Posts Tagged ‘One Love Soccer’

PUYOL SHINES BRIGHTEST vs MANNSCHAFT

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

by Marc Roseblade

The European champions, Spain, have joined Netherlands in the World Cup Final on Sunday after defeating Germany 1 nil in Durban tonight.

Carles Puyol’s 74th-minute header was enough to secure La Rojas a spot in their first ever FIFA World Cup final.

No matter who wins at Soccer City on Sunday, history will be made.

Tonight, Joachim Low’s men (minus wunderkind Thomas Muller) were unable to repeat the displays with which they swept aside England and Argentina in previous rounds. Once again, the Germans suffered a semi-final defeat.

This was Spain’s first World Cup semi-final and Vicente del Bosque’s side dominated possession from the start. Spain had dropped Torres from the starting eleven. Instead, Pedro Rodriguez had his first start of the finals and made a mark early on as he slipped a through-ball to David Villa after just six minutes. Despite a solid finish, German goalkeeper Manuel Neuer made the save.

In the 14th minute, Spain had a corner where Iniesta drove in a cross that eventual goalscorer, Puyol met with a flying header that flew over the crossbar.

Germany who were happy to play deep in their own half, continued to counter-attack when Podolski played in Ozil on the left before he brought Klose into play on the edge of the box, but the Bayern Munich forward was crowded out.
Spanish keeper Casillas needed to be alert on the half hour mark when he turned a 30-yard daisycutter from Trochowski by the post.

Germany called for a penalty on the stroke of half time when Ramos looked to have brought Ozil down in the box, but the referee waved play on.

The second half began with Alonso driving a shot narrowly wide from 25 yards, then Villa bent another attempt just wide of the post.  Pedro was next to try his luck as he made the German keeper Neuer make a fingertip save. As Mertesacker moved slowly to clear the rebound, Iniesta leaped on the opportunity to fire in a low cross that Villa just barely missed.

Casillas had to make another save on 69 minutes as German sub Kroos side-footed an effort at goal, but it was at the other end that the all-important goal was scored. With 16 minutes remaining on the clock Xavi fired in a corner that was met by the flying Puyol, and powered his header past the diving Neuer.

Pedro could have finished the game off in the final minutes when he and Torres burst through the German defense with a 2 on 1 assault. It looked as though Pedro would set Torres up with his first goal of the tournament, but the young Barca striker held on too long. In the end, Spain won.

We now look forward to history being made as a new name will proudly appear as FIFA World Cup Champions 2010. No one could argue that these two teams deserve to be at Soccer City on Sunday.

The only question that needs answered now is, Will it be La Rojas or the Oranje?

read more from Marc at My Scottish Football!

  • Share/Bookmark

ITALIA: We Came. We saw. We Failed Miserably.

Friday, June 25th, 2010

by Marc Roseblade

The Azzurri of ‘06.

Yesterday, one of the so called “power houses” of world football crashed out of the World Cup.

Italy, ranked 5th in FIFA world rankings before the tournament started, had, on paper, a fairly straightforward group.  No other countries; Paraguay, Slovakia or New Zealand are currently in the FIFA top 20.

The tournament was meant to be a swan song for wily old fox Marcello Lippi, but instead his reputation has been tarnished.  His legendary status of four years ago is now just a distant memory.

From the 1st game, they lacked passion or commitment. His team were not committed and they lacked a cutting edge in the final 3rd. Some people will blame the coach while others will blame quality of the team, and they would maybe be correct. Antonio Cassano was left at home after an excellent season with Sampdoria, Giuseppe Rossi was also left out after impressing in last years Confederation Cup while big players like Daniele De Rossi did not play to the high standards that made him one of the best defensive midfielders in the world. Antonio Di Natale and Vincenzo Iaquinta are not the standard of Italian strikers that we are used to like Zola, Del Piero and Baggio. The squad was nowhere near as strong as four years ago and Lippi appears to have lost his tactical prowess that made him so successful four years ago.

I believe it is a problem that most European leagues are suffering from a lack of quality in youth players coming onto the first team. Money has taken over Italy since the 1990’s in order to buy success. The Inter Milan team that played in the champions league final in May did not have a single Italian in the line up and the team who finished 2nd in Serie ‘A’ only had one (Daniele De Rossi) in their starting line up.

