Posts Tagged ‘Best of SL’

Soccerlens’ official song for the 2010 World Cup

soccerlens logo Soccerlens official song for the 2010 World Cup

I know it’s a bit late but we just couldn’t resist it after we have been crazy about this song around the same time that the 2010 version of the World Cup kicked off.

It’s a rather unknown band – the kind of bands who only have one good song and that’s it – Clutch and the song is actually the original soundtrack of the brilliant first person shooter video game Left 4 Dead 2. The song is called Electric Worry.

So, here it is (with a slideshow of some of the sexiest babes to keep you company)… the Soccerlens’ 2010 FIFA World Cup Official Song:

Original post: Soccerlens’ 2010 FIFA World Cup Song.

Soccerlens’ official song for the 2010 World Cup” was originally published at Soccerlens.com – Football News.



Soccerlens Review: The 09/10 Season


The 2009/2010 football season has been a rollercoaster ride of thrills, spills and tragi-comic falls as it builds up to the summer’s main event, the World Cup.

The memory of Blackpool’s monumental triumph is still fresh, and the sight of Jose Mourinho gracefully accepting the adulation of the traveling Inter fans on Saturday night was a poignant reminder of the man’s sense of timing and ability to mould his destiny to his will. Which other manager would have aced the job interview that was the Champions League final at Bernabeu so perfectly as Mourinho? Who else could have masterminded his life such?

But there’s more to the season than just end-of-May triumphs. From the record-breaking exploits of Real Madrid and Barcelona in a farcical two-club league to Liverpool’s demise and Tottenham’s Champions League qualification, from Fulham’s mammoth European campaign to Bayern’s near-perfect season, there has been plenty to talk about both on and off the pitch.

Here’s a look at our competition-by-competition review for the season – we’ll be back on July 12th with a review of the World Cup as well, till then check out the articles below:

Soccerlens Review: The 09/10 Season” was originally published at Soccerlens.com – Football News.



09/10 Serie A Review: Five-times Inter, the rise of Roma, the fall of Juventus and Milan


Serie A is a league of pragmatists. There are pragmatic coaches, who specialise in delivering results rather than entertainment. There are pragmatic owners, who will sack a manager without blinking. And there are pragmatic players, who will (allegedly) occasionally agree to play for a scoreline that suits both teams.

It is a league still recovering from the Calciopoli scandal of 2006 – a scandal that has reared its head across this season both in the press and courtroom. One of the consequences of that scandal is a perceived absence of competition, with Inter Milan having caught hold of the Scudetto ball and run with it, racking up several titles in the process. This year, however, a challenger emerged from a surprising source.

Title Race

title-race

Such is the force of Jose Mourinho’s personality that were Inter languishing in the bottom half of the table, he’d still be making headlines across Europe. As it is, he’s finally managed to shape this Inter side in to his own image. The summer saw them pull off one of the most remarkable transfer coups in recent footballing history – and all while selling their supposed best player. Zlatan Ibrahimovic went to Barcelona in exchange for Samuel Eto’o and a mammoth 46 million euros windfall. Ibrahimovic had been the inspiration between their title-winning campaign the season before, but Mourinho did not mourn his departure. Instead, he set about reinvesting the cash.

Aside from the arrival of Eto’o, there were four significant signings. He brought in Brazilian skipper Lucio from Bayern Munich to partner Argentinian hardman Walter Samuel at the back.

Two more South Americans arrived from Genoa, whose good form in 2008/09 saw them qualify for the Europa league. Combative Brazilian midfielder Thiago Motta arrived to add steel and a threat from long-range, whilst Diego Milito joined Eto’o as part of a new-look front-line. Milito arrived with a goalscoring record of at least one every two games for both Real Zaragoza and Genoa. Mourinho was as good as guaranteeing goals, and so it has proved.

The most significant signing, however, was Dutchman Wesley Sneijder. Like Motta, Sneijder had suffered a succession of knee injuries in his career and there were doubts about his long-term viability. Having been bought by Real Madrid to replace the expert delivery and set-piece threat of David Beckham, he now found himself being forced out by the arrival Xabi Alonso and Kaka. A move to Inter was seen as a gamble by all parties – some pundits feared Sneijder would be too delicate for the tactical minefield of the Serie A midfield. However, to the surprise of many, he has flourished.

