יום שבת, 26 בנובמבר 2011

DTotD: Eboue gets pelted with waves of objects from Besiktas fans

Former Arsenal midfielder and loveable goofball Emmanuel Eboue was subjected to sub-human treatment when his Galatasaray side visited Besiktas. Repeatedly pelted by a wide array of objects from the stands, Eboue was clearly in fear as the home fans targeted him and teammate Engin Baytar for their abuse until the whole squad was escorted off under protective shields.

From the AP:

The abuse came despite a decision by Turkey's big four clubs, including Galatasaray and Besiktas, not to allow visiting fans to attend games involving them in an effort to prevent violence. Turkey also introduced stringent anti-hooliganism laws in April, including prison terms for unruly fans.

The Star newspaper said Turkey's football federation had filed a formal report about the incident and that Besiktas fans could be barred from attending two home games. It did not cite a source for the report.

And that (hopefully) concludes a weekend where fans everywhere decided to act like spoiled beasts and throw things at the pitch and the people on it. In Germany, Hansa Rostock fans threw bananas. In Spain, someone threw an umbrella at a linesman. Now this in Turkey, which could carry a two-match ban for Besiktas fans.

Whether the abuse was racist remains unclear. Officials have denied any racial motives and Baytar, who was also targeted, is not black. But there have been reports of "monkey" chants aimed at Eboue, so Sepp Blatter might make every Besiktas fan shake hands with Eboue just for good measure. In fact, for something this bad, maybe he'd require them to throw in a pat on the back, too.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/soccer/blog/dirty-tackle/post/DTotD-Eboue-gets-pelted-with-waves-of-objects-f?urn=sow-wp6843

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Pro-active Petrov, bargain Ba and Europe's most creative player....a Swansea midfielder

ZonalMarking.net's Michael Cox uses the StatsZone app ? from FFT and Opta, available now ? to preview the big weekend fixtures... 

Wayne Rooney in midfield? With Paul Scholes retiring, Owen Hargreaves leaving the club and Michael Carrick seemingly out of favour, even when he isn?t injured, Sir Alex Ferguson had to use his number ten in a deep-lying midfield position during the weekend Champions League win over Otelul Galati.

The comparison with Scholes was inevitable, and here?s a direct look at the passing styles of the two players ? Rooney?s from the game on Wednesday, and Scholes? in his only complete match in the Champions League last season.

There is a clear similarity ? although if anything, Rooney seems to have played even deeper than Scholes. Whereas the latter has a lot of passes played from just over the halfway line, Rooney?s balls are often played from the other side of the centre circle.

Scholes had a marginally better pass completion rate, 93% to 89%, and it?s clear that he?s more accurate with the long diagonal balls. And, while Rooney attempted three long balls into the penalty box, Scholes saved his move forward for when he knew he could make it count ? picking up an assist.


If the art of tackling has declined, as Match of the Day pundit Lee Dixon has argued this week, then players who are good at intercepting the ball must surely become particularly valuable.
Therefore, credit is due to Aston Villa captain Stiliyan Petrov, who has made more interceptions than any other player in the Premier League this season, 39 ? nearly four per match.

With the exception of one, the interceptions from his most recent matches show they all take place in the middle third of the pitch, highlighting how intercepting is a more proactive method of winning the ball back than tackling, which generally take place in much deeper positions.

The most creative player in Europe ? Andres Iniesta? Mesut Ozil? David Silva? No ? Swansea?s Mark Gower, at least by one measure. According to Opta, has averaged 3.8 chances created per match this season, more than any other player in Europe?s major five leagues ? England, France, Germany, Spain and Italy.

The diagrams of the chances he?s created in his last two league games shows no real pattern to the passes, perhaps explaining why he is so hard to stop. A few come from corners, some are through balls into the area ? but most importantly, two are assists. No wonder Swansea made moves to offer him a new contract this week, and Liverpool will have to keep a keen eye on him tomorrow.


