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Topics - FF

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61
General Discussion / West Coast is de new Morvantman!!
« on: January 30, 2006, 02:47:19 PM »
Allyuh ent notice dis man join Nov 19th and he done cross a thousand posts and like he always online!!

meanwhile morvantman boil down like bhagi.... he even let truetrini pass him for most posts...

West Coast taking over!

Morvant wha going on?   ???

62
Football / Sour Grapes Diouf (ANC results)
« on: January 27, 2006, 12:06:16 PM »
Check what Diouf was saying this morning
http://football.guardian.co.uk/africannations2006/story/0,,1695940,00.html

excerpt:

El-Hadji Diouf is not one of nature's diplomats. Having missed out on World Cup qualification, he and Senegal have a point to prove against Ghana this afternoon, and the Bolton Wanderers forward is not going to deny it. "I think the wrong teams are going to the World Cup," he said. "If you have seen Ghana, and then you see Cameroon, Senegal and Nigeria, you know the wrong team is going."



well Ghana cut dey arse today.... 1-0




63
Football / Puma 2006 Kits
« on: January 20, 2006, 10:54:41 AM »
Switzerland Home & Away



Austria Home & Away



Poland Home & Away



Czech republic Home & Away



Senegal Home & Away



Ivory Coast Home


Togo Home


Ghana Home


64
Football / Long awaited Soca Warriors.net T-shirts
« on: January 09, 2006, 10:25:53 AM »
Well folks... some of you may remember the idea to have socawarriors.net t-shirts for de crew..... i even sent some of de designs to a couple of you all, including flex and tallman....

Well in true trini fashion de jerseys was supposed to be ready since de first Bahrain game .... den de second Bahrain game... den for de WC draw... well anyways

I now have 25 of de first design available all in XL sizes.
The printing was financed by Red or Dead productions and produced by Donmars Printing, a friend of flex and this website....

This is de first time we trying something like this so bear with meh
Right now we only plan to distribute in the New York area... if ppl like dem and demand is good ah will send down a bunch to TnT for carnival... also M and L sizes to come in time
I could also organize to send dem thru de mail... but is first come first serve...

The XL price is $20.... email: red.deadp@gmail.com or Pm me here to organize

Any questions or concerns please do not hesitate to ask

Here is the design.... Socawarriors .net is arched across the back of the shirt


65
Football / England Friendlies confirm
« on: January 05, 2006, 11:42:14 AM »
http://football.guardian.co.uk/breakingnews/feedstory/0,14546,-5525357,00.html

They playing Uruguay, Hungary, Jamaica....

Excerpts:
Jamaica, chosen in view of England's Group B game against Trinidad and Tobago, will follow on June 3.

"Jamaica will be similar in style to Trinidad and Tobago and have a lot of players playing in this country, like Ricardo Gardner at Bolton and Jason Euell at Charlton."
- Sven Goran Eriksson


I think Sven will be surprised if that is his belief... however... who would you suggest a team play in preparation to take on TNT

66
Football / Latapy was just on Sky Sports New
« on: December 02, 2005, 06:51:26 PM »
They interview him about Alex McLeish.... as he about to get de sack....

They show ah clip ah Latapy tunning up ah side when he play for HIbernian under mcLeish

67
Football / Scouting World Cup Participants
« on: November 27, 2005, 04:39:11 PM »
Here are some videos courtesy Puntu... originally posted on Bigsoccer

BRAZIL

BRAZIL - UAE http://www.megaupload.com/?d=UKY44PRG


FRANCE

COSTA RICA - FRANCE http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/show...8&postcount=160


PORTUGAL

PORTUGAL - CROATIA http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/show...68&postcount=30


CROATIA

PORTUGAL - CROATIA http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/show...68&postcount=30


COSTA RICA

COSTA RICA - FRANCE http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/show...8&postcount=160


TOGO

2005, June 18: SENEGAL - TOGO http://www.xalima.com/videomatch/st.html


IVORY COAST

ITALY - IVORY COAST (1st half) http://www5.rapidupload.com/d.php?file=dl&filepath=3470
ITALY - IVORY COAST (2nd half) http://www5.rapidupload.com/d.php?file=dl&filepath=3655
Last day of qualifiers http://bakykone.videos.free.fr/vide...n_civ_1_3.wm v


TUNISIA

TUNISIA - CONGO http://media.putfile.com/resume-congo-tunisie


GHANA

SAUDI ARABIA - GHANA http://alhilalclub.net/ngl11/SaudiArabia1-3Ghana-1.rm


SAUDI ARABIA

SAUDI ARABIA - GHANA http://alhilalclub.net/ngl11/SaudiArabia1-3Ghana-1.rm


ITALY

ITALY - HOLLAND (1st half) http://www.megaupload.com/?d=HX6YL829
ITALY - HOLLAND (2nd half) http://www.megaupload.com/?d=IY8LCAU7
ITALY - IVORY COAST (1st half) http://www5.rapidupload.com/d.php?file=dl&filepath=3470
ITALY - IVORY COAST (2nd half) http://www5.rapidupload.com/d.php?file=dl&filepath=3655
ITALY - MOLDOVA http://www.megaupload.com/?d=UMD8HIS6


