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Topics - Filho

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61
Football / Guus Hiddink...fall from grace?
« on: February 06, 2007, 12:28:23 PM »
http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=407152&cc=5901

Hiddink could face jail over tax fraud charges

AMSTERDAM, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Dutch prosecutors called on Tuesday for a 10-month jail sentence for Russia's national soccer coach Guus Hiddink on tax fraud charges, a Dutch court said in a statement.

 
Prosecutors say Dutchman Hiddink evaded almost €1.4 million in Dutch taxes while falsely claiming he was a resident of Belgium in 2002 and 2003.


From 2000 to 2002 Hiddink was employed as the national coach of the South Korean national team, guiding the co-hosts to the semi-finals of the 2002 World Cup tournament.

A prosecutor said Hiddink, who is on trial alongside his tax advisor for whom prosecutors are seeking a 13-month sentence, had instead stayed at his girlfriend's home in Amsterdam. He called calling Hiddink's Belgium residence a 'joke'.

He went on to describe Hiddink as a stubborn man who had ignored the advice of his accountant to at least spend the occasional night in Belgium, according to the Dutch news agency ANP.

'Hiddink has fallen from a high pedestal,' he added.

Hiddink admitted that he had not spent a single night at his Belgian residence at the trial's opening in late January, describing himself as a sort of soccer 'nomad', according to the Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad.

'I never felt comfortable there and no desire to lie there staring at the ceiling,' Hiddink said.

He said he had instead slept all over the place - in hotels, at his girlfriend's home, at the training ground of PSV Eindhoven, whom he was also coaching at the time, and sometimes even behind the wheel of his car.

The Russia coach said his income from coaching South Korea had already been taxed in Asia and he has acknowledged he chose Belgium as his official residence for taxation purposes.

In Moscow, Russian Football Union president Vitaly Mutko said he was not too concerned about the case.

'I don't think it'll get to a jail sentence,' Mutko, the man responsible of luring Hiddink to Moscow, said.

'We live in a civilised world, not in medieval times. Holland is a European country, so I don't think they will go to the extreme.

'Besides, this is just a prosecutor's demand. Let's wait and see what the judges will actually make of it.'

Hiddink is currently in the Netherlands where his Russia team face the Dutch in an international friendly in Amsterdam on Wednesday.

Prosecutors began legal proceedings against Hiddink last July. A verdict is due on February 27.

62
Football / Van Nistelrooy is a cry baby.....
« on: January 23, 2007, 11:23:25 AM »
...or is Van Basten the villain here? The more I read, the more it sounds like Van Nistelrooy is acting like a primadonna and won't rejoin the national team because he is not guranteed a starting spot. Compare that to Seedorf who was treated with even more disdain by Van Basten but always remained classy and maintained his desire to represent his country. Isn't representing your country more important than a personal gripe..and should anyone be guaranteed a spot in the national team? Van Basten is eating crow with a few players and going back on some bad judgement...but I guess that is not enough for Van the Man...

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/soccer/01/23/bc.eu.spt.soc.netherlands.van.ap/index.html

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) -- Ruud van Nistelrooy reiterated that he will not play again for the Netherlands under coach Marco van Basten despite a recent meeting aimed at easing their conflict.

"(It is) disappointing because I always enjoyed playing for the Netherlands and I would have liked to continue," Van Nistelrooy said Tuesday in a statement.

The 30-year-old Real Madrid striker has scored 28 goals in 54 matches for the Netherlands, making him one of the country's most prolific strikers.

But Van Basten publicly criticized Van Nistelrooy's form and then dropped him at last year's World Cup in Germany.

In an effort to clear the air, Van Basten and assistant John van 't Schip traveled to Madrid last week to talk to Van Nistelrooy.

"We had a good discussion Friday in Madrid about the cooperation over the last year," Van Basten said. "We ironed out a number of creases."

But Van Basten also told Van Nistelrooy that his position as the team's starting striker was no longer guaranteed.

"A number of other candidates have come forward in the last year," the coach said. "So he will have to be prepared to fight for a spot. We can't guarantee him a spot in the squad. That would not be fair to his rivals for the striker's position."

