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Topics - JDB

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61
Football / United vs CHarlton
« on: February 10, 2007, 11:06:29 AM »
Nothing much in the match other than the goals and Wayne Rooney.

For those who say Rooney is over-rated, a few flashes in this game showed how high his football IQ is.

One play he hat a man in the box, bringing down a long ball on his big toe and almost scored.

A next play he chase a man down to the corner flag and execute a perfect sliding jam, a play that is almost routine for him now.

And then he set up the second goal with a very intelliegent ball into space.

Can't rate this youth highly enough.

62
Football / Lamar Hunt, Dead at 74
« on: December 14, 2006, 07:31:18 AM »
Lamar Hunt, Chiefs owner and sports legend, dies at 74

Lamar Hunt was a sporting giant, not just in American football but also in our football as the owner of the Crew and Dallas (where our players have played).

He was a founding member of the MLS and one of the few owners to back the sport by putting up money to build purpose built stadia instead of piggy-backing on NFL teams.

Here was a sports businessman who always gave the impression that he loved sport more than money. Too bad others can't do the same.

63
Football / CL on ESPN C lassic
« on: September 11, 2006, 02:45:50 PM »
Good news for the US based (don't know if this was posted already).

ESPN is showing four games a week now. This week the English Clubs (Liverpool and United) on ESPN2 at 2.45 pm amd the Spanish Clubs (Barca and Real) on ESPN Classic at 5.00 pm.

To think that just five years ago we were only getting game during some gameweeks.

64
Football / Guardian Journos World Cup Review
« on: July 11, 2006, 06:34:57 AM »
From The Guardian Online

This is long so I won't post it. these guys are usually entertaining to read and TnT gets a couple of mentions. It is very funny to see the differences of opinion. One person has Robben in the team of the tournament, an other has him as the worst player of the tournament.

They also tokk a lot of shots at various England commentary teams and pundits fo rtheir lack of "perspective".


From Barry Glendenning

Best player: Fabio Cannav ... ah, boring. At the risk of turning my keyboard all gloopy, I'll go for Chris Birchall, a League One player who got to live the dream and rarely looked out of place in it.


From Scott Murray

Worst match: England 2 - 0 Trinidad & Tobago. A tedious travesty of a result. The England fans who had the audacity to celebrate with a rousing chorus of "football's coming home" want to have a good think. And then maybe a long look.


From Rob Smyth

Team of the tournament: (4-2-3-1) Buffon; Edwards, Cannavaro, Gallas, Grosso; Pirlo, Gattuso; Maxi, Riquelme, Ronaldo; Henry.




65
Football / Some Pics and Vids from Germany
« on: July 02, 2006, 09:43:55 AM »
I finally have time to post some of this. Unfortunately I didn't get pictures of everybody I met but this is a sampling of some of the WN supporting in Germany. In posting these I realize that I have a couple others that I did not upload. hopefully I could get around to it sometime this week.




Ricky, JDB, Supporter outside Limerick's in Dortmund




Tongue, Jumbie, JDb, Bally, dTrini - Dortmund

Video of the Pre-game party - Dortmund

More of the same




Bally and dTrini courtesy Triniscene.com




If yuh look good you will see Superoli - Also from Triniscene.com




Fans on the train to the Stadium





I was lucky enough to bounce up the TD before the Sweden game and he was nice enough to pose for a pic.



JDB, Andre, BigMag at haltime. (sorry for the side scroll, will try to reformat this pic and upload again)


Post game fete - Destra mash up the place

Nuremberg




At least we get we hands on the Cup. Ramizinho on the far left and three non-WN pardners in Nuremberg.




My pardner Lester, the lovely Destra and JDB before the England game.



THIS Englishman was real kicks. After singing "English till I die" the man break out and start to chant some old school dub. Man wanted to dead. Unfortunately I only catch the last performance from his impromptu three song set on video.



Proud TnT supporters after the England game.




Patriot in full gear and fine spirits after the England game.




Samo and me commiserate after England.




JDB, Andre, TI after the England game.
 


66
Football / The Perils of Inexperience!
« on: June 14, 2006, 04:59:36 AM »
TnT is in a great position right now but WE HAVE PLENTY WORK TO DO. We worked extrememly hard and left it all out on the field. Once we do that again, WIN , LOSE or DRAW we will have a good performance regardless of the result.

BUT WE NEED TO BE WARY OF INEXPERIENCE.

Almost everytime an unheralded nation has sprung a shock on the WC they have been undone by inexperience or naivete. They have exciting, non-european, football which is refreshing, exuberant and always physical.

