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#1 | ||
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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FM: Roma, circa 2012
On the final few versions of SI Games-made Championship Manager, I kept regular dynasties on this forum. With this version, though, my one attempt at a dynasty fell apart when I first hit a busy patch in my life and then lost the save. The game I started up to replace that one has been going very well, though, and since I just got a very interesting-looking new job at Roma I thought I'd have another go at a dynasty.
I'm running England down to the Conference and the top divisions of most of the other interesting European leagues, with a medium database. It is currently early March 2012 and I have just taken control of my fourth club, Roma. I started out with Rushden & Diamonds, who I took from League Two to the Championship in consecutive seasons and then kept in the Championship for one year. After that year, I moved to Wigan, and in my first year got them into the Premiership via the playoffs. We were comfortably midtable and had effectively clinched survival by Christmas of the following year, which is when the PSV Eindhoven job came up and I jumped at it. PSV had finished second each of the previous five years; I was unable to break that streak, since Ajax were twenty points clear at the time I took the job, but I made sure of second. The next year, we won the league by 18 points; the year after that, we won it by 20 points with the Cup thrown in for good measure. It was at this point that I got thoroughly bored with the lack of challenge in Dutch football and resolved to accept the first good-looking job offer that came along, aided by my now World Class reputation. Two thirds of the way into the most one-sided Dutch title race yet Roma sacked Luigi del Neri and so here we are. |
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#2 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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March 3, 2012
Roma are actually still in the hunt for a few trophies; they – we, now – are second in the league, four points behind Juventus, and playing PAOK in the second knockout round of the EURO cup. I don’t hold out much hope of winning either of them, though, since the squad I inherited, which I can’t change at all until the summer, has some glaring holes. My biggest priority is simply to get the club back into the Champions’ League, where it has been most of the time but wasn’t this year. But rather than get ahead of myself, I’d best go through the squad more systematically: Goalkeepers Ivan Pelizzoli has been getting most of the starts in goal; he’s good, rather than exceptional, but I don’t have any problem with him as a starter. Juan Acosta, a 20-year-old Argentinian, looks better than Pelizzoli in training, but he hasn’t been playing this season and my assistant manager hates him. I’ll go with Pelizzoli for the time being, but I definitely need to get Acosta some time to see whether he’s for real. There are no fewer than five keepers in the reserve team, which is somewhat puzzling, especially since none of them are very good. Left-Back Now we come to the glaring holes I was mentioning earlier. When everyone’s fit, Pietro Moretti will probably be the starter. Apart from being the shortest footballer I’ve ever met, there’s not much he’s really bad at; it’s just that there’s not much he’s particularly good at either. Of course, he’s out for two months with a broken ankle, so he’s probably not going to start many games for me before I begin overhauling the defence. The other specialist left-back who might see some time is 19-year-old Christian Parisi. Parisi will be a good player someday, but right now he’s all promise. The fact that I don’t have any better alternatives is somewhat worrying. Centre-Back Of course, I do have one better alternative than either Parisi or Moretti; it’s just that I want him playing in the middle. Christian Chivu is magnificent both as a centre-back and as a left-back, exempt from all my complaints about the quality of my defenders. Also exempt from those complaints is Brazilian international Adriano, who is probably the single best central defender I’ve ever been privileged to manage. Past them, you’ve got Matteo Ferrari, who’s fine as long as you don’t expect him to kick the ball to anyone on your team, and Jose, who in spite of his name is actually Italian. Jose is just 20, and looks like a decent prospect but is a bit too slow to be a top-notch player. Right-Back Brazil is currently swimming in good 21-year-old right-backs, and Vagner is one of the better ones. He’s big, he’s fast, and he’s got a cannon shot from distance; the rest of his game is mostly average at the moment, but he’s got time. Not as positionally adept as I’d like, or as good at crossing, but he’ll do. After him, the next best thing is probably 18-year-old Stefano Fiore, who will be a force to be reckoned with in a year or two. Unfortunately, Fiore’s positional sense is still too raw to make him anything other than a stopgap measure. Left Wing Andy Reid crosses well, and is fairly good at set pieces, but apart from that is thoroughly forgettable. I’m not a big fan. Richard Blonk is lethal from free kicks, and a very good passer, but he’s pretty slow to be a conventional wide man. I might prefer to have him in central midfield, especially considering his hard tackling. Central Midfield This is where the job really starts to look attractive. Daniele De Rossi is an Italian international holding midfielder, and every bit as good as you’d expect from that. He can run, he can jump, he can tackle, he can pass, and I’m delighted to have him. De Rossi isn’t our only regular in the national squad; Alberto Aquilani has nailed down the playmaker role for us and for Italy, and it’s easy to see why: he’s the most technically gifted player I’ve ever seen. Fernando is not quite as polished as either of the other two; then again, at 20, that’s only to be expected. He’s already played twelve times for Spain U-21s, and is a very good player even at his current age. Right Wing Mancini is the only right-sided midfielder in the squad, but he’s plenty. He runs very fast, he dribbles well, he crosses brilliantly. What more can you ask for in a winger? Strikers Javier Saviola isn’t much use in the air, but then he doesn’t need to be given how good he is with the ball at his feet. The prototype of the short, fast striker. Mido, on the other hand, is lethal in the air, and very good on the ground too; I’d prefer it if he were a bit quicker, but I’m delighted to have him just as he is. Ewerthon, our third striker, was used mostly as a winger by my predecessor; he’s not good enough at crossing for me to play him there, but he’ll do just fine up front. Alessio Cerci is currently the fourth man, and is more or less sufficient to that role. I’d hesitate to play him regularly, though. My immediate reflex, looking at that squad, is to play a 4-4-2 diamond formation; it’s one I’ve used before, and would seem to suit our central midfielders very well. Failing that, I’d probably go for a 4-3-3, since I’m really not sold on any of our options on the left wing and we’ve got three very good players both up front and in central midfield. The one are which really needs reinforcement is the defence; Chivu and Adriano are both fine, but Vagner is the only other player who’s even average, and he’s nothing special at the Champions’ League level. Changes will be made there; what other signings I’ll make depends on which formation we wind up playing. |
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#3 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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With both Adriano and Chivu unavailable through injury, I wasn’t very optimistic about my first match in charge away to Bologna. Certainly our defence looked suboptimal, with some painfully bad marking at a corner allowing Jermain Defoe to open the scoring. Then again, I can’t complain too much; at another corner, a few minutes later, Bologna somehow managed to let Javier Saviola, the shortest man on the pitch, equalize. After that, our defence settled into a rhythm, ushering opposing strikers through on goal at every opportunity. Somehow, Ivan Pelizzoli managed to keep us within one goal until, with twenty minutes to go, I admitted that 4-4-2 wasn’t working and switched to 4-3-3. We immediately started looking much better, and equalized in stoppage time when substitute Fernando curled one in from the edge of the area. Bologna 2-2 Roma
Our defence clearly needs some help, and fortunately I have a good idea of where to go in order to get some. Back in my PSV days, the club had two very good centre-backs – Alex and Kevin Hofland – and three hot prospects backing them up. I had a very clear idea of how I ranked those three prospects, both for current skill and future potential; my assistant manager disagreed completely and rated them in the opposite order. Given that that same assistant manager is now running the team, I think there might be a chance that my favourite – a 19-year-old Dutch sweeper named Jos Rozema – could be for sale. I put in a £2 million bid. Half our starters are still tired from the league match when Thursday and the EURO Cup tie with PAOK rolls around. Still, I sent everyone who feels up for it out in a 4-3-3, and what I saw confirmed my feeling that this is the way to go for us. Fernando, in particular, thrives as one of the wider central midfielders: he can shoot from outside the area, which he loves to do and shows some skill at, or he can drift out wide and hit a variety of nasty crosses. It is the latter approach which ultimately bore fruit against PAOK, when he curled one onto the head of Matteo Ferrari for our second injury-time goal in as many games. Roma 1-0 PAOK It turns out that Ewerthon tore his knee ligaments during the match and will be out for two months. In the short term, this means that reserve striker Nicola Rosati gets to sit on the bench some; in the long term, it’s my cue to start shopping for forwards. While I look at the available options up front, we get back word from PSV on my offer for Rozema: no dice. I ask them what fee they would prefer. Also around this time, Atalanta manager Pasquale Marino says that he thinks we’re a few signings short of being able to challenge for the title. Since I happen agree with him, I’m not too annoyed about the attempted put-down, and respond politely. We may or may not be able to win the title, but we can certainly manage to beat the second-from-bottom team at home, especially with Adriano and all the tired players returning. One of the returning players, Javier Saviola, put us ahead just seven minutes in, and Atalanta never showed any sign of being able to get back into it. The best they could manage was to keep it down to one for as long as possible, but eventually they ran out of energy and we knocked in three in the last ten minutes, Mido getting one and Saviola hitting two and completing his hattrick. Roma 4-0 Atalanta And once again, half our squad need resting. We have no cover right now. In my continued attempts to fix that, I renew my interest in an old target from my PSG days, a 28-year-old Brazilian international striker by the unlikely name of Fred. He’s fast and a lethal finisher, and good enough to have been capped eight times in the face of some stiff competition. The Jos Rozema chase continues; PSV want £6.5 million. I can afford that, with my £89 million transfer budget (no, not a typo), but I’d rather hedge my bets. I offer £4.5 million plus £2.5 million after ten international caps. |
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#4 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Once again, I dropped everyone who was feeling tired to the bench for our EURO Cup trip to Greece.In the first leg of the tie, PAOK offered no real threat on offence. In the second leg, against a weakened side, they offered no real threat on offence . . . apart from the time Simone Parisi gave away a penalty. Oops. With both Nicola Rosati and Alessio Cerci in the team, we had difficulty creating chances, and so the match went to penalties. What followed, from both teams, was an abysmal display of penalty-taking. Saviola, Rosati, and Blonk missed for us; they had one shot off the post, one over the bar, two saved by Juan Acosta, and we won when Aquilani, Mancini, and Mido scored. PAOK 1-0 Roma (2-3 on penalties)
We’re up against Atletico Madrid in the quarterfinals. If we get past them, we can expect to face Newcastle or Nantes. Back to the league now, and Aldo Luigi Ammazzalorso, manager of defending champions Chievo, says that he would love to put a dent in our title hopes by winning our upcoming match. He may possibly still hold a grudge over getting beaten twice in the CL this year by my PSV team. Since I don’t want to talk up our title chances while we’re behind a clearly better squad (Juventus), I decline to comment. Probably a good thing I wasn’t feeling talkative, too, since they managed to beat us by means of our own favourite tactic: the injury-time winner. We took the lead inside the second minute, when they let Fernando get the ball about 30 yards out with nobody marking him and he responded by popping it into the top corner. But with several players being rested after the midweek match went to extra time, we were unable to keep control of the match. Marek Jankulovski equalized with a wonderful free kick, then Jose got sent off before they finally hit the winner. Chievo 2-1 Roma First bit of good news: I’ve finally agreed on a price for Jos Rozema. After seeing my previous attempt at negotiations met with a suggested deal that would have been worth £8.7 million as soon as he made his international debut, I just gave up and offered their initial asking price of £6.5 million. They accepted, and he only wants £10,000/week, which shouldn’t break the bank. We also, much to my astonishment, get some results from our strategy of randomly offering for top-level strikers (none of whom I thought were plausible enough targets to merit being mentioned here). Barcelona are willing to accept £25.5 million for Alberto Gilardino. I accept, and then agree to offer the £70,000/week that he wants. With Mido tired from previous exertions, I find myself being forced to play Saviola, Rosati, and Cerci up front against Fiorentina. Saviola is good enough, but the only contribution either of the others can manage comes when Rosati gives away a penalty with fifteen minutes to go. Fortunately for his life expectancy, the Fiorentina player misses. We have twenty shots, ten of them on target; none of them wind up in the net. While some of that is due to Fiorentina goalie Simon Jentzsch, most of it is due to poor forward play. Roma 0-0 Fiorentina With Ewerthon injured and Saviola and Mido rarely fit to play on the same day, we just don’t have enough forwards to play the 4-3-3. In the next few games, then, I’ll be experimenting with other formations to see what else works for my first-teamers; I’ll also try to find some cover I can draft in for next season. I don’t need anything more than cover, though; both Rozema and Gilardino have agreed contracts, meaning that after July 1, my starting strike force will consist of Saviola, Gilardino and Mido. This is a very comforting thought. I meditate on it, whenever I am tempted to strangle Rosati or Cerci. Still on my shopping list: a left-back and a central midfielder (our midfield depth is marginally better than our depth up front, but I still want at least one more player capable of starting regularly in Serie A). |
