What a weekend. Plenty of goals, tumultuous scenes on Derby Day and some ducks broken down the table.
Heading North
Arsenal
At 2-nil down in Belgium, Arsenal’s season was on the verge of unravelling. But the gritty comeback against Standard followed by the brushing aside of Wigan actually put a smile back onto Arsene’s face! Not the most dazzlingly Arsenal display but good enough.
Manchester United
What do you reckon the overriding emotion was at full time (plus six minutes) on Sunday? Relief would be pretty high up there I’m guessing. United were patchy to say the least but on the sheer weight of possession and chances in the second half, they deserved to win. Just. Fergie will be delighted to get the 'w' over his “noisy neighbours” , but will also know how serious a threat they are. A wonderful advert for Premier league football. A cracking, cracking match.
Michael Owen and Fernando Torres
Great finishes from great finishers. And truly great players choose their moments...
Manchester City
Ok, so they lost the game, but certainly laid down a marker for the rest of the season. The better side in the first half, they hung on and refused to lie down. They are truly exhilarating on the counter and have some resilience. A defeat but possibly a watershed moment for City and the Premier League. Doing a fine job of crashing the 'big four' party.
Craig Bellamy
Incredible performance. The finish for his first goal was quality, but the run past Rio was breathtaking. He is playing the best football of his career right now. The only thing that may sour it is the fracas with a supporter.
Shay Given
Similar to Bellamy. Given is the best shot stopper in the league and he kept City in the game.
Chelsea
It’s all going rather well for Ancelotti’s side at the moment. Spurs were a challenge for much of the first hour, but once King was withdrawn, Drogba dominated. Add to that the continued excellent form of Ashley Cole and Essien dominating, and you have a heady mix. Will be tough to beat this year. Drogba’s injury the only downer.
Wolves
A crucial win for Wolves. They never allowed Fulham to settle and by the time the Cottagers started playing they were two down. There’s life at Molineux.
David Nugent
The North-West air agrees with Nugent. Prolific with Preston, pathetic at Pompey, but two clinical finishes have got his Burnley career off and running. Great win for the new boys.
David Moyes
A good news week. Lucas in and two comfortable wins. The green shoots of recovery at Goodison maybe?
Birmingham
It looked like the same old story. Chances galore, but no-one to finish them off. But finally Garry O’Connor buried the chance and got the Blues a much needed win on the road. 10 players were missing through injury so credit where its due.
Going South
Match Officials
Received the ire of several managers at the weekend. None more so than Howard Webb who didn’t give penalty for Spurs (Keane did give him the opportunity to not give it with his dramatic tumble), and of course Martin Atkinson for using the classic Old Trafford stop watch.
Liverpool’s Back Four
What on Earth is going on there? Jamie Carragher had a shocking day out at Upon Park, run ragged by the young Hammer Hines. Skrtel couldn’t pass water, and as a unit they were appalling. Vulnerable at set pieces, troubled by pace and all at sea.
Spurs
Couldn’t have gone much worse really. Missed chances, penalty turned down, injuries galore. The bubble has burst, but on the bright side, that’s now threee of the top four already played and the fixtures look handy over the next month. Providing ‘Arry can find a fit centre half. King’s latest drama is a body blow.
Kenwyn Jones
Relegated to the bench in recent weeks, Jones got a chance in the second half at Burley, and promptedly made the mistake that led to Burnley’s second. His lacklustre display summed up Sunderland’s mood, and will frustrate Steve Bruce, who sees his side’s form swing wildly.
Phil Brown
The knives are out for Browny, with several English papers suggesting that the end is nigh. Defeat against an under strength Birmingham at home is a pretty depressing result. The Premier League novelty value has worn off on Humberside, and they are now dealing with the reality of week by week struggle and it’s not pretty.
Bolton and Blackburn
One step forward, two back. After positive weeks, these two clubs had a poor weekend. Bolton were booed off at the Reebok after escaping with a draw at home to Stoke in a poor game, and Blackburn rolled over at Goodison.
Pompey
I don’t know why but I really believe Portsmouth have a good group of players there, and will come good, but every week the results don’t reflect that. Some many new signings will obviously take time to gel, but six defeats on the spin, combined with the schoolboy defending we saw at Villa Park does not bode well at all.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Sydney FC's Biggest Battle Starts Here
It was the perfect opportunity for Sydney FC to capture the hearts and minds of its public. No NRL, no AFL, perfect weather, and family deals galore.
Cheap ticketing hell even free pies were offered as an incentive to get punters through the door, as Sydney FC became the only show in town when they faced Newcastle today
But in the cold light of day it didn’t work. 10,357 was the official attendance. The lowest of the season, and a massive disappointment for the Sky Blues.
All this in a week where we saw a changing of the guard in the boardroom. CEO Stefan Kamasz, a survivor of the “Old Football” era, was moved “sideways” into a football development role, with another Dutchman joining the Australian football revolution. Edwin Lugt arrives from the Dutch 1st Division – not the top flight as some have misleadingly reported – where he was chief executive.
