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Numancia 0-2 Real Madrid

Sunday, 01 February 09, 07:35 PM

r171049_6424751Gol TV strikes again ladies and gentlemen. Rather than getting a bit of Spanish classicism from the best league in the world, I get stuck watching U-20 South American kids; which I'll say is perfectly good if you like living in that head space where you watch a player and wonder whether he'll be any good in 4 years, when you barely remember him, but right here right now you just wonder why you're bothering to watch sub standard football.

So rather than watch Real Madrid at a decent hour, I'm watching it at 1 in the morning right before bed. Some reflections early on:


  • Soria is a very small venue to watch a first division game. I wonder if they can build a sustainable model of top flight football at Numancia with that small stadium?

  • Fernando Gago continues to be late reacting to the ball and continues to come in late for tackles. He's no Fernando Redondo, no matter what people say about resemblances.

  • I don't like to criticize people covering games, but Phil Schoen on Gol TV made me laugh when he mentioned the great players that Real Madrid have in their "cantina". No wonder they all play sluggishly.

  • Wesley Snejder is a great talent but there's something wrong with him still. He should have waited to make his comeback. He's great on the set pieces but he's lost a step in the run of play.

  • Numancia don't play like a promoted side looking for a break. They dominated possession in the first half and should have scored off the header by Javier del Pino.

  • The first goal, the record breaking one by Raul, was set-up by a darting inside run by Robben who layed it off to Higuain who shot, it was blocked and Raul poached it. Nice form for a guy who doesn't have the skill anymore of a quality support striker but isn't physical enough to really handle the #9 role all by himself. The forgotten man though was Lass. It was he who won the ball for Robben, who I assume realizes that if he stays by Lass, he'll get the ball soon enough.

  • The second goal was typical Robben. He may not be Lionel Messi but he's the only player they have that can break a man down all by himself and he showed it. Higuain comes close, but this is the real failure of Pedja Mijatovich, he continues to bring in players that have no business wearing the classic white shirt.


The story of the match was Raul's reaching for Alfredo DiStefano's club record for goals. "It is a beautiful thing", he remarked to himself primarily, as DiStefano was nowhere to be found. I realize he's getting on in years but Don Alfredo's been a constant presence there for decades. I wonder if there's a bit of crankiness there for a man known for his crankiness. Wouldn't surprise me. That's Real Madrid.

Aupa: La Liga

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Numancia 0-2 Real Madrid

Sunday, 01 February 09, 11:35 AM

r171049_6424751Gol TV strikes again ladies and gentlemen. Rather than getting a bit of Spanish classicism from the best league in the world, I get stuck watching U-20 South American kids; which I'll say is perfectly good if you like living in that head space where you watch a player and wonder whether he'll be any good in 4 years, when you barely remember him, but right here right now you just wonder why you're bothering to watch sub standard football.

So rather than watch Real Madrid at a decent hour, I'm watching it at 1 in the morning right before bed. Some reflections early on:


  • Soria is a very small venue to watch a first division game. I wonder if they can build a sustainable model of top flight football at Numancia with that small stadium?

  • Fernando Gago continues to be late reacting to the ball and continues to come in late for tackles. He's no Fernando Redondo, no matter what people say about resemblances.

  • I don't like to criticize people covering games, but Phil Schoen on Gol TV made me laugh when he mentioned the great players that Real Madrid have in their "cantina". No wonder they all play sluggishly.

  • Wesley Snejder is a great talent but there's something wrong with him still. He should have waited to make his comeback. He's great on the set pieces but he's lost a step in the run of play.

  • Numancia don't play like a promoted side looking for a break. They dominated possession in the first half and should have scored off the header by Javier del Pino.

  • The first goal, the record breaking one by Raul, was set-up by a darting inside run by Robben who layed it off to Higuain who shot, it was blocked and Raul poached it. Nice form for a guy who doesn't have the skill anymore of a quality support striker but isn't physical enough to really handle the #9 role all by himself. The forgotten man though was Lass. It was he who won the ball for Robben, who I assume realizes that if he stays by Lass, he'll get the ball soon enough.

  • The second goal was typical Robben. He may not be Lionel Messi but he's the only player they have that can break a man down all by himself and he showed it. Higuain comes close, but this is the real failure of Pedja Mijatovich, he continues to bring in players that have no business wearing the classic white shirt.


The story of the match was Raul's reaching for Alfredo DiStefano's club record for goals. "It is a beautiful thing", he remarked to himself primarily, as DiStefano was nowhere to be found. I realize he's getting on in years but Don Alfredo's been a constant presence there for decades. I wonder if there's a bit of crankiness there for a man known for his crankiness. Wouldn't surprise me. That's Real Madrid.