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#5 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Found a promising-looking striker in the reserves named Maurizio Liccardi. Decided to give the 4-3-3 one more chance. Got completely hammered by Inter. Can’t blame this one on Cerci and Rosati; the culprits were Saviola, who was absolutely appalling and has been formally warned, and Pelizzoli. Inter 3-0 Roma
Saviola thinks he has been treated unfairly. I don’t. In other news, Fernando’s equalizer against Bologna has won third in the Goal of the Month contest and PSV have clinched the Dutch title. With Saviola and Mancini away in South America with their national teams, I finally gave up on the 4-3-3 and switched to a 4-1-3-2 for the match with Atletico Madrid. It worked wonders. For the first time in a while, our midfield actually looked functional; in fact, both goals came from the midfield, Daniele De Rossi bending one in from about 25 yards and Richard Blonk capitalizing on a mistake by Atletico backup keeper Dani. Roma 2-0 Atletico Madrid Newcastle won 3-0 against Nantes, so a semifinal against them is looking very likely indeed. Transfer-wise, I’ve decided to take a lesson from the Gilardino signing and go after the very best fullback I can find. Large sums of money are therefore waved in front of Valencia noses in their capacity as Philipp Lahm’s current owners. They are pure of heart and prove able to resist; fortunately, Lahm is more susceptible and complains about the bid’s rejection. I offer £10 million plus Vagner. The return leg against Atletico is something of an oddity in that both Saviola and Mido are in the country and rested at the same time. Neither of them scored, as it happens, although I suspect that they might have had Atletico played Dani in goal again. Their regular was back in goal, though, and he won Man of the Match in a very even game. A draw would have been a fair result; Atletico never looked likely to get the two-goal win they needed, and although they did grab a late winner I was pleased with the performance. Atletico Madrid 1-0 Roma It is indeed Newcastle in the semifinal, and should we win we would face either Udinese or Inter in the final. I’m rooting for Udinese, personally. Valencia rejected my new offer for Philipp Lahm, and so I now ask them what price they would suggest. Just when I was beginning to feel optimistic about the team’s performance again, they came up with a thorough stinker of a performance away to Lazio. I can’t remember a single useful bit of possession by anyone in a red jersey. It’s only down to a miracle – well, a miracle and Juan Acosta – that we didn’t concede. Lazio 0-0 Roma Fortunately, our next opposition – Palermo – are not nearly as good as Lazio. In fact, they play against us much the same way that we did against Lazio, with the added difficulty that their keeper can’t quite stop us scoring. Fernando nets the first with a neat half volley, and then with the game almost over Alessio Cerci comes on as a sub and shows some legitimate skill to set up Manicini for the second. Roma 2-0 Palermo After failing to get Lahm, I’ve now settled on Fabinho of our recent opponents Atletico Madrid as our next left-back. A prototypical attacking Brazilian fullback, he is practically unique among Spain-based footballers in having a sane buyout fee. Not that the buyout fee is where I’m starting negotiations, but I’m willing to go that high if necessary. Nicola Rosati is upset at not being played enough, it turns out. He says that if he isn’t played more often, he may be forced to leave the club. As things currently stand, he’ll be seventh choice next year; given that, this sounds like a wonderful opportunity to find out if anyone is interested in buying him off me. Onto the transfer list he goes. Shay Given has been Newcastle United’s starting goalkeeper for fifteen years now, and in all those fifteen years I doubt that he has ever done anything quite so embarrassing as what he did just seven minutes into our EURO Cup semifinal. Receiving a backpass from his left-back, he stepped up, took careful aim, and bounced his clearance off Javier Saviola and back over his head into the net. Newcastle never really recovered. To be fair to Given, there was nothing he could have done about either our second or our third; the second came when Saviola was put clean through by Alberto Aquilani, and the third was the inevitable result of giving Daniele De Rossi time to shoot from the edge of the box. A delightful performance from our point of view, and it gives us one foot in the final. Roma 3-0 Newcastle Ewerthon was finally fit to return to the bench for our trip to Brescia, but it was Maurizio Liccardi who stole the show. He opened the scoring after Fernando put him through, and then put the result beyond doubt from Richard Bonk’s late free kick. In between was a thrilling match with plenty of chances at both ends. We went two up via a heavily deflected Bonk shot; they responded when one of my former PSV players, Michele Ciriaco, hit a beautiful shot from 30 yards out; then Liccardi sealed it. Brescia 1-3 Roma |
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#6 |
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Pro Rookie
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Woohoo! Looking forward to further adventures of Roma.
![]() Out of curiosity, I've seen the term "holding midfielder" mentioned before but never quite understood what it really meant. Can you elaborate on that term, please? Oh, whatever happened to Totti? |
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#7 |
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Coordinator
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Here and There
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A holding midfielder is a guy who can maintain possession of the ball and distribute it, so others can get forward. He helps the team dictate the pace of the game.
Claudio Reyna is a decent (or at least used to be) example of it. Last edited by Desnudo : 03-30-2005 at 04:19 AM. |
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#8 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Totti was sold to Chelsea early in the 2004/05 season for £24 million. He stayed with them for six years, then moved to Udinese on a free transfer during summer 2010. He played for them just one year before retiring, and is currently coaching at AC Milan.
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#9 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Our trip to Newcastle for the second leg of the EURO Cup semifinal was always likely to be more of a formality than anything else. They did get a little bit of hope twelve minutes in when Fernando deflected a hopeful shot past Acosta, but then Mido got in behind their defence five minutes later and left them needing four more. The rest of the match was very entertaining – an Aquilani shot off the bar here, a disallowed Newcastle goal there – but completely devoid of drama. Newcastle 1-1 Roma
Inter could only get a draw at home in the other semifinal, so we’ll face Udinese in the final, which is scheduled for May 16th in Belgrade. A lot of players are still feeling tired after the midweek match, so I dropped De Rossi, Aquilani, Mido, and Saviola for the match against Siena, replacing them with reserve midfielder Simone Perotta, Mancini, Maurizio Liccardi, and Ewerthon respectively. While this does weaken the side somewhat, there isn’t too much of a problem since Siena are by far the worst team in the league. We clean them out, dominating possession and strolling to one of the easiest five-goal victories I can remember. Scorers: Perotta(p), Liccardi 2, Ewerthon, Ferrari. Roma 5-0 Siena With two matches left for most teams, the league table stands as follows: Code:
Our game in hand is at home to Sampdoria; then it’s away to Udinese (three days before we play them in Belgrade) and at home to Juventus. Beating Sampdoria is obviously key to finishing in the top four; a draw would leave too much hanging on the Juve match. More squad cover is brought in for next year as I take advantage of Albacete’s financial difficulties to pinch their young Brazilian defensive midfielder Ailton. This is something of a blind signing, since my scouts haven’t been able to tell me everything about him, but everything I do know about him is very good indeed and at £2.8 million I can afford to take a gamble. |
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#10 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Back to the first team for Sampdoria, with the added bonus that Pietro Moretti is finally fit to play at left-back again. Moretti wasn’t really stretched on his return to first-team football, though, as we outplayed Sampdoria comfortably. Mido put us ahead early with a superb shot from a tight angle, and we were in complete control well before an own-goal sealed the victory. Saviola added a third late on. Roma 3-0 Sampdoria
The result leaves us in third, four points clear of fifth place. The usual set of starters – Aquilani, Mido, Saviola, De Rossi – are now feeling tired again. Hopefully next year they’ll be able to play two games running at some point. More bad news in that Adriano has picked up a calf strain and will miss the next two weeks. In other words, he’s out for the season. Even with five regular starters missing, we still got off to a good start in our league match with Udinese. Maurizio Liccardi put us ahead early with a fierce shot, then they had a man sent off just after the interval for shoving Ewerthon in the chest and complaining about the ensuing booking. Fernando doubled our lead with twenty minutes remaining before a Udinese substitute pulled one back from distance to set up an enthralling finale. Or an enthralling four minutes, anyway; that’s how long it took Fernando to curl one into the top corner from twenty yards out and restore our two-goal cushion. Udinese 1-3 Roma An unexpected bonus: Juventus have drawn 0-0 at home to Genoa, and Parma have also drawn 0-0 away to Siena. With everyone having just one match left, this leaves the top of the table as: Parma, 69 points, +21 gd Roma, 67 points, +28 gd Lazio, 66 points, +28 gd Juventus, 66 points, +24 gd Sampdoria, 63 points, +14 gd So basically, if we win and Parma don’t then we’re champions. Unlikely, considering that we’re up against Juventus and they’re at home to Udinese, but possible. Since we can potentially win major trophies in both of our remaining games, I think they deserve a bit more ceremony than I’ve been giving most of our matches. They’ll each get their own separate post. |
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#11 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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And now Christian Chivu’s picked up a knock, making him an injury doubt for both Udinese and Juventus. Not good. My starting lineup for the EURO Cup final, therefore, consists of:
Acosta, Moretti, Vagner, Jose, Ferrari, De Rossi, Blonk, Aquilani, Fernando, Saviola, Mido The Udinese team: Isaksson, Bogelund, Raul Bravo, Betao, Belloni, Edu, Messina, Bloudek, De Martino, Diego, Fernandez 7 mins: Udinese shot from distance, nowhere near on target 16 mins: Mido gets the ball out wide, cuts it back for De Rossi whose shot hits a defender 24 mins: Vagner hits a long ball over the top, Saviola runs onto it and goes to the byline before pulling it back for Fernando whose shot is saved 33 mins: Moretti hits a long ball for Mido, who continues his run and lobs the keeper from a narrow angle. 1-0 Roma Halftime score: Roma 1-0 Udinese 53 mins: Saviola and Mido combine down the left to tee up a shot for Blonk, who pulls it wide. We quickly win the ball back from the ensuing goal kick, though, and Aquilani puts Saviola through only for Raul Bravo to make a last-ditch tackle. 61 mins: Roma put Sculli & Giardina on for Fernandez & Edu 69 mins: Fernando gives away a free kick and is booked. Raul Bravo bends the free kick around the near side of the wall only to be denied by a wonderful flying save from Acosta. The corner is played short to Bloudek, who spins inside Jose only to see his shot parried at point-blank range by Acosta and then lumped away by Moretti. 71 mins: another Udinese corner gets headed in by Sculli. 1-1. They put Pinzi on for Bloudek. I put Liccardi on for the tired-looking Saviola to try and keep him fresh for the Juventus match. 78 mins: Fernando picks out Blonk with a beautiful crossfield ball. Blonk volleys the ball first-time into the stands from 25 yards out. 80 mins: Reid on for Blonk, Mancini on for Aquilani, and Fernando moves into the more central position from where he shredded them at the weekend. End of 90 mins: Roma 1-1 Udinese 95 mins: Diego curls in a shot which Acosta brilliantly turns round the post. 104 mins: Vagner crosses for a Mido header which is parried by Isaksson Half-time in extra time: Roma 1-1 Udinese 107 mins: Daniele De Rossi hits a long-range effort over the bar. Full Time: Roma 1-1 Udinese Penalties! Betao scores. 1-0 Udinese Andy Reid scores, though the keeper got a hand to it. 1-1 Bogelund screws his kick way wide. 1-1 Liccardi hits it over the bar. 1-1 Raul Bravo places his kick well but doesn’t hit it hard enough and Acosta saves. 1-1 Mancini drives his kick straight at Isaksson. 1-1 Belloni puts the ball just out of Acosta’s reach. 2-1 Udinese. Moretti sends the keeper the wrong way. 2-2 Diego hits his down the middle and Acosta saves. 2-2 Daniele De Rossi puts it too near Isaksson. 2-2 Messina hits the worst penalty yet, right at Acosta. 2-2 Fernando drills it into the top right-hand corner. 3-2 Roma And we’ve won the EURO Cup. Acosta deservedly wins the Man of the Match award. The board and fans, needless to say, are delighted. |
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#12 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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If anyone has any stylistic suggestions, for the dynasty in general or especially for the extended-style games, I'd be delighted to hear them. I've never written up an individual game like that before, and was more or less making up the format as I went.