And he has a massive job to do. The 4th Chief executive in 5 years, Lugt has to find a way of selling the club to the toughest market in the country, and fight off the expected arrival of a 2nd entity in the city’s west.
There have been many suggestions put forward as to why the club with the biggest potential fan base have consistently failed to pull in the big crowds. Sure there is a certain amount of apathy amongst the citizens of the harbour city. They are fair-weather fans. If this Sydney side reaches the finals, then they will flood through the doors. But Newcastle Jets? On a sunny afternoon? Nah…….
The lack of a big name marquee is also hurting. Imagine Robbie Fowler in the sky blue shirt. No disrespect to John Aloisi, but Sydney needs a big name overseas player. The recent press has suggested that the club would look at a guest spell for Luis Figo. That may be far fetched but it’s the degree of thinking required to put bums on seats, and have the clubs name on the lips of more than just the hardcore supporters.
Things have been a little too quiet as well. Lavicka’s side are going only steadily, and you know, in a city like Sydney that’s not enough. The public demand a bit of drama or controversy. The Butcher era. The Kossie Calamities. Sure the team wasn’t much chop, but wasn’t the drama fun!
It’s a big job for Lugt, and as usual with the club formerly known as Bling FC, there won’t be much time given to make things happen. Regardless of ownership, or management, success is demanded, and quick.
Lugt’s first task. Bums on seats. Free tickets to schools in the west would be a good start. Get a 1000 kids in next week, and 500 may return the following. Plus they’ll badger their parents for a scarf, or a shirt and then you’ve got them.
In 2 weeks time the NRL season will be over, and great swathes of the population, particularly out west, will be without a sporting fix on their weekend. Sydney FC need to find a way of filling that void.
Cheap ticketing hell even free pies were offered as an incentive to get punters through the door, as Sydney FC became the only show in town when they faced Newcastle today
But in the cold light of day it didn’t work. 10,357 was the official attendance. The lowest of the season, and a massive disappointment for the Sky Blues.
All this in a week where we saw a changing of the guard in the boardroom. CEO Stefan Kamasz, a survivor of the “Old Football” era, was moved “sideways” into a football development role, with another Dutchman joining the Australian football revolution. Edwin Lugt arrives from the Dutch 1st Division – not the top flight as some have misleadingly reported – where he was chief executive.
And he has a massive job to do. The 4th Chief executive in 5 years, Lugt has to find a way of selling the club to the toughest market in the country, and fight off the expected arrival of a 2nd entity in the city’s west.
There have been many suggestions put forward as to why the club with the biggest potential fan base have consistently failed to pull in the big crowds. Sure there is a certain amount of apathy amongst the citizens of the harbour city. They are fair-weather fans. If this Sydney side reaches the finals, then they will flood through the doors. But Newcastle Jets? On a sunny afternoon? Nah…….
The lack of a big name marquee is also hurting. Imagine Robbie Fowler in the sky blue shirt. No disrespect to John Aloisi, but Sydney needs a big name overseas player. The recent press has suggested that the club would look at a guest spell for Luis Figo. That may be far fetched but it’s the degree of thinking required to put bums on seats, and have the clubs name on the lips of more than just the hardcore supporters.
Things have been a little too quiet as well. Lavicka’s side are going only steadily, and you know, in a city like Sydney that’s not enough. The public demand a bit of drama or controversy. The Butcher era. The Kossie Calamities. Sure the team wasn’t much chop, but wasn’t the drama fun!
It’s a big job for Lugt, and as usual with the club formerly known as Bling FC, there won’t be much time given to make things happen. Regardless of ownership, or management, success is demanded, and quick.
Lugt’s first task. Bums on seats. Free tickets to schools in the west would be a good start. Get a 1000 kids in next week, and 500 may return the following. Plus they’ll badger their parents for a scarf, or a shirt and then you’ve got them.
In 2 weeks time the NRL season will be over, and great swathes of the population, particularly out west, will be without a sporting fix on their weekend. Sydney FC need to find a way of filling that void.
Saturday, September 19, 2009
One Day England might be good at cricket....
It was to be expected I suppose. After the drama of the ashes, England's cricketers have fallen in a heap during the one day series.
6-0 down with one to play (SBS sunday 7pm aest by the way), the hosts have been utterly inept from word go. A disparate group of players seemingly clueless on how to play limited over cricket.
Just look at the names. Denly, Bresnan, Morgan. Who? Andrew Strauss had to have his arm twisted to captain the 50 over side, due his lack of suitability for the shortened game, and yet he has been the stand out.
Too nervous, and indecisive in the crucila middle overs, England's batsmen get set, then get out. Time after time after time. It's remarkable how the basics of one day cricket confuse them.
It's a similar tale with the bowling. Too often content to be milked at 4 an over, England lack genuine wicket takers. I've taken a look at the top 20 wicket takers of all time in English ODI's. It's farcical. James Anderson is number 3. Of all time. Bob Willis is in the top 10 for Christs sake! Great bowler he was....25 years ago.