Sneijder is not, at first glance, a typical Mourinho player. The Portugese coach is known for favouring physically powerful, consistent, solider-like players. Sneijder is a mercurial talent, but he does meet his manager’s demand for statistical excellence: like Xavi of Barcelona and Cesc Fabregas of Arsenal, he is supreme when it comes to the retention of possession. However, of these two players he is more like the latter, as most of his work is done in the final third. With Motta and Esteban Cambiasso behind him, he is free to break forward and supply the likes of Milito, Eto’o, and January signing Goran Pandev.

Finally, Mourinho had his team. A team with the efficiency of his Chelsea side, with Sneijder playing the role Deco played in his Porto team  – providing the creative spark.

The one thing standing between the Portugese and the Scudetto success was an old enemy: Claudio Ranieri. Mourinho had replaced Ranieri at Chelsea, and famously denounced the Italian’s reign as one characterised by failure, branding the Italian manager “a loser”. Now Ranieri had returned as manager of his hometown club, AS Roma, and a remarkable 23-match unbeaten run propelled the Romans to the top of the league for the first time in three years.

Ranieri’s Roma was built on a remarkable never-say-die attitude. They had to do without the talismanic Francesco Totti for long periods, but were able to rely instead on the clinical finishing of Mirko Vucinic and a revived Jeremy Menez. Ranieri also brought in World Cup-winning striker Luca Toni on loan from Bayern Munich to add some much-needed firepower to his existing options.

There was one phrase which spread like wildfire among Roma fans, even as the possibility of ending their wait for Serie A glory grew tantalisingly close: “It’s not going to happen, but if it happens…”.

As it happens, their cynicism was well-placed: Inter edged the title on the final day with a 1-0 win over Siena. Roma’s turnaround under the likeable Ranieri was the feel-good story of the season, but Mourinho is anything but sentimental. His side were ruthless and strong enough to keep the capital club at bay.

Roma were also defeated by Inter in the Final of the Italian Cup, meaning that when Inter face Bayern in this weekend’s Champions League Final they, like their German opponents, will be one game away from a historic treble. Whether or not that proves to be Mourinho’s final game as Inter manager remains to be seen – the failure of Manuel Pellegrini to land La Liga means he could swiftly become a target for Real Madrid. Ranieri, meanwhile, has been linked with replacing Marcello Lippi as boss of the national team. However, having come so close to winning the league, you suspect he’ll want another crack at proving Mourinho’s “loser” jibe wrong.

Best of the Rest

best-of-rest

It’s been a difficult first season in management for Brazilian Leonardo at Milan. The former technical director was drafted in to replace the departing Carlo Ancelotti, and after an initial sticky patch the early signs were good. Leonardo was coaxing improved performances out of his mercurial compatriot, Ronaldinho, and the team were playing fluid football.

However, this is a Milan squad badly in need of overhaul. There are aging legs in every department, and the nigh-supernatural effects of the famous Milan Lab are beginning to wear off. Having achieved the bare minimum required – third place – Leonardo swiftly resigned. Not only has he taken little joy from the stresses of football management, but his working relationship with owner Silvio Berlusconi has been stretched close to breaking point. It’s doubtful whether the Brazilian would have received the funds necessary to make the changes required.

Whoever takes the Milan job now – and the likes of Marco Van Basten, Mauro Tassotti, and Filippo Galli have all been linked with the role – will have to build on the younger elements of A.C.’s spine: Brazilian pair Thiago Silva and Alexandre Pato. Both are reported to be summer targets for Real Madrid, but are essential if Milan are serious about re-establishing themselves as a domestic and European force.

The fourth Champions League spot – a place that may disappear in the coming seasons if Bayern beat Inter and secure a higher coefficient ranking for Germany – went to Sampdoria. It was the Blucerchiati who dismantled Roma’s title-challenge with a crushing victory, and their form over the season suggests they could be an exciting contributor to next season’s Champions League.