HOLLAND

ITALY - HOLLAND (1st half) http://www.megaupload.com/?d=HX6YL829
ITALY - HOLLAND (2nd half) http://www.megaupload.com/?d=IY8LCAU7


SOUTH KOREA

SOUTH KOREA - SERBIA http://playend.com/bbs/bugboard.php...th=&ex=&return=


SERBIA

SOUTH KOREA - SERBIA http://playend.com/bbs/bugboard.php...th=&ex=&return=


JAPAN

JAPAN - ANGOLA http://www.casemanager.or.kr/file/f...an-Angola-H.wmv


ANGOLA

JAPAN - ANGOLA http://www.casemanager.or.kr/file/f...an-Angola-H.wmv


AUSTRALIA

AUSTRALIA - URUGUAY http://twg1.sbs.com.au/home/index.php3

68
Football / TnT vs Bahrain on Futbol Mundial
« on: November 25, 2005, 06:30:59 PM »
NOW on Gol TV

69
Football / Planet World Cup Playoff wrap-up by Gohb.
« on: November 19, 2005, 05:07:29 PM »
Wrap-up: CONCACAF v Asia play-off.
By: Peter Goldstein (Gohb).


    Trinidad & Tobago vs. Bahrain, the working stiff’s playoff. No galacticos like Raul; no top-line strikers like John Carew or Mark Viduka. OK, there was Dwight Yorke, but this was the Social Security version, the old man ending his career on the other side of the earth. No, this was a bunch of guys few had heard of, from countries few knew much about. But a very first World Cup berth was only 180 minutes away, and to the players, and to their fans, it might as well have been Brazil-Germany, with just as much to talk about, care about, and live for, as any game in the history of football.

    For the opener in Port-of-Spain, the first question was whether Bahrain star striker Ala’a Hubail, just back after a long injury layoff, would start. The answer was no--instead the choice was Husain Ali, hardworking, but not in Hubail’s class. The second question was exactly how conservative a conservative Bahrain would play it. The answer was very--coach Luka Peruzovic went with a 3-6-1, with two lines of 3 in midfield. With T&T starting their usual 4-5-1, space would be very difficult to find.

    And that led to the third question: would Bahrain’s quickness and pace be too much for T&T? The answer was most definitely yes. In only the second minute Kelvin Jack had to come out to get the ball ahead of a racing Talal Yusuf. The swarming Bahraini midfield simply shut off the T&T attack. Dwight Yorke was forced too deep, and Russell Latapy, roving all over the field, found no space to dribble. The high ball proved useless, with Sayed Mohamed Adnan holding Stern John in check. Husain Ali Baba got in the way of any pass near the area. Aurtis Whitley was energetic in the middle, and Carlos Edwards found a bit of space on the right, but the team couldn’t string enough passes together.

    Meanwhile Bahrain was dangerous on the counter, with a superb Mohammed Salmeen providing incisive passes to Ali and speedy left winger Salman Isa. In the 15th minute Isa actually got the ball in the net, but was just barely offside. And as the Bahrainis gradually found their rhythm, they started to dominate. In the 21st minute another pass from Salmeen nearly sent Isa through, and only a desperation tackle by Marvin Andrews kept him away. In the 24th minute Salmeen found Ali alone in the area, and he should have scored, but from fifteen yards he shot wide. T&T was retreating on all fronts, second best in every way, looking nothing like the team that had closed so strongly in the Hexagonal.

    But the absence of Hubail told at the finish. Ali not only missed his one great chance, he lacked the vision to provide the crucial pass, and the attack slowed or died when the ball reached his feet. Inevitably the spurt had to give out, and when it did, T&T nearly finished the half on top. In the 40th minute Chris Birchall crossed for Dennis Lawrence, and his header was barely denied by Ali Hassan. In stoppage time fullback Silvio Spann got up on the right, and crossed to Stern John at the far post. He headed down for Yorke, at last up in attack--but Adnan was there to block the shot.

    To start the second half Beenhakker shifted Yorke out of the midfield and into a striker’s role to bolster the attack. It made sense, but without him they didn’t have the glue to hold the midfield together. Whitley, despite some fine individual plays, couldn’t pull the strings. Latapy was still shackled, and was eventually replaced by the more direct Jason Scotland, who managed a couple of runs but couldn’t get a shot on target. In fact, the only danger came when Yorke dropped a bit deeper to set up play. In the 68th minute came the best combination of the night, an excellent double one-two between Yorke and John, but John’s shot from the top of the area went straight to the keeper.

