Archive for April, 2009

Serie A to break away, Manchester United fans petition for Tevez signing, Soccerlens interviews American keeper Hope Solo, and more


Those of you who frequent the Soccerlens forums are no doubt familiar with Ivor Irwin, a.k.a bobotonto on the forums. Ivor has contributed to SL, and he also has his own blog, where you can find an excellent interview with English Brazilian football expert Jon Cotterill.

What else should you be checking out from around the football blogosphere? Find out in today’s roundup.

Interview with American Goalkeeper Hope Solo

Hope Solo is a great goalkeeper (and nice to look at too), and Soccerlens is very proud to have an interview with the U.S. Women’s National Team and St. Louis Athletica star.

Serie A to Break Away

In a move that have a profound effect on the lower divisions of Italian football, Serie A’s member clubs have decided to break away, Premier League-style. Good idea, or recipe for disaster?

Petition to Sign Carlos Tevez

Manchester United have thus far balked on signing Carlos Tevez to a permanent deal, but some United fans are trying to do their part to get the club to make the deal happen.

Manchester United v. Liverpool – Penalties & Red Cards

A lot is made of the decisions that supposedly go in Manchester United’s favor, but have Liverpool actually come out better with the referees this season

Should Barcelona Be Complaining About Chelsea’s Tactics?

Barcelona are none too happy about Chelsea holding them scoreless at the Nou Camp on Tuesday night, but are they just being bitter about an excellent defensive gameplan by Guus Hiddink?

Did Gemma Atkinson Turn Down Maradona?

Diego Maradona is known as a clinical finisher with both the ball and with women (like Wanda Nara), but he apparently came up a little short with Gemma Atkinson.

Serie A to break away, Manchester United fans petition for Tevez signing, Soccerlens interviews American keeper Hope Solo, and more” was originally published at Soccerlens.com – Football News.Share/Save/Bookmark

Is this the Premier League’s Most Improved player? Liverpool, Arsenal, Chelsea, Spurs, Man United, Man City and Everton fans vote now!

Make your voice heard!

So we just had the PFA Player of the year awards on the weekend and Ryan Giggs finally picked up the award at the 42nd time of asking but now it’s your turn to vote. We here at COS Towers are looking for the most improved player …

Manchester United v Liverpool – Penalties and Red Cards


The following article is re-posted with permission from the Manchester United forum, Republik of Mancunia:

The following is an analysis of all premiership premiership and champions league champions league games played by Manchester United and Liverpool this season. Liverpool are sure that United are top the table by manipulating the referees. Lets see if the facts support those accusations:

Manchester United

Games Played : 32

Number of Penalties given to United* : 4 League / 0 Champions League

—— Premier League ————-

1. Ronaldo (pen) 57 – Man Utd 5-2 Tottenham
2. Ronaldo (pen) 23 – Man Utd 1-4 Liverpool
3. Ronaldo (pen) 44 – Man Utd 1-0 Everton
4. Ronaldo (pen) 60 – Man Utd 2-0 Bolton

With the exception of Everton, United won every game they were awarded a penalty against by at least 1 additional goal.

Number of Penalties given against against United*: 3 League / 0 Champions League

—— Premier League ————-
1. Murphy (pen) 18 – Fulham 2-0 United
2. Gerrard (pen) 44 – Man Utd 1-4 Liverpool
3. Geovanni (pen) 82 – Man Utd 4-3 Hull

With the exception of Hull which united won by 1 goal, every penalty given against United resulted in the team losing the match.

No Penalties awarded against against United in the Champions League.

Number of United Players Sent Off: 5

—— Premier League ————-
1. Scholes 18 min – Fulham 2-0 United
2. Rooney 89 min – Fulham 2-0 United
3. Vidic 76 min – United 1-4 Liverpool
4. Vidic 90 min – Liverpool 2-1 United
5. Ronaldo 68 min – Man City 0-1 United

With the exception of Man City, United lost every game in which a player was sent off.