The majority of the Italian players in the 2010 World Cup squad are from mid-table teams like Napoli, Sampdoria and Udinese. You might feel sorry for Lippi for what he has to work with.  It is like asking Fabio Cappello to pick his England team from teams like Bolton and Blackburn Rovers and expect a good tournament in South Africa.

This will be a very dark time in Italy.  Heads will role and players will retire to hide from shame, but where will they go from here?

Before the Italians World Cup campaign began it was announced that Fiorentina Coach Cesare Prandelli would be taking over the national team. One of the best managers in Italian football has taken Fiorentina from mid league team to Champions League contenders.  From the Azzurri’s point of view, he got the best out of his players – most notably Alberto Gilardino, who was tipped for big things when moved to AC Milan from Parma in 2005.  When Gilardino failed to live up to the hype surrounding him at Milan, Prandelli took him to Fiorentina where has 44 goals in all competitions over two seasons.

Prandelli is well celebrated in Italian football and has been linked with top jobs in Serie A, with Juventus most recently linked to making him their new manager. He will need a better quality of player but will most surely call upon Antonio Cassano and Mario Balotelli to give back much needed flair and excitement to the Italian side.

They are down just now, the Italian FA (FIGC) are the root cause of problem by allowing vast amount of foreigners to ply there trade in Serie ‘A’.

A famous name in world football has been brought to it’s knees.  Lippi & Co let Italy down, but the Italian FA have let the standard of Italian football drop in the past 15 years and this dark day punctuates their descent. Italy is crying out for the next generation of players as the current generation has embarrassed Italy.  Let’s hope Prandelli can bring back national pride in the Euro 2012 qualifiers.

Read more from Marc at My Scottish Football!

  • Share/Bookmark

USA vs GHANA: Match Preview

Friday, June 25th, 2010

by Philip Cramer

All eyes will be fixed on LD tomorrow – photo cred: Alex V.

This USA team reminds me of the 2002 squad that made it to the quarterfinals only to lose 1-0 to Germany in a match where the Americans outplayed the opposition. The United States should have had a penalty kick, and Germany should have had a red card for a handball on the goal line.

That team came out with fire in its eyes, believing that its could beat anybody. And the Americans did, blowing away a very fancied Portugal side with three goals in the first half-hour of the opening game.

The 2010 team has that same fire and that same self-confidence that didn’t exist on the 1998 or 2006 squads.

The United States faces a tricky game tomorrow against a Ghana team that stumbled into the Round of 16 thanks to Australia. Ghana’s two biggest problems are the absence of star midfielder Michael Essien for the entire tournament, and an offense that has only scored two goals thus far—both from penalties. Those two problems are related.

The Americans are coming off the incredible high of Landon Donovan’s extra time goal to save their tournament. That will be a huge asset as confidence is essential in the knockout stage. Ghana will have a huge weight on its shoulders as the last team standing from Africa. That can cut both ways.

The U.S. is stronger at the back because of Tim Howard, and he has been excellent throughout this World Cup. It’s often the little things that make the difference in a game, such as his quick and accurate throw that led to Donovan’s game-winning goal against Algeria.

For Ghana, Richard Kingson is solid in net and has likewise been error-free in the tournament.

The U.S. defense has been solid with Jay Demerit and Carlos Bocanegra both having exceptional tournaments. Oguchi Onyewu should be back for this game as well. His height and size will help keep Ghana’s attack at bay.

Ghana have a solid defense that has given away little including holding Germany to one unstoppable goal. John Pantsil, John Mensah, and the newly promoted Jonathan Mensah have all been solid and disciplined and will force the U.S. attack to work hard.

The midfield matches up fairly evenly despite Essien’s absence. For the U.S. Michael Bradley has been stellar with a controlled level of aggression. Donovan can break open a game and Clint Dempsey is showing the wealth of experience he has garnered playing for Fulham.

Ghana’s midfield has surprised. Anthony Annan has become one of the standout holding midfielders in the tournament, and 20-year-old Andre Ayew is excelling. Kevin Prince Boateng is another player who could cause headaches for the Americans.

Up front Jozy Altidore has played well, proving he can play at this level despite not scoring yet. A goal would surely boost his confidence. Ghana needs Asamoah Gyan to come unstuck for them to have any chance at a victory. He was woeful virtually every time he got the ball in a critical situation against Germany, wasting a number of chances.

Despite struggling through the group stage, Ghana has been consistent with few errors. The ball control skills and short passing of the midfield could give Team USA headaches. The U.S. will need an error-free defense to win.