Cameroon in 1990 and Nigeria in 1994 are great examples. Both were playing great ball but both went out by giving up penalties. Cameroon give up 2 to England to turn a 2-1 lead into a 3-2 loss. Nigeria give up a winning goal in a 2-1 loss to Italy after failing to close out a 1-0 win in normal time.

In both games the fouls were clumsy to say the least and they paid the price. We need to aggressive, we need to determined but above all we need to be SMART.

We already see what happen with Avery and we were lucky to escape the game with the draw. We can't afford to give these teams an easy adavantage.

So let's go WARRIORS, Vibe's it Up. Another performance like that and we will prove that Saturday was no fluke.

67
Football / Germany Has Already Given Us Moments To Remember
« on: June 14, 2006, 04:07:50 AM »
From The Guardian

Germany has already given us moments to remember

David Lacey
Wednesday June 14, 2006

Guardian

Already this World Cup looks a good'un. The football has a freshness that the 2002 tournament lacked, due in part to the fact that it has started nine days later thus giving players from the European leagues a bigger breathing space.
Aggression is the byword. From the moment in the opening game when Philipp Lahm's beautifully struck, acutely angled cross-shot bulged the Costa Rica net to put Germany ahead in the sixth minute, fortune has favoured the teams prepared to take risks from the outset. Those who have wanted to sit back, like Serbia & Montenegro in the first half against Holland and England in the second against Paraguay, have forfeited the initiative and struggled to retrieve it.

Should the football continue in this vein Germany and the global millions watching events unfold on television are in for a treat. As it is, the memory banks are rapidly filling up with great moments: the inspired shooting of Germany's Torsten Frings and Tomas Rosicky of the Czech Republic and, from next season, Arsenal; the glee with which Holland's Arjen Robben, free of Premiership defenders doubling up to mark his left foot, ran rings around the Serbian defence; the lesson in higher football science given to the Ivory Coast by Juan Román Riquelme of Argentina; and Italy's stunning exhibition of counter-attacking play against Ghana.

Peter Crouch should be re-running the moment when Jan Koller, his 6ft 7in Czech counterpart, met a superb centre from Zdenek Grygera with a header which hit the back of the United States net - talk about attacking the ball, this was more like grievous bodily harm. Crouch sometimes gives the impression that the ball is attacking him.

The group stage of a World Cup is partly about sizing up the more likely contenders but is equally to do with seeing how far the less fancied nations have caught up. The presence of South Korea, Senegal, Turkey and the Americans in the 2002 quarter-finals, with the Koreans and the Turks reaching the last four, did suggest that the gap was approaching closure but in Europe the perspectives are more realistic.

That said, the Ivory Coast stood toe-to-toe with Argentina in a manner and with a quality which must have sent at least a frisson of apprehension through the ranks of Holland and Serbia & Montenegro. Angola stoutly denied Portugal the cakewalk which Pedro Pauleta's early goal had implied and Ghana were starting to prey on Italian nerves until the Africans were undone by naive defending.

The happiest moment so far has surely been provided by Trinidad & Tobago, whose scoreless draw with Sweden alleviated any English gloom following the poverty of the second-half performance against Paraguay. Yes T&T's achievement was a surprise, not least because they had to play half the match with 10 men following Avery John's dismissal, yet on a Richter scale of World Cup shocks it barely came halfway. A team drawn mainly from the British leagues should be expected to defend solidly in these circumstances against a somewhat pedestrian, predictable Swedish side. T&T, moreover, defended not merely in numbers but with admirable discipline and composure while West Ham's Shaka Hislop has provided the best display of goalkeeping so far.

Trinidad & Tobago's presence in this World Cup prompts memories of 1989 when they played the United States in Port of Spain in the last qualifier for Italia '90. The winners would go through and the stadium had filled up soon after dawn's early light. The Americans won by a soft goal and the home crowd just sat in the stands and cried. Now T&T will seek to reduce England to tears.


On the whole Premiership players have begun well, especially the Chelsea set of Didier Drogba, Michael Essien, Hernán Crespo, Joe Cole and Robben. Everton, in the shape of Tim Cahill, inspired Australia's late comeback against Japan and confirmed Guus Hiddink's side as a serious presence. What a contrast to 1974. Before they met West Germany in Hamburg their Yugoslav coach, Rale Rasic, informed his players that if they won he would treat them to a night on the Reeperbahn. Birds, booze and the rest, it would all be down to him. Up piped a voice from the back: "Say boss, if we draw can half of us go?" The Germans won 3-0.

Since England will avoid Hamburg Sven-Goran Eriksson will not, in his new sod-em-all mood, be tempted to make a similar promise. Probably just as well. His players might find it too hot.