Aupa: La Liga

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Headlines, Juventus Lose Second To Cagliari and Napoli - Udinese

Sunday, 01 February 09, 01:34 AM

Match Day 22: Juventus Lose Second To Cagliari

1/31/09 by: Special K 

Oh dear Juventus is faltering. The Bianconeri squandered all the good results they have achieved during the month of January after closing the gap between themselves and Inter to 3 points. Today's disappointing 2-3 result to Cagliari on home turf is the second loss for Juventus striker Del Piero (pictured/Reuters) and company while front runners Internazionale have righted their ship, winning the last two against Catania and Sampdoria. Tomorrow the Milan club plays lowly Torino who are currently in a tailspin and should have no problem in stretching their lead to 9 points. Torino having not won in the last 4 Serie A outings must look as far back as December 21, and their home defeat of Napoli for any consolation.

Note: Cagliari (away record, 3-2-6) have now won 2 on the road beating Lazio last week at the Stadio Olimpico 4-1, prior to that win the club had only one additional victory away from home at Torino back in October.

Juventus vs Cagliari Highlights

In other news stunned Napoli gave up a 2-0 lead after home sons Antonio Di Natale and Fabio Quagliarella helped to equalize for the visitors giving Udinese the 2-2 draw. (Both players come from the Naple region)

 
1/31/09 by: Gene

The San Paolo hosted a great game on Saturday evening, Napoli was punished by two Neapolitan players who play for Udinese, Antonio Di Natale and Fabio Quagliarella.

Napoli took a 2-0 lead in the first 27 minutes of the game on goals by Ezequiel Lavezzi and Marek Hamsik. Hamsik returned after missing two games because of the suspension he received after his red card in Verona.

In the 24th minute , German Denis took the ball at the midfield circle and carried it to kist outside the Udinese penalty area before passing to Lavezzi who whistled a shot past Andonovich 1-0 Napoli.

Just three minutes later Hamsik put a header past  Andonovich  off a free kick from Walter Gargano 2-0 Napoli.

But Udinese would answer when in the 31st minute, Paolo Cannavaro chased a ball in the Napoli area, but in the process tripped Isla, Gervasoni gave the penalty, Di Natale converted, 2-1.

In the 38th minute Lavezzi was tripped in the area by Isla but Gervasoni did not give the penalty, instead giving Napoli a corner kick.

Then in the 45th minute Fabio Quagliarella scored what I consider the prettiest goal of the Serie A season so far. On a pass by Isla he turned and shot from just outside the box, beating Navarro 2-2.

Watch Quagliarella's goal

The second half Napoli attacked consistently, Lavezzi had 2 chances Zalayeta one and Hasek another but nothing.

In the 90th minute Udinese almost stole the game on a shot by Giovanni Pasquale that went just past the post.

 
Before the game, Napoli announced the acquisition of Argentine left winger Jesus Datolo from Boca Juniors. The 24-year old becomes the 4th Argentine on the club this season. He will wear jersey No. 15 and becomes the 8th Argentine to ever play for Napoli.

Napoli now must go to play Juventus in Torino on Wednesday in the Coppa Italia quarter final. Winner will play Lazio in one semifinal, the other semifinal features Inter and Sampdoria.
 
Saturday Headlines

  • Jozy Altidore will spend the rest of the season at Spanish second division side Xerez.
  • Roma have signed defender Souleymane Diamoutene from Lecce. AS Roma
  • Jonathan Soriano joins Albacete on loan from Espanyol. RCD Espanyol
  • Luis Fabiano is going to miss at least three weeks with a strained his left knee.
Make sure to check out ForzaFutbol.com and follow us on Twitter.

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Juande Ramos

Saturday, 31 January 09, 06:38 PM

juanderamos4601Juan de la Cruz Ramos Cano is the new manager at Real Madrid of course and many of you will be looking on that appointment with a distrustful eye. He has a reputation of being a good Cup manager and not very attuned to the vagaries of winning league titles. He did well at Sevilla under the auspices of technical director Monchi but he was clearly out of his element at Tottenham Hotspur and failed miserably leading the "big-London club" into the maw of a relegation thunderstorm.

Now I won't deny that he had uneventful years at Rayo Vallecano, Real Betis, Espanyol and even Malaga before being tipped to head Sevilla and he isn't necessarily the most vocal or exciting leader for a club that is known for its extreme personalities, but I'm of the opinion that Juande Ramos is exactly the sort of manager that Real Madrid need right now.