    Meanwhile, Bahrain had become even more conservative, holding back on the counter, not releasing the wings quite as often. Hubail had come on at halftime to replace the ineffective Ali, but they couldn’t spring him loose. In the 61st minute Isa took one more fine pass from Salmeen, and forced Kelvin Jack to save for a corner, but that was all. Nil-nil was looking more and more inevitable.

    But what happened on that corner was an omen. Bahrain played it short, a cross led to a melee, and Hubail got a free shot a few yards out, offside as it happened. But crucially, on a set piece, Bahrani quickness had trumped T&T height. In the 69th, another Bahrain corner was cleared, but Adnan headed back in and Isa’s snap shot went just high. And in the 72nd there was no escape. Another short corner led to a cross, and Isa, the quickest man on the field, was left unmarked by Dennis Lawrence, the tallest. He headed in, and Bahrain were ahead.

    The road goal was a shocker, and T&T were in trouble. With the attack disorganized, where would an equalizer come from? Enter Chris Birchall. He’s not your usual hero: a box-to-box midfielder with decent technique and high workrate, the sort of guy who does his job but doesn’t get noticed. The only reason he stands out for T&T is because he’s white. But he has one special skill: a devastating rising shot from about 20-25 yards out. All the way back in the 7th minute he had a chance to let loose, but for some reason shot low instead of high, and Hassan saved nicely. Now, in the 77th minute, he got a second chance. Spann’s cross ricocheted off Rasheed Abdul Rahman, and bounced up perfectly, 25 yards from goal. And Birchall went back to basics: a tremendous high scorcher that left the keeper no chance.

    Now all the momentum was with T&T, but Bahrain was still comfortable on defense, and the combinations wouldn’t come. Yorke made a couple of neat moves, but couldn’t deliver the killer pass; a cross from Spann bounced a little too high for John; in the 86th minute they got the closest, when substitute Kenwyne Jones forced his way through on the right and his low cross was just out of Yorke’s reach. The game finished quietly at 1:1.

    Bahrain had earned the result, and best of all, the draw plus the road goal meant they could use the same approach in the second leg. Nil-nil, and they’d be home. But there was one very important negative: in the 66th minute, Mohamed Salmeen had clattered a bit too hard into Aurtis Whitley, and had been shown the yellow card. It was his second of the qualifiers, and so the team’s only playmaker, the man who made the counterattack go, would miss the return match in Manama.

    Peruzovic responded by replacing him with Ala’a Hubail--not as a striker, but as a midfielder. He kept Ali up front and simply slotted Hubail into Salmeen’s spot. It was a strange decision; Hubail is a scorer, not a playmaker, and although a quick and clever dribbler, isn’t the sort to run the counterattack. But Peruzovic obviously wanted to stick with the 3-6-1. There really was no substitute for Salmeen, and he may have wanted an extra scorer just in case a goal was necessary.

    A goal was definitely necessary for Trinidad & Tobago, and Leo Beenhakker had to figure out how to get it. Cyd Gray replaced Silvio Spann at right back, but that was a defensive upgrade. Somehow he had to find a way to get the ball to the strikers. Want to know how great coaches earn their money? They bench the team’s most valuable player. Russell Latapy, the man most responsible for the final push that put T&T in the playoff, was replaced by Kenwyne Jones. For all his skill and flair, Latapy’s slow, indirect style was fruitless against the quicker Bahrainis. But Jones was another matter: a big, physical striker who could use his muscle to get possession. He might also take advantage of Bahrain’s weakened back line, in which suspended Abdullah Al Marzooqi had to be replaced by the smaller and less talented Mohamed Basheer Juma’a. So an extra big man it was, a straight 4-4-2, with an emphasis on the long ball, relying on the strikers to get possession and the midfielders to come rushing up in support.

    The game started brightly, with T&T on the attack. Beenhakker’s tactics were looking good: John and Jones were winning the ball back to goal, and Yorke was showing energy in midfield. Bahrain tried to counter, but could only manage the long ball. A tiny moment in the fourth minute showed how things had changed from the first leg. Husain Ali Baba got to a T&T throw-in and sent it to Hubail back to goal in the middle of the pitch. Salmeen would have held the ball up, turned and looked for an outlet; Hubail instead tried to dribble, and was muscled off the ball by Aurtis Whitley. It showed that 1) Bahrain didn’t have the same counterattacking potential; 2) T&T were ready to use their physical superiority to good advantage.

    But that didn’t mean T&T were without worries. In the seventh minute Sayed Mohamed Adnan spotted Kelvin Jack off his line and lofted one from the center stripe. Jack should have dealt with it easily, but in the first of many amusing moments, somehow muffed it for a corner. And, as in Port-of-Spain, that meant trouble. Juma’a got free near the penalty spot and headed forward; a pinball sequence found Hubail with the ball six yards away, and only a sliding block by Avery John saved a goal.

