did not deprive me of. Even though their experiences were very far removed from what I was experiencing, in that neither of them would ever have considered setting foot on the terraces of the Den, both of them were completely open and believed that, as much as they were part of this society, there was work that had to be done to break down its rigid demarcations."

His rousing performance as Johnny in "My Beautiful Laundrette" got me started on my DDL addiction. And he brought his Millwall mojo to My Left Foot, In the Name of the Father, Gangs of New York, There Will be Blood, and most recently Lincoln. For Gangs, this was a particularly vexatious period as Day- Lewis contracted pneumonia and then struggled to find the physical and mental strength to keep up with the film.

" And I will admit that I went mad, totally mad. I remembered the days of fighting on the Millwall terraces and they stood me in good stead for Bill the Butcher. He was a bit of a punk, a marvellous character and a joy to be - but not so good for my physical or mental health."

Millwall, you may not play the prettiest football, you sometimes behave atrociously on and off the pitch, but you must have done something right in shaping the career of film's most consummate thespian. Take a bow.

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One wonders how much Demba Ba's obviously broken beak protected by a face mask swayed Andre Marriner's decision to award a penalty? The chatter after the Newcastle match was how Fabricio Coloccini was so stripped of humanity, a lifetime spent in purgatory would not be enough.

That was a phantom foul by Joe Hart on the Senegalese striker. Ba cut a tragic figure on the pitch looking very much like the Phantom of the Opera expecting a sympathetic reaction. Frank Lampard who is just about automatic from that distance could not believe his eyes when Joe Hart guessed correctly bringing off a magnificent save. A paradigm shift that could spark City's flagging hopes for a consecutive second league title? They need lots and lots of help from Man Utd. Nagannahappen.

David Silva came back to life and was the primary figure in harrying the Chelsea defense into submission with Yaya Toure a close second. Check out the big man's nimble feet and quick eye to spot daylight between Petr Cech and the far post and curl the ball into goal. Carlos Tevez, so underutilized this season, it feels like he's flitting back and forth between the real and the imagined, took advantage of Branislav Ivanovic's half hearted defending to lash the ball from distance. Nothing Cech could do about it. He was beaten by two superlative strikes.

Roberto Mancini reading his players the riot act worked. This was a complete show from the men in blue and given their half a billion spend, very workman like.

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Norwich sticks an extra time dagger into Everton, 2-1

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szólj hozzá: Norwich City 2 - 1 Everton

Kei Kamara a few years ago was know for this. Today, the Sporting Kansas striker on loan to the Canaries was the hero powering in an unstoppable header from Robert Snodgrass's corner to equalize for his side in the 84th minute. And what happened to Marouane Fellaini? He was a wild haired beast the first half of the season, overpowering all mankind in sight, now he seems to be Denethor, bereft of spirit, a hollow shell.

Worse to follow.

Eight minutes later, nanoseconds before the final whistle, Russell Martin swings a ball to the far post and a rising Kamara knocks it down right in front of Grant Holt. The Norwich striker sporting distinct man boobs toe pokes the plum gratefully. Everton, no strangers to last gasp heart breakers were on the receiving end. That Leon Osman opener took place a long, long time ago in a galaxy far away.

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szólj hozzá: QPR 0-2 Manchester United ,Premier League (27

A tale of two clubs. QPR, bottom dwellers hurtling towards relegation with the same velocity as Rafael's crashing opener. Man Utd at the top ferociously steamrolling towards their 20th league title. It's only February but with due apologies to Nicholas Nassim Taleb there is no Black Swan in this case. This is pretty much over.

Ryan Giggs scored a late goal providing an exclamation mark. His strike against Everton a fortnight ago ensured 23 consecutive seasons of goalscoring. The man is turning 40 years old this year and he plays like he's a decade younger! A legend.

Even Harry "Houdini" Redknapp, a proven escape artist cannot save QPR. You could see a new owner stepping in as Tony Fernandes has said he will walk away if the side is relegated.

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szólj hozzá: Arsenal 2-1 Aston Villa

One did not know who to feel sad and sorry about. The Arsenal manager on the sidelines looking more bilious by the moment, his countenance creasing up at every miss by his team, into a Cy Twombly squiggle. Or the impotence of this Arsenal side, pouring in more than a dozen set pieces but with the threat levels of a gaggle of geese with botoxed beaks. One could just about count Guzan having to exert himself once, to save a Giroud header. The other corners were either too short or floated into no man's land. Ditto free kicks. Into the wall or driven outside.

Whereas, other teams greet set pieces as the next best thing to a goal, with this Arsenal side you fear that it will lead to a goal at the other end. A hypothesis that was proved with a very robust p <.01. The other thing Arsenal seem to lack are the numbers needed to attack and defend in the final third. You could square, cross, pass, float, whip, drive, chip, but there was no one to stick an offending leg to the ball, like that Mandzukic guy this week for that killer third goal. And at the other end all it did was to take a single moment by Andres Weimann to brush aside a dissembling Arsenal defense and a clumsy swipe at his shot by Wojciech Szczesny for the equalizer. You knew for all Arsenal's huffing and puffing that this was coming.

The script was looking very familiar till Santi Cazorla did the right thing curling Nacho Monreal's cutback in an all former Malaga connection with his left foot past Brad Guzan for the winning goal. Very early, the pint sized Spanish midfielder, shape shifting all over the pitch, followed up his shot with another cleverly angled drive for Arsenal's opener. One can't emphasize how crucial he was to the outcome. Jack Wilshere was his usual energetic, driving self except his through passes were lacking in quality, Theo Walcott was oscillating in another familiar limbo, and Olivier Giroud used up his quota of six missed opportunities without any return.

The camera panned onto Stan Kroenke, looking miserable in the cold sitting next to a an expressionless fat bloke masticating slowly on gum. Can there be any owner in the league more dispiriting? There is no spark. You know Arsenal is just an acquisition, another possession to add to his stable of professional sports teams that have suffered his benign neglect. Kroenke is not Tom Hicks or George Gillett, greedy leveraged buyout mercenaries but he's the heir to the Walmart fortune through marriage. Passivity pays off in his case.

On a practical level, these are three welcome points. We did not allow ourselves to fall off fourth place pace which comes as a great relief. On an entirely different one, how does one keep a side giving up the most goals in the league, another mistake away from winning this match? We live on the edge and this is just not good for our self confidence going forward for the upcoming sterner tests in the next four weeks.

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Luis Suarez's stamp on Tomáš Hubočan: Split personality

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Luis Suarez is an absolute genius of a footballer. Look at those sublime free kicks that led an Anfield audience and the hundreds of thousands of Liverpool fans worldwide into believing an improbable comeback against Sparta Praha. But at the same time, sometimes within the same match, he would make a psychopath blush with his blurring of what is right and wrong. It's as if the super ego completely switched off in Suarez's head and all he has is his ego and id.

Here he is stamping on a prostrate Tomas Hubocan fully cognizant and without a trace of guilt thereafter. How he did not receive red escapes anyone with a moral pulse. It just confirms Evra's racial abuse although Suarez claimed cultural immunity at that time. He's his own worst enemy and is inexorably laying waste to a Liverpool legacy that should rightfully be his if it were not for a lack of a moral compass.

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Dan Tan: The shadowy Singaporean behind the match fixing

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The NYT has a pretty decent article on the brains behind the multi-million dollar gambling syndicate that has spread its tentacles over every interface in the sport, in every league, involving players, officials, administrators, and created suspicion about every result. Did Barca really have an off day at Milan? Mmmmmm.

One suspects that this is not the only gambling syndicate in the business of match fixing, although it might certainly be the biggest one in Asia and Europe. Most of these cartels have strong local offshoots or collaborators and in Dan Tan's case, it was the Eastern men, who handled Europe.

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Arsene Wenger remains defiant, not ready to "quit"

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The Arsenal XI share the same craggy defiance as their coach except for the first half and the last 15 minutes of the second

Arsene Wenger basically says make me:

"If I go out now and play one against one with you, you will see I will beat you and at least if I don't manage to beat you, I will want to beat you. That will not change as long as I can move."

An admirable sentiment. Even more so for a 63 year old in his sixteenth season at the same club going through an eight year drought (yes, Allianz Arena, second leg miracle, blah blah) of silverware. The fire had not died out. But what motivates this man should also motivate the club for 90 + minutes, not 10. And herein lies the disconnect.

"We live in a world of emotion, of excess, and it is down to people who have responsibilities to put that into perspective and keep solid and keep guiding the club in the right way."

That in so many words means Arsenal is wedded to its economic prudence and will remain steadfast in the midst of giant vampire squids squirting swathes of staining black ink money on this sport. Except that the club's wage structure undercuts that message quite significantly as players who have not played a lick sit on the bench earning close to £2m a year, inflating the wage bill to fourth largest in the Premiership.

Andrey Arshavin loves Arsenal's economic message so much he's turned down every offer because where else can you earn £60,000 a week for doing nothing. That is the definition of excess. The problem is not a war chest, the first priority should be to get rid of the unproductive players and the savings received will tot up to what Sunderland, Stoke, Fulham, and Wigan spend in two transfer periods.

There is also a performance upside to this. Wenger makes sure that those who wear an Arsenal shirt deserve their place. That translates into more pride and passion on the pitch. Jack Wilshere is already doing that but the danger is he's already showing signs of frustration in carrying the team. That was one of the factors that drove Fabregas back to Barcelona. It becomes too exhausting to find you're on page 325 while everyone is still reading the preface.

Wenger also put to rest the Sun's obviously planted story (par for a Rupert Murdoch run rag) that the club was contemplating a two year extension before his contract ran out in 2014. There are good and bad ways to exert pressure on Wenger and this was particularly obnoxious. The bottomline is Wenger is not going away unless its of his choosing. You may draw up a short list, a long list, A list, B-lister in the Sun, David Moyes, Juergen Klopp, Jupp Heynckes, Michael Laudrup. All sorts of lists. Extracting needed change (in transfers, in tactics) will be a challenge.

