Monday, February 28, 2011

Reading boss McDermott ready to attack Everton

Everton

Reading boss Brian McDermott says they'll go to Everton to win in their FA Cup tie.

McDermott is keen to attack from the off and give his travelling fans a night to remember.

He said: "I want it to be a great game and I want to make sure we do the best for our fans.

"We'll have good travelling support and it's important that they have a good night.

"We go there well equipped, we know what we are doing and we know our gameplan. We will attack the game and look to win it on the night.

"We have been to Merseyside before and won and we love going there.

"They are really good footballing people who know their stuff."

 
Click here for the No1 coverage of all the gossip and transfer news around Everton.

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Birmingham make Arsenal pay for late blunder

Birmingham make Arsenal pay for late blunder

21:00 GMT, Sun 27 Feb 2011
Birmingham make Arsenal pay for late blunder

LONDON, Feb 27 (Reuters) - Substitute Obafemi Martins pounced on an 89th-minute defensive blunder to give Birmingham City a 2-1 upset win over Arsenal in a dramatic League Cup final at Wembley Stadium on Sunday.

UK Football

Arsenal had been overwhelming favourites to end their six-year trophy drought but a mix-up between defender Laurent Koscielny and goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny allowed Martins to secure Birmingham's first major trophy since 1963.

Birmingham, battling against relegation from the Premier League, led with a header from towering striker Nikola Zigic but Arsenal equalised through Dutchman Robin van Persie and looked poised to win the first of the four trophies they are seeking this season.

"Relatively speaking, it is the greatest moment of my career, in terms of personal achievement, when you consider the team we were up against," Birmingham manager Alex McLeish told reporters.

"For a little club like Birmingham to take on the might of Arsenal, it's fantastic. We weren't given a prayer today and think even the bookies got it totally wrong.

"I said myself that Arsenal would win nine times out of 10. But we believed. It was a titanic performance."

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger defended his 20-year-old goalkeeper Szczesny.

"I am bitterly disappointed. I hope this won't have a negative affect on our season," Wenger said afterwards.

"You have to be positive because he is a young boy," he added.

"Hopefully, he will pick himself up and respond well (in the FA Cup replay against Leyton Orient) on Wednesday.

"When we conceded the goal there was no time for us to respond."

 

LUCKY LET-OFF

Arsenal, who beat Barcelona in the Champions League last week and lie second in the Premier League, had an early let-off when Zigic played Lee Bowyer through and he was wrongly flagged for offside.

Birmingham settled quicker and buoyed by their vociferous supporters carried the game to Arsenal with Bowyer, former Gunner Sebastian Larsson and Keith Fahey looking for Zigic at every opportunity.

Arsenal, missing the guile of injured skipper Cesc Fabregas, also pushed forward with Jack Wilshere, Tomas Rosicky and Samir Nasri probing for the opening.

Nasri set up Andrei Arshavin for Arsenal's first real scoring chance when the stocky forward had time to turn and shoot and Ben Foster did well to save with his feet.

Birmingham, with 6ft 8ins (2.03 metres) tall Zigic as their target man, tended to go for the high ball and the forward's aerial power brought the opener after 28 minutes when he outjumped Szczesny to head his side in front.

Arsenal responded when Van Persie headed over the bar but he was right on target 11 minutes later.

Wilshere unleashed a ferocious left-foot shot from the edge of the penalty area which smashed against the bar.

Birmingham failed to clear the danger and the ball came out to Arshavin who found Van Persie with a perfectly weighted cross for the Dutchman to volley crisply home.

Arsenal looked the more likely winners in the second half but with extra time looming Zigic flicked the ball on and Nigerian Martins, just six minutes after coming on to the pitch, took advantage of miscommunication in the Arsenal defence to stroke it into an empty net.

Martins, formerly with Inter Milan, Newcastle United and VfL Wolfsburg, only joined Birmingham in January, on loan until the end of the season.

"You can never tell with Arsenal so I was very happy to score and win the trophy," said Martins, clutching a bottle of champagne and wearing a blue hard hat given to him by a Birmingham supporter.

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Man Utd boss Ferguson has full confidence in Smalling for Chelsea trip

Manchester United
Sir Alex Ferguson
Chelsea

Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson has no doubts about Chris Smalling for tomorrow's clash at Chelsea.

