Friday, 15 February 2008

Why must Sepp Blatter ruin everything?

Obviously the idea to play Premiership matches abroad is brilliant. Fuck Blatter, and fuck the World Cup.

Tuesday, 12 February 2008

Kammy

Friday, 8 February 2008

The best sending off ever?



What was he thinking?

More things to agree on

Obviously we are all completely psyched about the Premier League's plans to play ten league matches abroad in January 2011? Good.

Meanwhile - I am in town for the final group matches of the Hong Kong Football Association League Cup, which is next weekend. Assuming girlfriend permission, I intend to provide full coverage. Nine of the ten HKFA league teams are playing, which gives me a chance to pick my HK team (although unfortunately the one team that isn't playing, Workable FC, is already a frontrunner on name basis alone.) Wonderfully, all the teams except Lanwa Redbull play on the same ground, Mongkok Stadium, which will make the whole thing easier.


mongkok stadium

Thursday, 7 February 2008

Hideous Yellow Away Shirt Update

Spain's is a stinker.

Friday, 1 February 2008

Something we can all agree on

Surely the most annoying "classic greatest goal" of all time is that bloody Argentina goal from the last World Cup, the one with the 146-pass build-up (mostly defenders passing to each other in their own half). Agreed? Good.

Anatomy of a goal



I'm not sure what the best Premiership goal ever was, but I'm certain that it was scored by Thierry Henry, my favourite Premiership player. Here's one from the FA Cup. Why is it so good? First, the audacity and creativity of the initial self-pass. Second, the pace needed to catch up with Carra (not the player he originally tried to tonk it around). Third, the physicality and agility to rob Carra, who gets to it first, of the ball. Fourth, the confidence and composure to pull away from goal, around Agger, when Agger starts to close him down (watch the slo-mo replay: 90% of strikers would shoot at 00:42-00:43, not bring the ball horizontally across the goalmouth at two Liverpool defenders to open up the angle). Fifth, he doesn't actually strike the ball that hard - as much as I can appreciate traction-engine legs like Hasselbaink's, true class is a calm, unhurried slot into the corner.