68
Football / World Cup Timetable Wizard
« on: April 19, 2006, 06:39:10 PM »
For the WC nerds who a little lazy. Here is a WORLD CUP TIMETABLE in excel format that I found on the web.

Just enter the scores and sit back. I assume that the tiebreakers are correct and it should be useful in calculating possible group qualification scenarios after the first two rounds.

69
Football / Ruud On The Chopping Block?
« on: March 15, 2006, 06:56:36 AM »
This is a very interesting article from soccernet...

Ruud not to play him?

Norman Hubbard
Archive

As befits a proud son of Govan, Sir Alex Ferguson has a tendency to wield the axe with all the subtlety of a Glaswegian kiss.

Ferguson: Still unafraid of handing out harsh treatment to established stars.Remember David Beckham? Ruud van Nistelrooy certainly does, and has had time to ponder the treatment meted out to his former team-mate while taking a watching brief in Manchester United's last three games.

Even Beckham, Roy Keane and Jaap Stam, others ruthlessly discarded by Ferguson, were not dropped for cup finals (Bryan Robson and Steve Bruce were but, in the twilight of distinguished careers, sentimentality would have been a major reason in the selection of either).

Ferguson himself was similarly treated in his playing days and said as much when preferring Louis Saha to his top scorer at the Millennium Stadium.

But as is often the case, the Scot's argument hardly stands up to scrutiny. He stormed out, whereas van Nistelrooy duly took his place on the bench and collected his medal, though remained a study in distancing oneself from the proceedings.

Ferguson had footballing grounds for fielding Saha; his inclusion also acted as reassurance to the Frenchman about his future.

So often the bridesmaid for the biggest games, Saha had finally displaced one of the untouchables in the United attack.

Moreover, as the leading scorer in the Carling Cup, his selection was an act of loyalty from Ferguson. It was vindicated when Saha scored in the 4-0 win over Wigan.

And, quicker and more mobile than van Nistelrooy, he is also genuinely two-footed and possesses a wonderful natural spring.

With seven goals in his last nine starts, he is arguably the form forward at Old Trafford.

He certainly looks a more credible choice as a United player than at any stage since the weeks that followed his transfer from Fulham. And Wayne Rooney, with four goals in his last three games, appears the beneficiary of partnering Saha.

So a simple footballing decision? Hardly. There was a vindictive element in Ferguson's decision to ignore his top scorer and introduce Kieran Richardson, Nemanja Vidic and Patrice Evra as substitutes at Cardiff.

His subsequent omission can be presented as a consequence of the football truism about changing a winning team, but there is an unlikely air of permanence about Van Nistelrooy's station on the bench.

Three successive matches outside the starting 11 is hardly the definition of squad rotation.

Louis Saha: Pacier, less deadly but preferred by Fergie and perhaps by Wayne Rooney..Immediate grounds for demotion, it appears, occurred at Anfield. Cameras picked up Ferguson's displeasure at van Nistelrooy's refusal to chase a lost cause in the FA Cup loss at Liverpool.

But the prime cause of defeat, which was again apparent in the fortunate Premiership victory over Wigan, was United's powder-puff midfield.

Van Nistelrooy emerged from the dugout in a damage limitation exercise at the JJB Stadium.

Further evidence of what United were lacking was, inadvertently, supplied by his team-mates on Sunday. Newcastle were beaten 2-0, a thrashing in all but the scoreline. Saha was chief among the culprits in a display of profligacy.

And, unlike the French forward, van Nistelrooy may be a one-dimensional player, but his gift is the most prized in football.

Indeed, the best out-and-out goalscorer in the Premiership is exactly the sort of player Liverpool and Chelsea, whose European exits were in part a consequence of missed chances, require.

The timing of the ruptured relations at Old Trafford is intriguing; will envious glances be followed by concrete declarations of interest in the sidelined scorer?

Because van Nistelrooy's record is exceptional. He has 148 goals in 210 games since leaving PSV Eindhoven five years ago. For much of that time, he has operated without a strike partner.

He is single-minded enough to prosper as a lone striker; indeed, selfishness is a trait of many great strikers.

Van Nistelrooy, it has long been hinted, would not top any popularity contests at Old Trafford, but his appreciation for Rooney's chipped opener against Newcastle was generous and hardly the actions of a sulking predator.

His current status is a reminder of the capriciousness of football.

It is a matter of months since he figured on the shortlist to replace Roy Keane as captain and only a year since a semi-fit van Nistelrooy was rushed back to face Milan, United's fortunes seemingly dependent upon his return. Nostalgia is evident, too, in most interviews he has given, but he harks back to his first two seasons at Old Trafford.

