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Topics - NC

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1
Football / FIFA V.P Dignitary list for WC Finals!
« on: July 11, 2006, 10:15:51 AM »
Why was our Prime Minister not on the FIFA V.P. dignitary list for the WC finals ... was a precedent set here??  Do you all remember Kirpalanis, is he destined to have the same fate as Kirpalanis????

2
Football / Adidas to launch Internet 'thank you' site for ...
« on: July 10, 2006, 06:05:01 PM »
Adidas to launch Internet 'thank you' site for Zidane
First Published: Jul 10, 2006
 
Adidas advert shows Zinedine Zidane presenting the official "Teamgeist" World Cup football. Adidas, the German maker of sportswear and equipment, plans to launch the Internet site mercizidane.fr on July 15 to thank Zidane as he retires.
Adidas, the German maker of sportswear and equipment, plans to launch the Internet site mercizidane.fr on Saturday to thank French football star Zinedine Zidane as he retires.

Fans are to write and videotape messages for the former French captain, with one lucky fan set to win the jersey worn by Zidane during the football World Cup final against Italy on Sunday.

Adidas thus confirmed its support for Zidane, a celebrated French playmaker who was sent off in disgrace in the final minutes of the match, which was his last before retirement.

"In no case does it change our relations with Zinedine Zidane, with whom we have been associated since 1996 and until 2017," said Emmanuelle Gaye, director of external relations for Adidas France.

Zidane was named the tournament's best player despite being shown a red card and dismissed after headbutting Italian defender Marco Materazzi in the chest in the second period of extra-time.

The planned Internet site was designed "to invite the French to thank this master of French football for all that he has done," Gaye told AFP.

"People will be able to comment in writing and through videos."

The two best videos are to be given awards, one of which is to be the Adidas jersey worn by Zidane during the final match.


3
Football / WC #18 - How does it Compare?
« on: July 06, 2006, 12:06:42 PM »
Could this be considered one of the worst World Cups ever, when compared to some of the previous compeitions.  Looking back and comparing individual ability ... is it true that quality of the individual talent in this WC has been substandard.  The shooting for example seems to have been at a very low standard, when compared to WC that featured Pele, Garrincha, Cubillas, Kempes, Maradona and others over the past 17WCups.  Should England and Argentina, for example, rely more on their young talent (e.g. Walcott & Messi)  The WC normally is the place when young talent would annunce their arrival, that did not seem to be the case during this WC?

4
Football / Believe it or Not!
« on: June 27, 2006, 06:06:31 PM »
The 2006 WC is now behind us and we need to start looking towrad the future.  This forum has done a good job in keeping the TTFF "honest" as best as it could in reference to what is important.  Well, the qualification for the U16/U17 WC will beging soon and as far as I am aware there is not a competent coach in place for that team.  As we all witnessed, football is a coaches game, and a competent coach can make the difference.  If the federation is serious about qualifying for 2010 ... then I would suggest we put the same effort into ensuring that we qualifing for the U16/U17 WC.  What say you?

5
Football / Where Can I download the T&T Games-Thanks?
« on: June 27, 2006, 05:47:19 PM »
Can anyone help?

6
Football / LIFE AFTER THE WORLD CUP!
« on: June 03, 2006, 01:43:06 PM »
Guys, not sure what we are expecting from our current team ... however, what are we doing to help ensure that the next "highly qualified coach" have a better bunch of players/talent to work with.  I think it's Czechs who are donating a percentage of the income they are getting from the WC toward youth development in their country.  WHAT ARE WE DOING TO HELP TAKE CARE OF THE FUTURE???  ANY CONSTRUCTIVE THOUGHTS?

7
2006 World Cup - Germany / Trinidad & Tobago vs. England?
« on: June 03, 2006, 08:05:33 AM »
After watching the first half of England vs. Jamica ... and seeing Jamica, a team that has been credit with having been more, committed and discipline that T&T, what are our breal chances of beating anyone in the WC???  No emotional immature responses please, only thoughtful responsible ones!

8
Football / T&T PLAYERS HEADING TO THE PREMIERSHIP!
« on: May 31, 2006, 08:36:52 PM »
What would it mean if Birchall was the only player from this team to end up playing in the premiership next season??