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Rubin Kazan vs Atletico Madrid 0:1 HIGHLIGHTS by UCL2410

La Liga has had a disappointing go of it so far in both Champions League and the Europa. Real drew Man Utd at home, Barca shockingly did not show up at the San Siro falling to Milan, Valencia fell to PSG, and Malaga were dominated by Porto. The second legs are all tantalizingly poised. Will the Liga pull through?

In the Europa Cup despite boasting the likes of Radamel Falcao and Adrian Rodriguez, it was Rubin Kazan getting through to the Group of 16. Falcao was not his sharpest and his goal was a touch fortunate but Atletico could not erase the two goal deficit a home. With their fall, Spanish representation is left to Levante who progressed past Olympiacos on a 3-1 aggregate.

What a difference from last year when all the chatter was about the quality gap between the Liga and the rest of the leagues. The beneficiaries this year have been the Russian and the Bundesliga.

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This video will prove fascinating to those who are always categorizing Cristiano Ronaldo and Leo Messi into columns. For those who see CR7 as a self absorbed narcissist this is proof that he's quite caring and for those who believe Messi has not one single mean spirited bone in his body, there is a legitimate claim he isn't exactly altruistic in this interaction.

There is however a difference in the encounter. Check out Messi getting blindsided by the charging boy's bearhug and then getting dragged aside. See CR7 amble down the sidelines and the boy coming within view for a gentler tete a tete. There is a also a difference in personality. Messi's reaction is that of a private person who doesn't crave love but CR7's desire for universal affection and playing to the galleries is quite well known. Yes, armchair psychologists join in. The forum is open.

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Chelsea vs Sparta Prague by matchoftheday

Tomas Vaclik was outstanding in the Sparta Praha goal bringing off at least three great saves. Check out that fingertip save off Juan Mata. Arsenal keep an eye on him to challenge Wojciech Szczesny.

Spraha went ahead through a clever bit of invention as Vaclav Kadlec slides past Gary Cahiil avoiding his challenge, regains his feet, picks out David Lafata perfectly to hammer the ball home.

Oscar reminds one of Kaka in his heydays. Under the Chelsea structure he's been muted but he has great goalscoring abilities and can coast around defenders to pick out a perfect pass. He was their best player by about a mile but gave way to Eden Hazard whose heroic left footed blast saved their side from spending more than regulation time.

For those who want to know, the Fernando Torres horror show went on. Roman Abramovich's boondoggle continues amidst a mounting body count.

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Lyon 1-1 Tottenham (Lượt về vòng 1/16 Europa... by f100003621573062

Moussa Dembele's superb strike in the 89th minute and Spurs progress to the final 16. It certainly neutralized Gareth Bale's poor defending which allowed Maxime Gonalons to head the ball off a Clement Grenier free kick.

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Liverpool 3-1 Zenit St Petersburg (Lượt về vòng... by f100003621573062

A pair of blinding free kicks left Luis Suarez's feet and reached the net untouched. Those had a homing device they were that superb.

Anfield was rocking as Joe Allen's putback sandwiched between the Suarez explosion would have been enough to see Liverpool progress. But earlier, Jamie Carragher's disastrous back pass attempt was picked up by Hulk smashing his way forward to slot the ball past Pepe Reina. And so Liverpool's brave comeback was negated by the away goal rule.

Afterwards, Brendan Rodgers praised his players for showing a fighting quality. He also did not blame Carragher dismissing his mistake as just one of "those unfortunate things."

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ŞAMPİYONLAR LİGİ | Özet: Galatasaray 1–1 FC... by Galatasaray

Didier Droba, turning 35 years old next month showed he still had the oomph to trouble Schalke. He had a hand in Galatasaray's first goal. The pitch was poor but both teams showed some great attacking moves with Schalke getting the edge in fluency. It was the home side going up first as Drogba pushed the ball forward to Selcuk Inan whose pass was flicked by Burak Yilmaz around a Schalke defender and booted home. The former Chelsea striker also had a shot parried by Timo Hildebrand but Hamit Altintop's follow up crashed off the upright. Yilmaz could have added another through another Drogba move but Hildebrand managed to deflect for a corner.

Schalke looked dangerous especially down the right flank with Jefferson Farfan cutting in with pace and setting up Klaas Jan Huntelaar whose timing was just a bit off on a number of occasions. Just before the first half they had the equalizer as Farfan broke down the right and squared the ball just before the box to Jermaine Jones who swung the ball past Fernando Muslera.

The aftermath has been controversial as the German club is now contemplating protesting Drogba's eligibility since his former club Shanghai Shenhua still claims he's under contract to them. Galatasaray counter with evidence that Drogba's registration has been approved and a temporary player permit has been issued by the Turkish football authorities.

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Arsenal to wheel out Stan Kroenke to sing Wenger platitudes

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Stan, Stan, where were you all these days? Ah, making sure your teams spiral into mediocrity. Got it.

It's amazing how the Arsenal PR machinery moves into double overdrive when it comes to saving Arsene Wenger's bacon. When it comes to making transfers or retaining players who can make all the difference, not so much. And so Stan Kroenke will reiterate his unflagging support at a boardroom meeting which comprises him and a obsequious wall for the beleaguered manager who is going through all the "why me" martyrdom normally associated with Mario Balotelli.

The first word that Arsenal should learn to become an effective team once again is "conditional".

Clearcut expectations and performances:

Wenger's future at the club should be built around clear cut parameters of expectations and performances. Not some woozy headed shifting of goalposts or redefinition of success. Fourth is not the Rosetta Stone, it is a bypass to the league title. Player wages and bonuses should be prioritized not through a Keynesian one size fits all but soundly structured through metrics and minutes on the pitch. Goals are welcome. Saves and clearances too. Shots off target are not. Losing balls are not. Running harebrained down the channels is not. Crosses and corners that lead to goals are muy bueno. So is tracking back. Putzing about like bystanders is not. Spending two years on the bench collecting £60,000 per week is not. A complete and collective 90 minute + performance on the pitch is well worth socialism while capitalism does its work off it in making sure players deliver and are recompensed well when they do. This will save about £25m in an inflated annual wage bill. Enough to retain a player essential to the side and at the same time afford Yann M'Vila and his wages.

Wenger needs to refocus on defense:

We can't talk about past Arsenal success without whipping up those Tony Adams and later Sol Campbell led legendary back fours. We get all rheumy eyed and develop a catch in our throat at the mention of their names. In perfect context, we saw Bayern, we saw Blackburn, we saw Bradford, and we saw Birmingham two years ago in a final that stuck a collective shiv in any title (no matter how looked down upon) aspirations we have because of our unbelievable talent in giving up cheap, cheap goals. That psychic blow has never been lived down. Now we're just chokers. Those killer B's will still be around. We dodged Barca this time and maybe seeing how they played yesterday, that's the B we should have faced. But we need a killer D and not a filler D. Please no more Silvestre's, no more Squillaci's, no more Santos's, nor more recycled Sol's. The bottomline is the opposition should be made to sweat and sweat hard and when they have sweated (whoa, that is a word) to a puddle, we can then score and/or score before and make them sweat to a puddle or muddle or fuddle thereafter. Whatever. Arsenal fans should never have to live in fear of the first half and the last 15 minutes of the second. Spend on quality. Let Steve Bould do what he needs to do. He once had ideas, now he has none. The man's basically been reduced to an unsmiling visage avoiding all eye contact, not even stealing a glance even when his manager is fiddling about with a stuck zipper for days on end. Wasn't that bizarre?

Wenger needs to play "fitba" not "FFP"

One of the many dilutions of Wenger as a coach has been his evolution as the chief pontificator of the sport over the years. This does not get much airplay but whereas Sir Alex would say, "Ar" to the doping scandal or financial doping and resume his focus on the X's and Y's of the match, the Frenchman is much sought after for his opinions about what ails the sport. And he's very erudite and listenable to when in that sort of audience. But sport is the here and now. What ails Arsenal should be his first and foremost concern and there is plenty to be concerned about. His pronouncements on those issues have been less sure. The players are "nervous", they "lack height", they give up "cheap goals". Why? For an economist and supposed guru of sabermetrics, these should be unsatisfying non-sequiturs.

Wenger's unerring eye at picking rough cut gems has also suffered over the years. His answer is that France is no longer the goldmine, the market has moved to Germany and Spain. Arsenal fans expect Leo Messi to waltz in. No, they don't. But its all part of this giant ball of stimulus response (reaction times for those in the field of cog psy) that now define Wenger's explanations. The sad trap of nostalgia also seems to infect his mien where one off performances are worthy of Patrick Vieira and Thierry Henry anointments. Or the quadruple. His experimentation with Emmanuel Petit and Henry paid off handsomely but what once looked like a discerning eye is a now a series of blind spots. The homegrown youth revolution ended three seasons ago. The team is no longer teenage heaven for Francophones, it is a polyglot of older, more varied add ons to cement fourth place. Wenger's shift towards experience has been unmistakable but it has not paid off because we have not paid money for first tier replacements. When Bayern won, many said it was boys against men. That was untrue. Knockoffs against men, more likely.

Arsenal's downhill performances coincides with the emphasis on economic success, the milking of their brand, and their arrival at the Emirates. Yes, its brought in huge unmatched matchday receipts but it also meant that the new management at the club could tout another shining metric to distract from the gathering cobwebs in the trophy room.

Perhaps success came too soon after Wenger's arrival in the English league. And more importantly, the sort of football that defined that success. It had not been seen before. But with every passing year, Arsenal's passing game is well found out while others have adopted it without giving up the basics. Sound goalkeeping, sturdy defending, and one or two players up front who can score. Swansea? These are self inflicted wounds. The debt is down to very manageable levels, the club has made millions and continues to take in a profit, and it still is still attractive to many talented players who would love to make Arsenal their home. Attitude adjustments and a plan B, C, and D, should do it.

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UEFA Champions League : AC Milan Vs FC... by MRLooka

Kevin Prince Boateng and Sulley Muntari were never at Pompey at the same time but each was known for their spectacular big time goals before that club went into administration. Both have however played for the Black Stars, most recently at the 2010 World Cup. Controversy dogged Boateng's induction into the national team as well as the extreme German ire at Michael Ballack's torn ankle ligaments. Muntari had a falling out with Serbian coach, Milovan Rajevac before being reinstated into the team. AC Milan must have thanked their stars that both bad boys found a way into their squad.