Gorging himself on Beckham's crossing, he struck 80 times in two years. The Dutchman has never been that prolific since and even the England captain's best man, Gary Neville, makes reference to his departure less than van Nistelrooy; indeed, only the Old Trafford marketing department misses him as much.

With the more erratic Cristiano Ronaldo - not to mention whoever Ferguson perms from Darren Fletcher, Ji-Sung Park and Kieran Richardson - on the flanks, van Nistelrooy's supply line has deteriorated.

His admiration is unconfined, too, for another in exile. Roy Keane's comments have been endorsed by van Nistelrooy, in itself a veiled criticism of his team-mates. It continues the Dutch tradition of independent thought; Ferguson, however, rarely brooks dissent.


Will Van Nistelrooy be following Keane and Beckham to the order of the Fergie boot?Compared to Keane, however, van Nistelrooy hardly represents a challenge to his autocracy. Unlike the ageing Irishman, his is a strong case for selection.

It is telling that Saha, despite his Carling Cup goals, has only struck three times in the Premiership; odds on a recall for United's top scorer against West Brom should be shortening.

His continued omission, however, is evidence that age has not withered Ferguson's fondness for a battle. To the bemusement of everyone else, he has picked a fight with van Nistelrooy.

The precedents, as Beckham, Stam and Paul Ince can testify, involve a high-profile sale, and not a change of management. This relationship may not be irretrievable, but the trial separation has revealed cracks.

And given the premium football rightly attaches to goalscorers - not to mention the wealthy clubs targeting a striker of van Nistelrooy's calibre -Ferguson may need his benched forward more than the Dutchman needs Manchester United now. 

70
Football / Andre Baptiste Interview with Mr. Warner
« on: January 08, 2006, 03:37:33 PM »
This Interview was posted before it was from before the Guatemala game but it has some interesting questions.

Warner talks about the government, Lincoln, Camps, TTFF elections, lack of public confidence in the TTFF, the PFL and his reduced role in football after this campaign.

What comes through loud and clear for me is the feeling that HE is a success and everybody who has issues with him or the TTFF are just jealous or envious.

It is a real bad attitude, one that smacks of hubris and an inflated ego and doesn't lend itself to any criticism constructive or otherwise.

It is almost as if he can do no wrong because of his success with FIFA (12 trips to Nigeria in 1 year, visits to 150 odd countries etc, etc) and his belief that nobody else in TNT cares about football like he does.

71
Football / Ticket info easy to get...
« on: January 03, 2006, 06:35:30 PM »
.....If you are from the US or England.

All I had to do was go to their respective websites and on the front page of each the ticketing procedure was displayed and easily accessible. Obviously these countries value their fans, or maybe they are organized.

Also they seem to have actual information about when/whether they will receive tickets from FIFA.

All this without having a FIFA VP to be proud of.

From the USSF
Tickets on Sale Dec 12

From the FA
25,000 member Fan Club with senior fans getting Tickets


The TTFF

If you could find any ticket information here, please let me know. When I search "tickets" in their search box all I get is this page. I could even find stuff on the French Site and I cannot speak French.

Now I am not one to throw out accusations about this and that because I am not ina position to prove things but...

If we have a FIFA VP how come England and the US have ticket info and we don't.

Wouldn't you expect people to doubt the honesty or the competence of the people in charge if that is the case?

It is either incompetence, dishonesty or both but you can't convince me that this is a political/media plot.

The PNM must be real good to get other football federations to make the TTFF and Mr. Warner look stupid.

72
Football / England star Owen breaks his foot
« on: December 31, 2005, 09:41:59 AM »
England star Owen breaks his foot
BBC Sport


Newcastle and England striker Michael Owen has broken a bone in his foot and will be sidelined for several months.

The 26-year-old fractured his fifth metatarsal during the Magpies' 2-0 defeat at Tottenham on New Year's Eve.

He is not expected to be a doubt for the World Cup finals in Germany this summer but his absence from Premiership action is a major blow to Newcastle.

In a further piece of bad news for the club, keeper Shay Given has suffered a suspected broken thumb.

St James' Park boss Graeme Souness bought Owen for £17m at the start of this season from Real Madrid.

He has been an instant hit alongside captain Alan Shearer up front, so this injury is a setback for Souness.

The fifth metatarsal is the bone in the foot that connects to the little toe - and the same one broken by England colleagues Gary Neville, in April 2002, Steven Gerrard, in September 2004, and Wayne Rooney in Euro 2004.