Ferguson is delighted with the 21-year-old's timely progress.

?We are very pleased with his performances,? the boss tells Inside United magazine, on sale from 2 March. ?It?s an outstanding contribution he has made. But, do you know, I expected him to do well. I had no doubts about him.

?He?s done really well for us and he is improving all the time. He is developing all aspects of his game because he wants to learn and improve. He likes defending, he enjoys it. So he?s a real bonus.

?We started him against City with Rio being out and it?s not easy coming in for your first derby at 21 years of age, having only been with us nine months. But I thought he would do well.?

 
Click here for the No1 coverage of all the gossip and transfer news around Manchester United.

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MLS 2011 Season Countdown (Pt 1.5) - Playoffs (Their ears must've been burning)

Don,

Thanks for the prompt reply.
...

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

The Cyprus Cup Part 2: Sweden vs Ukraine

I didn�t get a chance to see this game because I had to work (some of us have to do that kind of thing), but I thought I would give it a quick once over so that we can all move on. It was the second game of the glorious 2011 Cyprus Cup and the final as well.

Our starting line-up was as follows:

Isaksson,

Lustig, Granqvist, Majstorovic, Safari

A. Svensson, K�llstr�m

S. Larsson, Elmander, Wilhelmsson

Ibrahimovic (C)

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The Fate of Goitom

Every time a national coach takes out a squad, be it for a friendly or a qualifier of some kind, there are fans all over the spectrum demanding that one of their favorite players be selected.� Sometimes it?s someone who always does well at the club level, while other times it?s someone who has had an amazing run of form. Usually these types of players are strikers or attacking midfielders. There are names that come up on the eve of every international and tournament. I sometimes wonder if the coaches don?t get sick and tired of hearing these names after a while? For team Sweden, this recurring fan-loved outsider is none other than Henok Goitom.

What do we know about this young man? To be fair to him, he has been decent enough in his own right. At the moment he plays for Almeria in Primera Division, but for most of this season he has been riding the bench. Riding the bench as a rule means you don?t get selected for the national team (unless you are German and your last name is Klose-but he is a phenomenon). Two seasons ago Goitom scored ten goals for Valladolid (not bad actually), and if he?d kept that up he probably would have gotten a call up. Except he didn?t, then he had a run of injuries and bad form which unfortunately has been his usual story.

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Either Man United or Arsenal for the title - Ferguson

Either Man United or Arsenal for the title - Ferguson

14:46 GMT, Fri 25 Feb 2011
Either Man United or Arsenal for the title - Ferguson

LONDON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - Only Manchester United or Arsenal can win this season's Premier League title, United manager Alex Ferguson said on Friday, four days before his side face champions Chelsea at Stamford Bridge.

UK Football

United are one point clear of Arsenal at the top of the table with a game in hand which they will use up when they visit Wigan Athletic on Saturday.

With the leading teams having 11 or 12 matches to play, United are eight points clear of third-placed Manchester City, 10 ahead of Tottenham Hotspur and 12 clear of Chelsea.

If United beat Wigan for the 12th successive league match they would be 15 points ahead of Chelsea by the time the sides meet.

Ferguson, who has led his side to 11 league titles, virtually dismissed Chelsea's chances of retaining the championship.

"Normally two teams break away when you come to the end of the season, it's always two teams -- that's the way it's looking at the moment," he told reporters.

"I think it's either Arsenal or ourselves, either one of us will win it."

Ferguson also dismissed remarks made by Chelsea captain John Terry who said United might buckle under the pressure of challenging for the title, the FA Cup and the Champions League.

"You try things. We all try things," he said.

"But it won't be easy (for Chelsea) to come back from that kind of points deficit.

"I said some time ago, the team that is most consistent would win the league. That is why I stress that we have to keep our momentum going and get that consistency."

Ferguson said experienced striker Michael Owen, who has made only two substitute appearances in the league this year and played one full match in the FA Cup, could face Wigan after recovering from injury.

"He is back training and could be available on Saturday," he said.

Ryan Giggs could also return after missing last week's FA Cup match against Crawley Town and the Champions League trip to Olympique Marseille.

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SPL: Selling the Dream


The SPL sales drive for their shiny new double decker continues. Ten up. Twelve down.