The first goal had a touch of the fortunate as Kevin Constant sets up Riccardo Montolivo's free kick in the 55th minute which hits Cristian Zapata's right hand and falls invitingly in front of Boateng and with one wheel of his left leg, the German born Ghanian sends the streaking past Victor Valdes. Barca appeal in vain but nothing comes of it.

The second goal in the 80th minute was a moment that Barca probably won't be able to live down easily. AC Milan get the ball back from a Jordi Alba thrown in as Montolivo scoops the ball forward for M'baye Niang to gallop forward brushing aside Carles Puyol easy as you like.

Niang then pauses to spot Stephen El Shaarawy at the top of the box and calmly sidefoots the ball between two Barca defenders. The Egyptian origin midfielder controls the ball brilliantly with his left foot and and flicks the ball forward with his right to Muntari arriving at the left of the trident to volley home. Calm, composed, and collected. A beautiful libretto of movements off the ball which matched the beauty on it.

Barca had most of the ball but if you had to distil it down, it was more "navel gazing" then anything as they created little. Whereas, Milan with far less had a well coached look relying on such "heads up" to open up their attack. There was no familiar gnashing of teeth on not capitalizing on chances or being clinical enough. Arsenal anyone? At the other end, they defended in numbers maintaining their shape when pressed. Arsenal anyone?

A famous victory and a well deserved one. For Barca it was a shocker. A comeback and Barca in the same sentence is an exceedingly rare occurrence. But that is what they will have to do in order to progress. Sid Lowe has more on the Black Night reaction from Camp Nou.

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Champions League 16: Dominant Porto beat Malaga, 1-0

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[www.sportepoch.com]Champions League 1 / 8... by sportepoch_

The unbeaten Portugese league frontrunners who are in a dogfight with similarly unbeaten Benfica, second only because of goal differential dominated their Group 16 match against Malaga, at the Estadio Do Dragao. The Spanish side are in fourth place in the Liga and appear to have shown no drop off since their financial problems forced them to sell off some of their better players. Santi Cazorla and Nacho Monreal have found homes at The Emirates.

Alex Sandro latches onto the ball midfield and zigzags his way to the left of the box and then releases Joao Moutinho beating the offside trap for a nice finish. Moutinho? Wasn't he on the Spurs radar last summer? A done deal till a third party payout was involved.

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Arsenal 1 - Bayern Munich 3. Champions League... by videosfutbolizados

There are times watching Arsenal they give off the sense that their season just started. And one forgets the last time we used "well coached" to describe Arsenal. "Ill prepared" , "tentative" , " reactive" are more apt descriptors. The overarching gestalt is of a side that lacks focus, composure, makes mistakes, digs into an early hole and then repeats the same thing again and again match after match. Whether it is Bradford or Bayern, it doesn't seem to matter. They make goalscoring against them look so easy, so facile, it never ceases to astound.

Bayern were a side that played well within themselves. Truth be told, the Bundesliga leaders by a mile did not really have to. Watch the build up to the goal as Arteta did not attempt to close the distance to Thomas Mueller and when the cross came, Aaron Ramsey whiffed on it leaving Kroos with a perfect response as Mertesacker was too late closing on him. A well struck shot into ground that went past Szczesny.

Arsenal's anxiety on corners is now a well documented piece of existential crisis. Maybe it is zonal marking but then you have to get players into position to deny space. Daniel Van Buyten got his head on the ball unchallenged with Ramsey failing to front him and Szczesny's reaction was a weak parry straight to Thomas Mueller left with the simple task of popping the ball into goal as defenders stood around.

By now, we were looking at an whipping of epic proportions without Bayern, slipping past second gear. Philipp Lahm haring down the right unfettered was giving a clinic in whipped crosses as Arsenal's defense lost its shape again but was fortunate Mario Mandzukic did not do better with his header.

Wenger promoted Theo Walcott to striker as pundits built on his blistering pace slipping behind lines as some sort of WWII tactic while playing Cazorla on the wing but the former was rarely involved as the Munich side escorted him out of damage mode into anonymous mode very effectively.

Arsenal showed an improvement in the second half as Jack Wilshere showed the living on the edge quality of his game, driving past defenders, slipping passes into space, but if he could only have the scoring touch! He would be the complete unit. His drive and energy translated into a 10 minute period where an ascendent Arsenal scored to close the gap through an erroneously given corner and a terrible piece of defending by Dante and goalkeeping by Manuel Neuer. That was Arsenal like in its shambolicity (yes, there is a word like that somewhere or if there isn't, there should be). Lukas Poldolksi was left with a simple swivel of head to score against his former club.

A brief period followed thereafter that when things looked rocky for Bayern but a series of cheap free kicks allowed them to re-establish themselves and Arsenal exerted its patent on shambolicity by gifting a third goal, effectively ending their Champions League campaign. Arjen Robben played Lahm wide with the wingback dispatching his cross low and hard as Sagna and Szczesny caught in no man's land allowed Mandzukic to slide in and deflect the ball high into the roof of goal. Wenger brought in Olivier Giroud just before, and the Frenchman who seems to have four missed chances for every goal he scores had a moment to peg back one but his shot went straight to Neuer.

Arsenal did not get blown away and there were bright moments but it was not enough. Bayern were just too good for them and this loss exposes the gap between the best teams in Europe and us. We have got to the group of 16 two years in a row and we're in danger of crashing out at this stage again. Once again we've hit a ceiling we're unable to break out of.

A seemingly insignificant observation but there was a period when Bacary Sagna received the ball down the right flank and hemmed in by a couple of Bayern players, twisted and turned in desperation looking for an outlet as Arsenal players stood off watching the spectacle. There are too many bystanders on this team. We can go to Munich where a win might not be enough for progress. Or we can now concentrate on finishing fourth in the league but the greater victory will be if somehow this leads to introspection on what made Arsenal the great side it was and effect meaningful changes, transfer wise and tactically.

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Roberto Mancini's delusions of grandeur

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It's not just obviously Arsene Wenger looking like he could do with some mental counseling. Here is Roberto Mancini sounding like he's been talking to the walls in self indulgent navel gazing because of his previous FA and Premier League success. None of which is going to save him from the painful reality of being classified as an also ran this season.

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Arsene Wenger goes a wee bit stir crazy in his interview

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The backdrop: Rumours are that Arsene Wenger is on the cusp of signing a two year contract extension on his managerial career. This might be laughable but instead the tragedy is that it might be entirely true because the governing board if you can call it that consists entirely of one person who we know knows nothing of the sport. In fact, that is true of any team that he owns in any sport they might play. Whether it is the St Louis Rams, the Denver Nuggets, Colorado Avalanche, or the Colorado Rapids. They're all symbols of meandering mediocrity. Lost souls who crest dunes after dunes looking for an oasis in a desert of Stan Kroenke's making.

When it comes to Arsenal, Silent Stan has shown the passion of a neutered tom in a hellhole of mollies in a world of heat. When was the last time you saw his lugubrious countenance in the Emirates or heard any statement? Come to think of it whatever he has said about Wenger in the past sounds little else then a grab bag of platitudes. There is always a note of relief in Silent Stan's mien that he pronounced Wenger's name correctly which is about his extent of involvement. It gives you an idea of how Wenger has never been pushed by anyone in his sphere.

So hear the note of manic defensiveness and touch of paranoia in Wenger's tone when confronted by the media on the rumours or the loss at Blackburn as he splutters indignantly about this being an exclusive Q & A about Arsenal's upcoming encounter about Bayern. And when he's finally asked he responds, " Don't talk about Bayern today."

Wenger has had his way forever. Never challenged. Never been asked hard questions. And when he does on occasion face the spotlight, he responds with the same prickly arrogance which leads him to pronounce falsely that he's won more FA Cups than any other manager or trumpet his 14 consecutive appearances in the CL. As much as one respects all his undoubted glorious achievements leading Arsenal to the shining city on the hill, this is not the same Wenger, it is an atavism that now buys reactionary and desperate last minute purchases for considerable amounts of money. Unfortunately, they also don't justify their price tags with their underwhelming performances.

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Beitar Jerusalem tries to shed its racist image

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Beitar Jerusalem fans infamous in the Israeli league for their Meir Kahane inspired hyper-nationalism and racism towards Arabs an Muslims had their world turned upside down in the January transfer window when eccentric billionaire Arkadi Gaydamak (the former owner of Portsmouth) brought in not one but two Chechen Muslim players, Zaur Sadaev and Dzabhrail Kadiev. Thus breaking a proud tradition of being the only Israeli club to never to hire the enemy.

The news was met with anger and protesting fans rioted in shopping malls and hurled racist abuse at the two players during their first training session. However, Gaydamak remained unbowed and his intransigence seems to have really gotten under the skin of the nastiest of the lot, the ultras known as La Familia. The club's office and trophy room was torched in an arson attack a week ago, on the same day four Beitar fans were indicted for chanting "Death To Arabs" and "May Your Village Burn" at a match against Bnei Yehuda, a club long associated with Arab players. The club's caretaker Meir Harush in an interview afterwards talked of the loss:

"They burned the symbol of Beitar, the history of the club. People without a heart. It's infuriating and shocking," reported Channel 1.

Seven fans were taken in by the police and more are arrests are on the way.

The mindless act seems to have repulsed Israel political figures, football authorities, and the saner elements in Beitar's fan base. Even Benjamin Netanyahu, never one to shy away from cynically sticking a shiv in any ME peace accord appeared moved enough to issue a boilerplate:

"Such behavior is shameful. We cannot countenance such racism." He added, "The Jewish people, who suffered from boycotts and ostracism, must be a light unto the nations."

Of course, coincidentally enough, this remorseful condemnation came after Beitar's arson attack and not before when from the stands, this exhibition of ugly racism was in full display. According to reports, the majority of fans who appear moderate reject the most extreme elements and authorities are determined to marginalize them further. The evidence was the 79th minute introduction of Sadiyev, the Chechen player into last week's match against Bnei Sakhnin with Beitar trailing. His debut was greeted by both sides with applause creating a rare moment of unity.