David Beckham broke his second metatarsal just before the 2002 World Cup, and was still struggling for fitness during the tournament.

Republic of Ireland international Given has been one of Newcastle's most consistent performers this season.

It is unclear at this stage what injury the keeper has suffered.

Poor guy, really sorry to hear that.

73
Football / Fabio Capello Thread
« on: December 28, 2005, 11:00:40 AM »
Capello Dreams of Managing Manchester United

Sorry to interrupt the Jack/TTFF/Camps bashing but this is big news for the United fans.

Personally I real rate Capello. As a younger replacement for Fergie he could build a side to dominate for the next ten years.

From Soccernet Capello dreams of managing Manchester Mnited

Let the Jack/TTFF/Camps (cannot forget Camps) attacks continue with full force.

74
Football / What's on TV during the festive season
« on: December 20, 2005, 04:44:12 PM »
Fellas there's a lot of football on this weekend and going into the New Year. Post here to let us know what yuh watching so that we don't miss any of the good games on TV.

FSC is showing some United and Milan Classics that I will not be missing.

Sat. at 6.00 pm
Milan vs Barcelona Champs League Final 1994 (If you don't know the score this will be a treat to watch, this is atreat to watch under any circumstances)

Monday at 2.00 am
United vs Liverpool FA Cup 1977  ;D

Monday at 10.00 am
Liverpool vs Newcastle (This one should be good)






75
Football / So what is the story with Arsenal?
« on: December 18, 2005, 11:56:52 AM »
Certain men always talking about United "they shitty, Fergie is an ass, Van Nistelrooy is a goat, Rio and company are jokers".

On the other hand "Wenger is a genius, Henry?...c'est magnifique, Fabregas does shit gold and Van Persie is pure class, Lauren is a better RB than Neville"

So why is United second in the league and Arsenal in midtable? As they say when you live in glass house......

Discuss.

76
2006 World Cup - Germany / Cell phone plans and Internert cafes in Germany
« on: December 04, 2005, 05:41:00 PM »
Fellas as many of us are going to Germany in separate groups communication with each other and with the board will be crucial.

Some will be in hotels, some hostels, some with friends plus we will be in more than one city.

Can any of our german members tell us the cost of pre-paid cell phones in Germany?

Do they sell those "buy and go" disposable phones?

How much do they cost?

When the draw is made can we get good scouting on internet cafe locations in the key cities?

It would be a shame if we make the trip and don't link up.

77
Football / Bring Yorke to the PFL
« on: November 22, 2005, 05:57:21 PM »
I think it would be great if we could get Yorke to a PFL club after the WC.

It would do wonders for the league profile and attendances will shoot right up. The TV rights would be worth something too with all the people in 'Bago who will want to see him every week. That is basically what he is doing in Oz and he could more than do that for the PFL too. TnT get bitten by the football bug and now is the time for the PFL to capitalize.

The club in question could work out individual sponsorship deals to pay him and Dwight could make a good change himself with corporate sponsors. It would really inspire yongsters who have just discovered him and never seen him play and we could get a good 3-4 years out of him.

Latas would be another option but it seems that he have real deep roots in the Scottish footballing scene.

But wouldn't it be nice to see Yorke finish his career back home.

78
Football / A Significant Moment in Our Football Development
« on: November 18, 2005, 04:12:47 PM »
Yes we make the Cup which is great, but the way we make it is very telling.

Ignoring the wins against Guatemala and Panama.

The do or die games against Mexico and Bahrain proved that we have grown as a football team.

Both teams sat back and placed the onus on us to break them down.

In the past we would have self-destructed, bad-pass, poor marking, ball-watching, man getting sent off we would have found a way to lose even against easy opposition.

Against a very good side and an average team who wanted success as much as we did, we faced, them gave our best and came out victorious.

That kind of development will serve us in very good stead as we move on to tougher challenges.

79
Football / We make Sportscencer
« on: November 17, 2005, 06:57:31 AM »
Top Ten Plays no 9 - AND TNT DOES IT

They show Lawrence Goal - I didn't see the celebrations mayself, two notes:

1. Lawrence needs to work on his goal celebration

2. Where Sancho come from? I see he run on the field like he want to mash up some men at the end of the game.

Loverly

80
Football / For all the FERGIE haters
« on: November 17, 2005, 06:22:05 AM »
For all the men who hate Fergie for what he "do" to Yorke, despite the fact that Yorke is cool with the Fergie and respects him.

I hope yuh notice that Ferhie called him yesterday and had a chat with him. He mentioned the 1999 tie with juve when ynited came back from a 1-1 home draw to win 3-2 (after being 2-0 in the second leg).