The Airdrie and Coatbridge Advertiser reported yesterday:

Neil Doncaster will today meet with all 30 SFL clubs as the push for league reconstruction continues.

The SPL chief executive is to lay out his organisation's proposals for change at the SFL quarterly meeting of clubs at Hampden.

Selling the big idea.

A ten team SPL. A twelve team SPL 2.

And the rest?

Cast out to a pyramid system that hasn't really been defined. Are the SPL power brokers prepared to offer much more than a haughty "let them eat cake" to the bread starved peasants? When the rich revolt do the poor remain poor?

Maybe the SFL teams will feel energised by the prospect of change, any change, in a stagnating game.

Or maybe not.

I'm beginning to feel a bit sorry for Neil Doncaster taking his PowerPoint slides to a succession of hostile meetings with little but a wing and a prayer and handful of "maybes" to offer in support of his brave new world.

How do you sell that convincingly?

Suddenly I'm put in mind of The Simpsons' episode Marge vs the Monorail.

The residents of Springfield are bamboozled into buying a shoddy, needless monorail from a fast talking, all singing, all dancing salesman who promises them that all they need is change for change's sake to make life better.

You can sell anything to the gutless, the feckless, the desperate, the money mad.

Some of the SPL teams have already shown themselves to be exactly that.

Let's hope the SFL 30 aren't quite as yellow.

The Scottish Football Blog News Feed

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Saturday, February 26, 2011

Lampard future doubts as Chelsea go for Inter Milan ace Sneijder

Inter Milan
Manchester United
Wesley Sneijder
Frank Lampard
John Terry
Chelsea

Inter Milan ace Wesley Sneijder is on Chelsea's shopping list.

The Sunday Mirror says club owner Roman Abramovich is ready to dump captain John Terry, Frank Lampard and Drogba as he continues his Stamford Bridge revolution.

And Sneijder is being lined up to succeed Lampard.

The arrival of a key midfielder will put Lampard?s position under threat next season.

Dutch ace Sneijder has confessed an ambition to play in England - though would favour a move to Manchester United.

 
Click here for the No1 coverage of all the gossip and transfer news around Chelsea.

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Daily Sports News Feeds

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Liverpool skipper Gerrard: Suarez looks something special

Ajax
Liverpool
Steven Gerrard

Liverpool skipper Steven Gerrard is impressed by new teammate Luis Suarez.

Suarez has hit the ground running since his arrival from Ajax.

?We can already see what a good player Luis is,? said Gerrard.

?I expect him to be even better when he adjusts to the speed of football in this country. He had not played many games in the weeks before he moved here so he is still getting his match fitness. When he gets that he will be very difficult to stop.?

 
Click here for the No1 coverage of all the gossip and transfer news around Liverpool.

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Off to the seaside: Blackpool away

I've been to Blackpool once or twice but don't remember it as anything to write home about, although I'm told it is different with the football. If you're going, have fun. I wish I was going to the seaside today.

But I'm not, so I'm here all day. My preview is here and it focuses on Laurel and Hardy Dunne and Collins and how they need to be playing the game we know they are all capable of.

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Friday, February 25, 2011

Arsenal captain Cesc: Missing Cup final hugely disappointing

Arsenal
Arsene Wenger
Birmingham City

Arsenal captain Cesc Fabregas admits he's gutted to miss tomorrow's Carling Cup final against Birmingham City.

Fabregas has lost his battle to be fit to face the Midlanders.

He told The Sun: "It's hugely disappointing. Maybe my heart was ruling my head when I felt I might play. Now, reluctantly, I must accept I cannot.

"Even on Friday morning I had hoped to be involved, even if it was on the bench.

"But the boss, Arsene Wenger, is right and the most important thing is to make sure I get fit as quickly as possible to help Arsenal for the rest of the season.

"Let's hope Arsenal could also be playing in the FA Cup and Champions League finals at Wembley. It could be a once-in-a-lifetime season. So while it is agonising I can't be with the lads on the pitch on Sunday, I'll be working hard to ensure I am part of the whole adventure."

 
Click here for the No1 coverage of all the gossip and transfer news around Arsenal.