Here are my reasons:


  1. He was handpicked by captain Raul to right the sinking ship. Now that is usually the wrong reason to appoint a coach, the idea that if the club captain likes him then the rest of the squad might turn around, but in this case it is the most important reason. As I said before on the podcast, Raul's legacy is not only to take over Alfredo DiStefano's place as the club's all-time top scorer, but also  as the face of the club once he retires. Club presidents and coaches come and go, but I'm sure Raul's political clout at the club will continue.

  2. He's an experienced coach who has proven himself at a top four club, and no Spurs haven't been a top club in decades so you can't count that. Despite his failure in England, he is still well respected in Spain for taking a very talented club in Sevilla and winning the UEFA Cup following that up with a Copa del Rey win as well. He is tactically sound and a risk taker who believes that playing aggressive, attacking football and winning aren't mutually exclusive. His influence on the pitch was immediately felt: he reorganized a leaky defense that seemed

  3. He won't upset the apple cart in the dressing room and will create a bubble protecting the club from further embarrassment. After two coaches more noted for their explosive personalities than their diplomacy, Juande Ramos will bring his flavor of coaches' double-speak and obfuscation to the media room. "Today we played well, we had endeavor, lot's of endeavor, we kept possession, we defended, and we were fortunate to come out of the match with a favorable decision..." Yawn, but that's exactly what Los Blancos need.


Now, I won't deny that he's in a bad situation. He has on current form, very little chance of winning a third consecutive title for the club, so winning the Champions League is his focus, but even getting out of the next round and advancing to the semi-finals would be an achievement for a club that haven't been to the semis in years.  He inherited a side though that was put together by a pinhead in a gray pinstripe suit. They have players who wouldn't have been caught dead wearing the white kit of Real Madrid in previous administrations, and speaking of previous administrations, if all reports are true that former President Fiorentino Perez will run uncontested to reprise his role, you can bet that the club will get a strict make-over into one more resembling that glamor club that sported a gaggle of galacticos. He'll bring in his own sporting director, oust Peja who should have ousted himself when his boss left in shame, and I'm afraid for Juande, more than likely bring in someone with a higher profile than "Magic" Juande Ramos.

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Juande Ramos

Saturday, 31 January 09, 10:38 AM

juanderamos4601Juan de la Cruz Ramos Cano is the new manager at Real Madrid of course and many of you will be looking on that appointment with a distrustful eye. He has a reputation of being a good Cup manager and not very attuned to the vagaries of winning league titles. He did well at Sevilla under the auspices of technical director Monchi but he was clearly out of his element at Tottenham Hotspur and failed miserably leading the "big-London club" into the maw of a relegation thunderstorm.

Now I won't deny that he had uneventful years at Rayo Vallecano, Real Betis, Espanyol and even Malaga before being tipped to head Sevilla and he isn't necessarily the most vocal or exciting leader for a club that is known for its extreme personalities, but I'm of the opinion that Juande Ramos is exactly the sort of manager that Real Madrid need right now.

Here are my reasons:


  1. He was handpicked by captain Raul to right the sinking ship. Now that is usually the wrong reason to appoint a coach, the idea that if the club captain likes him then the rest of the squad might turn around, but in this case it is the most important reason. As I said before on the podcast, Raul's legacy is not only to take over Alfredo DiStefano's place as the club's all-time top scorer, but also  as the face of the club once he retires. Club presidents and coaches come and go, but I'm sure Raul's political clout at the club will continue.

  2. He's an experienced coach who has proven himself at a top four club, and no Spurs haven't been a top club in decades so you can't count that. Despite his failure in England, he is still well respected in Spain for taking a very talented club in Sevilla and winning the UEFA Cup following that up with a Copa del Rey win as well. He is tactically sound and a risk taker who believes that playing aggressive, attacking football and winning aren't mutually exclusive. His influence on the pitch was immediately felt: he reorganized a leaky defense that seemed

  3. He won't upset the apple cart in the dressing room and will create a bubble protecting the club from further embarrassment. After two coaches more noted for their explosive personalities than their diplomacy, Juande Ramos will bring his flavor of coaches' double-speak and obfuscation to the media room. "Today we played well, we had endeavor, lot's of endeavor, we kept possession, we defended, and we were fortunate to come out of the match with a favorable decision..." Yawn, but that's exactly what Los Blancos need.


Now, I won't deny that he's in a bad situation. He has on current form, very little chance of winning a third consecutive title for the club, so winning the Champions League is his focus, but even getting out of the next round and advancing to the semi-finals would be an achievement for a club that haven't been to the semis in years.  He inherited a side though that was put together by a pinhead in a gray pinstripe suit. They have players who wouldn't have been caught dead wearing the white kit of Real Madrid in previous administrations, and speaking of previous administrations, if all reports are true that former President Fiorentino Perez will run uncontested to reprise his role, you can bet that the club will get a strict make-over into one more resembling that glamor club that sported a gaggle of galacticos. He'll bring in his own sporting director, oust Peja who should have ousted himself when his boss left in shame, and I'm afraid for Juande, more than likely bring in someone with a higher profile than "Magic" Juande Ramos.