He remind Yorke of his championship days and of what a team can achieve if its will is strong enough.

He also wished the national team the best.

I don't expect yuh to love the man but at least keep your attacks accurate and to the point. The man never bear Yorke any undue malice or bad feelings.

81
Football / Get Well Soon Birchie
« on: November 16, 2005, 05:00:20 PM »
You made perhaps the greatest leap of faith to come and be one of us.

You had a great position at your club and you came to play qualifiers, gold cup, friendlies.

Thats is very impressive.

That sad thing is that you get injured and now that will make your club situation worse because this is waht they feared would happen.

Just know that we praying for you just as we was praying for this win.

Fate is funny and the work you put in with us will be rewarded greatly in the future.

God don't sleep brother.

82
Football / Bristling Birchall desperate to book Trini's ticket to Germany
« on: November 14, 2005, 07:34:38 PM »
Bristling Birchall desperate to book Trini's ticket to Germany


From the Guardian


Port Vale midfielder with aggressive style and a lethal shot is one game in Bahrain away from World Cup finals

Stuart James
Tuesday November 15, 2005

Guardian

Mention Chris Birchall's name outside of Staffordshire and it is unlikely to register with even the most rabid of fans, though 4,000 miles away on the Caribbean islands of Trinidad & Tobago the Port Vale midfielder is fast becoming a cult figure. Having marked his 13th cap with a superb goal to salvage a 1-1 draw against Bahrain in the first-leg World Cup play-off at Port-of-Spain, Birchall is hoping to further enhance his status among followers of the Soca Warriors in Manama tomorrow.
Victory or a high-scoring draw would secure a place in the World Cup finals for the first time in their history, a feat that would complete a whirlwind six months for Birchall whose head must be spinning at his extraordinary journey from League One to the brink of Germany 2006.

That rise is made all the more remarkable by Birchall's background. The 21-year-old, born in Stafford, is the first white player to represent Trinidad & Tobago in 60 years, and the only one to have scored for the nation.

Not that he has had time to dwell on the record books or headlines such as Bend it Like Birchall. Indeed, before Saturday's match he was still rehearsing the national anthem for a place that he had not visited until he donned the national jersey for the first time in May.

"It's gone remarkably quickly and it's just a big blur really," said Birchall. "I didn't expect the call-up but got one, didn't expect to get into the team but got there. I haven't had the time to sit down and think how well I and the team have done in the last six months."

Evidence of their progress will be clear if they beat Bahrain in a match Birchall describes as the "the biggest of my life". "If we play to our full potential we know we can beat Bahrain," he added. Dwight Yorke, the captain, has left the players in no doubt about the importance of the tie. "Dwight's had us in meetings where he's sat us all down to tell us just how much qualification means," said Birchall. "It's a great incentive to know that we could be the first team to qualify from Trinidad."

Birchall's call-up arrived in bizarre circumstances when Dennis Lawrence, Wrexham's 6ft 7in central defender, bounded over before a match last season and said "I hear you've got some Trini blood in you." Lawrence, referring to Birchall's mother who was born in Port-of-Spain and lived there for 18 years, was acting on the instructions of Jack Warner.

The Fifa vice-president and special adviser to the Trinidad & Tobago Football Federation had noted Birchall's parentage, and once Lawrence confirmed that the midfielder was interested Warner wasted little time in arranging a trial.

If the surroundings were initially alien, Birchall found reassurance in the sight of Stern John, Shaka Hislop, Clayton Ince, Carlos Edwards, Russell Lapaty, Kelvin Jack and Lawrence, who all play in Britain, while Yorke, now with Sydney FC, needed no introduction.

The same could not be said of Birchall, though, who arrived unsure of how he would be received. "I'll admit I was very nervous before I went over there to see how the people would take to me," he said. "I wondered if the players would think, 'Who's this white lad trying to get in the team?' But because there are so many English-based players it made it a lot easier. As for the locals, they have always been great to me since I got there. Everyone tells me they enjoy my aggressive style of play and luckily for me I've scored two worldly's."

In football parlance that equates to two spectacular goals, one against Honduras in July and then Saturday's. "After we beat Guatemala we were out at a private party and someone tapped me on the shoulder," Birchall recalled yesterday.

"I turned round and it was Brian Lara. I was gobsmacked. He put his arm around me, said 'You played well' and gave me a hug." The nation will want to do the same if he produces another worldly tomorrow.