There is also increasing anxiety on the part of Gaydamak, who has tried unsuccessfully to sell the club on numerous occasions and one of the factors cited in that failure is the club's unsavoury reputation. His move to recruit the Chechens might be driven by economic considerations more than tempering the behaviour of the ultras. However, this sounds like a temporary icing because the sort of virulent Meir Kahane extremism that drives La Familia is not going away. If they can resort to arson against the club they profess to love, Gaydamak's revisionism, whether pretended or genuine, is just mere inconvenience. There is also a double standard involved when it comes to Israeli racism as they unlike other associations or clubs have never been sanctioned or fined by UEFA or FIFA. Rifaat Turk, one of the best know Arab Israeli players subjected to racial abuse in every match played for Hapoel Tel Aviv during the 70s and 80s, has every reason to feel pessimistic.

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[www.sportepoch.com]FA Cup - Arsenal 0-1... by sportepoch_

Colin Kazim- Richards mishit goal encapsulates what has gone terribly wrong for the Gunners. It does not just take Arsenal's mistake to sink Arsenal, it can take your mistake to sink Arsenal. The result remains the same. At the other end, Tomas Rosicky's sweetly timed through pass met perfectly by a galloping Gervinho draws out Jake Kean and the Emirates rises in expectation. You've paid £10.5m for a striker who scored 17 goals in his last season at Lille and the expectations are he will score. That's all you can do. But Gervinho in his Arsenal phase defied the odds yet again.


What is more disheartening is that such losses now define Arsenal. Somehow there is never a learning curve in now what can only be called a double dip. At Bradford, now Blackburn. Arsene Wenger seems to be disconnected from inspiring this team or maybe this team is beyond inspiration because winning these competitions assume greater significance since Wenger's ambitions never go beyond finishing fourth in the league. The portal to the Champions League and bragging rights to a 15th season in elite competition. That is the mantra. Yet the simple truth is that winning less lauded laurels like the League and the FA Cup is the key to strengthening the psyche of this side, held together by duct tape. Any success, any, now need not be sneered at.

The Gunners have now been in umpteen situations where they have been invited to crack open the opposition. And Gervinho had the perfect opportunity but there was a feeling of inevitability with his miss, Rosicky's booming shot clanging of the crossbar, Diaby and Vermaelen's efforts saved by Kean that this would not be Arsenal's day. There was plenty of possession but somehow the personnel in the critical last third was missing. Olivier Giroud was stranded in the box while Alex Oxlade Chamberlain showed on quite a few occasions a lack of rudimentary crossing skills. The Ox man seems to be bent on performing something spectacular which may have to do with Theo Walcott back in his familiar position.

With time running down, Wenger went to Wilshere, Walcott, and Cazorla but before they could arrange their feet, Blackburn making a very rare foray through Martin Olsson, testing Wojciech Szczesny with a left footed shot which the Arsenal goalie managed to parry into the path of Kazim Richards, whose follow up was a shank into the ground. The ballistics report shows the ball not only looped over the prostrate Szczesny but also at an angle onto the upright and into goal. Which means that even had the Pole (a feeble pun, as feeble as Arsenal's efforts) been standing this would have been a goal. Karma for all the missed chances. Karma for being reactive. Karma for the disorienting changes in ambition. Karma for penny pinching. Karma for wasting the pennies not pinched on players that have proven a bust.

This is not a heartening preview to the Bayern match. Do you really have to scheme against Arsenal when it seems all you have to do is show up? Yet familiarly, Wenger was seeing past Bayern despite a history of bravado gone wrong. There should be a gag order on the quadruple and Abou Diaby being the next Patrick Vieira. Or whatever pronouncement which appear based in whimsy. Perhaps you should not fill your players minds with cloud puffs. For those who say the fans need to support their club come what may. How does one put pressure on a manager enjoying a life time appointment? The last thing he needs is unconditional love.

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Robbie Rogers comes out as gay: We salute you

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The world of football is one of closed ranks when it comes to sexual orientation. There are names but they will not be named. As recently as last summer Antonio Cassano responding to rumours that there were a couple of team mates in the Azzurri Euro 2012 squad who were gay, landed in hot water for saying, "The coach had warned me that you would ask me this question," Cassano said. "If I say what I think ... I hope there are none. But if there are queers here, that's their business." In other words, it was don't ask, don't tell.

Robbie Rogers, the former MLS player, recently released from Leeds Utd, came out as gay in a powerful post on his site. His announcement on Twitter set ablaze a myriad of positive reactions, from his former team mates in Leeds, the MLS, and the USMNT, showing their support and appreciation. He also announced that he would be taking an indefinite break from the sport.

What a change in the last two decades. Everyone knows the story of Justin Fashanu, who paid the price for coming out. Hounded by homophobes and a cold hearted Brian Clough, his career stalled, and as the walls closed in, finally ended his life. A recent Der Spiegel article also drew attention to the minefield a footballer faced in the event of his coming out, leading almost all save one brave soul with nothing to lose to cocoon themselves in a shadowy, double life. The Mannschafts's recent emphasis on eye catching footballing displays was derided by Michael Ballack's agent as unwelcome change brought on by a "bunch of gays" on the team.

Soccer has been slow to catch up on the equality front, even behind its NFL counterpart, what with former 49ers offensive linesman Kwame Harris recently charged with battery against his on and off partner for an argument over soy sauce that escalated (what straight couple has not fought over condiments, eh?) but as a 260 lb OL, the degree is a bit more extreme physically. Even rugby has its gay icon. Soccer, however, is still ruled by knuckle draggers like Joey Barton, who now thankfully uses his Twitter feed to settle personal feuds rather than cigarette butts or gouging eyes.

The recent Super Bowl was dogged by some pre match medieval jibing by 49ers safety Chris Culliver, who seemed to be more Kansas than Castro. But Brendon Ayanbadejo, the Baltimore Ravens LB, who sacked all the same sex bigotry of his sport, by backing marriage equality about three years ago was having none of it and framed his rebuttal in the most eloquent terms. For his part, Culliver had already apologized for his remarks, sort of.

Ayanbadejo was by now a cause celebre and when his First Amendment rights were infringed by a homophobe state senator, Chris Kluwe, the Minnesota Vikings punter, took it on himself penning a hard hitting riposte that tore a new one.

One would also like to think that Barack Obama helped foster this openness by his vocal support for gay rights and marriage equality in the USA, the first president to do so, and as someone who likes his sports, in toto, for sportspeople too. Rogers was also preceded by Megan Rapinoe who came out last year and she has never been more on fire. All of this still does not make his decision any less fraught. Its brave of him to do so. Robbie Rogers, you are a mensch. Free your mind, the rest will follow.

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Europa Cup: Liverpool fall to Zenit St Petersburg, 0-2

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szólj hozzá: ZSFL20130214

Hulk smash. Semak smack. Eh. Luis Suarez proves he's Liverpool's most exciting player a hundred millions time over but he ends up looking like Gervinho ever so often. He twists, he turns, he has an open goal, he misses point blank. That was Suarez against Zenit. And if he doesn't score, then the Merseyside club are in deep trouble. For those wondering why Daniel Sturridge was not present, the answer is he is cup tied having played for Chelsea in European competition before his transfer.

While we are at it. Could we please pull the 2018 World Cup out of Russia? It's just getting more and more racist out there and in another five years time when the GINI index hits 0.8, the foaming rabble rousing Neo Nazis will be ready to launch the Fourth Reich. And for those heroic Russians who fought the Nazis in WWII in the Battle of Stalingrad, a reminder that Josef Stalin was a steadfast Hitler ally before the Third Reich turned on them. Zenit St Petersburg has a particularly unsavoury history.

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Europa Cup: Chelsea leave it late against Sparta Prague, 1-0

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szólj hozzá: S0-1C www.fasthighlights.com

Nice bit of intricate passing with a Yossi Benayoun contribution for Oscar's 82nd minute twinkle toed goal. The Brazilian coming on for an ineffective Juan Mata instantly made all the difference. But that was not the biggest talking point inasmuch as the erstwhile champions of Europe playing Sparta at all. How did this happen?

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Just imagine having Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale together in the same team? Scoring enough goals through free kicks for their side to merit a place in the Champions League. Forget the muscular forays into open field that leave defenses slack jawed. We've seen Bale put Maicon out to pasture in that famous match but after that his career trajectory was a bit more squiggly.

There were flashes but Bale was less effective when pushed inside rather than out on the wing where he does most damage. This season and particularly the second half of it, he's turned it on and scoring match winners on automatic. Against Lyon, his two free kicks were pieces of cold calculated science. The Spurs winger's style is inevitably inviting comparisons to Cristiano Ronaldo but one can say on the strength of evidence, Bale at this stage is a better dead ball taker. There are other differences and context.

A: Bale is far more a conventional winger in that he naturally whips left to right crosses across goal expecting Spurs players to meet them. They cannot keep apace.
B: This new goalscoring onus is because of A.
C: He is obviously set on moving from White Hart Lane and hence B.
D: On open play, Bale's more raw than the man from Funchal even when you turn the clock back to a comparable stage (Bale is 23 years, CR7 is five years older). CR7's Porto Sporting CP/ Man Utd days showed a player with markedly superior close control of the ball.

A Bale - Ronaldo combination would be most effective with the Welshman doing what he does best, out hustle the competition down the channel, and then let Ronaldo go to work inside. With Angel Di Maria having his problems with consistency and temperament, Bale would be seen as an ideal replacement.

More onto the match. Lost in between those two superlative set pieces was Samuel Umtiti's absolutely smashing half volley which left Brad Friedel aghast. That was a critical away goal as the second leg moves to the Stade De Gerland. What bets Hugo Lloris starts for that match?