Is Demba Ba the signing of the season so far? He has plenty of competition, from Juan Mata, Sergio Aguero and Scott Parker, among others ? but when you consider that those three cost over �60 million combined, while Ba arrived on a free transfer after West Ham?s relegation, he?s surely the frontrunner for that accolade, with eight goals from nine matches.

His hattrick at Stoke on Monday was his second of the season, something only Wayne Rooney can match. The diagrams of his hattricks show that he?s basically a poacher ? four of those six goals came from within the six-yard box, and all from within the penalty area. The one attempt he had from outside the box in those matches was blazed over the bar.

The distance of the shots might partly explain why he has the best chances-to-goals conversion rate of any player that has scored more than four goals this season, at  47%. His opponents this weekend, Everton, tried to sing him over the summer ? how they must wish they?d succeeded.

Stats Zone, the app from FourFourTwo powered by data from Opta, is available now at the iTunes App Store  

Source: http://fourfourtwo.com/blogs/statszone/archive/2011/11/04/pro-active-petrov-bargain-ba-and-europe-s-most-creative-player-a-swansea-midfielder.aspx

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Links! And singing Zlatan Ibrahimovic!

All the stuff being covered outside the unfriendly confines of the award-winning Dirty Tackle...

This is the last thing you hear before getting kicked in the head. [YouTube]

The Umbro Speciali 20th anniversary collection is really nice. [TBG]

What Man City still need to conquer Europe. [Life's a Pitch]

Jonny Evans: Better than he seems, worse than he should be. [Surreal Football]

Barcelona president reads a list of club demands to UEFA. [TFB]

Grading last year's 100 best young footballers. [IBWM]

A very good interview with Steve McClaren. [Les Rosbifs]

Fans might be getting dumber. [WSC]

Top 10 NCAA players to watch. [KCKRS]

500 reasons to love football. [500 RtLF]

Mario Balotelli needs some plutonium. [Studs Up]

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/soccer/blog/dirty-tackle/post/Links-And-singing-Zlatan-Ibrahimovic-?urn=sow-wp6655

Iker Casillas Puyol Andres Iniesta Gerard Pique

Liverpool need to get their home in order, Man Utd go back to basics

ESPN's man with the mic Jon Champion looks ahead to the weekend's Premier League action. Watch live and exclusive coverage of Arsenal v Fulham live on ESPN from 4:30pm on Saturday

We?re now one third of the way into the Premier League season, and we?re getting to the stage where certain teams need to start putting together a run of results if they are to achieve their season objectives.

The stand out game this weekend sees too big spending sides - Liverpool and Manchester City ? go head-to-head. It?ll be a tough test for City, even if Liverpool haven?t been fully convincing at home ? their better performances have come away from Anfield, which is perhaps unusual.

Liverpool aren?t quite yet getting full value from their significant investment over the summer transfer window, and they are yet to settle and find the level of consistency Kenny Dalglish will be wanting from them. They also still look rather vulnerable at the back and that would certainly appear to be something City could exploit on Sunday afternoon.

City?s defeat in Naples on Tuesday evening means they face an all-or-nothing tie with Bayern Munich in two weeks? time, and while that huge game will be at the back of their minds in the next couple of domestic fixtures, if anybody has the squad which can cope with those kind of distractions then it?s probably Manchester City. Though as we know, it can take a club a few years to fully get to grips with the twin demands of Premier League and Champions League.

It took Manchester United the best part of a decade to fully master the balancing act, and for all the money they?ve spent, City are still in a relatively early stage of their development. We would often see United in the mid-90s fail to keep things going in Europe but still win the domestic title. It may well be that the same is going to be true of City this season.

Given Liverpool?s stuttering home start ? four of their six league games on their own patch have ended as draws ? City won?t be the kind of visitors the Reds want or need at the moment, and I?d be surprised if Roberto Mancini?s side weren?t the first side this season to travel to Anfield and win.