The intangibles favor the United States. The Americans’ team unity, commitment, and aggression can get under Ghana’s skin, and if that happens the United States will prevail quite comfortably. It could be a game of few clear-cut chances and whoever takes advantage of them will win.

This game could end up hinging on a lucky break, and after the group round the United States seems to have used up their allotment of bad breaks.

Soccer at this level can be a fickle mistress. The odds slightly favor the United States which is an accurate reflection of the game’s prospects. Ghana has more skill but the United States has heart, cohesion, and determination, attributes that have not been as evident for Ghana.

The United States should prevail by the odd goal, but expect a well-played, tight game.

read more from Philip at Irritable Liberal Syndrome!

  • Share/Bookmark

ONELOVE 2010: And Then What?

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Alex Valhouli/June 20th, 2010.

Heading home after 9 days in Joburg.  What a dream.

When I was a kid, I would brag to my grandfather about my dreams of becoming a professional soccer player, a professional skateboarder, snowboarder, film director, business man, etc etc. Every couple months it was something new. Every time I came to him with a new plan, he would always wait til I was finished and then ask enthusiastically, “Wow, Al, and then what?” As a teenager, I began to understand what he meant. “And then what?” means, will that be your life? Will you be happy then? And even after I began to understand the question, I had no idea how to actually SOLVE the riddle.

I think I get it now. Just live. Work hard. Stay curious. Be good to people and listen. Maintain your health. Give what you can, when you can. Accept responsibility and let others do the same for themselves. Have fun. Dozens of people have told me all of these things in the past, but it all sounded vague and impersonal until I could embrace it all through the context of ONELOVE.

After spending time in Joburg I have more belief than ever in the potential of ONELOVE FC. We are bound together, not simply by a single passion for soccer, but by an openness to embrace the lives and perspectives of different people. This is not about America, or sports, or products, or politics. It’s about people, plain and simple. We love people, and soccer is, for us, the people’s sport.

As we grow, it is our ultimate goal to establish and maintain a global presence, committed to local initiatives in the United States and abroad. Since ‘abroad’ used to be an ambiguous (sometimes terrifying) term, we scrapped it from our initial mission statement. After meeting people, talking about what soccer means in other parts of the world, experiencing new cultures in the context of soccer, we see limitless opportunity to affect positive change on a human level. We are inspired by people. We affect change through the beautiful game.

My brother, Jamie, and I visited with our grandparents before leaving for South Africa. We sat with them and explained our dream for ONELOVE. I was prepared to answer the “And then what?” question. I was finally ready. But it never came. Instead, all we heard was, “go for it.”

1L

- Alex

  • Share/Bookmark

SCOTTISH FOOTBALL: SPL Week 1 Draw

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

The SPL fixture list has been drawn randomly by some sort of weird computer thingy.

Week 1 is as followsspl

by Marc Roseblade

2010/11 Clydesdale Bank Premier League fixtures

Kick-off 3pm unless stated. TV selections will be announced in due course.

Saturday August 14
Aberdeen v Hamilton Accies
Hearts v St Johnstone
Inverness CT v Celtic
Motherwell v Hibernian
Rangers v Kilmarnock
St Mirren v Dundee United

I am not going to list all the fixtures as there are way too many, visit the SPL website.

read more from Marc at My Scottish Football!

  • Share/Bookmark

WORLD CUP ANALYSIS: Group B

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

by Philip Cramer

Group B: Argentina, Greece, Nigeria, South Korea.

This appears to be one of the easier groups to pick. I can’t see any of these teams stopping Argentina from winning the group. What can you say about an attack that may have Carlos Tevez and Diego Milito, who scored both goals in the Champion’s League final sitting on the bench. That’s the good news. Then there’s Diego Maradonna who has threatened to run naked through the streets of Buenos Aires if they win the cup. Given a choice, the players would rather win the cup and have to witness that spectacle but not by much.

More importantly I cannot understand why he left both Esteban Cambiasso and Javier Zanetti off the team. Both were a key part of Inter Milan’s record setting treble this past season and have proved themselves at the highest level. They still have Javier Mascherano and Maxi Rodriguez, who wasn’t at his best for Liverpool this season, in midfield. In defense they have Walter Samuel and Martin Dimichelis who are both world class but Garbriel Heinze has seen better days. The goalkeepers are all adequate but not exceptional.