    So the best bet was to keep going forward. In the 13th minute Yorke fed Chris Birchall in his favorite spot and he wound up for another blast. But Sayed Jalal got there first, and the hard tackle not only deflected the shot, but put Birchall out of the game. In came Spann; he had disappointed at right back in the first leg, but now he was in his natural position, defensive midfield. If the team had lost shooting power, it had gained pace and aggressiveness.

    For the rest of the half T&T followed the script: balls over the top to the strikers back to goal, with midfielders moving up to take the leavings. As anticipated, Juma’a was a weak point, and John and Jones were getting possession and distributing effectively. As an added bonus, round about the 20th minute, Bahrain stopped even thinking about the counter and set in to defend. For the most part they did so effectively, but how long they could withstand the pressure? In the 23rd minute Jones got free at the top of the area and Baba had to slide to block the shot. In the 32nd minute a deep cross from Marvin Andrews was flicked on neatly by Jones to John, and only a superb charge out by Hassan denied him.

    But let’s not forget about Kelvin Jack, who apparently was trying out for the Ringling Brothers. In the 41st minute Adnan floated a mile-high, harmless ball from deep. Jack came out, waited, leapt--and missed it entirely. He was five minutes away by phone. As millions laughed, a last-ditch clearance over the bar by Marvin Andrews prevented a goal.

    At halftime the score was still 0:0, but it was T&T’s game for the taking. Of course, Bahrain could keep on sending 50-yarders to Jack just to see what would happen, but in fact they weren’t trying to score. Except three minutes into the second half they almost did. In their one and only effective counterattack of the night, Talal Yusuf fed Husain Ali back to goal, who turned and whipped the return pass to Yusuf along the right. He crossed low for Hubail’s brother, Mohamed, but the ball was just out of reach. Now that was Bahrain football; a bit more and they’d be in the saddle again.

    But they never got the chance. A minute later T&T’s power finally told. With Bahrain up to continue the attack, Yorke got the ball and turned upfield. He beat one man, then sent it low for Jones on a slanting run in the area. Baba came over to defend, but Jones used his bulk to drive him away and force a corner. And now it was time for The Revenge Of The Big Guy. In the first leg, Hassan had misjudged a couple of high balls, but T&T hadn’t taken advantage. Here in the first half, he had come out wrong on a free kick, but once more the ball had been cleared. Now Yorke swung in the corner, and Hassan came out wrong again. And finally there was Dennis Lawrence, six feet seven, the man who had failed to mark on the goal in Port-of-Spain, to head powerfully down. Jalal was in position on the line to block, but the ball was hit too hard, and went through his legs.

    And now at last Bahrain were forced to attack. The shock of the goal obviously unsettled them; a moment later John almost got the clincher, but his hard shot went right at Hassan. For the next few minutes T&T were in complete control, with Yorke, Jones, and John swarming around the penalty area, and Bahrain helpless to maintain possession. It looked like it might be over quickly.

    But soon T&T fell back, and it was up to Bahrain to put together an attacking move. They couldn’t do it. There were aimless long balls and crosses, with Jalal a particular offender. Passes went awry, communications broke down. T&T’s defense wasn’t flawless--some clearances were weak, and there were too many fouls near the area--but they were clogging the lanes, intercepting passes, still using their muscle. Spann was a particular standout, consistently winning back possession and forcing the counter. Bahrain created only one real chance. In the 60th minute Salman Isa slipped inside two defenders, and got his head to a long ball; he flicked it to Ala’a Hubail, finally in position to score--but from six yards out he stabbed wide. The only other time they got close was on a cross from Yusuf, which Lawrence, attempting to clear, almost steered into his own net.

    In the 78th minute Beenhakker made the logical switch, Latapy for Jones. Now he needed possession, experience, technique. He almost got a goal, too, because a minute later, with a free shot, Latapy hit the crossbar. But it didn’t matter, because the game was all but over. Bahrain were void of ideas, winded, and beaten. T&T had most of the possession. The final score was clear for all to see. The clock ticked inevitably down--to one of the strangest finishes in qualifying history.

    First, in the 89th minute, Yorke decided to waste some time. He took the ball toward the left corner, and adroitly knocked it off a defender for a corner kick. With Latapy helping out, he repeated the trick. The Bahrain players, understandably frustrated, crowded them at the flag, which only wasted more time, as Latapy and Yorke appealed for the requisite distance. After the third corner, Yusuf came flying out of nowhere with a two-footed lunge that did nothing but send the ball out for yet another corner, and ratchet up the tension. A minor pushing war broke out, and referee Oscar Ruiz had little idea how to control it. Bottles and water bags rained down from the fans, targeting the T&T players in the corner.

    Now we were in stoppage time. Eventually the teams were separated, and Latapy took another short corner to Yorke. He decided to deal out some punishment, and whacked the ball low at Baba, presumably hoping for a bruise to two, plus another corner. But Baba had stepped out of the way, and all Yorke had done was give Bahrain a goal kick, and another chance.