Their manager, Gigi Del Neri, has worked wonders, building a team that is both solid at the back and exciting upfront. In less than a year he has revolutionised the team, replacing an erratic 3-5-2 system with a reliable 4-4-2. He has shown the courage to drop his best players, including the temperamental Antonio Cassano, and it has paid off – after a run out of the side in favour of Nicola Pozzi, Cassano returned reinvigorated and full of running. Only Roma have claimed more points in the second half of the season. It is no surprise to see Del Neri linked with some of Italy’s top jobs – including the intriguing possibility of replacing Mourinho at Inter, or joining Juventus.

Palermo were pipped to the post by Sampdoria, but can still take a great deal of pride from a fantastic season. Like Sampdoria, however, their satisfaction will be tempered by the fear of impending departures. 21-year old Denmark centre-half Simon Kjaer has been in outstanding form all season, and would only provide the assurance that he would say if the club reached the Champions League. As it is, the vultures of Europe’s top clubs are circling to prize him away. The same is true of another young talent, the dazzling Argentine talent Javier Pastore, who has been heavily linked with a move to Spain. Palermo president Maurizio Zamparini is insistent that Pastore will not be sold for “at least three seasons”, but he’s yet to receive the multi-million euro offers through his fax machine.

Juventus have had a nightmare campaign. After sacking Ranieri at the back end of last season, new coach Ciro Ferrara moved to strengthen his team with a couple of big-money Brazilian signings: playmaker Diego and holding midfielder Felipe Melo. Ferrara, however, lasted only until January, by which point his team had been eliminated from both the Coppa Italia and the Champions League. Serie A’s most successful club were in a dreadful state, and though caretaker Alberto Zaccheroni has shown some acumen to keep a sinking ship afloat, a 1-1 draw with Catania in early May ended any lingering hopes of Champions League qualification.

They now join Palermo and a resurgent Napoli in next season’s Europa League. Their efforts in the summer will be concentrated on trying to lure Rafa Benitez, who it seems will be without Champions League football wherever he begins next season.

Fiorentina will not be in next season’s Champions League either, but had an impressive showing in this year’s competition, only to be knocked out by some dodgy refereeing against eventual finalists Bayern. Those of a morbid persuasion will have watched on with a grim fascinating at the unraveling career of one-time Chelsea star Adrian Mutu. Mutu, who was sacked by the Stamford Bridge club for testing positive in a drugs test, will now be suspended until October 2010 following another anti-doping scandal in January.

Lazio’s most significant contribution to this year’s league was rolling over against Inter Milan to stop their rivals Roma from winning the title. “If you win we’ll beat you up,” bellowed the Lazio fans at the Stadio Olimpico – and, remarkably, their words were not aimed at the opposition. Fernando Muslera, the Lazio goalkeeper, was the only player in his team who seemed to be making much effort – so much so that Gazzetta dello Sport’s Luigi Garlando likened him to “the Japanese man in the forest who doesn’t realise the war is over”.

Battle at the Bottom

battle-bottom

Atalanta were relegated as the third bottom side, and will be cursing their luck at a quite extraordinary piece of refereeing.

In a crucial game with Bologna, the side who would eventually escape with a 17th place finish, they conceded a corner. From the set piece, Atalanta’s Pellegrino was marking Bologna’s Portanova. Pellegrino pulled ever so slightly on Portanova’s shirt, sending his man tumbling like a spinning top to the ground. The referee, Tagliavento, immediately blew his whistle, signalling for a penalty and booking Pellegrino for the foul.

Pellegrino and some of the other Atalanta players, clearly incensed by such a soft penalty decision against them, started to argue the case with the ref, who then promptly handed out a second yellow card followed by a red. The only problem that whilst all this was going on, the linesman was signalling that the ball had gone out of play and the initial corner was now invalid. So the penalty was overturned, but the red card stuck. Atalanta could only draw the game, and were eventually relegated.

Siena and Livorno, meanwhile, have less cause for dispute about their exit from the league: they’ve both had similarly poor seasons, each winning just seven games across the year and conceding 128 goals between them.


Four years ago, a squad of Italian players went in to the World Cup off the back of a season rocked by scandal, and won it. Marcello Lippi and his players will be hoping for the same result this summer. A successful World Cup, coupled with a potential Champions League victory, will be vital cornerstones in the rehabilitation of Serie A as one of Europe’s truly great leagues.