He also picked two of his old favorites, Juan Veron (35) and Martin Palermo (37) the idol of Boca. Palermo is little more than an appendage considering the other strikers but Maradonna probably wants to hear the Argentine commentators yell, “Marteeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeen” once more before the commentator passes out from a lack of oxygen.

Nigeria has seen their star tarnished somewhat in recent years with a surprising failure to qualify for 2006 behind Angola. The stars of the late 90’s such as Jay Jay Okocha and Sunday Oliseh have gone although Nwankwo Kanu at 34 is still on the team. In defense they have the seasoned Joseph Yobo and Dickson Etuhu in the midfield but they will sorely miss John Obi Mikel of Chelsea who is out for the tournament. Up front they have Yakubu and Obafemi Martins who bring a lot of European and Premier League experience to the table.

They have a new coach, Lars Lagerbeck who coached the Swedish national team for the past nine years, but then again, they always have a new coach so that shouldn’t bother them much. Nigeria is, as always, very physical, fast and has good ball handling skills. Qualification will probably come down to their final game in the group against South Korea.

Don’t expect to see them get much support from the South African fans. The locals don’t like Nigerians many, of whom came to South Africa after the end of apartheid and got involved in drug trafficking. Nigerians were equally offended by their portrayal in the Sci-Fi film, District 9 that was written, directed and filmed in Johannesburg.

South Korea broke through in 2002 when they hosted the cup. Prior to that they had gone 14 games without a win, debuting in 1954 when they were beaten 9-0 by Hungary and 7-0 by Turkey. They have made every final since 1986. They are consistently the best team in Asia and despite not making it to the second round in 2006, held France to a draw A loss to Switzerland in the last game cont them a chance of moving on.

They key player is Park Si Jung who had a great season with Manchester United. He can control the midfield with his speed and skill on the ball. Their defense can be a little suspect but their work rate is phenomenal and their fitness is never in doubt. Apparently they have been using oxygen tents to acclimate to the altitude although two of their three games will be at sea level. A handful of their players now play in Europe which previously wasn’t the case. Lee Chung Yong is another midfielder whose speed and passing down the wing added a dimension to Bolton Wanderers and was their Player of the Year.

I am not that familiar with Greece as most of their players play locally in Greece. They had a relatively easy route to qualification finishing second in their group behind Switzerland and ahead of Latvia and Israel. In the playoff they were held at home by Ukraine to a goalless draw and then surprised them by poaching a goal in the first half and hanging on to qualify.

Their biggest asset is their German coach Otto Renhagel who took them to the unlikeliest of victories in Euro 2004 when they beat Portugal twice, including the final as well as beating France and the Czech Republic and drawing with Spain with a team if unknowns. I can’t see them repeating that miracle in only their second appearance in the finals. In their first appearance in 1994 they lost all their games by a combined goal margin of 0-10. They will do better than that dismal debut but not by much.

There is a large Greek émigré population in South Africa who will turn out in full support and that might help.

Argentina will win the group and might even take maximum points if all goes well. South Korea and Nigeria will battle it out for second place.

Fearless Forecast:

1 – Argentina
2 – Nigeria

read more from ONELOVE Ambassador Philip Cramer at Irritable Liberal Syndrome.

  • Share/Bookmark

CHINA TOPS FRANCE: Seriously?

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

Les Bleus win the worst-in-show prize for today after a 1-0 loss to China. Check out highlights.

  • Share/Bookmark

OFFICIAL WORLD CUP ROSTER: Netherlands

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

by Marc Roseblade

The Oranje were the latest top team to announce their 23 man World Cup squad.

Goalkeepers: Sander Boschker (FC Twente), Maarten Stekelenburg (Ajax), Michel Vorm (FC Utrecht)

Defenders: Khalid Boulahrouz (Stuttgart), Edson Braafheid (Celtic), John Heitinga (Everton), Joris Mathijsen (Hamburg), Andre Ooijer (PSV Eindhoven), Giovanni van Bronckhorst (Feyenoord), Gregory van der Wiel (Ajax)

Midfielders: Ibrahim Afellay (PSV Eindhoven), Nigel de Jong (Manchester City), Demy de Zeeuw (Ajax), Stijn Schaars (AZ Alkmaar), Wesley Sneijder (Inter Milan), Mark van Bommel (Bayern Munich), Rafael van der Vaart (Real Madrid)

Forwards: Ryan Babel (Liverpool), Eljero Elia (Hamburg), Klaas Jan Huntelaar (AC Milan), Dirk Kuyt (Liverpool), Arjen Robben (Bayern Munich), Robin van Persie (Arsenal)

There were no huge surprises in the players that were cut from the 27 man quad. Orlando Engelaar, Vurnon Anita, Ron Vlaar and Jeremain Lens will not travel to South Africa.