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Not Quite There: FC K�benhavn 0 - Chelsea 2

This was a historic achievement in Danish football. The first time a team from Denmark has reached the Round of 16 in the UEFA Champion's League. And it has been on the back of a team that has had simply phenomenal form this last half year, going undefeated in the league and even taking home a tie against a powerful Barcelona side.

Regardless of anything, FC K�benhavn made history just stepping onto the pitch tonight. Not only was the Parken electric with the screams of the FCK fans, it was filled with the cheers of a small nation who wanted to

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Ekstraklasa Winter Transfer Report.

It's getting closer and closer; this upcoming weekend the Ekstraklasa will come back and give the meaning to the lives of Polish fans again. I can already feel it in the air: the sound of fans chanting, the smell of 'fresh' grilled sausages, the queues to the toilet and the overcrowded buses and trams that take you to and from the game. Oh, and the always green and flat pitches that provide a surface for the spectacle of the highest quality. Alright, joking aside, I can hardly imagine the start of Ekstraklasa as I'm currently freezing my ass to death in -15C temperature. There is no way I can survive 90 minutes outside in such conditions (not that I didn't try). The one thing, though, that gives me some warmth and thrills is the thought of admiring new players that will enter the Polish pitches after winter. Here is who's worth having a closer look at.

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Park And Koo Say Goodbye To Korea

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Thursday, February 24, 2011

SPL: Selling the Dream


The SPL sales drive for their shiny new double decker continues. Ten up. Twelve down.

The Airdrie and Coatbridge Advertiser reported yesterday:

Neil Doncaster will today meet with all 30 SFL clubs as the push for league reconstruction continues.

The SPL chief executive is to lay out his organisation's proposals for change at the SFL quarterly meeting of clubs at Hampden.

Selling the big idea.

A ten team SPL. A twelve team SPL 2.

And the rest?

Cast out to a pyramid system that hasn't really been defined. Are the SPL power brokers prepared to offer much more than a haughty "let them eat cake" to the bread starved peasants? When the rich revolt do the poor remain poor?

Maybe the SFL teams will feel energised by the prospect of change, any change, in a stagnating game.

Or maybe not.

I'm beginning to feel a bit sorry for Neil Doncaster taking his PowerPoint slides to a succession of hostile meetings with little but a wing and a prayer and handful of "maybes" to offer in support of his brave new world.

How do you sell that convincingly?

Suddenly I'm put in mind of The Simpsons' episode Marge vs the Monorail.

The residents of Springfield are bamboozled into buying a shoddy, needless monorail from a fast talking, all singing, all dancing salesman who promises them that all they need is change for change's sake to make life better.

You can sell anything to the gutless, the feckless, the desperate, the money mad.

Some of the SPL teams have already shown themselves to be exactly that.

Let's hope the SFL 30 aren't quite as yellow.

The Scottish Football Blog News Feed

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Coaching the Coach: A Complete Guide How to Coach Soccer Skills Through Drills

Coaching the Coach: A Complete Guide How to Coach Soccer Skills Through Drills New Mint Condition Dispatch same day for order received before 12 noon Guaranteed packaging No quibbles returns List Price: �8.95 Price:

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CCL Preview: RSL at Crew

You hear that? It’s the sounds of Major League Soccer returning for a night. No we’re not talking MLS preseason here, its all about the CONCACAF Champions League as Real Salt Lake travels east to face the Columbus Crew in [...]

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Friday Video: Roy of the Rovers


It's Roy of the Rovers day at the Scottish Football Blog, I've relocated to Melchester for one day only. Hope there's not an earthquake.

Grab a cup of nostalgia and enjoy Roy Race - the Documentary.

Roy of the Rovers on the Scottish Football Blog

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Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Rangers: McCoist The Manager

Now we know.

We suspected, surmised, accepted. But now we've had the official unveiling.

Ally McCoist will lead Rangers into the 2011/12 SPL season.

Probably. Unless someone comes along to buy the club and decides that this is no time for a novice.

"No time for a novice." A line from an ultimately futile political speech.

Yesterday's announcement, the cynic in me screams, owed a lot to politics. This was an essay in deflection.

The good news story to deflect from a club in financial dire straits, a team on the back foot and a incumbent who has, once again, mistimed his departure.

It's a hell of a job for McCoist. This, clearly, was the role he wanted from the moment his career went from ex-player and pundit to ex-player and coach.