09/10 Serie A Review: Five-times Inter, the rise of Roma, the fall of Juventus and Milan” was originally published at Soccerlens.com – Football News.



09/10 Europa League Review


It is easy to forget that this season’s Europa League was in its inaugural year. After picking up an undesirable yet understandable reputation as the Champions League ‘sinferior little brother, Michel Platini oversaw the rebranding of what we once called, with a pejorative sneer, ‘the UEFA Cup’. The Europa League has a parallel structure to the Champions League, and will be hoping to build on an impressive start this year by capturing some of its glamour too.

The Road to the Final

Europe’s secondary competition has a structural problem, in that just as it reaches the knockout stage there is an influx of refugee teams which have been eliminated from the Champions League. The teams who’ve fought to come that far, whilst pleased to have the big sides involved, doubtless feel a little resentful. This year’s final was a microcosm of that conflict, as Roy Hodgson’s Fulham, a side that began their Europa League campaign way back in the summer, came up against Atletico Madrid.

Fulham arrived at the Final after a rollercoaster ride taking them past Juventus, holders Shaktar Donetsk and hosts, Hamburger SV. The tie with Juventus will be held up by many as the competition’s most memorable. After conceding an early goal in the second leg, Fulham required a foul goal haul to qualify. They promptly delivered it, with American Clint Dempsey’s glorious chip proving to be the clincher.

In the semis Fulham faced Hamburg, who will have been devastated to have lost, what with the final being held at their own impressive arena.

Atletico Madrid’s route was less convincing but similarly daunting, taking in trips to some of Europe’s most intimidating stadiums in ties against Liverpool and Galatasaray. Atletico’s run to the final was typified by draws and taking huge advantage of the away goals rule. Their crucial goal at Anfield in the tie that will probably define their season was scored by Diego Forlan – the Uruguayan returning to haunt the Liverpool fans after a match-winning performance on that turf in his otherwise forgettable United days.

The Finalists

Roy Hodgson’s Fulham team has been assembled at little cost but with a great deal of care. Australian goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer was afforded plenty of time to shine by a less than watertight Middlesbrough defence, but his Bosman move to London has revealed a keeper who is able to organise as well as produce match-winning acrobatics. Bigger clubs will regret not taking a plunge to sign one of the Premier League’s best stoppers.

The defence is built around centre-half Brede Hangeland, who was managed by Hodgson during his spell at Norwegian club Viking. Hangeland moved on to enjoy a fine spell at Copenhagen, but answered the call when Hodgson moved to sign him in January 2008. The 6’5” defender has formed a formidable partnership with one-time Aston Villa cast-off Aaron Hughes, and will be in demand from the Premier League’s leading clubs once again this summer.

The supporting cast of defenders, the likes of Paul Konchesky, John Pantsil and Chris Baird, are typified by a reliability and willingness to play a disciplined role in Hodgson’s tactical machine.

That focus on teamwork is carried in to midfield. Many feared the loss of the talismanic Jimmy Bullard from the Fulham engine-room would prove catastrophic, but he’s been more than sufficiently replaced by journeyman Nigerian Dickson Etuhu. Etuhu doesn’t have Bullard’s ability to shoot from range or deliver from a dead-ball situation, but more than makes up for that with his physical strength and discipline in the holding role.

If Etuhu provides the graft, the craft comes from veteran Danny Murphy. Much like Cesc Fabregas of Arsenal or Paul Scholes at Manchester United, Murphy sets Fulham’s tempo, dictating their play with metronomic precision. It is no surprise that Murphy was linked with a call-up for the World Cup this summer – his performances this season have matched the form of his Liverpool days.

The flair has come from the likes of Zoltan Gera, Clint Dempsey, and Simon Davies. But even these exponents of supportive attacking play have had to abide by their defensive responsibilities: in Hodgson’s regime, there are no luxury players.

Upfront they have been without record signing Andy Johnson for much of the season, but the goalscoring burden has been picked up with gusto by previously unfancied Bobby Zamora. With his strength and ability to shield the ball, Zamora has become vital in helping Fulham retain possession and create chances. He is also one of football’s true two-footed players, saying he prefers his left boot for accuracy but his right for power.