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#13 |
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College Starter
Join Date: Oct 2000
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well from my personal perspective being that it is year 2012. At the end of the season a review of how each team did and a preview of what to expect next season from them would be great. Go over key players new transfers that sort of thing.
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#14 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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And since I've only been in Serie A for about three months, that would also be helpful for me. Will do, and I'll also do something of the sort for the European Championships.
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#15 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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The Champions’ League was won, also on penalties, by PSV, which means I’ve managed both European trophy-winning teams in the same year. I wonder if anyone’s ever done that before.
Fabinho agrees a contract and the £10.5 million deal is clinched. But while next year’s squad may be looking good, this year’s team is significantly thinned at the moment. Fernando and Liccardi both were called up to their respective countries’ European U-21 Championship squads. Meanwhile, back at the ranch, both De Rossi and Aquilani have picked up injuries and are done for the season. All four therefore miss our match with Juventus. The only bright spot is that Adriano has regained his fitness unexpectedly soon. Our team: Acosta, Moretti, Vagner, Adriano, Ferrari, Perotta, Reid, Mancini, Blonk, Saviola, Mido And Juventus send out: Buffon, Carvalho, Marcos, Renzi, Sneijder, Robben, Pizarro, Appiah, Zhirkov, Nilmar, Martins 2 mins: Wesley Sneijder curls a long-range free kick over the bar 8 mins: Vagner hits a screamer from thirty yards out that grazes the top of the bar 9 mins: Parma score at home to Udinese. We now need Udinese to score in order to keep our title hopes alive. 13 mins: Buffon spills a Mido shot, but pounces on it at the second attempt 24 mins: Lazio go ahead away to Atalanta. We’re now in third. 33 mins: Andy Reid shoots from thirty yards, but Buffon gathers without too much difficulty. 36 mins: Atalanta equalize. Lazio are back behind us. 39 mins: Buffon has to stretch to turn a Richard Blonk free kick round the post. 45 mins: Lazio retake the lead Halftime Scores: Roma 0-0 Juventus, Parma 1-0 Udinese, Atalanta 1-2 Lazio 48 mins: Buffon does well to parry a low Perotta shot, but Mido gets to the loose ball first. 1-0 Roma. 54 mins: Lazio go 3-1 up 56 mins: Reid heads narrowly over from a Vagner cross 60 mins: Alberto Fernandez equalizes for Udinese, putting us top of the league 62 mins: Juventus put Zambrotta on for Zhirkov 72 mins: A Sneijder free kick pings around in the box for a while, then breaks to Martins who fires narrowly over. 73 mins: Juve subs, Serhat & Milliet on for Renzi & Martins. I put Ewerthon & Cerci on for Blonk & Saviola. 78 mins: Alessio Cerci finds himself in space in the area after a three-on-three break, but Buffon pulls off a good save. 79 mins: The Juve defence is starting to look panicky. Ewerthon gets a repeat of Cerci’s chance from a moment ago; he does better with it, rounding Buffon and sliding the ball into the net. 2-0 Roma. If Udinese can hold out eleven more minutes, we’ve won the league. 83 mins: Buffon has to scramble to parry a long-range effort from Ewerthon. 90 mins: And there’s been another goal elsewhere! Not for Parma, though. Alan Smith completes a rout for Lazio. Final scores: Roma 2-0 Juventus, Atalanta 1-4 Lazio, Parma 1-1 Udinese But it turns out we’re not the champions. It seems that if Serie A’s top two teams finish level on points then rather than having goal difference decide the title there’s a playoff. So there’s another match coming up on Wednesday. |
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#16 | |
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Little Rock, AR
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Quote:
Just shut up and post ![]()
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Xbox 360 Gamer Tag: GoldenEagle014 |
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#17 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Wednesday 30 May 2012
It turns out there are also two other playoffs going on: Sampdoria versus Juventus for the last Champions’ League spot and Milan versus Inter for seventh place. As far as I can tell both seventh and eighth are EURO Vase spots (incidentally, when did the names change from being the UEFA and Intertoto cups?), so I’m not quite sure why that needs a playoff. For our match, Christian Chivu is fit, so that’s the only change I make. Some of my starters are pretty tired at the moment, but they’ll have all summer to rest up. The Roma team, in full: Acosta, Moretti, Vagner, Adriano, Ferrari, Perotta, Reid, Mancini, Blonk, Saviola, Mido And Parma: Johnsen, Rossi, Navarro, Radoi, Contini, Marchionni, Downing, Simplicio, Bruno, Morsi, Mantovani 2 mins: Bruno shoots from distance. Not on target. 11 mins: Reid booked 13 mins: Richard Blonk gets the chance to shoot from the edge of the area. Unfortunately it is on his weaker foot and so he can’t get enough curl on it. 15 mins: Radoi booked. Mantovani booked for arguing about it. 19 mins: Bruno curls a free kick through the box, but nobody can get on the end of it. 29 mins: Bruno shoots from distance. It goes wide 36 mins: Mancini heads just over from Moretti’s cross 44 mins: Saviola booked for shoving Downing 45 mins: Bruno shoots wide from distance. Again. Halftime Score: Roma 0-0 Parma 48 mins: Reid shoots wide from distance 58 mins: Mancini has a good header from a Moretti cross, but Johnsen parries 62 mins: Parma substitutions. Portioli and Pozzi on for Morsi and Mantovani 66 mins: Reid sent off for his second bookable offence after a trip on Marchionni. I put on Ewerthon and Cerci for Mido and Saviola, with Ewerthon dropping back into midfield and Cerci going it alone up front. 67 mins: Parma change. Katsouranis on for Simplicio 76 mins: Ewerthon heads narrowly over after a Blonk cross causes chaos in the area 80 mins: Marchionni booked 81 mins: Bruno booked 87 mins: Ewerthon gets to the byline and cuts the ball back for Perotta, who shoots over. 88 mins: Acosta comes out of the area to collect a backpass, then gets caught in possession by Portioli. Fortunately, he can’t get any height on his attempted lob and Acosta collects. 89 mins: Perotta booked End of Normal Time: Roma 0-0 Parma 94 mins: Ewerthon gets some space twenty yards out, but shoots over 104 mins: Ewerthon gets to the byline again and cuts the ball back for Mancini, whose low shot draws a superb save from Espen Johnsen 118 mins: Radoi holds back Cerci and gets his second yellow card. Full Time: Roma 0-0 Parma So, for the second time in fifteen days, our chances of winning a major tournament have come down to penalties. I have distinctly mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, Jose Acosta is a very good penalty-stopper and has saved over half the on-target penalties in our previous two shootouts. On the other hand, he’s needed to save that many because our penalty-takers have struggled to maintain a one in two conversion rate. I’ve ordered extra penalty practice, but it is unlikely to have had much effect in just two weeks. Anyway, on to the shootout. Bruno hits his penalty softly (but not wide) and Acosta saves. 0-0 Cerci sends Johnsen the wrong way. 1-0 Roma Navarro tries a chip to Acosta’s left, but doesn’t fool the keeper. 1-0 Roma Perotta’s kick is straight down the middle and Johnsen saves with his legs. 1-0 Roma Pozzi drills the ball into the bottom corner. 1-1 Ewerthon’s kick is well placed but too weak and Johnsen gets to it. 1-1 Katsouranis sends Acosta the wrong way. 2-1 Parma Moretti fakes Johnsen out completely and tucks his kick home. 2-2 Downing converts his kick with no difficulty. 3-2 Parma Chivu gets good power on his kick but it’s too close to Johnsen. Parma win 3-2. Yes, more penalty-taking practice is definitely in order. |
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#18 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: The State of Insanity
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They changed the names because Champions League, UEFA Cup and Intertoto are all TM'd by UEFA, therefore SI would have to pay lots of dinero to license the names. SI, wanting to make money.. says. "You know what they are.."
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Check out Foz's New Video Game Site, An 8-bit Mind in an 8GB world! http://an8bitmind.com |
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#19 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Right, got it. Thanks.
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#20 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Lots of end-of-season stuff. Daniele De Rossi and Adriano both make it into the Serie A Team of the Season; Adriano also gets third in the Defender of the Year award, while De Rossi finishes second for Italian Player of the Year. No other Roma players get any sort of award.
Five Roma players are called up for the European Championships: Aquilani, De Rossi, and Ferrari from Italy, Chivu from Romania, and Blonk from the Netherlands. Alberto Gilardino (Italy) and Jos Rozema (Holland) are also with their respective teams. Still a bit of transfer business to conduct – our strike force is set for next season, and so is our defence, but I’d like one more good attacking/balanced central midfielder. Of the three players currently starting in that position for us, Richard Blonk is clearly the weakest, so I’m looking for someone left-footed by preference. The logical candidate is Arsenal’s Thomas Hitzelsburger, and so I put in an offer for him. |
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#21 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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I've done most of the work on the season previews, but can't finalize them until most of the transfer dealing is done. Instead, I'll get started on the European Championships previews, where hopefully almost all of the current top European players will get a mention.
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#22 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Group A
Netherlands Strengths: Van Den Boogart. Heitinga. Van Der Vaart. Robben. Sneijder. Some of the Dutch players are among the best in the world at their positions, and the midfield in particular is filled with creative potential. They’ve also got several players from current European champions PSV to draw on. Weaknesses: There are concerns about the strikeforce. Ryan Babel and Tim Janssen have scored fifteen each this season in France, but then there were thirteen other players who scored at least fifteen. None of the strikers have any pedigree in the really big European leagues. Rising Stars: Georginio Boateng of Espanyol is the great Dutch hope up front. He had a good half-season with Espanyol after his move from Real Madrid B, and at 22 already looks up to the challenge of playing in La Liga for a full season. Jos Rozema, of PSV but soon of Roma, is unlikely to play, but that he was invited along at all at age 19 and after a season in which he did not start regularly speaks volumes about his talent. Portugal Strengths: In Man U’s Cristiano Ronaldo and Milan’s Luis Oliviera Portugal have a superb pair of wingers. Vila Verde, the Deportivo stopper, will shore up the defence. Weaknesses: At least the Dutch strikers have mostly scored somewhere. Borges, of Boavista, is the only Portuguese striker to have managed even ten league goals last year. Ronaldo and Oliviera can create chances all they want, the ball will not go in the net. Rising Stars: Oliviera’s still just 23, and while he can’t break in to the current Milan side he’s still got plenty of room to grow. 22-year-old Porto striker Joao is the player most likely to confound my above prediction, and should be very good in a couple of years. Romania Strengths: Christian Chivu and Matei Mirel Radoi are a very solid pairing at the back. Real Madrid left winger Nicolae Mitea will create some chances. Adrian Mutu is still sharp at 33, and should be the best striker in the group if he can get into match fitness. Weaknesses: Mutu has scarcely played for Chelsea this year, and may not be fit. Apart from the four mentioned above, Romania don’t really have any other top-class players. Rising Stars: Nobody. The youngest player in their squad is 24, and there’s nothing in the U-21 squad either. Switzerland Strengths: Jonathan Vonlathen has scored a goal or two. Marco Padalino is a nice fullback. Davide Chiumiento will do a good job on the wing as long as he doesn’t have to run too fast. Weaknesses: They’re outclassed in most areas of the pitch by their opposition. Rising Stars: Nobody under 25 in their squad. Nothing in the U-21 squad. This is as good as it gets. My Prediction: 1. Netherlands 2. Portugal 3. Romania 4. Switzerland |
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#23 |
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Pro Starter
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Troy, NY
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Great previews for the Euro Champs -- where's it being played?