The Dutch soccer association said in a statement that Van Nistelrooy had called to say that he still feels there is insufficient trust in him.

In a statement released by his agent, Van Nistelrooy confirmed he would no longer play for Van Basten.

"I did not specifically ask for a place in the side, but I did want to have the feeling that I would be a candidate for that," Van Nistelrooy said. "I did not get that feeling. That is why I don't see the conditions to give a good performance. No one benefits from frustration. That's why this was a difficult but correct decision."

After being dropped last year, Van Nistelrooy accused Van Basten of selecting his personal favorites for the team and not necessarily the best players.

"If you do not please him on a personal level, you are not selected," Van Nistelrooy told Sportweek magazine last September.

The Netherlands leads its qualifying group for the 2008 European Championship with 10 points from four matches, but has been inconsistent and short of goals since the World Cup.

The Dutch next face Russia in a friendly on Feb. 7 in Amsterdam

63
Football / Is Chelsea getting desperate....
« on: January 23, 2007, 11:08:52 AM »
...or is this a good buy? I had no idea this kid turned down Real Madrid and was being chased by Lyon. At least the price talk sounds reasonable by Chelsea's standards.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/soccer/01/22/bc.soc.onyewu.chelsea.ap/index.html

LONDON (AP) -- Oguchi Onyewu could be heading to Chelsea.

The two-time defending Premier League champions are looking to sign the 24-year-old from Olney, Md., during the January transfer window. Onyewu, a member of last year's U.S. World Cup team, has been with Belgium's Standard Liege since the 2004-5 season, and British media reported Monday that the 6-foot-4 defender could cost Chelsea $3.95 million.

"There is truth in regard to Chelsea," said his agent, Will Sherling.

Chelsea, in second place and six points behind Manchester United, has struggled defensively in recent games. French champion Lyon also has been in discussions with Onyewu, who recently turned down an offer from Fulham.

"[Lyon] want to sign the player. They want to do the deal, but they want him to stay at Liege until the end of the summer," Sherling said.

Onyewu had been set to join fellow Americans Brian McBride, Carlos Bocanegra and Clint Dempsey at Fulham earlier this month in a $1.96 million transfer.

"We had a good offer from Fulham for him, and we agreed with Liege for a fee, but the player didn't agree to go," Sherling said.

Whether Onyewu joins Chelsea may depend on the amount of playing time he can expect. He turned down a move to Real Madrid earlier this season.

"When Madrid made a bid for him, it was not necessarily with him coming as a first-choice defender," Sherling said. "I don't know if that's the case with Chelsea. The best club for him is one that will develop his profile as a player. He doesn't need to get tangled up in which club is bigger than the next."

Onyewu also rejected a move to Middlesbrough in September. He scored one goal in 17 international appearances for the United States and played in all three U.S. World Cup games last year.




64
Football / Adriano back in Brazilian Squad
« on: January 23, 2007, 11:01:13 AM »
I guess 4 goals 4 games was enough....I like Adriano, but this is a surprise move. He still looks well below his best to me

Dunga names pretty much a full strength squad for friendly vs. Portugal

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/soccer/01/22/bc.eu.spt.soc.brazil.squad.ap/index.html

LONDON (AP) -- Ronaldinho, Kaka, Robinho and Adriano were named Monday in a near full-strength squad for Brazil's Feb. 6 friendly against Portugal.

Brazil coach Dunga named a squad of 22 players, all of them based in Europe, for the game at Emirates Stadium, where the team beat Argentina 3-0 and Wales 2-0 in September.

The game is Dunga's sixth since he took over from Carlos Alberto Parreira after the World Cup. He won the last four after a draw against Norway.

Dunga has yet to select Real Madrid striker Ronaldo, who has been struggling with form and fitness.