Atletico are an antithetical outfit to Fulham’s pragmatists: they are all attacking artistry. Take their lead striker, Diego Forlan: once a laughing stock in English football, La Liga has made him a global star. When Forlan was signed from Villarreal he was charged with the nigh-impossible talk of replacing El Nino, Fernando Torres. However, the consistency of both his performances and his goals have seen him win the fans’ hearts. History may see him as this tournament’s defining force.

Such is Forlan’s prominence that one can easily forget his strike partner is also one of the world’s top attacking talents: Diego Maradona’s son-in-law, Sergio Aguero. It has been argued that Aguero’s talents, like those of Torres before him, may require a grander stage on which to flourish. One wonders what heights he might hit if a mooted move to Chelsea comes about this summer.

There is a similar threat out wide too, coming principally from Portugese veteran Simao and a revived Jose Antonio Reyes, who finally seems to have recaptured the form that inspired Arsenal to pay a whopping £17m for him all those years ago. A series of personal and injury problems have hampered his progress since then, but at Atletico he is once again playing with the bull-fighting flourish that was characteristic of his younger self.

Tomas Ujfalusi and Antonio Lopez have provided know-how and continuity at the back, but this is an Atletico side set up primarily to attack. With such obvious clashes in style between the two competitors, the final was eagerly awaited.

The Final Itself

I’m not going to compose a full match report – that will be done elsewhere and undoubtedly better by other contributors to the site. What I will say is that in this final, only Fulham truly lived up to their billing. Their display was one of the character and commitment we have come to expect, whilst Atletico’s didn’t have the fluency or vibrancy we had hoped would be on display. Not that it affected the result too much.

Diego Forlan’s goal, two minutes from the end of extra-time, settled the contest at 2-1 to Madrid. The difference between two tiring teams was the firepower Madrid could call on. With Zamora struggling with an achilles problem that removed his chances of a World Cup spot, the totemic Fulham striker was withdrawn on the hour. Madrid, however, were able to leave the pair of Aguero and Forlan on, and they combined to win the tie.

As Fulham’s brave heroes sank to the floor, Roy Hodgson calmly shook the hands of his staff. The LMA’s Manager of the Season has achieved wonders this year, and a late defeat on such a big stage should not be allowed to mar that.

“Their two front players were very good throughout the game but we gave them as good as we got and it looked like it was heading for penalties,” said Hodgson. “We were looking very comfortable throughout long periods of the game and it’s a real shame to get so close and miss out. I could not be more proud of the players. This performance in many ways sums up what we are about at Fulham. Everyone watching on the TV and here in Hamburg will realise we gave everything we had. We go a goal down and fight back to take it to extra-time. That shows what we are about and I think the fans will realise we’ve done the very best we can.”

Defeat in the final marks the end of Fulham’s hopes for European qualification for next season, and one wonders if Hodgson’s team may now begin to break up. The manager himself is reportedly a target for Liverpool – Fuham’s fairytale resurgence may have ended, but his could yet continue.

Atletico, meanwhile, were left to celebrate winning a major European competition for the first time in nearly 40 years. The great underachievers have hauled themselves back on to Europe’s podium, and Madrid will be rocking with the celebrations for some time to come.

09/10 Europa League Review” was originally published at Soccerlens.com – Football News.



09/10 Bundesliga Review


For a long time, European football fans regarded the Bundesliga as the backwater home of poor defending and psychotic goalkeepers.  It was a league that lived in the shadow of its more illustrious neighbours: Serie A, La Liga, and the Premier League.

However, growing disillusionment with the ‘bigger’ leagues has seen the Bundesliga become the envy of Europe.  Indeed, it now has the lowest ticket prices and highest average attendance of Europe’s five major leagues.  The number of season tickets is capped so that your average fan always has a chance to get to games.  The away team has a fixed right to 10% of available capacity. 