Thanks! ~rpi-fan
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Quis custodiets ipsos custodes? |
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#24 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Group B
Croatia Strengths: Left winger Marko Klasnic will create quite a few chances, and both Ivan Klasnic and Ivica Olic are more than able to put them away. Weaknesses: This is an old team. Every single one of the key players is 30+. They’re also shy of international-quality defenders. Blackburn’s Josep Simunic (34 )is their only really competent centre-back – and he’s suspended for the Sweden match. Rising Stars: Kresimir Marincic of Cordoba doesn’t have much going for him, but he’s incredibly fast. If the rest of his game catches up, he might make a decent player some day. England Strengths: The forwards. Wayne Rooney is brilliant, and both Jermain Defoe and Jonathan Stead are extremely able players. Michael Owen and Alan Smith are still fairly good as well. Stewart Downing is more than able to supply them. England top-scored in qualifying, and there’s a reason for that. Weaknesses: By dint of some truly astonishing planning on the part of manager Micky Adams, David Prutton is the only player in the squad whose preferred position is central midfield. This is as opposed to the six out-and-out strikers in the squad (Dexter Blackstock is also with the team, for no readily apparent reason). Rising Stars: Nobody with the main squad, but the U-21 team has some nice players. Striker Paul Watts, with ten goals in nine U-21 games, is the most obvious future star, but then I may be slightly biased having managed him both at Wigan and at PSV. Chelsea central defender Ben Cooper also looks promising. Sweden Strengths: Kim Kallstrom is one of the world’s finest midfield playmakers, and Zlatan Ibrahimovic is a brilliant striker. Andreas Isaksson is a quality keeper. They’ve also got a nice variety of good-but-not-great wingers and strikers. Weaknesses: The defence is constructed out of spare parts, and unlikely to bear up to any serious attack. Rising Stars: Andreas Garphammar of Bolton will be a good centre-back some day, although not soon enough to salvage their defence here. Wales Strengths: They’re co-hosting with Scotland, so the crowd will be on their side. Richard Duffy is a good right-back, and Jason Brown could surprise a few people in goal. Weaknesses: They’re not very good. There’s nobody who’s really going to win matches for them Rising Stars: Darren James, currently playing in the UAE of all places, has the potential to become a decent defender. Ian Williams of Aston Villa will be a very good winger in a year or two, and if he breaks out at this tournament then Wales could surprise some people. My Predictions: 1. England 2. Sweden 3. Croatia 4. Wales |
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#25 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Group C
Bulgaria Strengths: Valeri Bojinov and Dimitar Berbatov form one of the best strike partnerships in the tournament, and Chavdar Yankov will create quite a few chances for them from midfield. Weaknesses: Just like Sweden: no defence. They can score, but can they keep anything out? Rising Stars: 20-year-old Stanislav Dobrev is probably their best bet for a good defender. Both backup strikers, Dimitar Iliev and Ilya Korbankolev, are still young and will be good players someday. Germany Strengths: Liverpool striker Lukas Podolski, Stuttgart forward Kevin Kuranyi, and HSV’s Benjamin Lauth give the Germans a deadly trio up front. Timo Hildebrand is one of the tournament’s best keepers. Weaknesses: With Philipp Lahm out with a fractured skull, they’ve got a gaping hole at left-back. Rising Stars: The brilliantly named Mario Hellmeister is going to be an absolutely superb winger. Also watch out for 22-year-old midfielders Daniel Weber and Tomas Judt. Norway Strengths: Deportivo striker Daniel Fredheim Holm is quite possibly the best player in the world. Andre Hanssen and Morten Gamst Pedersen make a strong combination in midfield. Espen Johnsen is capable of saving (or blowing) matches single-handedly. Weaknesses: Right back is a question mark, but more generally they just don’t have anyone ready to step in if their starters go down. Rising Stars: My former Rushden and Wigan keeper Lasse Staw is shaping up to be Johnsen’s successor. Spain Strengths: The defending champions and the favourites. Incredibly good squad. Fernando Torres and Miguel up front, Raul and Joaquin in midfield . . . half the squad is made up of superstars. Weaknesses: They’ve only got one specialist left winger, and he really isn’t all that great. Also, this is Spain. If anyone can underachieve with this much talent, they can. Rising Stars: Deportivo striker Miguel and Milan midfielder Raul are both just 22, but they’re already among the most talented players at the tournament. In the U-21 team, there’s a pair of central midfielders, Fernando of Roma and Vicente of Newcastle. Spain are loaded. My Pick: 1. Spain 2. Germany 3. Norway 4. Bulgaria |
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#26 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Group D
France Strengths: A really talented and deep midfield, with Ahmed Yahiouai and winger Hatem Ben Arfa standing out. Weaknesses: Don’t have the killer strikers that some of their rivals do. Rising Stars: Strasbourg striker Pascal Ferreira, who probably will be that killer striker they need once his ground game catches up to his aerial presence. Italy Strengths: The Roma central midfield pairing of Alberto Aquilani and Daniele De Rossi. Also a varied strike force led by Alberto Gilardino and Michelangelo Colletti. Weaknesses: Still haven’t quite found Buffon’s replacement, and lacking the normal Italian supply of world-class defenders. Rising Stars: I say Italy still haven’t found Buffon’s replacement, but in fact 20-year-old Lecce keeper Damiano Boni has been anointed the heir apparent. I don’t think he’s quite ready now, though, and manager Vicenzo Chiarenza might be better served to go with Leverkusen keeper Stefano Terenzo. Scotland Strengths: As co-hosts, they get home field advantage. Darren Fletcher will pull the strings well in midfield, and they’ve got quite a collection of promising young players on the wings and up front. Weaknesses: The youngsters are still probably a tournament or two away from really being able to contribute, and right now Scotland have a lot of good but not top-class players, which will get them killed in this group. Rising Stars: Neil Scott and Gary Cameron show promise on the wings while Gary Brown and John Ferguson will be dangerous strikers one day, but the future star is 23-year-old Leverkusen striker John McBride. McBride is a real threat now, and if Scotland somehow do get past France or Italy he will probably be one of the main reasons. Turkey Strengths: Real Madrid attacking midfielder Sanli Tuncay, Birmingham striker Ahmet Kuru, and Real Sociedad striker Nihat spearhead a potent attack. Weaknesses: Marseilles’ Cetin Servat is their only top-level defender, while their keeper Babacan Volkan has spent the last year on Inter Milan’s bench. Rising Stars: Volkan will be a good player if he gets regular games. Cakir Volkan – who may or may not be Babacan’s younger brother – and Ayin Ismael are promising young strikers. My Predictions: 1. France 2. Italy 3. Scotland 4. Turkey |
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#27 | |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Quote:
Should have mentioned this earlier. Scotland and Wales are co-hosting, which could present a problem since they're both almost certain to go out in the first round. Although if they swapped groups Scotland might have a decent chance of getting through. |
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#28 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Actual Roma business in among the European Championships.
Thomas Hitzelsperger has signed from Arsenal for £15M. He'll play on the left side of midfield and drive my spell-checker insane. Midfield is now set, but we're still looking for a right-back. David Rives of Spain and Juventus, who is not in Juve's first-team plans at the moment and so is available for cheap, is the favorite; if not him, then my old PSV starter Cesar is agitating for a move out of the Dutch league and would probably be a good choice. |
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#29 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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First round of matches:
Group A: Marseilles forward Tim Janssen scored both for the Netherlands in a 2-1 win over Switzerland. The underdogs played well, and managed to draw level temporarily early in the second half via Xerez-bound striker Ludovic Din, but the result was never in doubt. Portugal laid an egg in the other match, looking completely outmatched by Romania even after going ahead early through Joao. Adrien Cristea and Adrian Mutu caused the Portuguese defence nightmares and grabbed a goal each while Christian Chivu took all the pressure off a shaky-looking Romanian keeper with a masterly performance. Group B: England outplayed Wales without ever really outclassing them, and won 1-0 through a Jonathan Stead goal. Their central midfield combination was David Prutton and Owen Hargreaves; I still think that’s going to end in tears. Sweden fell behind to Croatia after just two minutes and never really looked like getting back into it. 2-0 was the final score, with Niko Kranjcar and Ivica Olic the scorers. Group C: Spain got off to a poor start with a spotty performance in a 1-1 draw with Germany. Miguel gave them the lead on his full debut, but they never really settled in their unnecessarily defensive 5-3-2 formation, and Germany got a deserved equalizer just after half-time when new Roma midfielder Thomas Hitzelsperger slammed in a piledriver from twenty-five yards out. Bulgaria came from behind twice to draw 2-2 with Norway, although they had to wait until two minutes from the end for Valeri Bojinov to restore parity after Iliar Dimitrov had cancelled out Trond Fredrik Ludvigsen’s opener. Norway will be sweating on the fitness of Daniel Fredheim Holm for the Spain match, as the Deportivo striker limped off midway through the second half shortly after restoring their lead. Group D: Scotland put up a much better showing than Wales, hanging in against Italy after falling behind to an early Niccolo Morsi goal in spite of being outclassed in midfield. Substitute David Clarkson equalized with twenty minutes left, and they held out for a 1-1 draw. Turkey almost did Scotland one better, going ahead midway through the first half via Nihat, but Hatem Ben Arfa capped a virtuoso performance by equalizing with ten minutes left and then winning the match for France in stoppage time. There will be questions asked about their defence, though, as Turkey created just as many chances despite having significantly less possession. |
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#30 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Group A: Portugal pulled themselves back together with a 2-0 win against Switzerland courtesy of goals from Joao and Helder Calviño. They also had no fewer than three players simply named Nuno on the field for the last twenty minutes, which fact was by that point considerably more interesting than the actual match. Romania lost some of the momentum they’d built up against Portugal, falling 2-1 to the Netherlands. Arjen Robben and Ingemar Maayen put the Dutch two up before Adrian Mutu pulled one back from the penalty spot. The Netherlands have won the group unless they lose to Portugal; otherwise, Portugal need to get a better result than Romania (even just on goal difference) to go through.