    So Hassan sent the goal kick short to Baba, and he drove the ball the length of the field, over everybody. But that meant to Kelvin Jack, who came out a little bit late, and a little bit clumsily, collecting just barely ahead of Ali. He got up, prepared to kick it long, and with his mind on--well, who knew what it was on--didn’t see Ali lurking just to his right. He released the ball for the punt, and as neat as you please, without touching the keeper, Ali stuck in a leg, knocked it clear, and put it in the empty net. Equalizer!! But the whistle blew. Ruiz disallowed the goal.

    Pandemonium. Ruiz was engulfed in an outraged river of red, bumped from behind by Baba, pushed from the front by Jalal, retreating thirty yards as the surge drove him on. Bahrain were sure the goal was legal, and I’ll bet a lot of armchair referees, and not only in Manama, agreed with them. I admit I wasn’t sure at the time. But in fact Law 12 and accompanying Q&A 19 are very explicit: you can’t interfere with the keeper in the process of the kick. Ruiz had made the right call, and bravo to him.

    Of course, that doesn’t help much when you’re about to be dismembered. But eventually Bahrain’s coaching staff convinced the team that rioting wasn’t the best option. Baba was sent off, and we settled down to two more minutes of stoppage time. The ball bounced around for a while with nothing happening, until with only a few seconds left, Hubail won a corner. One last chance. Yusuf sent it into the area; in the scramble it hit one head, then another, and rolled out toward the top of the arc. And then came the most astonishing moment of all. Husain Ali, after more than 180 minutes of ineffectiveness, spun and drove a wicked left-footed shot at goal. It deflected ever-so-slightly off the head of sub Ian Cox, and headed straight for the top corner. And Mr. Comedy, Kelvin Jack, with approximately three milliseconds to react, produced an unbelievable save, a save for every World Cup qualifying highlight reel for the next 100 years, leaping to his left and tipping the ball over with his right. T&T were in.

    The fans, furious at the officiating, threw seat cushions onto the field for several minutes after the final whistle. But if they wanted to complain, they should have started with the team. In fact Bahrain had done very little to deserve a berth at the World Cup. Except for those fine 20 minutes at Port-of-Spain, they were remorselessly negative, proud to play for the scoreless draw. Peruzovic deserves most of the blame. In his zeal to line up as many midfield players as possible, he wasted whatever attacking potential the team had. Yusuf, an outstanding dribbler and shooter who plays best as a withdrawn forward, was stranded out on the right wing. In the home leg, Hubail was put in the midfield instead of up front where he belonged. Yes, they were unfortunate to be without Mohammed Salmeen for the return match, but sometimes you have to play shorthanded. What counts is how you approach the game. In Port-of-Spain they were worth their point, but in Manama, with all the natural advantages, they had nothing to show. In the end they were beaten by the better team.

    As for Trinidad & Tobago, well, you’ve probably heard the story of 1989, how they were beaten out by the USA at home on the final day. For 16 years it’s been the defining memory of T&T football. But now there’s another: a courageous victory under hostile conditions, to which every member of the team contributed, with a superb set of tactics by a top-class coach, and a magnificent last-second save. Dwight Yorke and Russell Latapy were on the pitch for the 1989 match, so maybe the World Cup berth means the most to them. But let’s give our last salute to the fans, the people for whom, after all, the game is really played. They cried, they stayed loyal, they waited, they hoped, and they were rewarded. May it happen so for every country in the world.

Orignal Article.

70
Football / Official World Cup Draw Thread
« on: November 17, 2005, 10:02:04 AM »
Flex, Tallman... I am asking that you make this thread ah sticky... because I know there will be nuff questions and speculation... so men could ask questions and get dey answers right here:

The World Cup Draw will be conducted on December 9th in Lepzieg, Germany.
ESPN 2 will televise the draw live from 3pm EST
Univision and Telemundo's coverage will begin at 2pm EST


Germany will be the first seed in A1... Brazil will be in F1

63.67 Brazil
48.83 Spain
47.83 Germany
47.33 Mexico
46.33 Argentina
45.83 England
45.83 Italy
44.67 France


It is possible that FIFA could change the formula or alter it, but because the last three world cups used this formula, it is a good projection of which teams will be seeded.

The formula used can be found here on Big Soccer
http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/showpost.php?p=6460526&postcount=3

There WILL be 4 pots

Pot A WILL be the 8 seeded teams

Pot B WILL be the remaining (2) Conmebol teams, 5 Africa and Australia

Pot C WILL be the remaining (9) European teams... Serbia being the lowest ranked team will be separated and drawn last

Pot D WILL be the remaining (3) Concacaf and (4) Asia

Germany WILL be in Group A with games played in Munich, Berlin and Dortmund (largest stadiums)!
Brazil WILL be based in Group F as games will also be played in Munich, Berlin and Dortmund


One team from each pot to a group.. with the following rules.