Match tickets come with in-built train tickets to travel to stadiums where supporters are welcome to stand, sing, and drink beer.  The clubs make a collective profit, and now, to top it all, Bayern Munich have reached the  last round of the Champions League.  It is eight years since Bayer Leverkusen contested the final, and nine since Bayern won it.  The Bundesliga has waited, but it might now be about to be back on top.

The Resurgence of Bayern

bayern_championsThis is undoubtedly Bayern’s season.  On the final weekend of the season a 3-1 win over already-relegated Hertha Berlin saw them ensure the title, and potentially the first part of a historic treble.  It’s a remarkable turnaround for a club who seemed to be heading for disaster back in December. 

New coach Louis Van Gaal’s relationship with the players was disintegrating, and he was reportedly just one defeat away from receiving his notice.  Van Gaal was hired after leading AZ to the dutch championship – a formula Wolfsburg will be hoping to repeat next season after hiring Steve McClaren, who must already be practising his comedy German accent.  But despite his experience and tactical know-how, Van Gaal was struggling.  His time was almost up.

Then game the catalyst for change: a 4-1 win over Juventus in Turin that ensured qualification for the knockout stages of the Champions League, and created the positive momentum to carry them forward in the Bundesliga.

Bayern share the widespread unpopularity that Manchester United have in England – such has been the consistency and nigh-predictability of their success that non-Bayern-supporting members of the German public have understandably begun to tire of them.  This season, however, not many will begrudge them their success.  They’ve played with such style that it’s perhaps not surprising to note that their team is built on the same model as the Real Madrid ‘Galacticos’ team: one of ‘Zidanes y Pavones’ – stars and youth players.

Bayern cannot compete financially with the likes of Real, Chelsea or Man City, so are forced to make use of their impressive youth system.  This season, Philipp Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Holger Badstuber and Thomas Müller have all featured regularly, and are all products of the Bayern academy. 

Schweinsteiger’s transformation this season has been a key component of Bayern’s success.  After emerging as a non-axial playmaker – a floating winger with the capacity to cut in and shoot from distance – Schweinsteiger has recently been converted to a holding midfield role.  As he has matured so has his game, and now is able to make use of a budding football brain to pull the strings for Bayern from deep in the centre.

ArjenRobbenOf course, what accelerated Schweinsteiger’s departure from the wing was the arrival from Real Madrid of Arjen Robben.  It will pain Real to see the Champions League Final take place in their own stadium without the participation – and it will hurt them all the more that a player they let go this summer has been so instrumental in taking Bayern to the brink of that success. 

In the Bundesliga too, he has been instrumental.  In the second half of the season he has arrived at his best run of form and fitness since his first season at Chelsea.  Playing predominantly from the right-hand side, his ability to dribble in-field and finish is probably second on the global stage only to Lionel Messi.

Robben’s form has been such that he has surpassed even his much coveted team-mate Franck Ribery, with 16 league goals as opposed to the Frenchman’s four.  Ribery has faced problems on-and-off the field.  He has struggled with tendonitis in his left-knee, which caused him to miss several months before the winter break, and will miss the Champions League final due to a suspension for a straight red-card in the semi-final tie with Lyon.  However, when available, Ribery has joined Robben to a form a twin counter-attacking unit who can demolish any side.

Bayern unite the Dutch 4-3-3 philosophy with a German solidity and stoic character.  After a questionable start, Van Gaal has knitted together a team who have dominated domestically, and could become the first German side to do so on a European scale in almost a decade.

Best of the Rest

best of rest

In second place this year are Felix Magath’s Schalke.  Having led Wolfsburg to the title last season, Magath will have to make do with second place this time round.  A collection of Brazilian internationals like Ze Roberto, Rafinha, Mineiro and Bordon have helped Schalke to automatic Champions League qualification, and they can be proud of running a rampant Bayern so close. 

The Champions, however, have not shown Schalke much good grace, with President Uli Hoeness labelling them “the vice-champions of the hearts” – an allusion to Schalke’s claim in 2001 that they were “champions of the hearts”, despite finishing second.  Just when Bayern seem to be clawing back some popularity, they are liable to throw it away with an act of haughtiness like that.  One wonders what kind of verbal sparring Hoeness and Jose Mourinho might indulge in as the Champions League Final approaches.