Though it may seem unlikely, Chelsea are at risk of losing three consecutive home games as they face Wolverhampton Wanderers on Saturday, extraordinary given they not long ago set that incredible record of 86 league games unbeaten at Stamford Bridge.
It?s a whole new experience for Andre Villas-Boas, who last season with Porto only dropped six league points over the course of the entire 30 game season. Suddenly he?s confronted with a flurry of setbacks ? three straight defeats in all competitions, still with work to do in their final Champions League group match and currently outside the qualifying positions for next year?s competition in the Premier League.
I?ve seen Chelsea three times in the flesh this season and on each occasion they have set no sort of tempo at all ? they?ve been sluggish from the start, content to keep possession rather than take the game to their opponents, which is very unlike the Chelsea we?re used to seeing.
Wolves aren?t playing too badly at present, but with just one win in the last ten they do need to start finding results sooner rather than later. The consolation for them is that there are three sides struggling so badly beneath them in Bolton, Blackburn and Wigan, while the sides above them  - Sunderland and Fulham ? don?t exactly look likely to pull away. It?s hard to see them getting a result away to Chelsea, but if there?s a good time to go to Stamford Bridge, this is it.

Although they were a tad sloppy in their midweek Champions League draw with Benfica, it remains a fact that Manchester United have lost fewer matches than Manchester City this season, with just the one defeat so far this term, albeit a fairly spectacular one. There?s little to suggest Newcastle will end their wretched record at Old Trafford, despite making a very strong start to their campaign. The Magpies are tough to break down but are never likely to score a bucket load of goals, particularly against the stronger sides. United have gone ?back to basics? in the league since that defeat to Manchester City ? they?ve looked to lock things down, make sure they don?t concede silly goals or leave themselves too exposed. Their performances may not have been quite so dynamic, but the results have continued to come, and for that reason you?d have to fancy the champions to win again this weekend.


Arsenal have been in superb form of late, but closing the 12 point gap that has opened between themselves and Manchester City ? and indeed even the seven on Manchester United ? will be a gargantuan task, given the general level of consistency at those two clubs right now.
The other thing to add is that, although 11 wins in 13 matches in all competitions is highly impressive, if you look at the teams they have beaten, only the win at Stamford Bridge really stands out as a particularly impressive victory. When they have played the stronger sides they have generally been beaten ? at home to Liverpool and away to Manchester United and Tottenham ? and those matches perhaps give a truer indication of where Arsenal are than matches against teams like Bolton and Norwich.
For that reason there may be a reality check in store for them at some stage, though I can?t imagine it would come in Saturday evening?s late kick-off against Fulham, who are likely to turn up, put up a bit of a fight but ultimately roll over.

Spurs also look in tremendous shape at the moment. They have a settled side, are great to watch and are playing some fabulous football ? hence their current run of eight wins and a draw in the last nine. There is an element of the cavalier about them, but there are still enough defensively minded players there ? including Ledley King, who is enjoying a rare run of matches ? to keep the opposition at bay.
It?s hard to see them getting anything other than a win from Saturday?s trip to West Bromwich Albion, who probably won?t have too many problems this season and currently sit in tenth place, but what problems they do have will come against sides like Tottenham.

Norwich versus Queens Park Rangers is, of course, a meeting of two newly-promoted sides, but two sides who have adapted well to life back in the Premier League, currently sat in 11th and ninth place respectively. Norwich, however, are not just one win in six, while QPR have impressed away from home ? winning at Everton, Wolves and Stoke ? and have Heider Helgusson in the kind of goalscoring form that could help them secure significant points. They?ll be happy with the way things are going and will certainly relish this trip to East Anglia.