Number of Opposing Players Sent Off: 2

—— Premier League ————-
1. Robinson 40 – West Brom 0-5 United
2. Wilkinson 72 – Stoke 0-1 United


Now lets look at how much Liverpool has suffered at the hands of the refs.

Liverpool

League Games Played: 33

Number of Penalties given to the Liverpool*: 8 (4 in the League / 4 in the Champions League)

—— Premier League ————-
1. Gerrard (pen) 39 vs Villa 5-0
2. Gerrard (pen) 65 vs Villa 5-0
3. Gerrard (pen) 44 vs United 1-4 (A)
4. Alonso (pen) 77 vs newcastle 1-5 (A)

—– Champions League ———–

5. Alonso (pen) 28 vs Chelsea 4-4
6. Gerrard (pen) 28 vs Real Madrid 4-0
7. Gerrard (pen) 90+5 vs Atletico Madrid 1-1
8. Gerrard (pen) 32 vs Marseille 1-2 (A)

While not so significant in the league, penalties awarded to liverpool came in very handy in tight games against Marseille and Atletico Madrid. It almost gave them the edge over Chelsea as well.

Number of Penalties given against against Liverpool*: 2

—— Premier League ————-

1. Ronaldo (pen) 23 , Man Utd 1-4 Liverpool
2. Mido (pen) 83, Wigan 1-1 Liverpool (A)

Of the two penalties against Liverpool only Mido’s cost them points.

Number of Liverpool Players Sent Off: 0

That’s right. Zero! Only Lucas has been sent off this season for Liverpool, and that was against Everton in the FA cup. 0 players sent off in the league and the champions League. Now, lets see how many players have been sent off when playing against Liverpool.

Number of Opposing Players Sent Off: 8

1. Hull 1-3 Liverpool ( Sent off Folan)
2. Liverpool 5-0 Vila ( Sent off Friedel )
3. Utd 1-4 Liverpool ( send off Vidic )
4. Liverpool 2-1 Utd ( sent off Vidic)
5. Liverpool 2-0 Chelsea (sent off Lampard )
6. Arsenal 1-1 Liverpool ( sent off Adebayor )
7. Man City 2-3 Liverpool (sent off Zabelta )
8. Everton 0-2 Liverpool (sent off Cahill)

8 Players have been sent off playing against Liverpool. Of these 8 games, Liverpool won 7 Matches and drew 1 (playing away). Liverpool have played 33 games this season and almost a aquarter of the time it was against 10 men.


Footnotes

* Only penalties that have been scored have been counted. I have no stats on penalties that were awarded but not converted. If you know where to get these stats feel free to add them in this thread.

Sources for all Stats:

Manchester United – BBC Match Results
Liverpool – BBC Match Results

The above article is re-posted with permission from the Manchester United forum, Republik of Mancunia:

Also See: The Big Decision Webb and the Media Missed

Manchester United v Liverpool – Penalties and Red Cards” was originally published at Soccerlens.com – Football News.Share/Save/Bookmark

Interview with Hope Solo, USWNT and St Louis Athletica Goalkeeper


Hope Solo is the goalkeeper for the US national team, a 2008 Beijing Olympic Gold medalist, and now the undaunted keeper for St. Louis Athletica, a WPS team currently at the bottom of the table.

Noted for her outspoken comments about her coach’s decisions during the World Cup, she is just as genuine and forthright now speaking about her decision to become a goalkeeper, why England should have a women’s league, and why MLS should increase their international roster slots. Solo also revealed that she’s become a Seattle Sounders fan.

Read the Soccerlens interview with Hope Solo, after the jump.

LE: I saw you play the Boston Breakers in freezing rain at Harvard Stadium three weeks ago. How did the conditions affect your game?

Solo: I could care less about stadiums, to be honest. It was kind of old-school turf and turf is kind of a different game for us, and that turf was carpeted, very slick, very hard and the wind, the rain, the conditions definitely not ideal.