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Sergio Ramos accepts responsibility for Welbeck's goal

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szólj hozzá: R0-1M www.fasthighlights.com

In Madrid, there are mixed emotions. Satisfaction at the way the Merengues played the first leg but unhappiness with the result. Sergio Ramos accepted the error he made in not pressurizing Danny Welbeck but as the video clip showed that was a load of malarkey. The full back was basically trying to shove Welbeck off the ball. There appeared to be no intention of playing the ball from the very outset. This being Ramos, he also blamed referee Felix Brych for wrongly giving a corner as Shinji Kagawa apparently had the last touch before the ball went out.

Welbeck's header had Marca bemoaning Madrid's achilles heel. Set pieces. 34% of goals conceded have come off corners and free kicks. What can they do to stop these gifts? One person they can turn to for advice is Arsene Wenger. No, not really.

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David Beckham trains with PSG: Look red beanie

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In case you did not notice. David Beckham trained with PSG for the first time since joining and he wore a red beanie. Amongst the black beanies and the bare heads.

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szólj hozzá: SDBD22130213

The match was prefaced by tragedy. Five Shakhtar Donetsk fans died en route as their plane crashed after it overshot the runway. A minute silence was observed at the Donbass Arena before the match. Given the circumstances, this was an extra-ordinary performance by the home side.

Onto the pitch. Remember Robert Lewandowski? He was supposed to have been on his way to Man Utd after the 2012 Euro. It was all a done deal. Not really because he re-signed with Borussia Dortmund and continued on in the crucible of German talent with the likes of Marco Reus, Mario Gotze, Mats Hummels, Sven Bender. He scored Dortmund's equalizer after Darijo Srna's sweetly struck free kick put the Ukrainian side on top.

That leveler was a bit of a production as Lewandowski embarrassingly whiffed on his first attempt off Gotze's cross. But like a Tony Jaa movie, two Donetsk defenders lay miraculously felled and on that let off, the Polish striker made no mistake with his second attempt.

Shakhtar made further inroads with Douglas Costa's spectacular goal, one of the many Brazilian imports which makes people wonder why it doesn't apply for membership to the Brazilian Campeonato. In keeping, Costa was also strongly linked with a move to Utd targeted by Sir Alex as someone stepping into Ryan Giggs shoes. But Utd's overtures have been rebuffed a number of times, first by Gremio and more recently by Shakhtar.

Dortmund managed to restore parity late in the day with Mats Hummels powering his header in from Marcel Schmelzer's corner. Dortmund was the more assured team overall and from their performance should be the favourites to progress when they play the second leg at the Signal Iduna Park.

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Felix Brych: Too big for his britches

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How is someone better looking than 50% of the players officiating them?

Felix Brych is the German referee who officiated the Real Madrid vs Man Utd match. He has a doctorate in law. He's probably not very good because he erroneously applied the statute of limitations on that Utd corner. Well, they could have taken it in regulation, why wait till extra time, eh? What cheek. That's not the only time he tried to diddle Utd having sent off Nemanja Vidic two years ago against Otelul Galati in their CL group encounter for a touchy feely tackle which hardly sent any bones clattering.

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szólj hozzá: Real Madrid vs Manchester United 1? parte

The man of the match was David De Gea. Real came at him with guns blazing, testing him with long range piledrivers and set pieces obviously having seen him at the receiving end while at their crosstown rivals or more recently through the grapevine with his momentary lapses in the Premiership. But he was brilliant and if by the end of the match he had any fingertips left, he should count himself lucky.

What should have been evident to Jose Mourinho's side after De Gea turned in that performance was that it would take a Barcelona or dare say, Arsenal type of walk the ball into the goal that would win the match. But Real lacked patience and the craft to do so. Instead there were 28 attempts at goal and most of them were from distance.

After a while all that fire and brimstone counterattacking became predictably rote. Which is why Utd are lucky that Barca weren't playing them. In retrospect it took something special to beat De Gea and that was CR7's standing leap header off Angel Di Maria's cross to breach the gap. Michael Jordanesque without the tongue hanging out. That curiously enough turned out to be Real's last potent shot across the bow. All it did was to restore parity after Danny Welbeck's equally fine header from RVP's corner shot Utd into the lead. With each missed opportunity, Mourinho became an agitated and wildly gesticulating curmudgeon.

All the stats favoured Real by a country mile, but its best to remember that RVP had the two best chances to pull off what could have been an epitaph to Mourinho's Madrid career. One hit the crossbar and in the other Xabi Alonso turned into a saviour clearing the ball before it crossed the goal line. Phil Jones can also be included in that category but his body check of Angel Di Maria was more worthy of the NHL and flirted with a penalty type punishment. Instead the German referee, Felix Brych saw nothing to it. More inexplicably, who calls the end to a match before a corner is taken? What blathering nonsense.

The result sees Utd gain a vital away goal and now with Real traveling to Old Trafford, those are pretty nice odds. Kudos to Welbeck who was very impressive and on Real's side Ronaldo was a beast while Angel Di Maria and Mesut Ozil kept their attack purring.

The video above was the first part. Here is the second part >>

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Let the mind games begin: Man Utd meet Real Madrid today

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Wayne "El Coco" Rooney: Utd's bogey man

Marca fired a series of salvos at Man Utd especially targeting Wayne Rooney to get inside his head. A "freckled hooligan", in spirit not far removed from the beer fueled traveling Utd fans, but on the pitch, arguably the world's most dangerous player all embodied in a tree stump like neck. That neck glows red when angry and it could light up seeing Cristiano Ronaldo, Iker Casillas, and Pepe, all players who he's tussled with in the past and added to the ever increasing annual rings on that aforesaid tree stump like neck.

Disclaimer: The neck as tree stump reference is all Soccerblog's, not the Spanish media. But you get my drift.

Real Madrid themselves might need help from their subservient media. Jose Mourinho has had his share of problems with players like Iker Casillas and Sergio Ramos, willing proxies for the Mardrid media, especially Marca in their feud with the abrasive coach. The side are now amongst the also rans in La Liga, below cross town rivals, Atletico. Beyond Cristiano Ronaldo, they lack a consistent goalscorer with Karim Benzema and Gonzalo Higuain below par. A Bernabeu failure could see a full throated cry for Mourinho's removal. The strain is obviously telling because, well have you ever seen him look like this. On the other hand, Sir Alex looked calm and confident with his place in Utd history cemented.

The old CR7 used to try too hard and that might be the case against Utd, looking to impress his old boss. A frustrated CR7 is not good news for the Madrid club and if that look of petulance wears on then he could take himself out of the game. Both sides are excellent on the counterattack with Madrid having the edge. But Utd for all the accolades given to RVP for his goalscoring exploits have a better balanced attack. Crucial goals from midfield as well as from the back four have bolstered their season admirably. For all of their 0-60 acceleration, Real actually might test David De Gea more with set pieces. The former Atletico goalie comes in with an uneven reputation dealing uncomfortably with crosses and corners.

Utd will probably have to weather a fast start by the Merengues before seeing more of the ball and then settling into a series of sharp counterattacking exchanges. Look for an open ended, fluid match. It could come down to a set piece and a defender like Rafael Varane or Nemanja Vidic to provide the match's biggest most significant moment. Or in plural.

Prediction: Real Madrid 2 Man Utd 2

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Valencia vs PSG 1-2 and Highlights CHAMPIONS... by dm_51179a82305b7

Every team should have a terrier like Ezekiel Lavezzi, snapping and nipping at every Los Che ankle in their group of 16 encounter. The Argentinian was responsible for the first goal but if you had to pick a player it would have to be Lucas Moura, coasting down that right flank with speed and sublime ball skills. Lovely player and to think he could have been at Man Utd before the financially doped French club lured him away. Yes, filthy lucre Moura.

That second PSG goal was all Moura's doing as he arrowed in from the right cutting out and then in with a deft touch and change of pace as he entered the box and picked out Javier Pastore with a perfect pass. Valencia played well till it was time to score and then were found wanting in the final third. Adil Rami's late goal will give them some cheer to take to Paris for the return leg. The Parisians will also find Zlatan Ibrahimovic missing after being booked for the second time for a studs up tackle in extra time. But he was not really a factor in this match.

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Champions League 16: Tricky Juventus ease past Celtic, 3-0

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UCL : Celtic vs Juventus 0-3 by MRLooka

Highlights sometime tell you very little about the match other than the most rudimentary of statistics. And so even with a scoreline as unflattering, Celtic fans will tell you they were robbed. Much of the ire of Neil Lennon and the Bhoys was directed at referee Alberto Undiano Mallenco, an official who's built a reputation for dishing out cards like Texas does death sentences. But it seems this time around the ever eager Mallenco did not pull them out fast enough for Juve's group of dirty tricksters especially when Celtic were pressing on with their corners. Lots of shirt grabbing, body checks, and rugby like holds went unnoticed.

Celtic were good when they had possession and they certainly had more shots on goal. Victor Wanyama was impressive and one can see why he would be linked to a club like Arsenal (but who isn't, eh?). But what counts in the end is what you do with the ball. And in that department Juventus were superior. Helped by some defensive lapses of the most egregious kind.

Look at the first goal. Efe Ambrose had a series of brain farts and stood around in a daze as Alessandro Matri got to the long ball as easy pie with Fraser Forster's imbecilic charge opening up the goal invitingly. No one bothered to follow up Claudio Marchisio after the goal line clearance which clearly came after the ball had crossed the plane. In the second half, Forster made it easy for Marchisio as he again strayed out of position for the second goal after the winger cut inside. Then it was Ambrose again as culprit dallying too long on the ball (maybe he hadn't stopped celebrating Nigeria's Africa Cup win) and getting robbed as Vucinic scored with Forster's effete charge putting him under no pressure. On the sidelines Lennon was having a non stop migraine.

The Old Lady was smarter. Just like Man Utd against Everton over the weekend, where it was all Toffees for large stretches with Utd playing rope a dope and then boom. It's disheartening when it happens but it wasn't the first and it certainly won't be the last time matches are won this way. Celtic face a steep, steep climb on their return leg. They will have to pull off a Deportivo La Coruna like comeback but this time on the road, in Turin.