At the end of their final game at Mainz, Schalke’s star strike Kevin Kuranyi threw his kit in to the crowd, and confirmed he will take up his right to a Bosman transfer by moving to Dynamo Moscow.  Kuranyi reportedly turned down offers from Premier League clubs including Sunderland and Tottenham to accept the Russian’s £200k p/week offer.  With Joachim Low confirming that Kuranyi will not be part of his World Cup plans, the Brazilian forward is free to get spending his considerable signing-on fee straight away.

The third Champions League spot goes to Werder Bremen, who recovered from a sixteen-point deficit to overcome to haul back Bayer Leverkusen.  Claudio Pizarro’s return to Geman football has banished the memory of his dire form at Chelsea, and it was his goal in a final day 1-1 draw with Martin Jol’s Hamburg that ensured Bremen’s rollercoaster season ended on a high.  Bremen now have the unenviable task of attempting to stop Bayern completing a domestic double in the German Cup Final.

Hamburg themselves have only another crack at the Europa League to comfort them after the ignominy of their exit against Fulham and losing the chance to contest the final on their own ground.

Sixth place Stuttgart waved goodbye to full-time mentalist and part-time goalkeeper Jens Lehmann, who played his last professional game at Hoffenheim, who failed to build on a promising first Bundesliga season by slumping to 11th place.  Lehmann’s side were the form team of 2010, putting together a decent Champions League run and sneaking in to Europe after suffering just one defeat in the post-Christmas Bundesliga fixtures.  Christian Gross, still a figure of fun in England, deserves serious credit: when he arrived, Stuttgart were 15th.

Last season’s Champions, Wolfsburg, slumped to eighth place this season – twenty points behind eventual winners Bayern.  They were let down by a leaky defence and too many draws, but the attacking due of Edin Dzeko and Brazilian Grafite still offer plenty of promise for the arriving McClaren next season.  Dzeko racked up 22 goals in 34 games, also providing an impressive 7 assists.  At the risk of stumbling in to every ‘big man’ cliche going, his deft touch belies his stature, and the Bundesliga will probably struggle to keep hold of one of Europe’s most exciting attacking talents.

Battle at the bottom

race to bottom

An emotional final day victory for Hannover against Bochum kept the former in the Bundesliga, and in extraordinary scenes the team promptly fell to their knees, burst in to tears, and dedicated the win to Robert Enke, the goalkeeper who tragically took his life in November of this season.  Enthralling though the Bundesliga has been, it is Enke for whom this year will be remembered.  His death sent shockwaves through the sport, and once the initial surge of grief had passed, highlighted the important issue of the disregard for mental health difficulties than exists in many sports.

The whole affair clearly hit Hannover hard, and they almost paid the price with their place in the league.  Instead, however, it was Bochum who went down, after such a poor season that on the last day disenchanted fans ran on to the pitch to try and attack players at the final whistle.  Caretaker manager Dariusz Wosz is not expected to hold on to the position, so it remains to be seen who will be faced with the challenge of re-enlivening this despondent team.  FC Nurnberg, meanwhile will face FA Ausburg, the third best team from the Bundesliga 2, in a two-legged play-off to decide their fate.

As mentioned before, Hertha Berlin have been relegated for the first time in 13 years.  They ended up 7 points adrift from safety, after winning just five games all season.  Their main problem was an inability to score goals – their final tally of 34 was less than half that of Champions Bayern.  Some observers pointed to a form of footballing karma: in 2008-09, Hertha were infamous for producing some of the dullest football on offer in Europe.  What was once regarded as clever, defensive tactics transformed to dull, uninspiring defeats.  Bayern’s success this season shows that adventure can be rewarded.


Their remains one final battle for the Bundesliga to face.  If Bayern can overcome Jose Mourinho’s Inter Milan in the Champions League Final of May 22nd, it will be a victory for German football over Italian in more ways than one. 

If Bayern win, Germany will secure third place in UEFA’s all-important UEFA coefficient rankings, simultaneously overtaking Italy, and winning an extra automatic Champions League spot as of 2011/12.  Add that, and the Bundesliga becomes yet more alluring.

09/10 Bundesliga Review” was originally published at Soccerlens.com – Football News.