Last night the Dutch squad defeated Mexico 2-1 convincingly with a Van Persie double.

Holland are another amazing nation that have never won the World Cup. Having finished as runners-up twice (1974 & 1978), they’re looking to go the distance in South Africa.

They certainly have a squad of players capable of winning the competition and it would be refreshing to have a different name on the cup. Their fans are also among the most colourful in the world.

The future is bright, the future is Oranje!

read more from Marc at myscottishfootball.blogspot.com!

  • Share/Bookmark

DAVE KIRBY ON ‘15 MINUTES’

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Istanbul, 2005. Liverpool take to the dressing room at halftime, trailing AC Milan 3-0 in the Champions League Final. They emerge 15 minutes later to deliver the greatest comeback performance in Champions League history.

Our friends at the Kicking & Screening Festival (June 1st-5th in NYC) have shared with us an inside look at ‘15 Minutes That Shook The World,’ a comedic journey through the pivotal halftime break featuring rare performances from legends Jamie Carragher and Steven Gerrard. The film screens June 1st at Tribeca Cinemas.

A few words from Writer/Co-director Dave Kirby…

“Like every Liverpool fan (and every football fan) I always wondered just what the hell happened in that dressing room at half time in Istanbul. Without doubt it was the greatest and most dramatic comeback in football history of one of the greatest and emotional nights of my life. As a drama it had everything – a beginning, middle, and end – tragedy – tears –hero characters – a dramatic twist – ecstasy …in fact even Shakespeare couldn’t have written it better.

In my mythical dreams I always preferred to believe that Rafa gave some kind of Winston Churchill / Martin Luther King type speech or that maybe the players were inspired by the passionate, emotional rendition of ‘You’ll never walk alone’ which echoed around the stadium during the half time interval. No chance!

When the reports came back they all described a dressing room of complete calm and composure. I was gutted. Surely some bastard got angry? To me it felt like ‘Braveheart’ without the rally cry of: ‘Freedom’ or ‘Zulu’ without the song: ‘Men of Harlech. It was definitely that mythical yearning which prompted me to write the Istanbul story as I saw it …with humour! Much had been written and filmed about that fateful evening but not in movie format or with humour and certainly not in a way which also allows the viewer to witness our most bitter rival’s pain.

In Liverpool the humour is brutal and cutting and fundamentally based on ridicule – in many ways similar to New York (‘The Jerky Boys’ phone call tapes are still revered in my city). In Liverpool wherever there’s a compliment, a humorous insult is never far away which is evident in the film – no one escapes it – not even the players and Rafa who attended the premiere and took it in the spirit in which it was written.

Since its release the film has been translated with subtitles into German and Norwegian and is about to hit Asia such is the global appeal of Liverpool FC. That night that will stay in our hearts and minds forever. As a Liverpool fan and writer I’m proud that it’s now been captured forever in a light-hearted 100% Liverpool tale. ”

  • Share/Bookmark

CAPE VERDE HOLDS PORTUGAL

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Ronaldo fails to impress – photo credit: AP

Portugal struggled against minnows Cape Verde Islands earlier today.

Portugal had a full compliment of first team players on show but even some of the worlds greatest players couldn’t make the break through against the small african nation ranked a lowly 117th in the world.

Despite numerous chances, even the great Ronaldo failed to score and Portugal manager Queiroz will hope his talented side will start to produce the goods soon as their first World Cup match is only 3 weeks away.

Portugal qualified for the World cup only after beating Bosnia in one of the European sections play off matches and the Portuguese have always failed to reach the heights expectd of them in World Cup.

Few could argue that they have a team filled with star players but on this occasion tonight they were unable to deliver the goods and the question has to be asked if they will be able to raise their game when they come up against Brazil in their World Cup group.

Portugals team included Ronaldo, Deco, Carvalho, Ferreira, Bruno Alves, Nani & Mendes.

If you like this, please share.

for more of Marc’s writing, visit www.myscottishfootball.blogspot.com

  • Share/Bookmark