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Tottenham Hotspur vs Newcastle United 2-1 9-2-2013 by DutchEredivisieNL

Just watch the highlights. There is Gareth Bale and no one else. In a classic understatement one of the commentators said, "Formidable." A one man wrecking crew. For those who want to know, Emmanuel Adebayor was on the pitch after his post Africa Cup dithering around but he might as well not been. Bale very pointedly ignored him as the Togolese was reduced to a passenger for most part. Check that second goal as Bale blows past three Newcastle defenders AND Adebayor.

Yoan Gouffran's goal for the Magpies was quite spectacular but it wasn't enough. The Frenchman had to leave after Kyle Walker's studs left a nasty gash on his shin. The question was how many Bale let offs would be there because he appeared to be in a particularly unforgiving mood. He is sealing his Real Madrid deal because with each performance like this his asking price goes up by a few million and that suits a master negotiator like Daniel Levy just fine.

Yoann Cabaye had a forgettable match following his return. That studs up stamp on Moussa Dembele's ankle looked pretty sickening. Amazed that he remained on the pitch.

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Southampton stun Man City, 3-1 as title chances evaporate

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Southampton 3-1 Man City Highlights by goalsandsoccer

Joe Hart and Gareth Barry must have drunk paint thinner for breakfast. Hart had no reflexes and Barry had too much. Give enormous credit to the Swans who attacked, attacked, and attacked as they swarmed all over City's defense.

City's chances are over. The Fat Lady can sing. Twelve points adrift with a Man Utd team that look and behave like piranhas. Nagannahappen.

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Sunderland vs Arsenal 0-1 Longer Highlights (9... by Hemchand_Mallela

Over the weekend, Arsenal had their second game in succession against more "industrial" opponents, this time the Black Cats away at the Stadium of Blight. Lee Cattermole, who grew up as a child punishing all manner of objects including his own shadow with fouls employed the same neural pathway that elicits a knee jerk. All he had to see were yellow socks or a dim recollection of them. Anthony Taylor should have sent off Cattermole in a strait jacket. It was left to Martin O'Neill to take action with increasing evidence the midfielder was going to implode if left on the pitch.

On to the action and it should have been over a half dozen times for Sunderland as Arsenal repeatedly tore into them with Walcott, Wilshere, and Cazorla leading the way. Walcott had two close chances saved by Simone Mignolet who was superb all the way. Ramsey had one swerving shot fisted away and then a point blank opportunity in front of goal denied by Mignolet once again. The Welshman should have done better. Giroud fired just wide after some quick work with his feet. A goal was coming and it happened when Wilshere pushing all the buttons yet again with one of his trademark quick, darting runs, with Sunderland snapping at his heels, sent in a pinpoint through pass to Walcott who with his back towards goal squared left to Cazorla and with one step, the Spaniard sent the ball skimming past Mignolet.

The re-jiggered Arsenal defense did not have much work to do the first half but towards the end of the second half, Arsenal had to dig deep, very deep. Carl Jenkinson who was included at the last moment because of Laurent Koscielny's pre-match injury was given his marching orders as he picked up a second yellow for his blatant foul against Stephane Sessegnon. Kos's injury saw Wenger move Sagna to centre back alongside Per Mertesacker.

After Jenkinson's departure the conventional wisdom would have been to relocate Sagna to his familiar right back position and pair Ignasi Miquel with Merts. But Wenger chose not to move the Frenchman, undoubtedly inspired by his outstanding performance at such short notice in the heart of defense. Instead, Ramsey was delegated and it all worked with plenty of help from an outstanding Wojciech Szczesny who turned Sunderland away with some superlative saves including a fingertip that pushed the ball over the crossbar as he was coming down. One of his best performances this season.

There were few Arsenal chances this half with the best falling to Walcott as Cazorla, almost perfect all match through, picked him out with another lovely pass, but the winger's shot struck the upright. Cazorla himself had a chance and Giroud came close once again. That they were able to generate that many despite Wilshere's presence, the midfielder leaving early in the second half picking up a calf injury. Wenger was reassuring when he said it wasn't serious and Wilshere should be available next week for the CL fixture against Bayern. One can't see Arsenal competing on even terms (saying this is still a stretch) against the Bundesliga giants without their best player.

A crucial win and with Spurs and Chelsea both winning, it kept the momentum going forward. We are now above Everton in fifth with Liverpool falling back after their West Brom defeat.

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CAN 2013 - Finale Nigéria 1 - 0 Burkina Faso by warrant

Stephen Keshi's move to include a number of local Nigerian talent into a team with its share of international names paid off handsomely with Sunday Mba of the Enugu Rangers scoring the only goal. His exquisite touch and consummate finish in the 34th minute made the difference. Keshi also led the Super Eagles to their last Africa Cup title in 1994 as a player and thus became only the second man after Egyptian Mahmoud El Gohary, to repeat success as coach as well as player.

Burkina Faso had their moments. They received a boost when the player of the tournament, Jonathan Pitroipa was cleared to play after his red card was rescinded by CAF on review following Tunisian referee Slim Jedidi's decision to book him for "diving" in the match against Ghana. An egregious mistake that was quickly corrected

In the 73rd minute, Vincent Enyeama's fingertip graze was enough to alter the the course of Wilfried Sanou's rapid fire shot headed seemingly for goal.

The Super Eagles won their third Africa Cup and deserve all the kudos but the 92nd ranked Stallions can hold their heads high, taking their tiny country to the finals for the first ever time, never awed, always proud. Congratulations to both teams.

Pitroipa was named MVP of the tournament and it will come as little surprise should he be targeted for a move to a bigger league from Rennes in the French Ligue.

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Leo Messi signs with Barca till 2018

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A less successful 2018 signage

It's all in the bag. The best footballer that is and will be has signed on for Barca till 2018 when he turns the ripe old age of 31 years. It was a two year extension on his contract that was due to run out in 2016.

Note to Arsene Wenger and Arsenal, this is how you negotiate. Well in advance. For the players you should want to keep. Plus, as is rote in the Liga, Messi has a release clause, except its worth €250 million/ $335 million/ £213 million. To keep in perspective, that is about one ninth the valuation of Man Utd, the most expensive sports franchise in the world, at €2.24 billion/ $3 billion/£1.91 billion.

Note to Arsene Wenger and Arsenal, we don't want Messi because then you'll charge us £500 per match and £25 for a soggy meat pie in the extra-terrestrial event he wants to come. We want Ybingewe Kidolalelee Shingbatwoano, if he can hold midfield.


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Cesc Fabregas's favourite food is sushi and nothing washes that down better than cold beer.

A new Estrella Damm ad has the former Arsenal midfielder on a fishing trawler riding a westerly as freshly caught camarones is made deliciously edible by Hideki Matsuhisa, the executive chef of Koy Shunka, downed with a refreshing brew or two. Oh, and the crew does improvise a game of football except unlike Cesc they're all at sea. It's all spectacular.

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True grit: Jamie Carragher to retire after this season

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This tells us all that you want to know about Jamie Carragher

There are few who embody Liverpool more than Jamie Carragher. He was Liverpool as much as Steven Gerrard. Here is the thing about Carragher. For some reason or the other, he was never recognized as much as he would have liked in an England shirt. As he took a back seat to the likes of Sol Campbell, Rio Ferdinand, John Terry, Ledley King, Joleon Lescott, and Phil Jagielka on the national team.

Perhaps it was his introduction as a full back, or being hailed as Rafa Benitez's reinvention as centre back, the Spaniard never the most popular of managers with the establishment, or maybe it was just his unassuming personality. But Carragher was a definite national afterthought and this frustration led to a 2007 retirement before Fabio Capello recalled him for the 2010 World Cup after anxiety over Ledley King's injuries. Only to be dumped unceremoniously in favour of Matthew Upson for the match against Germany. Yes, that match.

Liverpool was different however. As much as one debates his talent, Carragher was the rock in that changing back line. Keeping up after Sami Hyppia's retirement was difficult but Martin Skrtel and Daniel Agger proved less worthy. Which is why Brendan Rodgers sought him out from the margins to the starting XI. Not suprising. Carragher's positional ability and anticipation compensates so well for his lack of speed, its little wonder he's considered one of the best in snuffing out attacking threats. He may have scored a few own goals but he must have saved hundreds more.

Rodgers was also acutely aware that the man from Bootle, other than Gerrard, brought essential leadership qualities to a transitioning team. Just like he had seen off the challenges of Rigoberto Song, John Arne Riise, and Steve Finnan, Carragher once again managed to adapt starting a mini-revival this season. Liverpool nowadays is far removed from those CL knuckle whiteners against AC Milan or Chelsea in which the centre back strode like a colossus. With his retirement, only a handful (Gerrard, Reina, and possibly Agger) are left in the side to provide those comforting associations. Carragher still has the rest of the season left, so let not that past tense fool you. There are things to do, miles to go, before one hangs up those boots. Just business as usual for Mr Carragher.

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AFCON 2013 SF: Nigeria steamroll Mali, 4-1

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CAN 2013 - Mali 1 - 4 Nigéria by warrant

Goals from Elderson, Ideye Brown, Emmanuel Emenike, and Ahmed Musa put this match to rest for the Super Eagles. Cheick Mady Diarra clawed out a consolation goal. Nigeria advance to their seventh Africa Cup finals. They were winners in 1980 and 1994.

For Mali, a final would have brought a welcome reprieve from the civil strife that has torn their country as Islamic extremists expanded from their northern strongholds pushing south. French forces coupled with the Malian military succeeded in pushing the insurgents back to enforce an uneasy peace. Now comes the hard part in deciding what course to take for the future.

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CAN 2013 - Burkina Faso 1 - 1 Ghana (3 tab 2) by warrant

One of the most incompetently officiated matches. All the critical decisions went against the Burkinabe. Jonathan Pitroipa gets flattened by John Boye in the box, a clear offence, and one that merited a penalty. Nothing given. At the other end, Mady Panandetiguiri made incidental contact with Christian Atsu after he headed the ball towards goal and referee Jdidi Slim of Tunisia without even deliberating a second awarded a penalty. This was getting suspicious. Mubarak Wakaso made no mistake as the Black Stars went ahead on the strength of a tainted moment.