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Forza Futbol 47

Wednesday, 28 January 09, 10:21 AM

This week Hannah, Mando talk about the happenings in Spain and look at the games from the weekend. Kevin joined us to talk about the weekend's action in Italy. Get the whole episode here, direct download here or subscribe in iTunes. Check out our new site ForzaFutbol.com and follow us on Twitter.

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Forza Futbol 46: Tim Vickery

Monday, 26 January 09, 12:44 PM

Forza Futbol’s Mando talks to Tim Vickery about South American players in La Liga and Serie A.

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Forza Futbol 45

Friday, 23 January 09, 12:13 PM

This week Hannah and Armando talk about Kaka to Manchester City, trouble at Real Madrid and trouble at Espanyol. Get the whole episode here, direct download here or subscribe in iTunes.

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The EPL. Not so Golden?

Tuesday, 20 January 09, 01:04 AM

Photobucket
Now don’t cut my head off if this report just happens to resurrect itself in a few weeks with the transfer window closing around then and this whole Kaka business, of him going to Manchester City for 100 million pounds returns to the English ragsheets, but as of right now the deal is off.

Ricky will get to kiss his Milan badge again, the ultra hunger-strikes can be called off and Silvio Berlusconi can replaster his ear to ear grin on again even though we all know that he would have welcomed a 100 million pound injection of cash. Milan need the money, I know that, and they certainly need to retool their team, but losing arguably their best player and a poster-boy for the Milan cause once Paolo Maldini finally decides to go to stud, is not the right answer.

Manchester City on the other hand, while misfiring for the Balon d’or moon, have instead continued to land another round of over-priced, laughably untalented British players like Scott Parker, Wayne Bridge and Craig Bellamy. The newspapers will no doubt blame iton  Kaka’s lack of ambition, or some very personal or religious reasons why staying in Milan might be more attractive to the Brazilian than joining  the second team in Manchester might. They might even blame the Citizen’s lack of current or historic form or they might even blame Sparky’s problems with the Brazilian contingent already at City. Once the fervor dies down though, you might start to see another round of the same sort of nonsense, this time directed not at Ricky Kaka but at others in his ability range: Cristiano Ronaldo, Kun Aguero, Lionel Messi, Zlatan Ibrahimovich amongst others. What they won’t understand is that Kaka, nor any of these others will go to England to play in their prime.

The fact is, since the inception of the English Premier League, there have been only 4 Ballon D’or winners who have played in England. 2 came out of the youth ranks of Manchester United and Liverpool (Cristiano Ronaldo and Michael Owen) and 2 others came to England well past their prime (George Weah and Andriy Shevchenko who both played for Chelsea).  Italian clubs had 8 winners during that time while Spanish clubs had 6. Only Jean-Pierre Papin for Marseilles and Matthias Sammer for Dortmund played elsewhere and while they both left their respected clubs they eventually played for one of the black striped clubs in Milano.

History is telling us something that well know but are ignoring. Players come to England for the money, for that one last paycheck to end their careers, but if they’re looking for glory at the height of their abilities, they will move to Italy or Spain.

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Links

Saturday, 17 January 09, 09:38 PM

Links


General La Liga Blogs
la_liga_logo

Heads or TailsLa suerte del Fútbol... ¿está echada?

Hay Liga–La Liga in English
The best of Spanish Football in English


La Liga Loca
442's sideways look at Spanish football by Tim Stannard

Spanish Football & Sports
Striker's Blog on the best of the Spanish Primera Division

Atletico de Madrid

atletico
Atlético de Madrid
Our friend Leni's Mad love for Atletico Mdrid. The Love that hurts

barcelona
All About FC Barcelona
A blog dedicated to the most prestigious club in the world
FC Barcelona
Blaugrana passion, great football

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All In White
Real Madrid Football Club
The Real Liga
Everything Real about Madrid
Real Madrid Spanish La Liga Football Blog - Real Madrid
The Offside Real Madrid Blog by one of our listeners: Corey
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RCD Espanyol USA
Mando's Blog on all things RCD Espanyol!!! In English

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Real Sociedad News

deleted-png-picture-31
Sevilla La Liga Blog - Sevilla
Ryan's Sevilla Blog on the Offsides. Another great friend of the show.
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Valencia Spanish Football Blog - Valencia
Cesar's Valencia Blog for the Offsides.

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