No more than one team per confederation in each group with the exception of UEFA which may have no more than two!


These are the basic rules! So for example Trinidad cannot get drawn with France and Germany as they will be in the same pot and cannot get drawn against each other. We may not be drawn with an Asian team

Here is a NEW mock draw based on the above rules

Group A: Germany, Netherlands, Paraguay, Costa Rica
Group B: Spain, South Korea, Switzerland, Angola
Group C: Italy, Ivory Coast, Croatia, Trinidad & Tobago
Group D: Mexico, Ecuador, Iran, Ukraine
Group E: France, Sweden, Japan, Australia
Group F: Brazil, Togo, Serbia & Montenegro, Portugal
Group G: Argentina, Tunisia, Saudi Arabia, Poland
Group H: England, Ghana, Czech Republic, USA



Any questions and or errors noted please post away!!

71
Football / CALLING A.W.A.T.T. HELP NEEDED
« on: November 15, 2005, 10:03:52 AM »
Right now I am being assaulted by an overwhelming wave of negativty and waggonism via email... it is putting me out of sorts and in ah state of confusion.... Several waggonists and anti-TNT trinis have my email inbox hostage... I am calling on Commissioner oconnorg and the powers that be to rescue me from this certain peril that I face... Monty, Strip and Nachilus_TT also grimm01 are also being innundated and are forced to swim against de current... I fear we may all drown.....

...AWATT SAVE US!!!

excerpts:

When tnt play anybody that decent full strength team with tnt full team I does be shame at the licks dem men
does collect. I don't believe in backing bonk just because I was born
dey. Blind allegiance is not my scene.


so dey cyar appreciate supportin a squad dat have
skilled players an playin dis much BONK
I ain really no sports man so I'ze jus pick a team when di time come
an bawl "yay" when dey score an "boo" when dey losin


I not "condemin" for a poor important game

I condemin for ONE good game and a bunch a flukes...and the ONE good
game was against a B team




AWATT SAVE US!!!



72
Football / Anybody watching FSW report
« on: November 14, 2005, 09:41:39 PM »
Them turkey men getting on bad!! de police detain de swiss in de airport for 2 hrs while dogs sniff the baggage... then de fans block de bus from leaving de airport... den dey stone down dey mudderc*nt with all kinda eggs and missiles... badnesss...

... but de best is ah man holding ah sign which I swear say " I f**k yuh muther" in german  :rotfl:

73
Football / Soca Wariors Forumites @ Mangoville
« on: November 13, 2005, 01:10:02 PM »
From L-R:  JDB, KND, Jersey Trini, Pass(10)Trini, FF and Trinbago

Trinbago have on he cry-face

edit: I change "somebody" to Jersey Trini


74
Football / Strike Squad/Soca Warriors tunes on 95.5 NOW
« on: November 11, 2005, 11:43:39 AM »
Big tunes

Victory for de strike squad of TnT T T T

On and ON!!!!!!!!!! ee ooo aye come check de danger

anytime we come we come dangerous

when we put down ah beat... de crowd jump to dey feet

75
Football / What Team have we never beaten?
« on: November 02, 2005, 03:18:30 PM »
Trinidad is known for its inconsistency... whereby we can beat the best and then turn round and have the likes of St Kitts run rings around us...

But who in Concacaf have we not beaten?

I know Canada used to be a real bogey team... and the way the US beating we recent is like we never beat them before...

We have beaten all of Central America and the Caribbean.... we have beaten them all.... Can anyone else say that, other than the top three of Mexico, Costa Rica, USA?

Now tell me who has Bahrain beaten?

Yes Bah simply better this thread was for you

76
Football / No trinis in action today or wha?
« on: November 01, 2005, 05:29:31 PM »
Well Mcleish gone and bench Dog again and they end up drawing 2-2 after leadin twice

They say that Rangers suffered due to defensive uncertainties..

http://football.guardian.co.uk/Match_Report/0,1527,1606607,00.html

77
Football / Allyuh remember this tune
« on: October 14, 2005, 12:28:03 PM »
For de longest while old and new forumites alike looking for de strike squad tunes from 89.... even though de lyrics kinda specific to those events back then....

but who remember this big tune??

http://www.tradarr.net/BUICKmp3/lets%20go%20all%20the%20way.mp3



LETS GO ALL DE WAY!!!!

GERMANY '06

78
Football / Favourite Strike Squad Player
« on: September 16, 2005, 09:36:04 AM »
Vote for yuh favourite Strike Squad members AT DE TIME... you can vote for up to three men

I remember being ah youth man and looking up to these three

1. Leonson Lewis
2. Hutson Charles (crucial goals)
3. Marvin Fuastin (representing Barataria)

79
Football / Football Trivia Quiz time
« on: August 24, 2005, 10:29:36 AM »
I eh see ah trivia thread in a while... so ah go kick off one. Hopefully this will keep us occupied and off of DavyJenny case for a lil while  ;)

Was reminiscing the other day and remembered two friendly games played sometime between 93 and 94. They were both in the Oval against Aston Villa and Mexico u-23. They were notable for long chip-shots scored over the keeper in each one.