Stoke are struggling, and surprisingly so. They?ve lost their last four league matches and have now won just once in their last eight ? a run that has seen them slide from fifth to 14th, though come the end of the season I?d still expect them to finish somewhere between. The fixture congestion caused by their involvement in the Europa League is perhaps a convenient excuse for their slump, but while there is likely to be some fatigue it can?t all be down to that. For the first time, Tony Pulis has a few selection dilemmas, and doesn?t have and obvious first XI. Perhaps this lack of consistency in selection has led to a lack of consistency in results.
But they?ll relish facing Blackburn on Saturday, who haven?t kept a clean sheet in 15 matches in all competitions this season and, despite a couple of improved showings in the away draws at QPR and Norwich, still look poor, particularly at the back.

It is certainly a depressing time for the Lancashire clubs at present, with Bolton Wanderers also looking out of sorts having lost seven of their last nine in the Premier League. They?ll be up against an Everton team who should be good enough to secure a result at the Reebok in the current circumstances. The Toffees shot up five places with their win over Wolves last weekend, and although they have displayed a certain inconsistency that hasn?t been a hallmark of David Moyes? side down the years, they will have been boosted by Marouane Fellaini signing a new long-term contract with the club.

Sunderland?s positive goal difference of +1 is a testament to the fact they concede so few goals ? 13 in 12 so far ? despite their relatively poor start to the campaign. Their problem, as we?ve said before, is that they don?t score enough goals and that has led to them having to settle for a point rather than three on more than a couple of occasions in recent months ? most recently and pertinently against Fulham last weekend when they dominated for long periods but couldn?t get the ball in the net.
On Saturday they?ll face one of the team to score fewer goals in Wigan Athletic, whose chairman Dave Whelan has once again stated there will be no change in manager, and it also seems there?ll be no philosophical change, and if Wigan keep trying to play their way out of the hole they?re in ? and they?re already five points adrift of safety ? it?s hard to see them escaping.

Swansea play some beautiful football, but there?s not a lot on the end of it. They?re great for two thirds of the pitch, but lacking in the final third. Sunday?s opponents Aston Villa were really poor at Spurs on Monday evening, and it?s hard to imagine Alex McLeish allowing that kind of performance to be repeated. Swansea will have been encouraged by both their own and Villa?s performances last time out, and with their home form likely to be the key to survival, will surely look to target three points here.

Jon Champion is a football commentator on ESPN, broadcaster of Barclays Premier League, FA Cup, Clydesdale Bank Premier League, UEFA Europa League and more. For more information visit espn.co.uk/tv

Source: http://fourfourtwo.com/blogs/jonchampionsleague/archive/2011/11/25/liverpool-need-to-get-their-home-in-order-man-utd-go-back-to-basics.aspx

Andres Iniesta Gerard Pique Rio Ferdinand John Terry

Champions League Results, Pt II: Traumatic Yet Titillating

Source: http://www.kickette.com/champions-league-results-pt-ii-traumatic-yet-titillating/

Drogba Michael Essien Samuel Etto Steven Gerrard

Arsene Wenger Admits to Over-Reliance On Robin Van Persie (Video)

Slightly stating the obvious but presumably the Emirates Stadium boss is keen to see other attackers share the Gunners goal-scoring load. Watch the Premier League Live Online addCustomPlayer('1w6lt9709k6la11808fgs9be07', '9776e735a37743b9b7b7d7ff11b21603', '1g9u2k39v86re1ed76e6h2gb76', 380, 405, 'perf1w6lt9709k6la11808fgs9be07-1g9u2k39v86re1ed76e6h2gb76', 'eplayer3'); Join the Best Football Manager game now, Its Free!

Source: http://www.caughtoffside.com/2011/11/26/arsene-wenger-admits-to-over-reliance-on-robin-van-persie-video/

Deco Ronaldinho Drogba Michael Essien

Christine Bleakley: Cycling Into Work

Source: http://www.kickette.com/christine-bleakley-cycling-into-work/

Pablo Aimar Michael Ballack Maradona David Beckham