Group B: Sweden are falling apart. They were thoroughly outclassed by Wales, for whom Craig Bellamy hit two and backup left winger David Fowler also scored in a 3-0 win. England also had some trouble against Croatia, although in their case it was just a matter of putting the ball in the net. Croatia got just one shot on target, Ivan Klasnic’s nineteenth-minute penalty, and then shut up shop. It was only poor finishing on England’s part – Jonathan Stead the main culprit – that kept them to two goals, ultimately scored by Ledley King and Owen Hargreaves. England are through; Croatia will join them if they can beat Wales, otherwise Wales go through. Group C: Spain’s hopes of defending their title very nearly disappeared in a flurry of missed chances against Norway. They dominated possession, but with Espen Johnsen in inspired form they were unable to equalize Azar Karadas’ opener. Trond Erik Bertelsen made it 2-0 late on against the run of play. Germany scored three times in the first half-hour on their way to a 3-0 win against Bulgaria. Lukas Podolski and Benjamin Lauth had them two up inside the first ten minutes before Robert Huth curled one in from outside the area. Spain and Bulgaria now both need to win their head-to-head match by a sizeable margin and hope Germany-Norway sees a winner in order to progress. Group D: I said that John McBride would be key to Scotland’s chances of getting through, and it looks like I was right. He scored twice in the first twenty minutes to set Scotland on their way to victory against France, who struggled to make any headway against a firm Scottish rearguard. Anthony Le Tallec made it 2-1 with ten minutes to go, but there it stayed. Italy drew 1-1 for the second straight match. Nihat put the Turks ahead inside the second minute, then Italy spent the rest of the match trying to recover before Antonio Cassano made amends for a missed penalty by levelling with seven minutes to go. Italy and Turkey go through with wins, while Scotland and France only need draws; the only exception is if France draw with Italy and Turkey beat Scotland by one goal, in which case the top three spots will be separated only by goals scored. |
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#31 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Final round of group matches:
Group A: In spite of a very promising start when Hugo Caetano put them ahead within a couple minutes of the kickoff, Portugal were soundly beaten by the Netherlands. Georginio Boateng netted twice, Ugur Yildrimm made it 3-1 in stoppage time, and Tiago added insult to injury by getting sent off with eight minutes to go for his second bookable offence. Portugal still go through on goals scored, though, after Switzerland beat Romania 2-0. Ludovic Din opened the scoring, then Sola Michael doubled their lead just before half-time. Had Jonathan Vonlathen not missed a second-half penalty, the Swiss would have made it to the quarter-finals. Group B: Wales harboured hopes of going through to the quarterfinals for just over half an hour; then Croatia scored twice in five minutes through Ivan Klasnic and Darijo Srna, and the dream was dead. Ivica Olic made it 3-0 in the second half. England coasted through their 1-1 draw with Sweden, going ahead through a David Prutton penalty after Ola Kullberg got sent off for a professional foul only to be pegged back when Zlatan Ibrahimovic equalized. Group C: Spain finally looked like one of the best teams in Europe against Bulgaria, and not a moment too soon. Raul, Oskitz, Miguel, and finally Xabi Alonso in stoppage time all scored in a 4-0 demolition of Bulgaria. Alonso’s goal was particularly important since up until that point Spain had the exact same record as Germany, who were busy losing 2-0 to Norway. Azar Karadas and Andre Hanssen scored for the Norwegians, who win the group in spite of missing Daniel Freidheim Holm for their last two matches. Group D: Liverpool keeper Gregory Lemaire is the toast of France after single-handedly knocking Italy out of the tournament. Lemaire pulled off save after save as the Italians dominated but could only score once, through Alberto Gilardino in first-half injury time. Anthony Le Tallec equalized immediately after the restart and France managed to cling on for the rest of the match. Scotland were held to a 2-2 draw by Turkey due to a late Nihat goal, but the co-hosts won’t mind too much as they won the group anyways. All the goals were scored in the second half, with Barry Ferguson and Patrick Scullion netting for Scotland after Sanli Tuncay opened the scoring for Turkey. The quarter-finals, with my predictions italicised: Croatia vs. Holland Portugal vs. England France vs. Norway Spain vs. Scotland |
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#32 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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And David Rives is moving to Roma, after a £11.5M deal was agreed with Juventus. I'll talk about him more when I do our season preview after the European Championships.
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#33 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Croatia 0-2 Holland
Rafael van der Vaart and Tim Janssens scored to cap a comfortable win for Holland. They’re the only team to win all their matches up to this point and they have to be regarded as favourites. Portugal 0-2 England Another one-sided match. Owen Hargreaves and Wayne Rooney did the damage. France 1-0 Norway Gregory Lemaire was impressive again, but France were never really troubled by a disappointing Norway. Said Khiter scored the goal as the string of boring quarterfinals continued. Spain 3-0 Scotland David Villa scored twice in the first ten minutes to completely kill any chance at a serious contest. Scotland folded after that, and the only shot on target any Scottish player managed all day came when Cristophe Berra put through his own net just before half-time. What a disappointing round. Not a single interesting match and no goals scored by any of the losing sides. Here’s to some better semifinals: Holland vs. Spain England vs. France And my prediction for the final: Holland vs. England |
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#34 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Holland 4-1 Spain
A classic counterattacking display saw Holland score with every single one of their shots on target. Spain managed to respond after the first one, Miguel scoring to cancel out Arjen Robben’s effort, but they struggled to break down an excellent Dutch defence. Georginio Boateng netted twice and Rafael van der Vaart added the fourth as Spanish hopes disintegrated. England 3-0 France 41% of the possession and one off-target shot. That’s what France had to show for a day on which they were thoroughly outclassed by England. Alan Smith, James Milner, and Jermain Defoe shot England into the final in one of the most impressive team performances of the tournament. And then the final . . . Holland 1-0 England Holland had all the possession, England had all the chances, and Roma’s very own Richard Blonk scored the only goal with a brilliant thirty-yard free kick. Jos Rozema, having just officially joined the club, also got into the starting lineup for his international debut. There’s a lot of turnover among the coaches of the competing teams after the tournament, as per usual. Wales, Sweden, Croatia, England, Portugal, Holland, and Spain are all in the market for new coaches. I’m particularly interested in England, Holland and Spain. England because I am English, after all, and they’ve got quite a good team at the moment; Holland because after my three years with PSV I actually know more about the Dutch players currently coming through than I do about the English, and because they’re the European champions; Spain because, as I’ve said a time or two before, they have an absolutely obscene amount of talent right now. I apply for all three. I’m going to bed now, so if anyone has suggestions as to which job I should go for most heavily I’d be interested to hear them. I don’t promise to pay any attention, but I would be interested to hear them. |
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#35 |
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Pro Rookie
Join Date: Oct 2000
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I would dig seeing you take the helm of either the England or the Holland job. For whatever reason, I've always rooted for England. Probably as much as, if not more than the US team. I'd also dig following your account of the Holland job since a number of players I like are Dutch.
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#36 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Well, England have offered me the job while Spain and Holland were still thinking about it, so it's not really all that difficult a choice. England it is, then.
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#37 |
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Pro Rookie
Join Date: Oct 2000
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Yay! I dig!
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#38 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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I've formally taken up my duties as England manager now. The FA expects me to qualify for the World Cup; with a group of Bulgaria, Austria, Russia, Estonia, and Lithuania, there ought not to be any major difficulties. I'll give a full report on the current English squad just before my first international in charge.
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#39 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Probably the best way to start off the new season is to formally introduce the many new players coming into the club. There are a lot of them, six major transfers costing a total of £72M.
Fabinho is a 28-year-old Brazilian left wing-back. He can also play left-back, and that’s where he’ll play for us, but he’s at his best going forward. I normally prefer my fullbacks to be defenders first, but Fabinho is a good enough player that I’ll let that pass. Fabinho might not start all that regularly, though, as I’m tempted to move Christian Chivu out wide to make way for Jos Rozema. When I took over at PSV, I thought that the then-16-year-old Rozema was the most exciting defensive prospect I’d ever seen. He’s 19 now, and I still haven’t changed my mind. I’m not the only one impressed, either; he made his debut for the senior Dutch national team a few weeks ago in the final of the European Championships, and my assistant manager is suggesting that I drop Adriano – one of the best defenders in the league – in order to fit him into the starting lineup. He’s fast, he’s strong, he’s dominant in the air, he’s a very good tackler . . . The list is endless. I’m very much looking forward to seeing him develop over the next few years. He’ll miss the start of the season, though, off in Canada for the Olympics. David Rives, our third defensive signing, has had one of the oddest careers in recent memory. He started his career with Atletico Madrid B, but soon moved to Manchester United as part exchange for Gabriel Heinze. After two years in which he never played a single first-team match, he was let go to Real Zaragoza for £350,000. He started for them for two years, then moved back to Man U for about eight times what Zaragoza had paid. After one year as one of the Premiership’s best fullbacks, Juventus paid £34.5M for him. He was superb for them in his first year in Italy. Then in his second year – last season – they switched to playing three at the back with the result that he made just eleven appearances, all as a substitute, and was available at a considerably reduced price. He’s not all that impressive physically, but is a very intelligent and determined player with superb technical ability. He’ll take over from Vagner at right-back. Ailton is the bargain of the bunch, a 21-year-old Brazilian defensive midfielder who cost just £2.8M courtesy of Albacete’s financial difficulties. He’s probably a bit too slow of foot to ever make it as an elite player, but that’s his only weakness; he’s a disciplined, effective player whose gifts are superbly suited to the holding midfield role where he will back up Daniele De Rossi. Thomas Hitzelsperger, the new occupant of our leftmost midfield role, has been one of the most reliable and consistent midfielders in the Premiership over the past decade. For the last three years, he’s been a mainstay of the Arsenal midfield, creating at least twelve goals in each of those seasons; before that, he was doing the same thing for Aston Villa. He can do just about everything you could possibly want from a central midfielder, but is particularly famous for his left-footed thunderbolts from distance, typified by his first international goal against Spain in the European Championships. With 32 goals in 59 international appearances, Alberto Gilardino is Italy’s most dangerous striker. He’s not exactly been shirking at club level, either, scoring goals for Parma, Ajax, Inter, and Barcelona and even getting nominated for the 2010 World Player of the Year award (he finished third). Fast, intelligent, and a deadly finisher both in the air and on the ground, I’m expecting him and Javier Saviola to be one of the most dangerous strike partnerships in Serie A. |
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#40 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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And now from the new boys to the full squad. We play in a tweaked version of the basic 4-1-3-2 attacking formation, and here’s the squad with which we start the season:
Goalkeeper: Juan Acosta is the single biggest source of disagreement between me and my assistant manager. My assistant hates him; I think that he’s a good keeper now, and at age 20 he’s only going to get better. He won the UEFA Cup for us more or less single-handedly last season, and has earned a full season in the starting lineup. Still, he’s one of the biggest question marks in our first eleven. Ivan Pelizzoli is a competent backup, although he’d be just average as a starter. Defence: Christian Chivu, Adriano, and David Rives are all among the best defenders in the league; Jos Rozema isn’t quite their yet, but will be in a year or two. Fabinhois also impressive. Many of last year’s starters or rotation players will be cover this year. Vagner and Matteo Ferrari will spend most of the season on the bench, while Jose – who is actually a decent prospect, in the Italian Olympic squad, but is outclassed by Rozema – and Pietro Moretti start the year in the reserves. Midfield: Daniele De Rossi in the holding role; Thomas Hitzelsperger, Alberto Aquilani, and Fernando in the middle of the park. Fernando will take some time to get used to playing this far out wide, but this is a terrifically talented group. Richard Blonk, the scorer of the European Championships-winning goal, will start on the bench along with Ailton and Mancini. Andy Reid has been transfer-listed, being both one of our least talented midfielders and poorly-suited to our current formation. Strikers: Javier Saviola and Alberto Gilardino will be the main strikers, but Mido isn’t exactly the soft option off the bench. Ewerthon is slightly less lethal than the other three, but can do a competent job either here or in midfield. Maurizio Liccardi, currently up in Canada with Jose and Rozema, is developing into a very promising-looking forward and I’ll hope to get him some starts around the edges. |