One can only imagine what Bill Struth would have made of an ex-chat show host becoming Rangers manager. If Struth could have comprehended what a chat show was.

But Ally's Rangers credentials are good. A novice, but his is a time served apprenticeship at the feet of Walter Smith, a man who can tell a story or three about managing Rangers.

If he dreamt - as surely he must have - about managing his club, McCoist could surely never have imagined that it would be in such straitened times.

The premature confirmation suggests that a takeover is no closer. It might still happen but existing debt and that tax question remain, making the odds on a benevolent knight arriving ever longer.

The team needs an overhaul, key players from Smith's second era are already gone or look to be heading for the exit door. Age has caught up with David Weir, financial necessity will probably spell the end for Madjid Bougherra and others.

Becoming Rangers manager at any time is a massive challenge. In the present circumstances it seems McCoist is about to tackle the north face of the Govan Eiger.

A glance across the city shows another novice transformed from playing hero to manager. Neil Lennon had even less experience than McCoist when he got the Celtic job.

But Lennon has benefited from an extremely effective scouting system and a board that has a firm direction in mind.

Rangers seem to have neither. Many people might have claims on the club, all might have the best interests of it functioning as a going concern at heart.

But vested interests and differing opinions lead to a boardroom tension - if not an internecine war - that robs Rangers of momentum off the pitch.

Even more crucially it seems that McCoist will not enjoy Lennon's number one luxury of weakened Old Firm opposition, a dose of good fortune that has given the Celtic manager time to find his feet.

There will be some in the Rangers support who welcome the appointment, there will be others who bemoan McCoist's coronation.

He is the most available, most economical choice. That's how Rangers have to operate at the moment.

It's impossible to tell how good or bad he will be.

But when Smith takes his leave in May McCoist will have a fairly lengthy to-do-list.

He needs to rebuild his side, he needs to do that on a budget. He needs to try and ensure that the rebuilding process is quick enough to allow him to keep pace with a Celtic side who might - just might - be heading into the new season with the confidence of a newly won treble behind them.

And all that has to be done while coping with the distraction of a club in a state of confusion off the park - a malaise that the courts and HMRC might make even worse.

It's quite a task. Achieve it all and never will the 'Super Ally' tag have been so deserved.

Achieve just some of it and the myriad powers that be at Rangers might still think they've found the right man.

It could be that Rangers are preparing - silently, without fanfare - for a period where trophies are less important than re-establishing financial safety.

If so, then a hungry new manager - we can hardly call McCoist young - with a passion for the club might be exactly the man they are looking for.

The Scottish Football Blog News Feed

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Football, Blogs, and Newspapers Unite? Part Four

Richard Whittall continues his series by examining the Guardian's online success, and asks Guardian Sport Editor Sean Ingle about the Guardian Fans' Network during the 2010 World Cup.

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The SPL Today: A Handful of Previews

What a week, what a seismic week.

Scotland dismantled a side ranked above them in the world rankings. Destroyed them with a goal blitz.

Who cares that the FIFA rankings are essentially meaningless or that Northern Ireland were just not very good?

Actually there was a lot to be positive about after Scotland?s 3-0 win in Dublin. And that?s a nice, if unusual, feeling.

But reality must strike and once again we dive headlong into the murky waters of the 2010/11 SPL campaign.

Hamilton v Hearts

H is for Hamilton v Hearts. How sorely Hamilton wish they weren?t where they are. They retain their two games in hand. But where will the points come from?

Their only wins so far have come on the road, against Inverness and, most recently, against Motherwell all the way back in October.

Fine results. But not enough.

Organised, determined. There is much to admire about Billy Reid?s side. But if they can?t find a spark from somewhere then you have to fear that they are only headed one way.

They?ll not relish a visit from Hearts today, having lost 2-0 at home and 4-0 away in their previous two clashes.

Hearts now seemed destined for a best of the rest no man?s land, too far ahead to worry about a challenge from below but not close enough to challenge for second. All they can do is keep going, keep learning, keep improving.

I suspect they will do just that today. Away win.

Hibernian v Kilmarnock

Kilmarnock ended their strange run of losing late goals with an 81st minute winner of their own last time out.

On the same night Hibs were finally getting a win and at last getting those much longed first goals of 2011.