Caribbean cruise

April 26 2005 Wrexham defender and Trinidad & Tobago international Dennis Lawrence asks Birchall if he would be interested in playing for the Soca Warriors

May 18 2005 Pulls on a Trinidad & Tobago shirt for the first time against the Peruvian club side Alianza Lima and wins man-of-the-match award

June 4 2005 Plays his first World Cup match for Trinidad & Tobago, starring in a 2-0 win over Panama

July 7 2005 Scores his first goal for Trinidad & Tobago in a Concacaf Gold Cup tie against Honduras

Nov 12 2005 A spectacular second-half shot salvages a draw against Bahrain in their World Cup finals play-off first leg in Port-of-Spain

83
Football / A 1:1 home draw is not as bad as you think. CHECK THIS.
« on: November 13, 2005, 06:22:34 PM »
Bahrain only scored ONE GOAL.

Any time we score in the second game whether it is minute 1 or minute 89 we in a good position because we match their away goals tally and we still have minutes to get more. They play their 90 and only get one. Who can say how much we will get?

Back in 1999 United drew 1:1 at home with Juventus (Davids, Zidane, Inzaghi, Del Piero, the full squad). Circumstances was similar. United was trailing whole game and Giigs come up with a 90th minute laser out of the blue.\

When United went to Italy they give up a goal in the 2nd minute in true Trini style.

But check this....

That goal really didn't change anything because United still needed to score ONE GOAL to get back in the tie, which was the original goal.

They then give up a second goal after 10 minutes, but check this...

that goal was even less significant because if they wanted to win the tie they still need to score the same two goals.

Once they could stop letting in goals they would be good. As soon as they scored the first goal after 30 minutes Juventus was in trouble because ONE GOAL was all United needed.

When they scored the second (Yorke I believe) United was in charge because the more they score the more Juventus in trouble. Even if Juve scored again ONE MORE GOAL would have been enough for United. By the time United scored the third the game was well and truly over.

The lesson here is....

If we give up a goal WE CANNOT PANIC because it doesn't change much as long as we continue to play good ball and dedicate to scoring.

This Bahrain side does not have many goals in them. If they score more than one goal against us and we can't match them then we need serious help.

It is really important that the players and fans DO NOT PANIC even if we 2-0 down with 5 minutes to go we are still in the tie, still just minutes away from the WC.

We just need to take it ONE GOAL at a time.

84
Football / Two Strikers on Wednesday ?
« on: November 13, 2005, 01:54:26 PM »
Also state the one player who would get dropped if you choose a forward who didn't start yesterday

85
Football / Blood in Boots (BOB) Time - THE WARRIORS WILL NOT BE DENIED
« on: November 13, 2005, 07:40:48 AM »
Fellas nothing much has changed. The equation is the same - Beat bahrain= WC Germany. There was no realistic result yesterday that would have made us comfortable today. It was always going to be close and the only problem with 1-1 is that Bahrain will waste time from minute one. Also they will take yellow cards and face a possible WC suspension, so I expect plenty gamesmanship and nasty play. On the other hand we haven't lost anyone and if we have to start the first game of a WC without 8 of our guys it is worth it because at least we make the WC. This is real "blood in boots" time

We can beat this side - Literally. We haven't had a side eat shake so in a long time and that gave us confidence but we didn't capitalize. Often we just dribbled into trouble, not into space, and not to play the ball off constructively. We need to get the mix right in the second leg. We would beat into th ebox and then try a poor cross. If we get into the box and is only Stern or Latas, this is the time to take on the last man to make space for a easy pass, win a penalty or win a corner.

Which brings me to Carlos - You are crossing with your head down. You can't do that when you have one man in the box. Pick your head up. Yuh beat one man back and forth four times if you get to the byline take your time and get a good cross in.

Stern - From the time a cross reaches its high point you should know where it is goindg to drop. You cannot wait behind the defender, hoping for him to miss it. You have to challenge for it. You are the only man in the box it is not going to just fall to you every time. Force them to make a mistake. Make something happen.

The opposite is for the defence - Man does miss headers. You cannot stand behind your defender with two Bahrain men expecting him to get the ball. You have to challenge too. We had eleven heroes against Mexico and we need eleven against bahrain. Do not shirk responsibility. We come too far for that. Also if you are marking zone and there is one man playing between the zones and looking for their outlet passes, stay with the man. Don't expect him to go into a next man zone, talk to each other and pick him up, that way the pass doesn't come or isn't effective.

Latapy - Bahrain obviously watched our games before Latapy joined the team. They realize that if he doesn't get a chance to play we don't do our best work. Everytime he got the ball the closest man rushed to close him down and then other men's markers would come and double team and triple team him. Latas needs to recognize this and play it off faster, Whitley Yorke, Birchall and Stern need to fill the open spaces. Latas should not even have to look for them, just play it into vacated space.

