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Sunday 19 August 2012

Media circus; lights, camera, action

Interesting morning reviewing what has been said and done in the newspapers with regards to this weekends football action. I am rather amused by Harry Redknapp’s desperate attempts to stay the focus of media attention and use his cronies to tout for potential new jobs. He outlines that Arsenal selling Robin Van Persie is a bad bit of business for Arsenal in his Sun column which is potentially a fair comment but then goes onto say that they will really struggle to get into the top 4 this season. Harry Redknapp believes that Tottenham will again close the gap on Arsenal (he is judging this on Tottenham signing only 2 new players so far, having 1 proper striker available for selection and fails to discuss the fact that they are due to lose their best player in Luka Modric). Interesting how he uses his article to outline how much weaker Arsenal are going to be as they are selling their best player whilst Tottenham are doing the exact same thing.

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Redknapp goes onto suggest that Manchester United and Manchester City will compete for the title and no one else will get near them and he believes Chelsea are going to struggle to fit all their new signings into the side and therefore struggle to finish top 4 in the Premier League. I am curious as to who Redknapp thinks will finish in the top 4 this season as he seemingly rules out most teams. I hope someone gives him a job soon so we don’t have to put up with a whole season of his bile in newspapers and on television. He like everyone else should delay making definite conclusions until the season has developed and ay least wait until clubs have completed their transfer business. Manchester City, Tottenham, Arsenal, Sunderland and most other clubs will be doing a lot of business before the transfer window shuts therefore the it is pointless drawing conclusions at this stage.

It was a great start of the season however and my only wish is that the media celebrate this, celebrate Swansea playing magnificently and winning 5-0 away from home, West Brom having a fantastic opening result and even celebrate Portsmouth being able to even play a game at Fratton Park and Rotherham playing the first game at their fantastic new stadium after such troubled times.

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Judging from what I have read this morning, the vouchers are circling however on Liverpool and Brendan Rodgers framing them as a ‘crisis club’ and as usual Arsenal are in crisis at the start of the season. After writing a lot of columns about how footballers need to change their behaviour after the heroics of the Olympians at London 2012, maybe the journalists need to think about adopting a different approach and give the scaremongering and doomsday stories a rest - especially on the first day of the football season!

Friday 17 August 2012

Football is Dead predictions... an unfortunate first attempt!


What an unfortunte face to start the video with... Well this is my first attempt at it and the sound is a bit rubbish and it's all a bit dry and dull. I hope to get more comfortable doing videos during the season and improve the quality....cheers.

Wednesday 15 August 2012

With a very bitter taste.... football returns

The knowledge of a new football season starting less than a week away usually has me dreaming and eagerly anticipating all the things that might be. Hot on the tails of a long summer religiously studying transfer rumours and club news, watching friendlies and looking out for potential weaknesses in rival teams, the excitement would usually build as the new season is upon us.

I do not have the same excitement as I usually would for this upcoming season however. I always watch the Community Shield game and I appreciate it is essentially a friendly game but it always feels like a good season opener. The game between Chelsea and Manchester City left a sour taste in my mouth and summed up my general feelings around football at the moment. My main issue it seems is that I am suffering from an Olympic hangover. Two weeks of feel good sporting action that celebrate the diversity, spirit and ultimate sportsmanship in human beings have left me eager for more. My faith was restored in British people as I lined the streets and stadiums and joined in when celebrating the achievements of some of the most humble people one can ever encounter. Many of these athletes do not gain acclaim for the work they do and the sacrifices they have to make and they certainly do not gain monetary reward for their efforts (in the most part). The people of London, and those who joined us from all over the world to watch the spectacle, did so with a smile on their face and one could not fail to be inspired by what unfolded around us. A collective spirit from the athletes, to the workers, to the volunteers, to the people was formed and there was no escape from the feel good factor.



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As the games come to a close on Sunday evening I reflected upon what I had seen in the Community Shield at Villa Park earlier in the day. I attempted to think of some simple words to describe what went on; hate, bile, anger, frustration, vile, misery. Villa Park turned into a hate filled arena during a game that was formed to celebrate football, celebrate a new season, celebrate the football community, a game designed to give something back to the people. Chants of ‘racist, racist, racist’ echoed around the stadium rather inevitably at John Terry, Fans goaded each other, the referee was treated to a chorus of ‘wanker, wanker, wanker’ by the Chelsea fans aggrieved at a sending off for a two football lunge by Ivanovic. The stadium soon turned into a hate filled arena to directly contrast to that of the Olympic games where sport was celebrated and all those who took part were championed.