The Stallions fought back magnificently and two minutes later, Aristide Bance, a handful all match, finished with aplomb curling his shot past Abul Fatawu Dauda for the equalizer. With the teams deadlocked in regulation, the Stallions came into their own during extra time, looking fresher and stronger. Bance was proving unstoppable with just his last touch deserting him.

The Stallions should have gone ahead in the 105th minute as Prejuce Nakoulma battling with Kwadwo Asamoa for possession of a long ball managed to toe it over Dauda. Their jubilation was short lived because referee Slim kept up his theme of deriving perverse pleasure by denying them once again. He then added some more misery as Pitroipa cutting into the box was brought down by Boye kicking at him for another clear penalty call. Instead, in another head scratching decision, the winger was booked for diving, receiving his second card and sent off. The match ended with Gyan and Bance missing on either end.

So it went to PKs and fittingly, Bance, turned out the winning penalty as he coolly and calmly slotted the ball past the wrongfooted Dauda. At the other end Ghana's Emmanuel Badu had his spot kick saved by Daouda Diakite. The Stallions made history with their first entry into the finals. Even the most jaded heart can take comfort that justice finally prevailed.

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England 2 1 Brazil Hoofoot.com HD highlights... by hoofoot

The stadiums will be up well in time for the World Cup. There will be no problems juggling Belo Horizonte and Sao Paulo to see the group stages. We might even survive a night out in a favela with our limbs intact. But will the Seleccao be prepared is the million dollar question?

They came out to Wembley but it was the Three Lions that provided the oohs and the aahs. And if you're an Arsenal fan, there was much to be delighted in the performance of Jack Wilshere and Theo Walcott, in particular, the former as he brandished the midfield reins. This was a refreshing England, eschewing a 4-4-2 for the attack minded 4-2-1-3. Ronaldinho was back looking about 30 lbs less but his penalty was saved by Joe Hart and then corralled away to safety. All signs pointing to a fairly memorable upset.

Wilshere provided the game changer, dissecting the Brazilian defense with a beauty and it was off to the races for Walcott whose shot caromed off Julio Cesar. But fortunately, Rooney followed up for the perfect finish. There was some Neymar sightings and Oscar's touch of genius but it was left to 95 year old Fred to take advantage of some extremely sloppy defending by Gary Cahill to rifle home the equalizer.

A nonagenarian scorer for Brazil amongst all the barely pubertal figures. But England's Frank Lampard is also a HP Lovecraft Cthulhu like figure proving to be equally dastardly for the Seleccao. Big Phil Scolari should have known. As Walcott flashed in a cross, Brazil dithered clearing out the ball, and it broke loose to the Chelsea midfielder to lace in an unstoppable finish. Succinctly said. Nice. Nice, indeed.

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Hexagonal World Cup qualifiers: USA fall to Honduras, 1-2

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Tough, tough loss. The USA suffered from a stunning loss of creativity. What does it tell you when Jermaine Jones is the catalyst of the attack? His on the money chip found Clint Dempsey who had all kinds of time in the world to volley the ball home in the 35th minute.

The USA looked distinctly surprised when they went ahead against the run of play as Los Catrachos was clearly in the ascendancy and probing Tim Howard and the US defense hard with all kinds of close calls. The lead lasted just 5 minutes when Juan Carlos Garcia pulled a Wayne Rooney unleashing a stunning acrobatic bicycle kick after a cross was pinged back to him with the defense in disarray. That bit of sublimity was better than that of the Man Utd striker because he was clearly under pressure. But because he's Garcia from Honduras and not Rooney, epicentre of football, it will be referred to in two years time in a Rob Smyth article about bicycle kicks.

Honduras could have gone ahead for good when a goal by Carlos Costly was dubiously ruled offside. That decision fortunately did not prove costly as the New England Revs's Jerry Bengtson took advantage of some really poor defending to bang home the winner. Former MLS player, Roger Espinoza now at Wigan was a constant thorn testing the US defense with his twisting runs and snap shots.

The US desperately needed to stretch out the pitch. There was little of it given that Timmy Chandler and Fabian Johnson are the sort of bombing full backs that should have fed Jozy Altidore a steady diet of crosses or used cutbacks for Clint Dempsey or Michael Bradley to follow up. Which makes the lack of strategy even more remarkable. Instead the USA chose to go down the centre very, very slowly as Honduras capitalized on that predictability with some choice defending.

Klinsi was also playing safe with three holding midfielders. A draw would have been ideal but that pre-condition lay on the defense doing its job. Who knew the US back four would imbibe Arsenal with such vengeance? There is little that Tim Howard could do to legislate against such rank incompetency. Then there was the distinct lack of ambition with his substitutions. Leaving out Jose Francisco Torres and Hercules Gomez on the bench, two players who could bring something a little bit different.

All of this does not make the next round of fixtures any easier. The only saving grace is that El Tri were held to a goalless draw in the impregnable Azteca against Jamaica. Hey, Reggae Boyz, that was some great karma. Panama and Costa Rica fought to a two all standstill. The US has a very good chance of getting to Brazil but somehow even after more than a year and a half of Klinsi in charge, the most frustrating thing; we still don't know what works for the national team.


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Feb 6th: Hexagonal World Cup qualifiers: Honduras vs USA, Estadio Olimpico, San Pedro Sula, 4 PM on beIN Sport

After faffing around for a couple of years with one excuse after another and playing just exhibition matches, the wingback is ready to commit to the national team. He's now a fixture in FC Nuremberg having made 63 appearances and the sustained Bundesliga exposure has given him a tonne of confidence. Not a moment too soon as Steve Cherundolo is getting on in years turning 34 this month.

The USA face a tough test against Los Catrachos at San Pedro Sula in a start to their final round of World Cup qualifying. Juergen Klinsmann retained seven from the squad facing Canada last week including Sean Johnson, Matt Besler, Omar Gonzalez, Graham Zusi, Brad Davis, Brad Evans, and Eddie Johnson in the 23 facing Honduras.

Landon Donovan declared himself unavailable while others like Cherundolo, Stuart Holden, and Brek Shea are injured. Still others like Clarence Goodson and Eric Lichaj were ruled out after their club performances dropped off steeply.

Starting line up: Tim Howard, Timothy Chandler, Geoff Cameron, Carlos Bocanegra, Fabian Johnson, Danny Williams, Michael Bradley, Jermaine Jones, Clint Dempsey, Hercules Gomez, Jozy Altidore.

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Paolo Berlusconi by MotionCrew

Lets put it this way. Mario Balotelli's return to the Serie has been nothing short of eventful. Leading AC Milan over Udinese with a delightful brace on debut to boost his club towards securing their CL spot. As desirable as that was, here is a reminder why Benito Mussolini's ghost lives on in much of Italy.

This is AC Milan, as urbane and refined a setting as one can get, and yet Silvio Berlusconi's son, Paolo and a VP of the club thinks nothing of calling Mario Balotelli "il negretto di famiglia" or the "family's little nig*er". This evokes the pejorative "house nig*er" and their fealty to the white slavers. Samuel Jackson played one to the hilt in Django Unchained.

The remark gathers more significance as it was made at a rally for Silvio Berlusconi's right wing People of Freedom Party (PdL) as Italy gears up for the national elections later this month. This is what Paolo Berlusconi said of Balotelli, "And now let's go and watch the little nig*er of the family, the crazy head. All the young ladies are invited as well - you can even have a chance to meet the president." (referring to Silvio Berlusconi) as some in the audience snigger.

This is the sort of election rhetoric keeps the Lega Nord, the anti immigrant, northern nationalist party supporting a PdL led coalition. As many as four Lega Nord politicians became ministers in the Berlusconi government after the 2008 elections in a quid pro quo. Balotelli is now political football even as just a month before Kevin Prince Boateng led Milan off the pitch in a widely praised move after Pro Patria fans started heaping racist abuse at him.

Racism and Balotelli go hand in hand as seen last year in the 2012 Euro when Croatian and Spanish fans targeted him with abuse and one fan even threw a banana leading to UEFA imposing slap on the wrist fines on those respective federations. But the worst offenders are fellow Italians as this distasteful cartoon amply proves, one in a series of never ending offenses. This is the reality that Balotelli came back to but you would never expect to be blindsided by those running the club. You didn't even have to dress up Ali G or Borat for this one.

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Vukasin Poleksic, Debrecen's goalkeeper is suspected of taking a bribe

Liverpool's narrow 1-0 win against Debrecen in the 2009 CL group stage is thought to be one of the hundreds of matches under investigation by Europol for match fixing. The agency suggested there was a CL fixture played by an English side in the last 3-4 years that had attracted their attention.

The central figure is Debrecen's goalie Vukasin Poleksic who is alleged to have taken a bribe to lose to the Reds by at least a two goal margin. The scoreline in the end was much closer. Dirk Kuyt scored the winner in a lacklustre match after Poleksic stopped Fernando Torres's effort. Poleksic was also banned for two years by UEFA after an investigation revealed he had failed to disclose being approached by Italian match fixers in a match against Fiorentina in 2009 which his side lost.

LFC responded to the allegations first reported by Danish publication Ekstra Bladet that the Debrecen match was the one under suspicion. In a statement, "Liverpool Football Club has not been contacted by anyone from Europol or Uefa in relation to this matter."

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Leo Messi set to sign on for 5 more years at Barca

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This Thursday, the little maestro re-commits to Barca for another five years till he turns 31. In 2018, Arsene Wenger has a shot getting him to the Emirates. The Arsenal manager will still be there on a lifelong appointment as the Gunners enter their 14th year without silverware. Reality bites, eh!

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Gerard Pique and son Milan Pique Mebarak share a moment

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The first pix of the new arrival: Gerard Pique at ease with son, Milan

You can donate to UNICEF as Milan Pique Mebarak hosts his first charity event.

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Cristiano Ronaldo reçu par des "Messi, Messi... by evidenceprod

Not exactly the welcome one had in mind. CR7 returned to Guimaeres and was greeted by a fan shouting "Messi, Messi", visibly upsetting the striker who stopped in his tracks and searched out the crowd. He proceeded to autograph a ball before entering the hotel uttering, "OMG. Portugal plays Ecuador tomorrow in a friendly.