Roster

Goalkeepers: Helton (FC Porto), Julio Cesar (Inter Milan)

Defenders: Daniel Alves (Sevilla), Maicon (Inter Milan), Adriano (Sevilla), Gilberto (Hertha Berlin), Alex (PSV Eindhoven), Juan (Bayer Leverkusen), Lucio (Bayern Munich), Luisao (Benfica)

Midfielders: Gilberto Silva (Arsenal), Edmilson (FC Barcelona), Dudu Cearense (CSKA Moscow), Elano (Shakhtar Donetsk), Kaka (AC Milan), Tinga (Borussia Dortmund), Diego (Werder Bremen), Ronaldinho (FC Barcelona)

Forwards: Robinho (Real Madrid), Adriano (Inter Milan), Rafael Sobis (Real Betis), Fred (Lyon)


65
Football / Beenhaker and co. banned from Euro 2008?
« on: January 22, 2007, 11:34:24 AM »
Saw this on ESPNsoccernet

WARSAW, Jan 22 (Reuters) - Polish soccer officials fear the national side will be axed from Euro 2008 after FIFA and UEFA warned on Monday they would take action over a row with the government.

 
The trouble started on Friday when Polish Sports Minister Tomasz Lipiec suspended the board of the national football association and appointed Andrzej Rusko as a commissioner in its place following new arrests in a match-fixing investigation.


FIFA, who resent government involvement in soccer matters, issued a strongly-worded statement on Monday saying action would be taken for what it called Warsaw's 'interference'.

With FIFA having suspended countries over state involvement in the past, the gravity of the situation was not lost on Polish soccer officials whose team are just a point behind Group A leaders Finland in Euro 2008 qualifying.

National team spokesman Kazimierz Oleszek told Reuters: 'For now, this seems to be giving the government and Mr Rusko some time to consider what to do.

'As the national team, we are very concerned that FIFA may suspend us from competing. We are playing very well, we have every chance of qualifying for Euro 2008.

'We very much hope this will not end in the national team being ruled out of the competition.'

In their statement, soccer's world body FIFA and its European counterpart UEFA said they were 'surprised' by Lipiec's move and did not recognise Rusko's appointment.

'In the coming days and weeks, FIFA and UEFA will determine what action to take in response to the Polish government's interference, which contravenes article 17 of the FIFA Statutes,' they said.

Rusko's appointment had also been made 'in spite of several warnings from FIFA and UEFA', the statement said.

They added it 'not only violates the principle of autonomy that applies throughout the sports movement but also undermines the steps taken by Polish government authorities through working group activities in conjunction with FIFA and UEFA to find solutions that are beneficial to...Polish football.'

Sports Minister Lipiec told a news conference he will contact FIFA about the issue and senior FA officials said the world governing body's statement looked like a warning to back down or face the national team being suspended.

About 70 officials have been charged or detained in the match-fixing investigation.

'The next decision will very likely be the suspension of the football association as a member of FIFA,' said former Polish international Roman Kosecki, who has said he will run to head the FA in elections set for the end of March.

'We have very little time to repair the situation -- clubs and the national team need to be able to play.'

66
Football / Beckham - The truth about the deal
« on: January 17, 2007, 10:24:27 AM »
In the end...the reports are a bit misleading about the value of the contract. MLS itself is only on the hook for $2MM of a $50MM guaranteed over 5 years. For those who want to know what the real deal is with that contract. Oh..and don't going buying a gold and green Galaxy shirt with Becks name on it...the entire club is being re-branded...Beckham style

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/writers/grant_wahl/01/17/beckham.qa/index.html

1. Is Beckham's contract with the Galaxy really worth the reported $250 million?
No, and it's not even close. Leiweke refused to discuss the details of Beckham's deal, but league sources confirmed that Beckham's guaranteed salary will be around $50 million over the entire five-year length of the contract. That's hardly chump change, but it's still less than the salaries of a lot of U.S. sports stars.

Nor will Beckham's salary bankrupt MLS. Per the league's new designated-player rule, MLS's owners (who otherwise share the costs for all player salaries) only have to contribute $400,000 a year for each of the league's 13 designated-player exceptions. (Right now Beckham is the only one.) The rest of Beckham's salary comes from Galaxy owner Phil Anschutz. The result: Anschutz is on the hook for around $48 million guaranteed with Beckham, while MLS owners only have to pay $2 million.

Don't worry about Uncle Phil's ability to pay: He has a net worth of $7.8 billion, according to Forbes.