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I love football. In my opinion the essence of the game is like no other and it is the best sport in the world. It captivates me and delivers true theatre as you truly never know what will happen next in any given moment. There is a raw passion in football and the atmosphere in stadiums makes it very, very special. The balance has been tipped however and football is rotting from within (once again). The Olympics in London has only served to embarrass football and football fans and Villa Park on Sunday was an example of this. Men with children stood in the crowd shouting and swearing as opposed to supporting and this is the way things are at the moment. Football has become hateful and vile and has become a parody of itself. It is reflected on the pitch with players acting out disdain- see the much publicised John Terry vs. Anton Ferdinand case.

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Is this really what we pay money for? It is enough to make me want to turn it off. Football has gone too far and is out of control. The players are earning a grotesque and unjustifiable amount of money and are now so detached from the everyday person it is hard to truly support those who represent our clubs. Look at Robin Van Persie for instance, Arsenal Football Club stood by him through very dark times, through an accusation of rape, through many injured years where he was consistently injured for half a season each season and rewarded him handsomely with high wages. Robin was happy to pick up the money then and stay in the treatment room, he was happy to be a part of Arsenal and hoped to show the fans what he could do rather than flattering to deceive. Robin was a cult hero before becoming a fans favourite when he finally got himself match fit and completed just over a season injury free. Arsenal fans would now be able to see the best of him. Sadly Robin had other ideas. Robin declared this summer that the club does not meet his ambitions and he wants to leave. Robin, in a badly worded statement that patronised Arsenal supporters and alienated himself perhaps forever, served to screw Arsenal over for all their patience and support through difficult years as his statement cut his ‘value’ dramatically. Fundamentally Robin is looking for more money whether it being at Arsenal or one of the richest clubs in the world. There are not many heroes left in football and the disconnect between players and fans means that football is rotting at the core. Of course they are not all the same and in the lower divisions players are generally closer to fans and the community. The problems lies in the fact that the greatest theatre is in the top division and this arena has become a hateful place for both players and fans alike. Other sports have shown the way this summer and given footballers and fans a lot to think about. Of course passion is part of football but when you are sitting in the stands listening to grown men chant about how Arsene Wenger is a paedophile, fans chanting about a players mother or wife, chanting about the death of family member, hissing as if to replicate the gas chambers used at Auschwitz etc, one has to really question the sanity in what is unfolding. To see children being influenced by adults who partake in such sadness really is a step too far and not enough is being done to rectify the problem.

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Once the league season kicks off much of the Olympics will be forgotten, heroes like Mo and Ennis will be largely put aside in favour of back page news of footballers doing the dirty on team mates and racist accusations. Football is beautiful however in essence and I still love it and of course I will be watching. To put it simply, things have been put in perspective this summer and I am certainly not as excited as I normally would be about a new season and I am sure I am not the only one. Football needs some new blood and needs to rediscover the people, the fans and supporters and inspire a young generation otherwise it will continue to slowly rot and only the masochistic will be left to watch it.

Monday 23 April 2012

Weekend football and Sunday Brunch

It has been a fantastic weekend of football viewing and as the season is coming to climax I am looking forward to witnessing the sharp end of the season once again. I feel I am in a fortunate position as my wife is also a football fan and this allows me to indulge in hours of viewing football all over the world at any given time. I am sure she has her reasons for allowing me to lose myself in so many games, whatever they may be, I am grateful.

I watched Sunday Brunch on channel 4 on Sunday morning with Tim Lovejoy and Simon Rimmer, they had Richard Bacon on as a guest amongst others. Richard Bacon declared that he hoped his son would not be a sports fan, primarily because it takes up so much time to be a sports fan. I feel he has a valid point, if I invested as much time into learning languages as I do watching football then surely I would be able to converse in a magnitude of different ways which I acknowledge would be wholly more impressive than discussing why the referee cost 'us' the points in an important home game.

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My feeling is I am stuck this way now, it is now an obsession. Maybe I could get some help with it? See a professional? Go to meetings like alcoholic anonymous or narcotics anonymous. Coincidentally I learnt that there are many different support groups on offer to people, one is called CoDA for people who view themselves as co-dependent. Maybe I could go there for my football obsession?

I guess the problem is, a lack of a problem. I can easily spend 8 or 9 hours out of my day watching football but where is the harm in that? I am still functioning, I am happy and this leads me believe that co-dependency may not be such a bad thing in my case. If people like me did not exist then who would really care about football anyway? The players would not be paid so much, in fact probably not paid at all. No one would be in the stadiums, it would not be on television and it would be of little interest. People like keep the beautiful game alive and they know it. They do not know it? Surely...