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If it is Monday, it must be matchfixing day

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Declan Hill in his book "The Fix" reveals the existence of a multi billion dollar Asian gambling syndicate based out of Singapore that has infiltrated every level of the sport. The news today of Europol investigating 700 matches for match fixing including about 150 involving national teams should therefore come as no surprise.

The brains behind this operation is supposed to be Dan Tan who has been issued with an arrest warrant by Interpol but continues to operate freely enjoying the protection of the Singapore government.

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AFCON 2013 QF: Ghana end Cape Verde's magical run, 2-0

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Bóng đá: Ghana 2-0 Cape Verde (All Goals... by tapchibongda

Ghana finally broke through in the 54th minute through a questionable penalty call as Carlitos and Asamoah Gyan challenged for the ball and the striker went to ground a bit too easily. Wakaso Mubarak made no mistake with the spot kick. Both teams did little of note in the first half and there were no shots on target.

Things livened up in the second half through the introduction of Wakaso and there was finally a zip in the Black Starts. On the other hand, the Blue Sharks responded with a number of chances through Helton, Platini, and Djaniny but could not match the Black Stars clinical efficiency. Wakaso put the icing rolling the ball into an empty net in stoppage time following a Ghana counterattack.

Well played, Lucio Antunes and the Blue Sharks. You showed no awe and you did your country proud. Ghana now meet Mali while Burkina Faso take on Nigeria in the semi-finals.

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CAN 2013 - Burkina Faso 1 - 0 Togo by warrant

The lowly Stallions who had last made it to the semi-finals as hosts of the 1998 Africa Cup of Nations continued their impressive march into the quarter-finals against Togo as Jonathan Pitroipa turned a corner into goal in the 105th minute.

Pitroipa, the Rennes winger was not the only hero. Custodian Daouda Diakité came up empty handed as Emmanuel Adebayor got to a cross first and with his header bouncing ominously towards an empty net, Saidou Mady Panandetiguiri effected a goal line save. Adebayor protested but the ball clearly did not break the plane.

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AFCON 2013 QF: Nigeria shock Ivory Coast, 2-1

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CAN 2013: Ivory Coast 1-2 Nigeria 03.02... by ourmatch

The two West African powerhouses met and with a stellar line up, almost all playing in the overseas big leagues, Ivory Coast were favoured to go through. In comparison, Nigeria's coach Stephen Keshi relied more on the local league and his gamble paid off as the Super Eagles posted a well deserved victory.

Emmanuel Emenike's well placed free kick fooled Boubacar Barry as Nigeria took the lead in the 43rd minute. After half time, Ivory Coast equalized as Cheik Tiote powered in a header from Didier Drogba's free kick. But it was Warri Wolves's Sunday Mba proving to be the hero as he drove forward and stunned Barry with a looping shot over his head for the winning goal and send Nigeria into the semi-finals.

15 years before, Mba's more famous namesake, Sunday Oliseh did the same against Andoni Zubizaretta leaving the Spanish goalie slack jawed as his fierce half volley led Nigeria over Spain, 3-2, in a stirring comeback in the 1998 World Cup group stage.

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CAN 2013: South Africa 1-1 Mali 02.02... by ourmatch

Bafana Bafana went ahead as Tokelo Rantie scored in the 31st minute but Mali equalized through Seydou Keita in the 58th minute. The two teams remained deadlocked even after extra time and it went to penalty shootout.

SA started brightly from the spot but then suffered embarrassment in all three subsequent attempts as Mali proved cool and collected in front of goal. Complete PK highlights here >> Check out Cheick Diabate's spot kick which looks suspiciously like a paradinha.

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AC Milan 2-1 Udinese footyroom.com by Futbol2101

Fairytale start for the former Man City striker as he finds himself in the club that he worshiped from childhood. While City club desperately staved off Liverpool noticeably lacking firepower, here at Milan, Masimilliano Allegri wisely decided to let Balotelli run the show. It appears giving him responsibility actually yielded positive results while micro-managing him as an errant child as did Mancini, provoked a completely different set of reactions.

Daniele Padelli, the Udinese goalie was magnificent in preventing Milan from scoring more. Balotelli's injury time penalty winner was the result of an extremely harsh decision as Stephan El Shaarawy was adjudged brought down in the box by Daniel Heurtaux as replays clearly showed the defender's challenge got all ball. Till then it looked like Udinese would hold onto a 1-1 scoreline.

Interestingly, M'baye Niang, the 18 year old phenom who has been compared frequently to Balotelli and you can see why also seems to have his share of off the pitch misdemeanours so much so that Milan were ready to ship him out. He was reportedly tracked by Spurs and Arsenal.

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Man.City VS Liverpool. Liverpool play Highlight... by kkjwiner

Move over Super Bowl which relied on a power outage to make the Baltimore Ravens sweat. The investigation reveals an inebriated fan tried using the power line to recharge his Iphone leading to the 30 minute break in the match. OK, just kidding. It was Beyonce's Large Hadron Collider performance that drained power. No such artificial drama suffused Liverpool's encounter with City which surely sees Utd power to their 20th league title. Nine points is too difficult to bridge with Utd in such unrelenting form.

Liverpool were on top for large stretches of this gripping match. Edin Dzeko took City into the lead but 6 minutes later was involved in a scrap with Daniel Agger that left him sprawling without a foul being called. As Dzeko lay on the ground the game went on without the referee stopping play. That suited Liverpool controlling the ball and after a scintillating build up Daniel Sturridge, proving to be the signing of the season for them, lashed in a perfectly placed shot with his left foot.

Steven Gerrard revived memories of his long distance piledrivers seen last in the 2005 CL final against Milan with a huge 30 yard bomb that left Joe Hart, his reputation spiraling down, agape. Liverpool had collared this match and could have easily left the Etihad with three points. Instead, it became a matter of which goalie would be more boneheaded. Pepe Reinia came out on top as he ill advisedly deserted goal to chase down Sergio Aguero, all the way to his left. The Argentinian skinned the Spaniard easily and then with an almost zero angle, no vision, showed unreal GPS swinging in his shot to the far post. In Reina's defense, Agger who was terrible defending Dzeko for the first goal, allowed too much space. But Aguero's finish was just other worldly.

What a match. Fluid, open ended play, genius goals. And as one of the commentators said, you did not want it to end. The Sturridge and Suarez partnership is clicking. Jordan Henderson shows unmistakable signs of improvement. The Reds looked stronger, fresher, and ran City to the ground. Amongst these signs of optimism, 20 year old Philippe Coutinho is to launch his Liverpool career giving fresh attacking impetus. What is there not to like?

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Newcastle's French revolution upend Chelsea, 3-2

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Newcastle 3–2 Chelsea 02/02/2013 HIGHLIGHT goal by dm_50df505e1d12b

Where is Arsene Wenger missing out? What are his scouts telling him? Moussa Sissoko coming to Newcastle for £1.2m but playing like he was worth £25m is the sort of signing that made Wenger a legendary purveyor of talent. The French Ligue was once his pasture. It is true that the level coming out is uneven in recent years but the Toons seem to have a finer sieve separating the chaff out. Sissoko, Yoann Gouffran, and Mathieu Debuchy, are the new French inductees and they all had mighty fine performances against the reeling Blues. The back four including stalwarts Ashley Cole and John Terry were repeatedly ripped in shreds by the reign of terror.

Chelsea were able to step on the frontfoot through Frank Lampard and Juan Mata's goals which were of the highest quality. Former Newcastle man, Demba Ba booed unmercifully by the St James faithful, left unceremoniously with a broken beak going in for a header as the ball bounced invitingly off a rebound with Fabricio Coloccini's challenge resulting in a boot to the face. It was all inadvertent and the Argentinian was rightfully not sent off much to Rafa Benitez's howls of dismay.

Jonas Gutierrez, the Newcastle veteran got things started with a nice flick off a cross that beat Cech before Lampard and Mata turned the Blues around. That was before Sissoko had his unforgettable debut for his new club. To be sure, Newcastle always looked good for the Europa Cup at the least before the season and it was surprising to see them unravel to relegation zone status. Now, they appear to be making an unmistakable U turn and they look very, very formidable. New, quality reinforcements do make a huge difference.

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Arsenal put one over anti-football club Stoke

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Arsenal 1-0 Stoke City by goalsandsoccer

What club can transform a seemingly nice bloke and a previous talent like Michael Owen into little more than a street thug? Yes, Stoke. The epicentre of anti-football. This was a better and more gritty display by Arsenal and it had to be. Getting stuck in with tackles is and trying to fight your way through a 1-9-1 formation is part of the job description. The other part is that despite their tough guy attitude, Stoke are a collection of drama queens, who bleed and whinge, led by a man who wears a baseball cap. They rarely try to win games and after trailing, Tony Pulis thought it fit to put in three strikers.

A managerial stroke of genius because all it did was provide a comical interlude in which Owen swats at Mikel Arteta after a legitimate challenge. Both tumble to the ground, the Spaniard gets up, shoves the former striker and things heat up with Wilshere getting into the action. The FA is reviewing the incident and Owen might be booked retrospectively.

The clip above is Poldi's free kick in the 77the minute nestling in the net after a deflection and it does not give you the number of chances that Arsenal should have put away as Asimir Begovic proved that he is one of the few gems at Stoke.

The Gunners were made to sweat as the linesman seemed to rule it offside which led to a consultation with Chris Foy as players from both teams milled around arguing their case. Thankfully, it was allowed to stand. Ryan Shawcross's meltdown after that was a thing of beauty to behold. Earlier, he tried to end Koscielny's happy endings with a studs up tackle to his family jewels. Shawcross's brand of punishment might be more useful in dealing with the gang r*pists of the world.

How was Nacho Monreal's debut? Solid. He tracked back, made himself available to receive passes, and was not afraid to surge forward. It was good to see his team mates turning to him instinctively when under pressure as he earned their trust, a change from the skittish demeanour engendered by Andre Dos Santos. He got his first proper introduction to the English league when his clash of heads with Jonathan Walter left the striker bleeding and requiring six stitches. Here is a nice sample of his first outing.

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This page is an archive of entries from February 2013 listed from newest to oldest.

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