England reached the final of the 92 World Cup on the back of Botham at the top of the order, Lamb in support, all rounders chipping in and a slow bowler who kept it tight and took wickets. Since then it's been a debacle and doesn't seem to be getting any better.
English cricket needs a radical rethink of it's 50 strategy, mainly because they've dumped it at domestic level. Some of the rationale appears to be that the South Africans have done the same, and they're the best in the world. Ok....how many World Cups have South Africa won?
The Champions Trophy starts on Tuesday and it's possible Engand will go in on the back of a 7-0 hiding. I'm not putting much money on them winning a game on the high veldt in the coming month.
6-0 down with one to play (SBS sunday 7pm aest by the way), the hosts have been utterly inept from word go. A disparate group of players seemingly clueless on how to play limited over cricket.
Just look at the names. Denly, Bresnan, Morgan. Who? Andrew Strauss had to have his arm twisted to captain the 50 over side, due his lack of suitability for the shortened game, and yet he has been the stand out.
Too nervous, and indecisive in the crucila middle overs, England's batsmen get set, then get out. Time after time after time. It's remarkable how the basics of one day cricket confuse them.
It's a similar tale with the bowling. Too often content to be milked at 4 an over, England lack genuine wicket takers. I've taken a look at the top 20 wicket takers of all time in English ODI's. It's farcical. James Anderson is number 3. Of all time. Bob Willis is in the top 10 for Christs sake! Great bowler he was....25 years ago.
England reached the final of the 92 World Cup on the back of Botham at the top of the order, Lamb in support, all rounders chipping in and a slow bowler who kept it tight and took wickets. Since then it's been a debacle and doesn't seem to be getting any better.
English cricket needs a radical rethink of it's 50 strategy, mainly because they've dumped it at domestic level. Some of the rationale appears to be that the South Africans have done the same, and they're the best in the world. Ok....how many World Cups have South Africa won?
The Champions Trophy starts on Tuesday and it's possible Engand will go in on the back of a 7-0 hiding. I'm not putting much money on them winning a game on the high veldt in the coming month.
Manchester's derby day drama
As I write this we're just 24 hours away from the most anticipated Manchester derby in years. After a summer of spending and acrimony, Ciy and United get it on, with more than local bragging rights at stake.
City's transformation from perennial under achievers to title challengers is nearing completion. Their victory over Arsenal last weekend showed that can match it with the traditional "big four". Their breathless counter attacking game will trouble many sides but there is a massive question mark over their fragility at the back. Shay Given may turn out to be the best signing oil money can buy.
On Sunday they will be without Adebayor, quite rightly sanctioned by the FA for his stamp on Van Persie. That was his crime, not the celebration that left many hot under the collar. Its about time fans started to take responsibility for their actions. Blaming a player for provocation after you've spent 75 minutes abusing him at the top of your voice is a bit rich. Man up.
Mark Hughes has shown an enourmous amount of poise in his media dealings this year, refusing the get seriously involved in the tit for tat campaign with his former boss down in Salford, or becoming flustered by talk of pressure and money. And he'll need to maintain his poise tomorrow, and guide his charges to what could be a defining performance.
As for United, they were quite brilliant at Tottenham, carving the hosts open on the counter, and suffocating the midfield. City's style is sure to be a little different, and without Adebaor, they will have to re-jig, so it will be down to Fergie to work out how to break them down. Expect roles for Giggs, Scholes, Neville and Owen, as United try to exploit the derby day atmosphere against a group of players with very little allegiance to City, or to Manchester.
I can't wait for this one, and can see City giving it a real go.
City's transformation from perennial under achievers to title challengers is nearing completion. Their victory over Arsenal last weekend showed that can match it with the traditional "big four". Their breathless counter attacking game will trouble many sides but there is a massive question mark over their fragility at the back. Shay Given may turn out to be the best signing oil money can buy.
On Sunday they will be without Adebayor, quite rightly sanctioned by the FA for his stamp on Van Persie. That was his crime, not the celebration that left many hot under the collar. Its about time fans started to take responsibility for their actions. Blaming a player for provocation after you've spent 75 minutes abusing him at the top of your voice is a bit rich. Man up.
Mark Hughes has shown an enourmous amount of poise in his media dealings this year, refusing the get seriously involved in the tit for tat campaign with his former boss down in Salford, or becoming flustered by talk of pressure and money. And he'll need to maintain his poise tomorrow, and guide his charges to what could be a defining performance.
As for United, they were quite brilliant at Tottenham, carving the hosts open on the counter, and suffocating the midfield. City's style is sure to be a little different, and without Adebaor, they will have to re-jig, so it will be down to Fergie to work out how to break them down. Expect roles for Giggs, Scholes, Neville and Owen, as United try to exploit the derby day atmosphere against a group of players with very little allegiance to City, or to Manchester.
I can't wait for this one, and can see City giving it a real go.
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