9
Football / SOCA WARRIORS NEED OUR SUPPORT!
« on: May 31, 2006, 08:02:04 PM »
The quality of the post seems to be detiorating daily ... if anyone expect us to be the quality of Brazil overnight, with the average age being more than 3o years old and our best players playing in Europe's lower division, then you are all crazy.  We went from talking about beating England to calling our own players "shit hounds" ... THE TEAM NEEDS ALL THE SUPORT IT CAN GET GUYS, LETS SUPPORT THE TEAM, AFTER ALL THIS IS THE SAME TEAM THAT QUALIFIED AND MADE US ALL HAPPY.  WHEN WE QUALIFIED DON LEO WAS CALLED A "GENIUS" NOW HE DOES NOT KNOW WHAT HE IS DOING????

10
Football / Who's going to Germany
« on: March 28, 2006, 04:15:09 PM »
Before we qualified, there was a lot of talk about going to Germany on this site ... now there is virtually none ... is anyone on this site going to Germany still???

11
Football / Barcelona vs. Chelsea?
« on: March 16, 2006, 01:02:58 PM »
Can someone upload the last Braca vs Chelsea game ... it will be appreciated?

12
Football / Soca Warriors Kit & Uniform?
« on: March 03, 2006, 04:17:51 PM »
Could someone find the shirt NC posted about three months ago ... and  see if it resembles the one unvailed on Tuesday  ;D???

14
Football / International Frendlies!
« on: January 05, 2006, 01:44:56 PM »
Anyone know the FIFA approved friendly dates?

15
Football / Maradona was 'threatened at gun-point,' says friend
« on: December 22, 2005, 06:17:36 PM »
Maradona was 'threatened at gun-point,' says friendFirst Published: Dec 22, 2005

 
Argentine soccer legend Diego Maradona, seen here in November 2005, was allegedly threatened at gun-point by police during a fracas at Rio de Janeiro airport, according to a friend travelling with Maradona
Football legend Diego Maradona was threatened at gun-point during a fracas at Rio de Janeiro airport, a friend claimed.

The Argentina World Cup winner was arrested by police for causing a disturbance after missing his flight to Buenos Aires from Brazil.

Police in Brazil claim that Maradona, as well as a group of travelling companions, had even destroyed the VIP waiting room.

All were arrested but later released.

But Alejandro Mancuso, a former player who was travelling on the same flight, said Maradona was furious because a door had been slammed in his face.

"They shut the door in his face and then they called the police who threatened him with their guns," Mancuso told Argentine radio station Mitre.

"Maradona's anger was logical and spontaneous. They shut the door, we asked for an explanation and they called the police. Armed police arrived, they threatened us with their guns.

"At that point Diego became angry. It was incredible. We arrived at the airport, did some shopping and when we went to board the plane, the door was shut."

In Rio, police told Radio CBN that they intended to conduct an alcohol test on Argentina's 1986 World Cup hero but Mancuso denied that Maradona had submitted to a test during his detention.

Maradona, vice-president of Boca Juniors, found himself in trouble after "losing his cool" over failing to make his plane back home, an agent reported.

Maradona was in Brazil to take part in a charity match on Wednesday with Brazil's former football star and now coach of Japan, Zico.

According to CBN Maradona had already ruffled feathers when announcing just before kick-off for the game in aid of Rio's poor children that he wouldn't be playing.

He finally turned up surrounded by a posse of bodyguards for the fixture at Zico's football school which ended 4-4.

Later Thursday, the 45-year-old was released, along with four friends, after being detained for a number of hours.

Police said Maradona had wrecked part of the VIP waiting room at the airport during the fracas and would be expected to pay for the repairs.


16
Football / Anton Corneal Interview!
« on: December 13, 2005, 05:11:01 PM »
Tallman/Flex:

In light of Anton appointment and some of the responses to it, can you guys get an interview with him?

18
Football / Guys Do Not Forget!
« on: November 18, 2005, 02:58:21 PM »
... that the real Hero in all of this is Don Leo.  He has done things to ensure out success that no other local coach would have done ... for example, deciding to leave Russel out of the starting line up.  Nothing against Russel, but if you understand what he did you would know it was genious.

19
Football / Did Anyone Hear?
« on: November 13, 2005, 12:55:29 PM »
One of the commentators on fox said "I have seen cones be more dynamic anf this Trinidad team"  I find that bt be offensive ... we should flood him with e-mails showing our dissatifaction ... one of them also made a negative comment about Dwight's personal life style.  I watch a lot of football and they do not do that to other players unless there is a major scandal.

20
Football / Technical Analysis!
« on: November 01, 2005, 07:11:38 AM »
In the "Draw your own conclusion" post some members from our sophisticated group of fans have been making the general statement "that Samuel is better than Avery" ... could you all please provide a technical basis for stating that Samuel is a better player than Avery?