This weekend I have watched the following games; Queens Park Rangers vs Tottenham, Barcelona vs Real Madrid, Manchester United vs Everton, Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Manchester City, Juventus vs Roma, Valencia vs Real Betis, Atletico Madrid vs Espanyol, Banfield vs San Lorenzo. I have also seen highlights of all the games in different countries, listened to the Arsenal vs Chelsea game on the radio as well watching some of the Sparta Prague game.

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Tonight I intend to watch Leicester City vs West Ham and anything else that takes my fancy. I have a definite obsession and it is not going away, for better and for worse I am stuck with it.

Game of the weekend in my opinion was Juventus vs Roma. I hope more Italian clubs build modern stadiums as it truly has brought new life to the Old Lady.

Monday 16 April 2012

An ode to the football maverick

The modern age of football has heralded an era of professional footballers being elite athletes, media savvy, and almost monosyllabic in all forms of output. Footballers are more machine like than they used to be with their lifestyles, diets, sleep and all manner of other exciting things carefully managed. Their performance is carefully monitored by the use opta statistics and other mathematical based systems and on the whole the beautiful game has become more clinical and would not look out of place on a deeply cleaned clinical ward at Great Ormond Street Hospital.

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Forget the question, 'is football dead', one should be examining if football has become boring.

To avoid getting into a long winded debate, for which I simply have no time for at the moment. I would rather celebrate my favourite football species, the magnificent 'maverick'.

Long has been the tradition in British football that the maverick is the most sought after footballer on the pitch. The rock star of the team, ordinarily given full licence to attack and have nothing to do with defending what so ever, mainly due to managers anxieties of a lack of responsibility and fear of the unexpected. When considering  the 'maverick', the players that immediately spring to mind are the likes of George Best, Stan Bowles, Tony Currie, Charlie George, Alan Hudson, Rodney Marsh, Peter Osgood, and Frank Worthington. Indeed, British football was blessed with 'mavericks' in the 1970's.

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This small population characters are in danger of becoming extinct in the modern age of football. Managers have lost patience with those with raw ability without the application. Those who are blessed with ability for the sublime, but equally for the abhorrent. Those types of characters are few and far between in the robotic football we all watch now but those who have graced the pitches of these isles have been celebrated and treasured. Manchester United supporter's will forever chant for Eric Cantona and QPR supporters are currently enjoying the enigma that is Adel Taarabt. Mario Balotelli has already been discussed on this blog and is an example of the 'maverick' going through harsh times.

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My modern favourite is undoubtedly Andrey Arshavin however. Beautiful, funny and frustrating to watch at Arsenal, being a 'maverick' was ultimately his downfall in a modern game where being clinical is paramount. Poor fitness, erratic displays where he would miss a 2 yard pass followed by scoring from 30 yards were accepted by the hierarchy and fans alike when he scored 12 goals and had 7 assists in 39 games during the 2009-10 season followed by 10 goals and 17 assists in 52 games the following season. The tide turned on the lovable Russian when his output became less, he became less clinical, he had less assists, less goals, and had not as much influence on the games he was involved with. His antics started being held with derision rather than being celebrated by supporters and it was inevitable that the 'meerkat' would leave England and return to Russia.

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Having looked through the weekends football action I raised a smile however as it seems Mr. Arshavin has not lost the ability to do something completely different on the football pitch. During the Zenit St. Petersburg against CSKA Moscow tie on Saturday Andrey delivered something that was more attune to a sketch from Monty Python than that of a Russian football title decider. Rather than describe in words his actions, please watch for yourself and join me in celebrating the endangered world of the football 'maverick'.


For weekly updates on the world of Andrey Arshavin I thoroughly recommend visiting his website and in particular the 'ask Andrey' section.

http://arshavin.eu/en/discuss.php?fid=15

Saturday 14 April 2012

Fish and Chip

Well it is Grand National day, a day when I traditionally put a lot of money on blind betting. I have no idea about horses, form etc. I generally pick those mid way down the order with juicy odds. When I look at the estimated winnings I get a bit carried away and put too much money on. However, if I win one of my bets then I will make a lot of money (well for me anyway!).

It's the weekend, I haven't shaved so I am sat here stroking a beard trawling through the internet looking at the latest football news. Some big games this weekend, notably in the FA Cup semi's. I predict Liverpool to beat the form guide to conquer Everton. I'm not sure why but they seem to have hoodoo over their neighbours. Chelsea vs Tottenham could go either way but I will go for Chelsea on that one.