Name the players who scored these goals and the score at the end of each match.

Employees of the TTFF, National Team members and their relatives AND ESPECIALLY Tallman are prohibited from participating. Void where prohibited


(Tallman is kicks ah ketching with yuh, but at least wait ah hour before yuh giwee the answers nah... ah know yuh know)

80
Football / Allyuh go and sign de Roll Call nah
« on: August 11, 2005, 02:56:10 PM »
Only like 2 or 3 men sign so far

Look it here:

http://www.socawarriorssc.com/swonline/smf/index.php?topic=2941.0

Lewee get ah nice idea as to how deep we rolling... also signing in go be ah nice show of support...

81
Football / The First Galactico is Gone
« on: August 04, 2005, 01:54:13 PM »
Figo signing for Inter

http://football.guardian.co.uk/breakingnews/feedstory/0,14546,-5189828,00.html

Figo's Real love affair ends in a quickie divorce
By Simon Baskett
MADRID, Aug 4 (Reuters) - When Luis Figo controversially joined Real Madrid from Barcelona in July 2000, club president Florentino Perez said it was a marriage made in heaven.
Five years on the Portuguese midfielder's relationship Real has ended in a quickie divorce as he speeds off to Inter Milan to sign a two-year contract with the Serie A side.
Ever since being dropped in order to accommodate both David Beckham and Michael Owen in the starting lineup against Barcelona at the start of April, the relationship between the former World and European Player of the Year and his club had been distinctly sour.
Figo accused coach Vanderlei Luxemburgo of failing to warn him that he was going to be dropped and the two began a round of mutual recriminations about who stopped talking to whom first.
Rather than risk having a potential loose cannon within the camp for another season, Real opted for a clean break and decided to offload the winger to Inter a year before his contract was due to expire.
But the significance of Figo's departure for Italy far exceeds his mere importance as a player.
If it had not been for Figo, Perez might never have become Real president in the first place.
After all, it was the construction magnate's promise to make off with the most prized possession of arch-rivals Barcelona that was largely responsible for his victory in the 2000 club presidential elections.
WORLD RECORD
Perez kept his word and paid a then world record $56 million to buy Figo out of his contract with Barca, a move that provided a world-class addition to the Real squad and at the same time dealt the Catalans a blow from which they took almost five years to recover.
With his move to Real, Figo immediately became a symbol of a new generation of the sport's global superstars whose own interests superseded those of the club they play for - in short he was the first of Real's Galacticos.
Barca spent a combined total of $75 million on new players in an attempt to make up for the loss of Figo, but they were unable to find an adequate replacement for the Portuguese star who underwent an overnight transformation from hero to the vilest of villains in the eyes of their fans.
But Barca's loss was Real's gain, and although the winger never quite reproduced the sparkling form of his days in the blue and scarlet strip, he proved to be a gilt-edged asset to "Los Blancos".
Figo provided a hatful of assists and notched nine goals of his own during Real's procession to the league title in 2001 and although he was overshadowed by new arrival Zinedine Zidane in his second season he still managed to pick up a European Cup winners' medal with Real's victory over Bayer Leverkusen in Glasgow.
The following season he scored a career-high 10 league goals as Real pipped Real Sociedad to the Spanish title.
DROPPED
He was one of the few players who could hold his head up after the club's trophyless campaign in 2004, and up until he was dropped by Luxemburgo in the latter stages of last season he was one of Real's most consistent performers.
Internationally he appeared to be falling out of favour with Portugal's Brazilian coach Luiz Felipe Scolari after a more than a decade of service but the two managed to work together well enough to help their team to the final of Euro 2004 on home soil.
Portugal's most-capped player with more than a century of appearances, he retired after that tournament but had a change of heart this year and returned to the national team.
There is little doubt, though, that the 32-year-old's footballing powers are on the wane and although his effort can never be faulted, Luxemburgo quickly came to appreciate that the Figo was not suited to the more rapid counter-attacking game that he wanted his team to play.
In terms of close control, individual skill and versatility Figo is a more complete player than Beckham, but the England captain's passing skills and non-stop running fit more neatly into Luxemburgo's game plan.
Figo did relocate from the right wing to a position behind the two strikers for a short time, but was eventually forced out of the starting XI after Raul was moved into midfield in order to make room for the in-form Owen.
A melancholy figure at the best of times, Figo did not take the demotion well and accused the club of "hurting his pride" by the way in which he had been treated.
Luxemburgo was vindicated by the results, however, as Real won six and drew two of their remaining games while Figo was reduced to the role of a bit-part substitute.
On the pitch Figo is notoriously hot-tempered and argumentative, but it is his fierce competitive spirit and pride that make him the sort of player that cannot accept a supporting role.
The reversal of his decision to retire from international football and his move to Inter make it clear that he still retains a hunger for success.
With the World Cup just a year away he clearly wants to end his career on a high.