There is more to Beckham's deal than the guaranteed salary, however. Beckham will also earn 40-to-50 percent of Galaxy jersey sales and an undisclosed share of ticket revenues. And that's not all. "There are certain aspects of the deal that are ultimately about the upside value of the league as a whole that David can participate in," says Leiweke. "Our partners all had to sign off, and they did. We had a couple of interesting board calls, but they did."

Long story short: Beckham may or may not earn $250 million over the next five years, but the majority of his income will continue to derive from endorsements and not from the Galaxy or MLS. From my perspective, it's a shame that the phrase "$250 million contract" became gospel in the media, because it's terribly misleading and just not correct.

In any case, Leiweke feels confident about the agreement. "This is an economic deal that makes sense for everybody," he says, and as long as Beckham doesn't suffer a serious injury or become a total bust on the field, I'm inclined to believe he'll be worth the investment.


67
Football / Ronaldo on a roll
« on: December 06, 2006, 04:19:48 PM »
Sorry

I just had to mention that Fatinho score a double today and had a goal on the weekend. Is the fat man back?

68
Football / Barca vs Werder Bremen
« on: December 05, 2006, 03:43:37 PM »
Well Barca did their job and ended up winning 2-0. Bremen is a very good side and chased the game, enjoying the better posession and attacked with more intent while Barca looked to defend the lead and hit on the counter. Barca's experience won the day and they made a couple of chances that should have put the game away (think Guily's miss in the 1st half after Gudjohnson's great run and shot off the post). Winning like that at home, under intense pressure was impressive....Werder deserve better, but they ended up in the wrong group. They should be favorites to go all the way in the UEFA cup.

One thing is for sure though...DIEGO IS A BALLER. Dat youth has come back real strong. He will be at a very big club at the end of this season....He real  play today and has been one of the ebst palyers in the Bundelsiga so far.  Anyhow...Barca moves on. All the haters could go and brush dey teeth now  ;D ;D

BARCELONA ALL DE WAY

69
Football / Wright-Phillips to West Ham?
« on: November 24, 2006, 02:02:11 PM »
Chelsea chief executive Peter Kenyon has confirmed the club would be willing to consider an offer from West Ham for unsettled winger Shaun Wright-Phillips.

 
Kenyon revealed that the Hammers had already made an approach for the England international but that the figure was well below Chelsea's valuation.


West Ham are thought to be prepared to pay around £10million - a fee that would shatter the record fee of £7.25million they paid to land Dean Ashton from Norwich in January.

The Hammers will have money to spend in the January transfer market following the takeover of the club by Icelanders Eggert Magnusson and Bjorgolfur Gudmundsson but Chelsea want to recoup a fair proportion of the £21million they paid Manchester City for the winger in July 2005.

Kenyon said: 'There has been interest from West Ham and they have officially approached us.

'We're not in the position of having an offer but we've certainly had interest expressed from them.

'Our position is that we're not looking to sell our players but it we get an offer we'll have to look at it on a serious basis.'

Source: ESPN Soccernet

70
Football / Barca vs Villareal
« on: November 24, 2006, 12:29:19 PM »
One of Jai's favorite clashes in La Liga. I am surprised I haven't heard anything from the board's most famous lover of all things Argentine (read Riquelme) and all things Villareal (read Riquelme). Should be a good game as always. Forlan tends to wake up for these games and Riquelme can expect the usual unwanted attention from Edmilson and/or Motta. I never like to make predictions, but with Sevilla (vs. Atl Bilbao), Real Madrid (vs. Valencia) and Zaragoza (vs. Celta Vigo) all playing on the road...this is a good chance for Barca to try to open up some points at the top. Sevilla is the one with the best chances of winning on the road, but Madrid and Zaragoza face tough opponents. Pus Barca and Villareal play Saturday...so the others will know what they have to do when they take to the pitch on Sunday...Another great weekend for fans of La Liga

71
Football / Is Iniesta turning into Barca's best midfielder?
« on: October 16, 2006, 06:09:42 AM »
Beware the quiet men
Phil Ball
ESPNsoccernet.com

What makes football eternally fascinating is not so much its unpredictability (a virtue much exaggerated) but rather its ability to produce a new star every year, or at least a potential one. And of course, although potentially great footballers are all, to some extent, clones of previous great footballers - witness the way in which journalists will always talk about a rising star in terms of one whose light has dimmed ('the new Maradona') they are all nevertheless unique. They move differently, they think differently. Football imposes finite limits - eleven versus eleven for ninety minutes - but no game has ever been the same. The human condition plugs nicely into football, blessing it with its myriad possibilities.