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#41 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Now for my Serie A 2012/13 Season Preview, which should hopefully help point out who's who in Italy these days. I'll be running down the teams in reverse order of last year's finish, but first there's the three newly promoted clubs:
Cesena Goalkeepers: Cesena have three first-team keepers, but none of them is particularly good. Fabio, at eighteen, might be a player some day; neither of their other keepers will ever be any better than they are now. Defence: Lots of bits and pieces here, but few players who’ve played at the top level before. Gill Swerts, a free signing from Chievo, is the exception, and will probably have to be at or near his best in order for Cesena’s defence to amount to much. Midfield: A potential strength. Left winger Angelo Borelli is the club’s most intriguing prospect, and Spanish veteran Mikel Aranburu looks a classy presence in the middle. Young German right winger Thomas Schmidt will score a few from distance, and Maurizio Ciamitaro is one of the better holdovers from Cesena’s Serie B days. Strikers: All four of Cesena’s first-team strikers are Italians age 22 or under. It’s clear which two they ought to be relying on; Riccardo Bove, the club’s record signing, is a very promising player apart from his lack of pace while Giorgio Marini has the pace and finishing ability to score a few goals. Teenager Dario Fontana will be a decent player in a few years, albeit not now, but Angelo Boscolo is a lost cause. Outlook: Relegation strugglers. This is their first season in the top flight in recent memory, and while they’ve brought twelve players in during the summer they’re still to short of quality at the back to have a very good shot at safety. Messina Goalkeepers: Daniel Offredi and Alessandro Gatti will fight it out for the starting position. The simple fact is that they’re both the same age (24), they’re both mediocrities, and it makes very little difference to anyone outside their immediate families who wins the job. Defence: Guglielmo Stendardo, the former Perugia centre-back, is the only player here with significant Serie A experience. Messina did import four Spanish defenders from Albacete, though, and how well those four play – especially David Catala, Stendardo’s prospective partner – will determine how Messina’s defence do. Midfield: A lot of young Italians here, but very few of them with any real hope of making it at this level. Left winger Federico Franceschini, a free transfer from Atalanta, and former Bologna man Angelo Dossena are the two men most likely to have a positive effect this season; 19-year-old Salvatore Antonini also might do something, especially from dead balls. Strikers: Some quality here, but no real pace. Japanese veteran Shunsuke Nakamura will be useful, especially at set pieces; his target will be Luciano Leguizamon, who is a good target man, but painfully slow. Ivica Illiev, also in his thirties, is one of the few members of the squad remaining from Messina’s last spell in the top flight. Simone Calderoni, the baby of the group at 20, has yet to develop any really dangerous skills and is too slow to seriously hurt his opponents. Outlook: Albacete were right on the edge of the relegation zone in La Liga last year; Messina have imported about a quarter of their squad. They’d be delighted to match Albacete’s 17th-place finish. Relegation strugglers, definitely. Ternana Goalkeepers: Tommaso Berni makes poor decisions, doesn’t always deal with crosses, and is nevertheless the best keeper on any of the promoted clubs because of his superb shot-stopping skills. Carlo Zotti, his backup, is more well-rounded and is only a little behind Berni for the starting role. A potential strength. Defence: Quite a few players with Serie A experience here. Not all of them did particularly well in their previous spells in the top flight, but there’s a decent amount of talent. Matteo Abbate, formerly of Piacenza, will be the key, but there are a lot of people with the ability to help out. Midfield: Ternana play a 4-3-3, possibly because they don’t have very many good midfielders. I like the signing of former Bologna midfielder Massimo Loviso, but he’s not a real star and he doesn’t have nearly enough help. Strikers: Ternana’s strikers are less than awe-inspiring. Fabio Caracciolo has some skills but isn’t in very good shape, while the two strikers whose goals won them promotion – Luigi Elia and Carlo Emmanuele Ferrario – show no signs of being up to it at this level. Outlook: They’ll concede fewer than either of the other promoted teams, but they’ll probably score fewer too. Can’t see any significant difference in the results, though. Relegation strugglers. |
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#42 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Genoa
Past Performance: Genoa have been pretty much perennial strugglers. Since rejoining Serie A for the 07/08 season, they’ve finished 15th, 15th, 8th, 16th, and now 17th. They’ve traditionally had one of the weaker defences in the league, but the last two years their offence has fallen off a cliff. Not good. Goalkeeper: Goalkeeping really hasn’t been among Genoa’s problems recently. Gianluca Pegolo, the incumbent, is a perfectly good player; not elite, but quite good. Stuart Taylor is acceptable as cover, and 20-year-old former Italian U-19 international Giovanni Albano looks very promising indeed. Albano may take over the job at some point during the season, but whatever happens Genoa are in safe hands. Defence: Here’s the reason Genoa have been shipping goals regularly. None of Genoa’s defenders had a good season last year. None of them have ever had a good season at this level, in fact. They’re just not very good. 21-year-old Brazilian Wanderley and new left-back Giovanni Pasquale are the best of a bad lot. Signing Gianluca Zambrotta from Juventus was a good thought, but several years too late. Midfield: Better. Still not a lot of people who had good years last year, but most of the flotsam here have at least shown themselves capable of being average or near-average Serie A players. There are a few who are capable of more than that; Giovanni Barletta and Luca Mele are promising prospects, but the only player with real talent - Luciano Maiolini – got sold to Palermo during the offseason. Striker: Probably Genoa’s deepest position apart from keeper. Ciprica Marian and Stephen Ayodele Makinwa both managed to make it into double figures last season in spite of some fairly poor service, and are the only players apart from Maiolini and Pegolo who can be reasonably proud of their performance. They tried playing 4-3-3 to take advantage of their strength here; that also may have something to do with their defensive struggles. Outlook: Another relegation battle. They don’t have the talent for anything more. Bari Past Performance: The only newly-promoted side to stay up, Bari played passable defence, finishing 13th in the league in goals conceded; their offence was no great shakes, although they did score more than everyone below them except for Atalanta. Goalkeeper: At age 20, Ivan Morelli has already been capped four times by Italy U-21. I’d have capped him more in their place; to me he looks comfortably better than most of his agemates. In any case, he’s a good player now, he’s only going to get better, and he did a fine job last season. Which is a good thing because the alternatives are all distinctly underwhelming. Defence: There’s no particular talent here and nobody who really seemed to be playing well. A strong central midfield might have helped a bit, but I’d expect Bari to be back down with Genoa defensively next season. Midfield: Bari’s biggest strength. Fabrizio Melara and Fabian are both at least average wingers; Massimiliano Patti and Lorenzo Abate can do a job in the middle of the park. As with Morelli, the backups are poor, but as long as everyone stays fit the midfield is going to be a plus. Striker: They can run fast. They can head the ball, on those rare occasions they jump high enough. They can shoot. As long as you don’t ask Bari’s current strikers to do anything outside of those three basic skills, they’ll be fine. The club’s poor offensive record last year says everything you need to know about how well they do outside their core competencies. Outlook: Relegation struggle. They stood pat during the summer in spite of some real problems. Their defence consists of Ivan Morelli, smoke, and mirrors; he has to play most of the year for them to have any chance at survival. Last edited by Katon : 04-02-2005 at 12:48 PM. |
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#43 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Brescia
Past Performance: Scored a few more than Bari, conceded a few less, finished on the same number of points. This was a very disappointing season for them, their lowest finish in over a decade and their first time out of the top half since 2007. Goalkeeper: Sebastien Frey is now heading into his seventh year as the Brescia keeper. It’s strange to talk about someone with 29 French caps as a disappointment, but Frey has never really lived up to his potential. Lots of talent, but he never really seems to play all that well. Still, he’s a competent player. Defence: Much better than any of the teams below them. My old PSV right-back Cesar, a 21-year-old Brazilian who recently has emerged as the heir apparent to Cafu, is probably the best player (as you would hope for from their big summer signing), but they also have 21-year-old Argentinian international Hector Silva and Italy’s first choice left-back Erminio Rullo. Add in several other perfectly competent players and you have a very promising defence.. Midfield: I’m slightly biased here because in January 2012 Brescia spend £9.75 million on my best PSV midfielder, Michele Ciriaco. Ciriaco has never done quite as well in Italy as he did in the Netherlands – one stunning goal against Roma after I took over aside –but he’s still one of my favourite players, and I rate him very highly. He’s joined in central midfield by Maurizio di Giovanni, a member of the current Italian U-21 team, who looks a decent prospect although I don’t think he’ll ever be a star. Rodrigo Ferrante Taddei, a veteran with seven caps for Brazil, is their best winger. Striker: Emanuele Caleio is a major threat in the air, Hungarian international Imre Szabacs has an eye for a good pass, and just about everyone can finish well; still, there’s nobody here who can really hurt the opposition with the ball on the floor. The £4.6M signing of Lecce forward Artem Milevsky doesn’t really change that. Not Brescia’s strong suit. Outlook: Mid-table. It’s where they’ve been finishing most seasons, and they’ve got a clear talent edge on the relegation strugglers. Palermo Past Performance: Scored the fifteenth-most goals in the league and conceded more goals than any other team outside the relegation zone. Somehow, this added up to fourteenth place and their highest points total in the last five years. They’ve been in Serie A for eight years, and after a few good years started becoming regular denizens of the bottom half, mostly because they’ve been conceding 50+ goals a year regularly. Goalkeeper: Palermo have four first-team keepers, none of whom are very good. The starter for the past few years has been Marco Storari, whose solid shotstopping skills are generally seen to outweigh his inability to deal with crosses. Not a strength. Defence: Current Italian international Cesare Bovo is a good centre-back, and Christian Zaccardo (also capped by Italy) is a very nice right-back. Apart from them, probably the best defender Palermo had last year was the 36-year-old shell of Dario Simic. And he’s just retired. A disaster area, in spite of the two Italians. Midfield: Lots of interesting players here. 22-year-old former English U-21 international Terry Knight looks to be turning into a good right winger; in fact, given the current lack of good English right-sided midfielders, a strong season might see him be considered for a call-up to the national team. Summer free transfers Luciano Mauri and Marco Marchionni add further experience to the veteran presence of attacking midfielders Daniel Jensen and Salvatore Gambino, both of whom were among the club’s best players last year. Striker: David Andre is tiny, is good but unexceptional at every facet of the game involving actually kicking a football, and has scored 25 goals in 94 games for Palermo. But hey, he can run really, really fast, and so he’s been capped four times for France at age 22. His strike partner is Ernesto Antonio Farias, an Argentine veteran who is inferior to Andre in every respect for three: he’s a very sharp finisher, he can win the occasional header, and he actually plays well on a reliable basis. Farias doesn’t look all that impressive, but he’s been one of Palermo’s best players for quite a while now. Outlook: Their defence will probably keep them involved in the relegation dogfight longer than they’d like, but I think they’ll stay up in the end. |
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#44 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Udinese