LE: Athletica fell 2-0 that night and a few weeks earlier the national team suffered a tough loss to Norway on a PK in the Algarve Cup, although you won the distinction of Player of the Tournament. But it must have hurt because the national team had won that Cup the previous two years. Walk me through the process of a picking yourself up after a defeat and moving ahead.

hope-solo-2Solo: We don’t want to lose because of our competitive nature, which is at an incredibly high level. No one wants to lose, period. It should hurt, it should sting, and you don’t want to feel that feeling again. I don’t think it’s very tough to pick yourself up because you go into the next game and you don’t want to feel that feeling again. To me it’s quite easy. I have a problem with players who don’t take the loss personally. At a professional level you should, it’s our job, it’s our livelihood, it’s who we are at this level. Every loss should be taken that personal.

LE: Tell me about your college career and how you became a goalkeeper.

Solo: I went to the University of Washington at Seattle. I had made a vow to never stay in my home state to play, I wanted to go as far East Coast as possible, more or less to get away from my family life. I was a seventeen year-old wanting to get away and run, but I ended up staying in my home state and fell in love with it. I ended up having a beautiful relationship with my family over time and it was the best decision I’ve ever made.

I also had to make the decision of whether I wanted to be a full-time goalkeeper or a full-time field player. I was a very good field player so that was a hard switch for me to make full-time in college. It was horrible, to this day I ask myself why I’m a goalkeeper!

I’m actually very proud of it now, but it took years. I played soccer all my life and I used to think growing up that they put the fat kid in goal or they put the kid that wasn’t good with the ball at their feet in goal and I never wanted to do goalkeeper, I was always the goal scorer. But with that said, because I was so athletic, I excelled very quickly at goalkeeper, so I was kind of ahead of my time. I was a fit goalkeeper, very athletic but good with the ball at my feet, good footwork, so I went far pretty quickly as a goalkeeper.

LE: Did you go into it thinking “I’m going to be a goalkeeper” or “I’ll try it out and if it doesn’t work, I’m back on the field” ?

Solo: I think once I made that decision it was either all or nothing. I know I can play on the field at a very high level – even to this day with some training, but I made my decision and I stick with it.

LE: Do you think the NCAA should relax their restrictions on college soccer and expand it to a two-season sport?

Solo: Yes, I think it would help the sport.

LE: Why isn’t there a women’s professional league in England where you’d think it would have evolved first with all the history and culture?

Solo: It’s kind of frustrating. I play with Eniola Aluko, an English player, and we were talking just the other day about how sad it is that England really doesn’t have a women’s league because they have some incredible players, some of the best players in the world. And they don’t have a women’s league! Germany, Japan, has a women’s league. WPS is what American players have talked about for years and fortunately we have great support for soccer, we can make this our livelihood, and we can put every ounce of time and money and passion into our sport, which is also our job.

It’s unfortunate that in England we heard that players weren’t getting paid for taking time off and going to the World Cup. They have to take a lot of time off and I don’t know if it’s five, six weeks they spent over there, but was it worth it in the long run, losing money if they have jobs back home? I don’t see how that’s supportive, in terms of the Federation, in wanting them to train harder in an effort to win that World Cup.

That’s what we need as American players if we’re expected to win a gold medal or win the World Cup every time, we need the support to do so, whether financially or with health insurance – it doesn’t matter, but the US players have stuck together for a long time and US Soccer has supported us for a long time. It’s unfortunate because England could be so incredibly good – they are great, but they could be better.

hope_solo-3LE: Is MLS supportive of WPS?

Solo: No, we have entirely different leagues, they’re not supportive. Keep in mind though, that England has much richer clubs than we do here, I don’t think we have any high profile MLS clubs, to be honest. They’re just trying to make their own money and meet their own ends, so they’re doing things on their own for good reason.

We, the women’s league, have individual investors like in England, and there’s many ways to go about it and some of the clubs there would do very well to pick up a women’s team. It depends on the individual investors on how you want to run this league.

LE: Do you think Don Garber’s recent suggestion to expand the international roster in MLS would improve that league?