Whilst looking at clips on the internet I discovered Andre Santos eating at my former local fish and chip shop. It is not the best fish and chip shop in the area, if Andre walked 5 minutes down the road to Finsbury Park then he could have got more for his money. The fish and chips are of a good standard however and staff are very friendly. Despite the coverage suggesting Andre is 'enjoying' English cuisine, I think it's clear for all to see that he won't be eating at this establishment again!


Andre Santos is now known as 'fish and chip' in my household.

Friday 13 April 2012

A season of change and new hope

Mediocrity loomed. The devil was in the faces of the opposition as they pounced week in week out, focusing attention on the weak areas of a fragile team devoid of confidence, ashamed, embarrassed and lost. The fans, with their heads easily turned by delusions of grandeur, with their ego elevated by 15 years of high success, cast doubt over the role of the ailing stewardship of the football club.

Fingers were pointed in various areas; the ownership, or the unknown ownership in fact, the management, the backroom staff, the arrogance, laziness, incompetence of the players at all levels. Young players accused of not working hard enough as they have been rewarded too much too young.

A club in decline where the famous and medal clad former players discuss the reasons for the decline in the media on a weekly basis following yet another poor result; setting upon the club like wolves. Everyone believing they knew better than those who have been running the club for the last 15 years, everyone else had the answers. The cycle rolled on, more self examination followed by another poor result.

A manager who had built up the foundations for unprecedented success looked a shadowy figure prowling the touchline exasperated by poor form, bad luck and an increasing lack of love from supporters. The manager, aging before our eyes, became the focus of intense media scrutiny and many predicted it to be an un-dignified end to a gloriously successful and beautiful period of the football clubs life.

You will hear it muttered in football circles that 'form is temporary, class is permanent' and never has this clichéd saying found more substance than it has this season. The manager in question is Arsene Wenger.

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As it stands, Arsenal are third in the Premier League 5 points clear of a failing Tottenham Hotspur, an inspiring Newcastle United and an incredible 7 points clear of Chelsea. If Arsenal beat Wigan on Monday evening then they will stretch the lead and a win against an inconsistent Chelsea at the Emirates on Saturday lunchtime will all but seal a champions league birth for next season. Arsenal could potentially be 11 points clear of their arch rivals in North London after the match against Chelsea signifying one of the most remarkable comebacks in Premier League history.

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When looking at the football club, spending time in and around the Emirates stadium, one can note a real harmony at the club between fans and players and now management. Arsenal have been through turbulent year where two of the key players of the team decided to leave. One player, Cesc Fabregas, will be celebrated upon his return as he gave everything to Arsenal and it is common knowledge he still loves the club deeply, his head only being turned by boyhood dreams of representing the magnificent Barcelona.

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The same can not be said for Samir Nasri who has followed Emmanuel Adebayor in chasing a bigger pay cheque. The loss of key players signified much unrest at the club with factions of supporters ready to protest about the lack of investment and decline in expectations. The lowest point of the season undoubtedly came at Old Trafford as a weak, out of form and injury hit Arsenal side were humiliated by losing 8-2.

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Never have I witnessed a team gain so much togetherness throughout a season, the signings of Arteta, Benayoun, Mertesacker and Santos have gone a long way to creating a experienced calmness in the squad and this has been reflected on the pitch. Tomas Rosicky has been rejuvenated recreating the suberb form witnessed by supporters of Borussia Dortmund. Robin Van Persie has been at his determined, magnificent best fully justifying his selection as captain of the club.

There is something beautiful in football that when it is perceived as backs being against a wall, the supporters inevitably rally behind the cause. The atmosphere at the Emirates stadium has lifted and a togetherness has been created. One might put it down to supporters finally decreasing expectations and allowing a new team to develop. What ever the reason is, it has been felt by the players and management. Performances on the pitch have been excellent, professional, passionate and determined. Arsenal with a season goal of finishing above the rivals Tottenham Hotspur have taken to the challenge with magnificent grace.

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There is a feeling that this has been a true season of transition at Arsenal and the club are ready to challenge right at the top again. Previous painful experiences will resonate with supporters as the foundations of success have been stripped away with key players being let go. Something feels different now however and this summer might well prove to be a very exciting time at Arsenal with more experienced players being added to key positions in the team. The imminent signing of Lukas Podolski represents huge promise and a club that has learnt from previous mistakes. There have been strong rumours that more experienced internationals are going to follow Podolski's lead and it is looking increasingly likely that exciting times lie ahead of Arsenal.

Full credit must go to Arsene Wenger who has done a superb job this season under very difficult circumstances. One can hope that this experience will only make him more resolute and determined to have a final successful swansong at Arsenal. Keep an eye on this football club as they could well be the team to watch next season.

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