Past Performance: After finishing fifth and seventh in the previous two seasons, Udinese had a disappointing league campaign and dropped as low as thirteenth. They built on last year’s UEFA Cup semifinal appearance and reached the final this year, but that ended in disappointment too, as you may remember. Goalkeeper: Andreas Isaksson is only thirty, and he’s already played 80 times for Sweden. There’s a reason for the astronomical cap total; he’s a very good player, agile, good in the air, and one of the sanest goalies I’ve ever met. Defence: Thoroughly average. There are a lot of competent players here – Betao and Emilson Sanchez Cribari in central defence, Raul Bravo and Kaspar Bogelund at fullback – but nobody special. Midfield: Giampiero Pinzi isn’t all that old at 31, but he’s been one of the most reliable midfielders in Italy for over a decade. He’s never been a star, but he’s always been a good player, and has played nearly four hundred times for Udinese in that timespan. They’re trying to turn Raffaele De Martino into Pinzi’s replacement, but in spite of his arguably superior talent De Martino has never looked in the same class. With the wings occupied by people who are either too young (Francesco Messina) or just not very good, most of the creative onus has fallen on Slovenian Sandro Bloudek. Striker: At 27, Diego (not the Diego who you’ve probably heard of in 2005; he’s at Liverpool) has still not been capped by Brazil. I doubt that’s going to last, though. He’s a stunning player, and has hit over twenty goals in all competitions both of the last two years. Gianpaolo Sculli isn’t as talented as his strike partner, but he’s still an aerial force, as Roma found out in the UEFA Cup final. 21-year-old Argentinian Alberto Fernandez is a good prospect, although he hasn’t done much with his cameos in the first team as of yet. Outlook: Their defence has stayed more or less constant over the last few years, right around the middle of the league, but their offence was well below its normal level last year. Don’t expect Diego to let that continue; they should be up around the Intertoto slots. Perugia Past Performance: Built on a 15th two years ago on their return to the top flight and finished 12th. They conceded less than every team below them; they scored less than every team above them. Goalkeeper: They let last year’s starter, Fabio, go on a free transfer and seem to be preparing to hand the job over to 21-year-old Antonio Nicolini. Nicolini is a decent player should be able to do as good a job as Fabio did last year. Mario Villani is one of the league’s better backups, so they do have options if Nicolini fouls up. Defence: Australian international Patrick Kisnorbo is a good, versatile player, capable of doing a job anywhere along the back or in midfield. The rest of the Perugia defence is more or less competent, but eminently forgettable. Midfield: Perugia played a 4-3-3 last season, probably because their midfield really isn’t very good. Massimo Donati is a decent player, but past him everyone else is more or less the same: not horrible, but not good either. Striker: Carlos Delgado isn’t quite as good a finisher as Perugia might like, but his superb crossing makes him perfect as one of the wide forwards in a 4-3-3. In the middle is Perugia’s crown jewel, 23-year-old Nigerian John Ibrahim. Ibrahim is a good player now; in a year or two, when his skills catch up with his build and mentality, he’ll be a very good player. Definitely the best reason to watch Perugia Outlook: Not enough holes for them to get into serious relegation difficulty, not enough good players to get into the top half. Probably headed for another dull season. |
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#45 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Bologna
Past Performance: Mediocre. 11th last year, they’ve spent most of the last decade hovering around midtable. Goalkeeper: Mirko Conti deals with crosses about as well as anyone in the league, which has helped Bologna quite a bit recently. It’s even gotten him into the Italian team a few times, in spite of the fact that he’s not very good at actually stopping shots. Normally does well, but not someone I’d have in my team. Defence: With star defender Alessandro Iannicello sold to Juventus, they’ll have to adapt quickly. Right-back Chong Song-Goog is useful; the rest of the defence isn’t quite as good, but is at least not horrible. Midfield: Bologna’s best midfielder of recent years, Simone Barone, left on a free transfer over the summer. Fortunately for them, their big-money replacement – Edgar Barreto, who they signed for £30M a year and a half ago – showed every sign last year of having settled in for a long stay. Barreto, a Paraguay international, is one of the most talented players I’ve ever seen; about the only thing he isn’t good at is throw-ins. If he’s on form, he’ll be key to Bologna’s chances of reaching the European places. His central midfield partner will be £7.5M man Jan van Wijk, a 22-year-old Dutch international with impressive talent. New signings Javier Araujo and Leonardo Salvi bring much-needed quality on the wings. Striker: The best reason to watch Bologna is 20-year-old Niccolo Tassi, also known as the future of Italian goalscoring. Tassi is nothing special physically; what makes him such a highly-touted prospect is his professional attitude, his intelligence, and his technical brilliance. He’s heading into his second season as a full-time starter, and it will be interesting to see what he does with it. His strike partner will be Jermain Defoe, one of the best pure goalscorers in Serie A. Defoe has hit 15 league goals in each of the last four seasons; that’s his lowest total since coming to Bologna in August 2005. 17-year-old Spaniard Sergio also looks a very promising player. Outlook: If Barreto and Defoe can stay fit and in form for the full season and Tassi breaks out, then Bologna could very well wind up in Europe. The defence could be a worry, though. Lecce Past Performance: Having spent three years in the lower reaches of the table after coming up from Serie B, Lecce catapulted up to tenth last year. Goalkeeper: Damiano Boni is only 20, but he’s already played twice for the full Italy team. I don’t think he’s that good yet, but he’s been playing well in Serie A for three years now and anyone who can do that at such a young age has something going for them. Defence: Lecce boss Antonio Cabrini is a firm believer in the virtues of rotating your defenders, so it’s hard to pick out the starters here. It’s easy to tell who should be starting, though: Mali international Soulymane Diamoutene has been Lecce’s best defender for a couple years now, while Marco Antonio is the most well-rounded 21-year-old defender I’ve ever seen. He’ll be a star in a couple of years, I suspect. Everyone else is mediocre. Midfield: Another old PSV acquaintance here. Alberto Medina did a very good job whenever I called on him, but his PSV career was ultimately doomed by the fact that he was a winger and we never used wingers. He’s moved around a lot, but he’s always been a good player wherever he went. More centrally, Lecce have the classic defensive-offensive pairing in central midfield. Venezuela veteran Miguel Angel Mea Vitali handles the defensive duties; 20-year-old Italian Pietro Ferrante does the creative stuff. If Ferrante could contribute in defence more, he’d be a potential international; as is, he’ll probably get a few caps but never get a regular run. Striker: A major strength last year. Mirko Vucinic was Serie A’s leading scorer last year, and is by far Lecce’s best player. Artem Milevskiy wasn’t nearly as good as his strike partner, but still managed to scavenge 13 goals. Nobody got more goals from their top two strikers than Lecce. But Milevskiy is gone to Brescia, and with backup Cedric Konan also leaving on a free transfer Vucinic will have to do it on his own. Outlook: They’ll go as far as Vucinic can carry them. Probably in for a drop of a position or two, but it’s hard to see them doing significantly worse. |
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#46 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Chievo
Past Performance: One of these years is not like the other: 13th, 13th, 15th, 14th, 6th, 11th, 1st, 9th. With 27 players having left during the summer and nine more coming in, Chievo never looked like defending their title and got dumped out of the Champions’ League at the first knockout stage; still, they won the Cup, so at least they got something out of the season. Goalkeeper: When Chievo won the title, Christian Lucchetti turned in one of the least impressive performances by a title-winning keeper in living memory, so Chievo decided to sign a replacement – Eduardo – on a free transfer during the offseason. Last year, Eduardo was poor and Lucchetti was brilliant once he got back into the team for the last third of the season. It’ll be interesting to see what happens here next year. Defence: Chievo’s best defender this year was Marek Jankulovski; at 36, he’s not likely to be able to play 40 games again. Marco Padalino and Andrea Corradi, both holdovers from the championship team, will have to pick up the slack, since most of the other players here are distinctly mediocre. They also might get some help from former Roma centre-back Guiseppe Scurto, returning to the game after a year out with a damaged spine. Midfield: Brazilian right winger Alessandro Avezedo was one of the stars of the title season, and he kept the same level of performance last year. Defensive midfielder Matteo Brighi suffered a bit more of a decline, but was still reasonably good. With the emergence of young central midfielder Federico Linguanti and the midseason signing of Brazilian Alexandre Favaro, midfield was one of the bright spots of Chievo’s season. Balci Serkan is a very talented-looking free signing, so more of the same is definitely possible. Striker: Amauri was never a superstar, and at 32 he is definitely on the decline. But over the past decade, he’s been one of the most consistent players in Italy: he’s scored at least 14 goals for Chievo in each of the last eight seasons. It was unrealistic to expect him to keep playing as well as he did during the title season, but he had another fine year. His strike partner, Andre Cristea, was less impressive, scoring just twelve times in forty-eight matches. Behind those two there’s only Johan Kramer, my former PSV supersub. Kramer’s still got time at just 22, but the fact that he’s yet to start more than seven matches in a season is not a good sign. He’s similar skills-wise to David Andre, and is a large part of the reason I’m sceptical about Andre’s chances (though admittedly Andre is somewhat more talented than Kramer). Outlook: Lucchetti, Eduardo, Jankulovski, Avezedo, Brighi, and Amauri are all 30 or over. This is an old team, and it’s not likely to get significantly better. They’re doing a good job working youth into the midfield, but they need to do the same in the other positions too. Midtable again. Inter Past Performance: Inter had an interesting spell a while ago where they lost in final of the Champions’ League three times in four years. That’s over now, and their best European performance of recent years came this year when they lost to Udinese in the UEFA Cup semifinals. Their league performances are also in a recession, as they finished ninth last year breaking a decade-long run of top five finishes. This year’s eighth-place finish won’t be seen as an improvement, although it did have some positive elements. Last year their defence fell apart; this year their defence was fine and their offence, while slightly worse, was nearly as good as before. Goalkeeper: Morgan De Sanctis was the starting keeper for six-and-a-half years, including two of those Champions’ League finals; then half a year ago Inter management realized that he was now 35 years old and that they needed to bring in a replacement. Their solution was to spend £17.75M on Mexican keeper Francisco Guillermo Ochoa from Marseilles. I don’t quite see why Ochoa’s worth an eight-digit fee, but he’s certainly a good player. Defence: Inter play a 3-5-2 sweeper formation. The sweeper is 23-year-old Brazilian Fernando, who is a very good player in spite of his average pace and unimposing size. Ahead of him are veteran Argentinian Nicolas Burdisso and Italian wonderkid Manuel Francese. Francese is just 19, but he’s already a brilliant reader of the game as well as being very versatile. Past those three, Inter rely on Igor Tudor and Ivan Cordoba, both of whom are getting on in years. Midfield: Xabi Alonso is one of the best and most consistent midfielders in Europe; Bezologlu Emre isn’t quite on the same level, but is still a good player. Inter’s third starting central midfielder, Rosinei, would really be better off if he were played in the hole behind the strikers, but he can still do a decent job in a flat midfield. Horacio Peralta and Andreas Ivanschlitz are both pacy, talented wingers. If everyone stays healthy, this is a very good midfield. If someone gets hurt, they have basically no cover – a twenty-year-old kid in central midfield and a bunch of fullbacks on the wings. Striker: No depth issues here. Adriano is Adriano, of course, and his strike partner Jose Giresse Kiefa is also very good, almost certainly the best footballer ever to come out of Angola. Behind them there’s Rocque Santa Cruz, who hit eighteen league goals last time he got a full years’ worth of playing time, and Jhon Jairo Mosquera, a Colombian who is yet to find his feet in Italy but absolutely shredded both France and Argentina’s top league. 19-year-old Brazilian Paolo, their only summer signing, is also dangerous. Adriano and Santa Cruz are both 30; Kiefa and Mosquera are both 24. Outlook: Major depth problems, and they certainly didn’t need to wind up in the Intertoto Cup with its pile of extra games. Won’t finish any lower, and could well wind up a fair bit higher. |
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#47 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Milan