Solo: Yeah, I do. I think it’s incredible to see some of the foreign players come over to the MLS side. If the money is there and we have the opportunity to get more players, America would really appreciate the quality of play, which in essence would improve the sport in America.

LE: Do you think MLS and WPS should be marketed separately or do you think there are joint opportunities?

Solo: I think there are opportunities with doubleheaders. Their fan base is more or less the same soccer fan base that we’re all trying to market to. I think the women’s game gets more family coming together and young girls, but overall we all want that soccer market and I think if we have doubleheaders many of the audience would stay.

LE: Do you follow an MLS team?

Solo: Now that Seattle has a team in my hometown, I’m all behind Seattle Sounders as far as catching every single game and very much enjoying it. I’m glad MLS is expanding and will have three teams in the northwest now. I never had a favorite team until this year with Seattle.

LE: WPS is already planning to expand with three new teams, with Philadelphia starting up as the eighth in 2010, that’s pretty fast isn’t it?

Solo: I think it’s a little fast but at the same time I think it’s incredible for the sport to get more players, bring over more internationals, raising the quality of play. I think we could go another year with seven teams, but if we can afford it, if our investors can afford it, why not bring in another team?

LE: What’s the relationship between your club St. Louis Athletica and the proposed MLS franchise in St. Louis?

Solo: Actually, it’s our owner of the women’s team, Jeff Cooper, and he’s going after an MLS team as well. I think there would be a lot of similarities if he won the bid. We’d be sharing facilities, we’d be sharing ownership, and I think in the future our owner is going to be the model that other teams are going to try to follow behind.

LE: What are your personal goals this season?

Solo: Even though we’re in last place right now, it’s still early in the season. There’s 17 more games and my goal never has changed, and that is to win the entire league. The inaugural year would be incredible, that’s my #1 goal.

Also See: WPS ad featuring Hope Solo

Photo Credit: Tony Biscaia / BreakersNet.

Interview with Hope Solo, USWNT and St Louis Athletica Goalkeeper” was originally published at Soccerlens.com – Football News.Share/Save/Bookmark

Weekend of drama looms in the Football League

Nine months of dreams, disappointment, hope and joy will draw to a close this weekend with the end of the regular season in the Football League.*

Each team has played 4,050 minutes of football over 45 games – and for many all their hard work, endeavour, desire and commitment boils down to one gut-wrenching afternoon.

In short, what will unfold this weekend is the drama of the final day of the season. Or, as a mate of mine put it, we are about to go split-screen.

Over the course of this season I have visited grounds that ought to host Premier League football and others that felt more like a homely social club.

For me, this is a central part of the beauty of the Football League, the fact that its 72 clubs take us across a rich and varied footballing spectrum. Rich and poor often exist cheek by jowl (they certainly will in League One next season) and, refreshingly, the wealthy don’t always end up drinking the end-of-season champagne.

What I have discovered over the last nine months is that all are united by their incredible work ethic and an unwavering desire to succeed – but some will end the weekend nursing a disappointment of staggering proportions.

Birmingham boss Alex McLeish, Sheffield United's Kevin Blackwell and Steve Coppell of Reading

Starting at the top, Sunday is the final day of the Championship season and a three-way tussle for the Promised Land.

Birmingham, Sheffield United and Reading all harbour hopes of snatching the second automatic promotion spot.

It would already belong to Blues had they not surrendered a one-goal lead to Preston last weekend. Instead they now face a tricky trip to Reading, who are three points behind Alex McLeish’s side but have a vastly superior goal difference.

I’ll be there on Sunday, trying to capture the emotions of the victorious and the vanquished. The Royals must win to have any chance, while a draw might be enough for Blues.

The joker in the pack is Sheffield United.

The Blades are one point behind Birmingham and two above Reading. If Kevin Blackwell’s team win and Birmingham don’t it will be up, up and away for the Yorkshire club who are still hurting about the role Carlos Tevez played in their downfall the last time they were in the Premier League.

And who are they playing? Crystal Palace, wedged in the comforting if slightly underwhelming safety of mid-table and managed by lifelong Blades fan Neil Warnock, who was in charge at Bramall Lane during their fateful Premier League season two years ago.