Yorke - Yorke plays midfield for us. If we need a second striker, he is not the man. He is just not mobile enough. We better off playing John or Glenn upfront with Stern.

Whitley - Keep doing what you are doing, best player on the night. You prove again why you are the only local based in the side and yuh show that you are coming into your own. With you the future is bright.

And for the team - I know you guys are committed and everybody wants to go to the WC. Yes it is the pinnacle of your career and the TTFF will make plenty money. The people will be happy and there will be plenty fete.

BUT WE HAVE EVEN MORE TO PLAY FOR THAN THAT.

you guys showed supreme discipline, application and teamwork in our last two wins. That is so rare for us as a collection of people. If we do that again Bahrain cannot stop us. If we do that again we will be living examples of DISCIPLINE, PRODUCTION AND TOLERANCE - TOGETHER WE ASPIRE AND TOGETHER WE ACHIEVE.

It could be an example for all Trinis of what we can do when we face adversity, make sacrifices, work hard and never give up.

86
FAQ & Crew Meet Up. / New York based Trinis - Let's Link Up for the Games
« on: November 04, 2005, 10:23:59 AM »
Fellas in the interest of getting together to see the games with a good lime and atmosphere let's try and coordinate.

If you are in the NY/NJ/CT and are interested in linking up send me a PM or just state your location in this thread and whether you plan to attend, host, supply food or grog.

It is no scene if you just plan to show up to watch. If there is plenty interest we could find a bar to meet up.

My Location: Norwalk CT

I would gladly host but I know men in the City might not be up for that drive for a 24" viewing experience. If the New Rochelle men want to get together up here though that would be cool.

Walking with drinks and could bring food.


87
Football / Which one was Sweeter: Guatemala or Mexico
« on: October 14, 2005, 08:08:46 AM »
I know that both were great wins for us but choose one.

For me, although the Mexico win was the culmination all the hard work and "nearly, almost" of the Hex. The Guatemala win was more dramatic and without it there would have been no Mexico.

In just five minutes we hold guatemala and pull them straight out of the WC. it was head to head against a team that wanted it just as much as us and we crush them.

But that is just me interested to know what you guys think.

88
Football / To All Forumites, NEW and OLD
« on: October 13, 2005, 01:39:05 PM »
Allyuh ever check out the stats page?

October is a bumper month for the forum.

We have 62 new members already in October with less than half the month gone. The only months with more was March (when everybody transfer from the old site) and September (because of the Guatemala win)

Today alone 19 new people register, bettered only by the first few days of the forum.

We have the longest thread and the most people online, all in October.

Imagine what will happen when the team completes the job?

Much thanks and ultimate respect to Flexos and Tallest. Thanks also for the Warriors for giving us something to invest our hopes, desires, love and energy. Whether we make this WC or not we have no worries because we know that the desire and effort was real.

This is more than a message board. On this board I meet some genuine nice people, too many to call by name but yuh know yourselves.

I find men who I know since primary school who scattered all over the place through this site. Men I haven't seen or heard from in over a decade. This is a powerful place.

The positivity and unity of purpose before that game yesterday was impressive and what is better is that I know it will only get stronger as the games get bigger.

I want to say thanks and welcome to everybody, whether you does talk shit or sense yuh make this place special. To the lurkers, come eeen and register. Forget about any biterness or reservation that yuh might feel toward TnT football. The only thing yuh have to lose is yuh tabanca.

And after WC is said and done do not disappear. Just as we need to keep the football program going to be successful we need to remain interested. This community should not only something that pops up every two years. Let's keep the good vibes going.

The WARRIORS will not disappoint.


89
Football / BIG SOCCER is a bitter, bitter place
« on: October 13, 2005, 08:55:58 AM »
They refuse to give TnT any credit on that site and them Guaties steaming and whining lika a pack of asses.

I say leave them there. Let them continue to think that Mexico did us favours and we not good. Of course none of them mentions the fact they gave up 2 goals with five minutes to go.

My personal favourites:

"Well Iam really sad and pissed off, I would advise the ref from the tnt game not to ever visit Guatemala, and thats some free advice. I learned that if we want to go the world cup we should make one of our own corrupt administrators run for the Concacaf Presidency."

"Mexico played like total $hit, were they doing it on purpose?
Its as if they wern't trying..it was kinda funny"


"My hatred for the Mexicans just went up 10000%"

90
Football / Zamora
« on: October 12, 2005, 08:31:03 PM »
Alright fellas this debate will start soon. Sound off early.

Yes or no if Zamora comes begging.

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