Last season we were privileged to see the flowering of the elegant midfielder Riquelme, an allegedly great player seemingly farmed out to the margins of La Liga with Villarreal, hardly a household name. Quietly and ruthlessly he set about proving his doubters wrong by taking a club from a two-horse town to the very brink of European glory.

In several journalistic eyes, although he won no awards, he was the world's best player last season - certainly its most accomplished midfielder. But Riquelme is a quiet man, (some say a depressive one), not given to interviews, advertising, autobiographies or image rights. Ronaldinho and Frank Lampard are also fine players, but always on the public's lips. It makes commercial sense to have them at the top of the polls. No-one really gives a fig for guys like Riquelme.

And so this season he has disappeared in combat, as had Ronaldinho until he awoke from his golden slumbers this weekend against Sevilla. But the media has only been interested in the Brazilian's loss of form - hardly surprising given the fact that he's hardly had chance to catch his uptake breath since joining Barça, and has simply been knackered of late.

Riquelme, on the other hand, has slipped out of sight, playing reasonably for a stuttering Villarreal but grabbing no headlines, apart from when he announced his sudden retirement from the Argentine national side, for reasons connected to his mother's failing health. In what looked like an almost premeditated farewell, Riquelme has slunk back into the shadows where he prefers to be, earning himself a living but feeling no great obligation to continue entertaining the punters. There is no-one quite like him, but this season we will have to look elsewhere for the subtle pleasures that football can provide.

Ronaldinho will add to his repertoire of tricks, Messi will prove that he is no fly-by-night, and Atlético Madrid's Agüero may well be the season's most exciting newcomer - but these things are more or less expected to happen. No-one, at least up to the friendly between Spain and Argentina last week, had predicted that this season's true star - the guy who will earn the respect of his fellow actors but who will be unlikely to figure in the Oscars - was Andrés Iniesta.

The Barcelona midfielder has been around for a while now, since October 2002 to be precise when Van Gaal handed him his debut in a Champions League match against Bruges. So it seems that the much-vilified Dutchman got something right after all. Iniesta only made six appearances that season and eleven the next, but during the 2004-2005 campaign Rijkaard saw that the skinny lad they had picked up from Albacete at the age of twelve offered the team something else, something that Riquelme had conspicuously failed to produce for the Catalans the season before.

Iniesta made thirty-three appearances in that championship season, not all of them as first-choice - but Barça were hardly desperate for midfielders. The same could be said of last season, but Iniesta gradually emerged as the fulcrum of the side, especially when Xavi was out with a serious injury. This is the beauty of Iniesta. Whilst all around him is fireworks, he just gets on with lighting the fuse. You don't actually notice him half the time. He hangs around in a vaguely forward position in midfield, always supporting the player with the ball, always available. He often just moves the ball on, like Xavi, ensuring that possession is retained.


Jorge Valdano recently remarked of him that he embodies the concept of 'tocar y acompañar' (pass and support) - the hardest thing to do in football effectively. He looks undernourished, with skinny legs and prematurely thinning hair. He's the archetype of the quiet, nerdy kid who never got picked at school for the rough-and-tumble playground games. He looks slightly weird, like he needs to get home fast for his Gameboy fix.

In short, Barça are never going to have to worry about the negotiation of his image rights, but they should give themselves a pat on the back for having such a perceptive team of scouts, particularly the ones who were down in Albacete in 1996. You'd need to be a good reader of the game to notice him, to spot his quiet influence on the proceedings - to see his process in the eventual shape of the product.