21
Football / Bertille St. Clair Indicted?
« on: October 30, 2005, 09:22:35 AM »
" ... when my coaching staff and I arrived here in Trinidad in April we met 20 very good individual players, but nothing resembling a football team ..."  Leo Beenhakker.

Was BSC incapable or was it a run of bad luck?

22
Football / Is Wim Rijsbergen a Racist?
« on: October 26, 2005, 09:57:06 AM »
If Wim Rijsbergen made racist comments to David as alleged, should he be fired?  Should this be investigated by the TTFA?

23
Football / Interesting I955FM POLL!
« on: October 26, 2005, 08:02:48 AM »
In a poll taken this morning of I955FM listeners, 60% od those calling agree that David Nakhid was unceremonously released and that he did nothing wrong in taking a new job.

Whay say you?

24
General Discussion / GEORGE "UMBALLA" JOSEPH!
« on: October 14, 2005, 10:14:53 AM »
Does george "Umballa" Joseph have the continued development of our country in his heart?  And if you think he does, are his methods of dealing with our country issues effective?  For example, placing an impromptu call to a government minister or a CEO of a company to discuss on air their position of a particular issue, instead of having a pre-arranged interview.

On air a few weeks ago he stated that, and I am paraphrasing, that the indian womanwomen he were intimate with are better than all black women.  Does this behaviour represent someone that has our country's development in his heart.

Let me state that I do not know him personally, I know of him and is just trying to ascertain whether or not he is being effective.

26
Football / "Debacle highlights MLS' need to grow up" - True or False
« on: October 06, 2005, 08:57:06 AM »
Tuesday, those of us who care, saw an "all-star" team of MLS players lose to Real Madrid in Spain, 5-0.

Jamie Trecker, the Windy City resident, writes about soccer in the USA every Wednesday.
 
It was an embarrassing loss, another missed opportunity for a still-young American league that maddeningly manages to blow chances with abandon.

If you're honest and if you know something about the sport you have to ask yourself how many more chances MLS is going to get?

MLS' history is littered with failure. Ignore the millions of dollars flushed away, the attempts to mine South Florida that ended in contraction, the "sales" of franchises that have never come to pass, and the abject failure to convince the country's media of the sport's legitimacy. Just look at the steady attendance declines, and the lack of meaningful coverage of the sport. Why sleepwalk through an event that could have brought some badly needed attention?

The shellacking at the Bernabeu will resonate for a while to come, at least among the soccer community and with the sport's bashers, who are always ready to pounce. Think about it: one of Europe's best sides, playing at half-speed, put on a display that went beyond schooling — there was a nasty edge that underlined the opportunistic play of the Spaniards.

Perhaps the Galaticos had read the papers and seen the quotes attributed to the some-time American captain Landon Donovan about how he much rather would have stayed in Los Angeles.

Perhaps Real Madrid's squad has kept up with the Financial Times and knows how much money MLS' backers have lost and yet how little of their fortunes they have actually spent to date.

It doesn't matter why, really. If you are a fan at all of American sport, it was painful to watch Ronaldo, Guti and Beckham celebrate their goals by mimicking the panicked MLS defenders. With the flips of the head and the laughter at a hopelessly adrift back-line, the Madrileños emphatically underscored the division between the Old World and the New.

So many things are so awry with MLS that many fans simply walk away from the nascent league. Every expansion team in the league loses at least 25% of their attendance from Year One to Year Two — here in Chicago I've seen the Fire go from a team that could on any night get up to 30,000 fans to a team that struggles to draw 12,000.

American fans are (somewhat patronizingly, I must say) often described as "increasingly knowledgeable" by marketers and flacks. That means they know that the world's best players aren't wearing MLS uniforms. According to my mailbox, they think MLS matches are scrappy and slow. They are frustrated by the mindless, uncritical assessments of the teams on TV and in the papers. They don't bother to tune into "sports talk" radio, because the sport is never mentioned. They spend their money at pubs and on satellite dishes, watching games from Germany, England, Italy and Spain.

Most of all, real soccer fans see right through the fabrications that surround MLS' players.

Let's take Donovan for a minute. Anywhere else in the world, he'd be known as a never-was who crashed out twice in the Bundesliga. Fans would be singing "German reject" if he played in England. Elsewhere, the sportswriters would ream him for his behavior — is he really such a spoiled, childish man? But in the USA he gets a free pass from a press that not only doesn't know any better, but doesn't care to know. He isn't alone.

Few — if any — of the soccer writers in the USA want to tell the truth about many of the so-called stars in MLS — that they are illusions, by and large manufactured by marketers who desperately need a personality to hook their product to — because they've spent ten years convincing their bosses to give the game some space.