Palace chairman Simon Jordan, to be frank, cannot stand the board at Birmingham, while Blades boss Kevin Blackwell used to be assistant to Warnock at Bramall Lane.

Warnock’s claim this week that if Sheffield United play to their potential they will win has only added fuel to the fire of those who love a good conspiracy theory.

Equally intriguing is the three-way tussle for the last two play-off places.

Cardiff are in the box seat – a point for them at Sheffield Wednesday will do it – and a win for Burnley at home to Bristol City will guarantee that all the excellent work done by Owen Coyle and his team does not end this weekend.

Preston are hoping one of the other two will slip up.

North End are an excellent point in case as to why you should never give up. After losing to Blackpool on 11 April, the home fans trudged out of Deepdale groggy from the knockout blow their deadliest rivals had seemingly delivered to their play-off hopes.

Three straight wins later and they are poised to pounce on any last-day slip, providing of course they overcome the shambles that currently goes by the name of QPR.

Incidentally, if Cardiff lose and Preston win, North End will pip them on goal difference – a direct result of their 6-0 thrashing of the Bluebirds two weeks ago. Unbelievable – where did that one come from?

The relegation worries belong to Norwich and Barnsley. Any sort of positive result for the Tykes at Plymouth will condemn the Canaries to the third tier of English football for the first time since 1960. Jeremy Goss scoring against Bayern Munich seems a long time ago but, then again, this has been a season of unremitting misery for supporters of some of the Championship’s supposed big-hitters.

Norwich boss Bryan Gunn

Saturday is the final day of both the League One and League Two seasons – and each division features a straight shoot out for the final play-off place. Scunthorpe host Tranmere, who need a win to snatch sixth place from the Iron. Likewise, Shrewsbury travel to Dagenham & Redbridge knowing victory will see them move above their opponents. Sometimes the fixture calendar is a wonderful thing.

There are no other promotion issues in League One but there is trouble at the bottom. Realistically one of Northampton, Brighton and Carlisle will go down. Carlisle need to defeat Millwall at Brunton Park to have any chance of survival and hope one of the other two slips up.

Two automatic promotion spots remain up for grabs in League Two, with Wycombe, Exeter and Bury in the mix.

Wycombe have wobbled at times this season but a draw will do for them, while Exeter in third are a point clear of Bury.

I’m going to watch Exeter at Rotherham on Saturday to see whether they can clinch back-to-back promotions. It won’t be easy for them against a Rotherham side, who would be considerably higher up the table were it not for the fact they started the season on minus 17 points. If the Grecians do seal promotion it would be a wonderful achievement for a club that has experienced its fair share of relegation and financial problems over recent years. Mind you, the same could be said of Bury, who play Accrington Stanley. Shakers manager Alan Knill must be applauded for the brilliant job he has done at Gigg Lane.

Spare a thought for Luton and, barring a miracle, Chester on Saturday. They will be waving goodbye to the Football League. I spoke to Luton chairman Nick Owen a few weeks ago. Clearly the bitterness they feel at the hands of their treatment by the football authorities, who docked them 30 points before the season started, has not faded over the last nine months.

Following the fortunes of the clubs in the Football League this season has been both fascinating and insightful. I have been amazed by the dedication of virtually all of the people that I have spoken to, all determined to acquire that little edge that might make all the difference. And in a world when the top flight can at times seem to be populated almost exclusively by automatons I like to think that there are plenty of characters left in the Football League.

And next season you’ll be able to see a lot more of the Football League on this website. Every goal will be available to UK users to replay again and again (over the seven days after each match anyway), with plenty of divisional packages as well to take you through all the action.

I always think that a season feels like a very long time. It takes a long time for the table to take shape and there are long stretches when results don’t seem to matter that much, after all there is always next week. Not any more.

* Unless your team makes the play-offs.
** If you want to predict the final weekend’s results and see what difference your predictions would make to the final table, why not use our predictor – which is available for the Championship, League One and League Two.