As a player, he has no pace, little strength, and a lack of conspicuous circus tricks. Then suddenly you see it. As soon as a space opens up ahead of him, he slips into it like a wriggly worm, bending and flexing like a little elastic man. In the blink of an eye he's opened up the defence, panicked them into conceding more spaces for the attackers to exploit. His passing is quick and deadly, like De la Peña's before him. But he is more complete than the flawed Little Buddha, a player whose lack of generosity always let him down. Iniesta is there for everyone else. He rarely scores goals (for which some commentators criticise him), but he makes them a-plenty.

Against Argentina last week, he kept Luis Aragonés in a job (at least until Spain's next match in March) when he suddenly slithered forward from nowhere, slid out of the grasp of two Argentine defenders who clutched desperately at him like soap, then tricked the normally cool Ayala into committing a leg forward into the space where he least expected Iniesta to go. The resulting penalty was thumped home by Villa, and Spain went home happy, for a change. Had Iniesta not been on the bench against Sweden it might have been a different matter.

The amazing thing about Iniesta's emergence as Barcelona's new star-turn is that the champions are hardly struggling for midfielder personnel, nor searching for a system. It's of eternal credit to Rijkaard that his own management of the team's 'system' (a word rightly scoffed at by Croatia's Slaven Bilic on Wednesday night) has only ever depended on the players who have been sewn effortlessly into it, a flexi-system able to accommodate anyone willing first to conform and then to contribute - which takes us back to the opening paragraph of this piece.

All players are different. They shouldn't depend on the system. The system should rather be defined by them. Thus has it ever been with all the great sides, with the possible exception of those shaped by the forge of Helenio Herrera. But all exceptions prove the rule.

Barça have a wealth of midfield treasures, depending on how you define 'midfielder' of course - but just look at the competition Iniesta was facing; Deco, Xavi, Giuly, Motta, Ronaldinho and Messi - the latter two surely best described as creators as opposed to pure 'attackers'. Gudjohnsen can play in midfield too, but he's unlikely to need to this year. Messi and Ronaldinho are further freed to do their stuff by the likes of Iniesta, who can also tackle and intercept, such is his reading of the game. It's not quite clear from whom he's cloned, but it doesn't really matter. He's his own man.

It'll be interesting to see how he copes with the week ahead. Talk about pressure. Barcelona had a pretty tricky hurdle to jump with this weekend's game against Sevilla (which they won 3-1), but now face Chelsea in London on Wednesday and Real Madrid in the Bernabéu next Sunday. Both those sides are likely to be working in training on how to nullify the threat of the more obvious artists in Barça's line-up. But woe betide them if they ignore the little craftsman in the middle. 

72
Football / Van Bommel and Van Nistelroy reject Van Basten
« on: October 02, 2006, 11:17:42 AM »
I know the Holland fans on the forum real split over Van Basten and how he runs the Dutch national team. Van Nistelroy and Van Bommel have stated they will never play for Holland again, under V Basten. What do you think? Is Van Bommel wrong to reject this latest call up? Is the national team bigger than personal differences? What is the future for Van Basten and does anyone still insist his selection policies are racist...(Van Bommel and Van Nistelroy are white in case some of you didn't know  ;))

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/soccer/10/01/bc.eu.spt.soc.netherlands.van.ap/index.html

73
Football / Real Madrid picking up steam
« on: September 23, 2006, 06:56:33 PM »
Starting to look solid and efficient...true Capello style

This side will be hard to break down and they starting to move the ball well too. The flair players finding their feet and Reyes looking like a man who really enjoying his football.

Diarra had his breakout game. He is going to be a big big player if this game is anything to go by.
Final observation....Ruud and Cassano still have to find their feet. Cassano looked pretty good and Ruud worked hard but didn't ahve a particularly good game in front of goal. Right now, a 75% Ronaldo supposed to still walk on that side  ;)

Barca still mashin dat tho' :devil:


74
Football / Beenie off to a poor start....
« on: September 03, 2006, 11:43:57 AM »
Didn't expect Poland to get licks form a team like Finland...in Poland

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/soccer/09/02/bc.eu.spt.soc.poland.finland.ap/index.html