82
Football / Truetrini!!
« on: July 21, 2005, 10:13:26 AM »
Why yuh wasting yuh time on BigSoccer arguing bout Jack Warner.... that eh making no sense.... them fellas over dey myopic, geocentric and racist at times....

Only Gobh (Peter Goldstein) have a lil sense over dey... I fed up clash with them in de past... is a waste of time...

Imagine somebody actually claim that Peter Pendergrast is Jack Warner first cousin and that is why Pendergrast is still a referee!!! LOL

link for anybody who interested:

http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/showthread.php?t=221754

83
Football / Borgetti to Saudi Arabia
« on: July 21, 2005, 09:35:05 AM »
According to Soccernet.. he going to Al Ittihad instead of Bolton... Like big money passing.

http://soccernet.espn.go.com/headlinenews?id=337346&cc=3888

"Another player who has slipped through the Bolton net as Allardyce has struggled so far this summer to add to his squad is Mexican international striker Jared Borgetti, who the manager was chasing after his impressive performances during last month's Confederations Cup in Germany.

While Bolton were on the trail of the 31-year-old's signature, Saudi Arabian side Al Ittihad, the reigning Asian champions, announced they had completed a deal to sign the powerful striker, further adding to Allardyce's frustration.

'We couldn't compete with them, so if he's gone there good luck to him,' said Allardyce. 'But he's also gone there for the money not for the football so if that's the case it's just as well we didn't get him.' "

84
Football / Fellas who is de worst referee out there right now?
« on: July 08, 2005, 09:17:52 AM »
PRENDERGR-ASS from Jamaica gets my vote... what a waste...

85
Football / FLEX!!
« on: June 24, 2005, 12:50:07 PM »
I was browsing the player section

http://www.socawarriors.net/T&T_roster.htm

and ah notice yuh have Steve Sealy as going St. James Government and then St. Anthony's...

However he never went St. James that was his brother... Stevie went Fatima until Form Five... then St Anthony's

86
Football / Yorke for World Club Championships
« on: June 11, 2005, 06:48:20 AM »
From the guardian.co.uk

http://football.guardian.co.uk/breakingnews/feedstory/0,14546,-5067345,00.html


Sydney win Oceania club championship
SYDNEY, June 11 (Reuters) - Australia's Sydney FC beat New Caledonia's AS Magenta 2-0 in Tahiti on Saturday to win the Oceania club championship.
Sydney's victory earned the club the right to represent Oceania at the FIFA World Club Championship in Japan in December.
Matthew Bingley scored in the 16th minute and acting captain David Zdrilic added the second in the 59th for Sydney.
The club was only formed last year after the Australian National Soccer League was disbanded and replaced by the A-League.
The A-League is not due to kick off until later this year but Australian officials organised a short tournament to decide who would represent the country in the Oceania club championship.

87
Football / Some Opinions from Big Soccer
« on: June 09, 2005, 09:31:14 AM »
"Mexico didn't play as expected, but the opponent matters and T&T came out to play...The coach Benhaker has done a good job with that team, it is good to see teams from CONCACAF improving...
"

"Trinidad played well and look right now better than Guatemala. Beenhaker has added a lot to the team. It also didn´t help that Mexico and Mexicans thought they were playing St. Kitts. I was kind of nervous for 2 reasons. The first is that Mexico, when playing 2 games in a week, always concentrate on the 1st one and not the second. When the US game, they all concetrated on that one and totally left the Panama game until too late and endend tying. The other was Stern John and Dwight Yorke. They are pretty good players and fast. They could´ve hurt Mexico. Everyone was thinking this game was going to be a breeze and thus they played like that, overconfident and with no hurry. Thus stuff like this happens. Mexico needs to get its act together because Trinidad or not, they still can´t cope with team who close themselves defensively."


"Quote:
Originally Posted by Rafael Hernandez
Trinidad played well and look right now better than Guatemala. Beenhaker has added a lot to the team.


I agree. I wouldn't be surprised if they made a big jump in the standings and even caught up to Costa Rica. They had some good chances today and this game easily could have ended up tied or even in their favor."

88
Football / Flex you eh easy at all
« on: June 04, 2005, 06:52:20 PM »
You done update the World cup page with de victory today

http://www.socawarriors.net/World_Cup_Page.htm

Good work man

89
Football / USA vs Trinidad
« on: May 24, 2005, 12:19:57 PM »
Whatever happen to the sticky with tha game information?

People buy they tickets arready?? wha section we going?

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