Like Damocoles, they're always under the sword and it's bad business to point out the flaws in an Andy Williams, a Kevin Hartman, a Tab Ramos, a Mia Hamm.

To be perfectly fair I think the American game is improving, and I say that after having sat through a number of games involving the Tampa Bay Mutiny, the New England Revolution or (ugh) both at the same time (Note: I am still owed hazard pay). I honestly feel that today, when two good teams play each other — say D.C. against Chicago — you get a pretty good game for the buck.

I also think the folks that rank MLS below the second-tier European leagues are snobs who haven't seen a game in Scotland, Belgium or Poland lately.

But only a fool — or someone desperate to keep their job writing about the sport — would deny the huge disconnect between the packaging and the reality. Tuesday, we got to see the difference between $100 million and $1.7 million per team. We saw where MLS is without Carlos Valderrama, Peter Nowak and every other star the league has seen go without replacement. We saw the limitations of guys trained at American colleges and paid subsistence wages. Even if you knew nothing about the sport, the excellent telecast from Spain illustrated just how lousy some of SUM's deliberately cheap productions are.

The New England Revolution's Sunil Gulati once famously said that paying American players more doesn't make them better players. I felt then, and still do now, that that cynical attitude has sold the league's patrons on an entertainment that has chosen fixed, cheap costs at the expense of taking the risks that owning a pro sports franchise in the USA entails.

Gultati is also demonstrably wrong: paying more would certainly attract better athletes. If you don't believe me, go ask any 13-year old who can shoot hoops or bench 400lbs where the money in being an athlete is.

MLS has some choices to make. It can coast along and hope (as it has) that attention-deprived municipalities such as Bridgeview, IL and Salt Lake City will drink the Kool-Aid and fork out money to build an arena. For some investors, this would be perfect — it's damn near impossible not to make money under those strictures. Or, MLS can live up to its press kits and do what nearly every other sports team around the world does.

MLS needs to get rid of the single-entity system. It needs to hire people who actually know something about soccer on the field, instead of marginalizing them. MLS' owners need to spend money on some known names and quantities instead of throwing a Nate Jaqua out on the field and wondering why no one knows who the heck he is. Above all, it needs to be realistic.

If MLS really wants to be a world-class league, it had better get ready for an era of ballooning payrolls, prima donna stars and consistent discussion in the media.

It will have to accept cutting checks and getting dissected in print. It will have to acknowledge that people will criticize it on radio, on TV and in bars. It will have to stop pretending that international no-names like Donovan, Taylor Twellman, Tony Sanneh and Ante Razov (to name just a handful) are "stars".

In other words, MLS will have to grow up. Sadly, as the league remains infantile on virtually every level, I find it hard to envision such a change. Someday, we may be able to look back at August 23, 2005 and realize what a favor Real Madrid did the USA.

The Galacticos tartly demonstrated what real talent, real passion and, yes, real soccer looks like. I hope the guys in New York have paid attention.

And if they haven't, then consider this an open letter to Don Garber: You can't market your way out of this.

Jerry Trecker contributed to this report. Send plaudits, gripes, musings et al. to jamie.trecker@gmail.com

27
Football / Football Links?
« on: September 14, 2005, 03:49:23 AM »
Last season there was a link showing Italian games, does anyone know if it still exist?

Is there such a link for spanish league also?

28
Football / Family Life and Professional Football!
« on: September 08, 2005, 08:10:36 PM »
Does anyone know how many of our national teams players are married have children and actually living with their families?  And I would like to hear whether you all think this affects a players ability to perform at his best cinsistently.

29
Football / Foreign Fundraising for SOCAWARRIORS
« on: September 08, 2005, 11:30:30 AM »
Since we have so much passion on this site, who is will for us to work together and build a foundation to raise money toward the development of football in T&T so that we can have a better experience come 2010?  I am not looking for excuses I am looking for doers and thinkers.  What is your pleasure?  I am making the first pledge of $500.00.

30
Football / ARE EXPECTATIONS TOO HIGH?
« on: July 07, 2005, 06:53:16 AM »
Taking into consideration the inconsistency of the last two performances, along with the low level of technical ability displayed by most of the players on this team, are we expeting too much in terms of a high level of play consistently?  Isn't it sad that despite Stern's performance their not not anyone available that is capable and hungry enough to step in and replace him?  Isn't it clear that without a proper development program focusing on the future that it will be impossible for us to develop the ability and mental toughness to compete consistently at a high level?

I want to see us at the highest level, but is it a reasonable expectation?

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