75
Football / England too cocky
« on: August 13, 2006, 06:57:00 AM »
Gerrard says some things about Wayne Rooney's sending off here that I disagree with (but we've beaten that to death already)....but in the end he said something that I giuve him some serious respect for...admitting that England were just never good enough to win the WC and they were too overconfident. It is irrelevant whether we agree or disagree with that. Just refreshing to hear a mulitmillionaire footballer be humble and not look for excuses.

http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=375787&cc=5901

76
Football / Brazil fans..check it
« on: July 29, 2006, 07:41:23 PM »
For those who supporting Brazil from back in the day..a lil' something to make you feel a lil nostalgic. The music real corny..but the goals real sweet....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjkQRRvZrrY&search=socrates

77
Football / For La Liga fans....
« on: July 19, 2006, 11:43:16 AM »
Ok..the WC is over. Time to return to club football. I am a serious EPL and La Liga man and follow those leagues most closely. I follow others with interest but these two are my faves.

My La Liga team is Barca, who so far has only signed Godjohnsen. However they claim to be on the verge of signing Zambrotta and Thuram (2 boss boss signings). I think Barca is going to be even stronger this year. I also think we will see Madrid return to a more majestic form than the previous 3 seasons. What do allyah think..is this going to be a 2 horse race...Who are the spoilers. Valencia? Villareal? I think it is Barca...3 in a row

Also...is anything going to be done about the racist behavior of fans. Will the Zidane headbutt cause players to be more outspoken or creative in the way they react to crude behavior now....or is it going to be another season of the same ole crap. Have not heard much that is being done to change anything...

And where the hell is Jai John? Since Argentina fall out the Cup I eh hear nutten from the biggest Argentina and Villareal supporter. Always love yuh posts Jai and I know yuh is a La Liga man..lemme hear yuh

78
Football / What Beenhakker means in English....
« on: June 07, 2006, 03:44:30 PM »
well, this will be a very short thread, but I thought some of us would be interested to know that when literally translated into english...beenhakker means 'leg-chopper'. Nice name for a football coach....now I know why he like Cyd and Avery...blade specialist :beermug: :beermug:

79
Football / Brazil says NO to tough opponents before WC
« on: May 28, 2006, 01:03:21 PM »
Brazil is only playing easy friendlies before the WC to focus on doing things right. Coach Carlos Alberto Parreira seems to think this is better than challenging the team against difficult opposition...do the Brazilians have a point? Or is this good for some and not so good for others. One could argue that Beenie is adopting a similar policy. We are only facing tougher opposition at the very tail end of the prep..but seem to be using potentially weaker teams to iron out or tactics under relatively little pressure.....

http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=369390&cc=5901

80
Football / English teams raid Barcelona youth program....
« on: May 26, 2006, 06:41:49 AM »
Is this really reflective of the state of English youth programs, or just a geographical switch of the predatory transfer policies that teams like Barca have been practicing for quite some time on youths from Latin America and Africa. Does Barca really have the right to cry when Motta (a Brazilian) and Messi (an Argentine) have also come throught their youth ranks? True Messi and Motta's situations are admittedly a bit different from what happend with Fabregas but I thought this was interesting and wondered what it would be like if players like Luis Garcia and Fabregas were still on Barca's books (Luis Garcia actually played for Barca's first team in Rijkaard's first season and doesn't classify as a youth team player being signed away).....

http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=368815&cc=5901

81
Football / What is the story with Dog?
« on: May 23, 2006, 11:29:16 AM »
Did anyone mention why he missed the Peru game or why he is wearing them tights in every training session? Is he nursing an injury or is Beenie leaning towards Sancho? Not trying to start no rumor mill or bachanal, just curious as to how very little was written about Sancho and not Dog starting against Peru.

82
Football / Arsenal makes a shrewd buy...
« on: May 23, 2006, 08:30:20 AM »
This man is a big big player. Touches boy, the rainbow after the storm. First Thierry re-signs, now this

http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=368574&cc=5901

83
Football / MLS Thread
« on: April 06, 2006, 04:07:27 PM »
Still a rumor, but one that is making legitimate rounds...just saw this on the Sports Illustrated Online service. What you all think? Anybody else heard about this?