Past Performance: After a brilliant run from 2004 to 2010 where they won seven titles in eight years, Milan have been sliding down the table recently. Two years ago, their defence fell from superlative to average and they finished fourth. Last year, their defence was back among the league’s best but their offence had problems and they wound up in seventh, out of the Champions’ League spots for the first time since 2001. They did match their best result of the past eight years by reaching the CL semifinals, though. Goalkeeper: Milan sold their old starting keeper to Atletico Madrid during the January transfer window; the new starter was 23-year-old German Carsten Ludwig, who had a very good half-year. I don’t see Ludwig as a superstar in the making, but he’s a good solid player. Portuguese youngster Manuel is a quality backup. Defence: First off, Vincent Kompany is probably the best defender in the world at the moment. Second, Mark van den Boogart, who Milan bought from Sampdoria for £27M in January, is one of the world’s best right-backs and brilliant in the middle too. Cristoph Metzelder, the third central defender in Milan’s 5-3-2, is just good rather than great, but still: Milan have a scary defence. Midfield: French defensive midfielder Ahmed Yahiaoui is one of the most talented players in the world, but is yet to put all that talent together into a really dominant season. Milan aren’t forced to rely on him, though; Kim Kallstrom would be the perfect player if he had any pace, and January signing Christian Obodo looks able to cover the defensive midfield role that Andrea Pirlo is losing to age. Striker: Carlos Tevez is, like Kompany, among the best in the world at his position. Fernando Torres used to be in that discussion, but he’s yet to show his best in the two years since his £59M move from Atletico. Of course, that just means that instead of being otherworldly he has merely been very good. Dagoberto isn’t a good enough finisher to be in the same class as the other two, but he’d start for nearly any other team in the league. Outlook: Title contenders. I see only one potential flaw: Ludwig in goal has yet to play a full season, and could slip up. They sold Spanish midfielder Raul to Barcelona for £38M and haven’t spent any of that money yet, so they’ll probably reinforce in January. Fiorentina Past Performance: Mostly sixth with occasional off-seasons. They’ve been sixth each of the last two seasons, although last year’s goal difference of +2 suggests a certain degree of luck. Goalkeeper: Simon Jenzscht is a good player. He’s also 36, and due for a decline. Backup Diego Benaglio is competent, but hasn’t played regularly in several years. Defence: Guiseppe Scaturro is the leader of a defence built on having a lot of good players rather than one superstar. There are a couple of interesting youngsters, though: Salva played 35 times at the age of nineteen and put in some very impressive performances, while Marco La Rocca is one of the most hyped Italian youngsters around although there are questions as to his defensive abilities at left-back. Midfield: Both Fiorentina’s starting central midfielders, Marco Donadel and Andrea De Falco, declined markedly last season. Donadel has established himself as a better player than he’s looked recently; De Falco’s 2012 was typical of his career apart from an impressive 2010/11. Fiorentina made an impressive-looking signing in January when they bought 23-year-old Belgian left winger Wouter Vandermeiren, who went on to have a very good half-season. The right wing alternated between Swede Christian Wilhelmsson, who at 32 is on the downward slope of his career, and Andy van der Meyde, who has never really had an upward slope to his career and will start the next season elsewhere. Striker: Two years ago, after several years of bouncing around the French league without really impressing, Marcelinho suddenly put it together and started playing well. Fiorentina bought him last summer and he had another good year for them, hitting seventeen goals in all competitions. At 25, there’s no reason not to think this upward shift is for real. His strike partner is Michelangelo Colletori, who has been one of Fiorentina’s best and most reliable players over the past eight years but had his worst season ever last year. Still only 26, he ought to bounce back and could well outplay Marcelinho. Outlook: The Intertoto Cup spots. Their sixth-place finish was a product of some very fortunate goal clustering, and I can’t see them beating out the Milan clubs again, especially after their failure to bring in any help over the summer. |
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#48 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Sampdoria
Past Performance: After finishing fourth in 2008, Sampdoria spent three years in midtable before suddenly resurging behind a superb defence and finishing fifth. They almost managed fourth, but lost to Juventus in extra time in a playoff for the last CL spot. Goalkeeper: Always a good keeper, Sebastian Saja took a huge leap forward last year and was the best goalkeeper in Serie A by some distance. At 33 it is questionable whether he will be able to maintain this level of play, but if he can then it will be a huge boost to Sampdoria. Defence: Ivan Ayala is one of the shortest players in professional football, and he’s slow, but apart from that he’s the ultimate left-back. Even with those handicaps, he’s still a very good player. The other real star in Sampdoria’s defence last year – apart from Mark van den Boogart before his move to Milan - was the unheralded Moris Carozzieri, who at 31 had the best year of his career. Portuguese right-back Nuno is a good addition, but most of the rest of their defence is unexceptional. Midfield: Sampdoria sold one of their best players, winger Javier Araujo, during the offseason. New Dutch midfielder Maarten van der Waal could help fill the void, but at 21 he’s yet to match consistency to his undoubted talent. He could stand to take lessons from 19-year-old Italian winger/attacking midfielder Maurissio Zanon, who last year scored three league goals and set up eight while becoming the hottest Italian midfield prospect around. Next year watch for Michele Martino, who could well come close to matching Zanon’s breakout. Striker: Antonio Cassano scored 53 goals in 109 games for Torino; then, last January, they sold him to Sampdoria for £3.9M. Cassano’s talented, and has always played well for whoever owns him, but he’s a complete headcase. This is a marked contrast to his strike partner, Daniele Corvia, who has won nine caps for Italy by playing nicely (and very well) with his team-mates. Outlook: Their offence should have no trouble sustaining its performance, but it was defence which got them into CL contention, and their defence was driven by 30+ players having career years (Saja, Carozzieri) and by people who got sold in January (Van Den Boogart). They’ll drop back down to around the UEFA or Intertoto spots. Juventus Past Performance: After finishing runners-up in both the preceding seasons, Juventus started slowly, surged to the top, and then crumbled in the last month and wound up having to wait until extra time in a playoff to clinch CL football next year. To add insult to injury, this year’s CL campaign ended in the group stages, earlier than they’d gone out in any of the previous seven years Goalkeeper: Gianluigi Buffon is now 34 and retired from international football, but he’s still a brilliant keeper. I’m not sold on their backup, but as long as Buffon’s fit they’ll be fine. Defence: Juventus currently play a 3-5-2, which is why I was able to get David Rives on the cheap. Anyway, their star defender is Jonathan Woodgate, who has been superb whenever he’s played for the last few years. Of course, being Jonathan Woodgate, he’s also lost at least ten matches a season to injury with remarkable consistency. A declining Ricardo Carvalho and 21-year-old Brazilian Marcos round out last year’s starters. Alessandro Iannicello, a £6.25M signing from Bologna and Chievo (co-ownership of players gets confusing), should take a spot away from one of them. Iannicello doesn’t look like much, but he’s a very good player and at 24 already has a pile of awards from the various Italian media bodies. Midfield: Of course, there is a reason Juventus want to play five in midfield. 23-year-old Italian Andrea Eusipi has somehow managed to become one of the best playmakers in the league without being able either to run fast or to tackle; Juve also have a 33-year-old Eusipi in David Pizarro, although Pizarro actually has a decent turn of speed. Stephen Appiah completes the central group. Out wide, Juventus have more or less cornered the market in brilliant Dutch wingers, owning both Arjen Robben and Wesley Sneijder. Yury Zhirkov provides cover on the wings, although he’s not in the same league as Robben or Sneijder. Striker: Brazilian international Nilmar is the main man up front, having been Juve’s leading scorer in each of the last four seasons. Italy striker Gianpaolo Pazzini, a new signing from Atalanta, provides him with a very good strike partner. Displaced by Pazzini is Obafemi Martins, who has hit more than fourteen goals in a season just once in his career but who really ought to turn into a frightening striker any year now. Dropping down to fourth choice is 23-year-old Englishman Richard Hughes, a very talented player who is one good year of regular football away from an international call-up. Outlook: Juve have a scary midfield, but I question their depth, especially in defence. They’ll be around the title hunt, but will have to settle for another CL spot. |
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#49 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Lazio
Past Performance: Crashed out of both European competitions and the Cup in short order, but recovered to finish third for the second year running with the league’s best offence. Goalkeeper: Jan Lastuvka played half a season for me at PSV before negotiating himself a £10M move to Lazio. He’s a good player, although the occasional moment of stupidity stops him from being a great one Defence: There are a lot of Brazilian centre-backs in Serie A, but only Roma’s Adriano can match up to Luisao. Now 31, he’s rarely been less than superb at the back for Lazio, and was their only everyday player at the back last year. Apart from Luisao it was generally a case of four players for three slots, as right-backs Gilberto Martinez and Maicon fought it out for the starting role – with the loser frequently playing in the middle – while Fabio Martinelli and Matias Lequi duked it out on the left. Everyone except for Martinelli played splendidly; Martinelli, in his first full season in the first team, wasn’t actually all that impressive. Midfield: The midfield also saw only one player start more than 35 games: Mathieu Bodmer, a £14M summer signing from Lille who played very well in the centre of midfield all season. Apart from him, the only player to even start thirty games was Argentinean winger Luis Gonzalez, who responded to the playing time by having his best year for Lazio. Right winger Pasquale Farinelli, their only summer signing, looks very talented indeed although he’s worryingly short of pace. I have absolutely no idea who’s going to start here next season, but most of the candidates are decent players. Striker: Didier Drogba scored the goals, but it was Paraguayan forward Nelson Haedo Valdez who was probably the single best forward in the league. Alan Smith filled in around the edges and £11.75M was spent to bring Matteo Conti back from England, where he had been one of the league’s best strikers in spite of being short and slow. Outlook: Again I reiterate: I have no idea what’s going on in that midfield. Valdez and Drogba have been great the last couple of years, and they’ll probably score goals, but I think they need to get their defence and midfield sorted out before they can aim for higher than third. They’ll challenge, though. Roma’s current squad you’re already familiar with, so I’ll just point out that Roma are actually one of the few non-Milan clubs to have won Serie A recently (2008) and skip on to Parma Past Performance: Having finished eleventh, fifteenth, and eleventh in previous three seasons, nobody expected Parma to challenge for the title. Much to everyone’s surprise they took advantage of Juventus’ stumble to seize control of the title race, then drew their last two matches against soft opposition and needed a playoff and a penalty shootout to finally clinch the title. Goalkeeper: Espen Johnsen is a brilliantly talented keeper, and his penalty-stopping skills won Parma the title, but he’s also completely crazy. Think of a more talented Fabian Barthez. They brought in Perugia goalie Fabio as cover; he’ll do a decent job at that, being essentially a poor man’s version of Johnsen. Defence: Lots of reliable players, but no star. Matei Mirel Radoi and Paolo Cannavaro are both consistent, quality centre-backs, and Fernando Navarro is much the same thing on the left, but none are among the best in the league. Right-back is a weakness. Midfield: England left winger Stewart Downing is Parma’s best player; the rest of the midfield, however, is unexceptional. Downing is among the best pure left wingers in Europe. Cristoph Preub, newly signed on a free to patrol the opposite flank, should represent a significant upgrade from the departed Marco Marchionni. Bruno and Davide Furlan, the central midfielders, are above average on a good day. Striker: Some decent-looking players here – 23-year-old Colombian international Luis Gabriel Garcia has potential, and Italian youngster Christian Mantovani looked good after coming over from Man U in January – but it was Niccolo Morsi, scoring a goal every other match as he has done for Parma for eight years now, who fired the team’s title charge. Outlook: Parma have better players than Chievo had, but it’s not hard to see the parallels. I doubt they’ll fall all the way to ninth, but they’ll be nearer the UEFA Cup than the title next year. |
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#50 |
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College Benchwarmer
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Providence, RI
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Time for the season proper to begin. The first bit of news is that Sampdoria have spent £12M on Yuri Zirkhov from Juventus, intending him to replace Javier Araujo. This leaves Juventus’ squad even thinner, but it’s hard to criticise them too much for accepting an eight-digit offer in return for a decent but unexceptional backup. Sampdoria also splashed the cash on Inter central defender Nicolas Burdisso. This makes Sampdoria’s squad much stronger, but as far as I can tell Inter currently stands to feature 36-year-old Ivan Cordoba in a starting role. If they don’t sort that out before the end of the transfer window, Inter fans can kiss goodbye to the CL for another year. They’ve already gotten dumped out of the Intertoto, beaten on penalties by Milan in the semi-final.
The Champions’ League group draw sees us paired with Man U (ouch!), Celtic (beatable), and Basel (definitely beatable). First match of the season was the European Super Cup. PSV had the better of us for most of the first half and went ahead when Adriano completely botched a simple clearance and let one of their strikers in. On the stroke of halftime they had a man sent off and we dominated the second half, but the equalizer never came. PSV 1-0 Roma Remember what I said about Milan reinforcing themselves? They just signed Chelsea midfielder Cesc Fabregas for £74M. That’s the second-highest fee ever paid for a player, just behind the £76M Chelsea paid a year ago for, well, Cesc Fabregas. This means that inside the past twelve months Fabregas has drawn fees of a total of £150M. Good grief. Good player, too. Juventus have sold defender Marcos to Fiorentina, leaving Juventus once again with just three top-class defenders. And one of those is Jonathan Woodgate, the walking injury. They’ve been getting rid of their depth recently, and it could well cost them. In fact, it might have cost them their status as title favourites; they’re rated at 2-1 by the bookmakers, level with Parma, just ahead of Milan and Lazio, and behind 7-4 favourites Roma. In other transfer news, Sampdoria fullback Ivan Ayala has moved to Barcelona, earning Sampdoria back some of the money they’ve spent recently. I’m really underwhelmed by his backup, so they may need to buy someone new if they want to challenge. Our first match of the league season came against Milan, and we were much improved from the PSV match. We were thoroughly the better team but struggled to create clear-cut chances, and had to wait over an hour before Fernando curled the ball into the top right-hand corner from fully twenty-five yards out. Once we’d gotten one, of course, more came along in short order. Alberto Gilardino dribbled half the length of the pitch before doubling our lead on the break, then Javier Saviola slipped around the Milan defence to complete the rout. Roma 3-0 Milan |
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