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/scorecard/04/06/truth.rumors.soccer/index.html

84
Football / Soca Warriors vs Czech Republic
« on: February 02, 2006, 10:44:22 AM »
I don't know if this is old news...but it looks like it is official. I think our schedule looking smart so far. Each opponent is more difficult than the next. Iceland - Wales - Czech Republic.

http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=357267&cc=5901

PRAGUE, Feb 2 (Reuters) - The Czech Republic has added friendlies against fellow World Cup qualifiers Costa Rica and Trinidad & Tobago to round out its pre-tournament warm-up schedule, the Czech FA said on Thursday.

The Czechs will play Costa Rica in Jablonec on May 31 and Trinidad in Prague on June 3.


The Czechs also face Turkey in Izmir on March 1 and Saudi Arabia on May 26. The latter match will be a part of the team's preparation camp in the Austrian town of Seefeld.

The Czech Republic will play their first match in the World Cup finals in Germany on June 12 against the United States. Ghana and Italy are the other two teams in Group E.

Costa Rica face Germany, Poland and Ecuador in the opening round while Trinidad & Tobago play England, Sweden and Paraguay.

85
Football / Eto'o could be in serious trouble...
« on: January 15, 2006, 02:33:56 PM »
Anybody see Eto'o spit in a man face today? Scenes turn real ugly at the end of the Barca / Bilbao game and Eto'o might be facing a long ban. It will be interesting to see how the Spanish authorities react...given their lack of action regarding other issues plaguing the spanish league

86
2006 World Cup - Germany / What Category of Tickets are people buying?
« on: December 12, 2005, 11:51:53 AM »
Is it me or have all the threads re. tickets just disappeared. Anyway...I sounding like a stuck record at this point. Anyone want to let me know what category of tickets they tried to purchase on the FIFA website. Just trying to get an idea where the trinis will be. Right now I am think Category 2 or Category 3...thanks

87
Football / Is Roberto Carlos really the best left back in Brazil?
« on: November 21, 2005, 05:45:08 PM »
I not asking this because of his poor performance against Barcelona. Personally I find the man is a boss. But this season, from what I have seen Brazil's 2 best left backs don't even get a call up to the national team.

To me, based on form, Sylvinho from Barcelona (even though he missed the Madrid game) and Serginho at Milan are having stellar seasons. Serginhois finally holding down the starting spot I always felt he deserved amd Sylvinhyo has always been fantastic since his days at Arsenal,a nd frankly I find him much better than Gio van Bronkhorst. Even if you disagree that they are better than R. Carlos..aren't they better than Gustavo Nery? Anyone agree?

88
Football / Corinthians vs. Internacional is on GolTV right now!!
« on: November 20, 2005, 12:02:29 PM »
...game started at 1:00 Eastern US time (2:00 pm TnT time)

Big big game in Brazil. Internacaional in 2nd is the in-form team. Corinthians with tevez is just a boss team to watch. For men who eh just on European ball!

89
Football / Who would you pick from the 1989 Strike Squad?
« on: November 20, 2005, 08:58:23 AM »
If you could only clone one man from Strike Squad from 1989 to add to the Soca warriors to go to Germany...who would it be?

For me, is a toss up between Leonson Lewis and Hutson Charles. I might have to go with Leo cause we lacking that funk up top, plus he is my all time favorite baller period.

90
Football / Soca Warriors Alphabet
« on: October 12, 2005, 06:52:27 AM »
Fellas...I feeling de feeling and I coming through wid de Soca Warriors Alphabet...
Is ah inspirational ode/prayer to everything sweet about de socawarriors on the most critical sweat we have had since 1989....Ah starting it like dis..and who feel like it could follow with the letter B...

A- A, is for Avery...de ultimate blade specialist. Lord...keep Avery spirit strong and his blade clean. He is a true warrior. He not interested in gallerying up no lef' wing, he eh no free kick specialist, he eh no dribbling specialist...he is a blade specialist. Peeyuuure blade...Is strictly hard jam and I never once see de man give up on a  ball. Yes, A is for Avery...not Emery...dat is not de man name.. and yes, he did mean to blade ya and brok you up good each and every time....

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