They are hardly dancing on the streets of Leith. But I think I detect just a glimmer of optimism, a satisfaction with some of Colin Calderwood?s additions and an easing - although certainly not a complete removal - of relegation worries.

A new Hibs then? Certainly there are easier teams to prove that against and you have to suspect that Mixu would relish a win at Easter Road having lost out 2-1 back in October.

Kilmarnock might find a more combatitive Hibs midfield set out to stop them playing while Akpo Sodje will provide a physical defence for the Killie defence.

Hard really to predict how this one will go. Kilmarnock are strong but not without weaknesses. Hibs remain a work in progress.

I?ll back a draw with both sides to score.

> Colin Calderwood has suggested he's staying with Hibs after being linked with a coaching role at West Brom. I've said before that he can't be judged until he has had a period of stability as Hibs manager. It looks like he will now get that. On the whole I think that's a good thing for Hibs.

Rangers v Motherwell

After the Old Firm drama of the Scottish Cup, Walter Smith will have welcomed his players back from international duty with a number of concerns playing on his mind.

Traditional worries about fixture congestion aside, the more pressing worry is if Rangers? current form and personnel is going to be able to keep up a title challenge against what is looking like an increasingly strong Celtic.

At the moment, despite Rangers? games in hand, the title momentum looks to be with Celtic. All Rangers can do is keep grinding out wins and hope they get a break from somewhere further down the line.

They absolutely can?t afford any slip-ups. The recent League Cup semi-final showed that Motherwell are capable of making life tricky for the Ibrox side but Stuart McCall is still searching for the consistency that would allow him to make a real impact.

Whatever else the season holds this one is a home win for me.

St Johnstone v Aberdeen

A cup win apiece will have gone down very well in Perth and Aberdeen, both side negotiating First Division opposition and Aberdeen throwing in a late, late winner for good measure.

Both sides too will be hoping for a top six spot. To achieve that they need to win games like this.

St Johnstone have struggled with a lack of goals although, in fl-hair player Steve May, they look to have uncovered an exciting young striker.

Aberdeen?s Craig Brown revolution gives the impression of having stalled of late largely because of their seemingly interminable run of games against Celtic and the rather under par (ho hum) performance they produced in beating Dunfermline last week.

The truth, I suspect, is that these two are likely to be evenly matched today. So a draw it is.

St Mirren v Inverness

Ten games now since Inverness enjoyed an SPL win, a run that includes a defeat to St Mirren.

As Terry Butcher searches for his side?s early season form, Danny Lennon will still be smarting from St Mirren?s defeat to Hibs.

In the relegation battle you can?t afford to lose to the teams around you and a defeat to a Hibs side enduring a woeful run of form has to be seen as poor result and one that pretty much denies St Mirren the chance to drag themselves out of the dogfight.

Both sides will be desperate for a win today. Which allows me to sit on the fence again. Draw.

The Scottish Football Blog News Feed

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Jonathan T�hou�'s European odyssey to FA Cup glory against Arsenal | Louise Taylor

Leyton Orient's cup hero arrived at Brisbane Road via Le Havre, Apoel, Konyaspor and many more places besides

Promising French footballers brought up in African immigrant communities amid decidely not-touristy Paris suburbs who travel a well trodden route through Le Havre's renowned youth system rarely slip under Ars�ne Wenger's radar.

If it ranks as a minor shock that Jonathan T�hou� began featuring on the Arsenal manager's usually reliable talent ID system only after he scored the late equaliser which earned Leyton Orient an FA Cup fifth-round replay at The Emirates, other details of the striker's history merely exacerbate such surprise.

Quite apart from once plying his trade in Turkey's top flight with Konyaspor, the peripatetic T�hou�e was once very nearly signed by Lee Clark, the young Huddersfield manager rather admired by Wenger.

Even more remarkably, the striker, whose parents originate from Ivory Coast, is friendly with three Arsenal players; Emmanuel Ebou�, Abou Diaby and Alex Song. As youngsters he and Song played together for Bastia but, blind to this shared past, Arsenal's manager admitted: "I'd never heard of T�hou�."

Now 26, Leyton Orient's last gasp assassin ? eight of his 10 goals this season have arrived after the 85th minute ? made a circuitous onward journey from Corsica to East London. After stints with a couple of Belgian clubs he headed east, first to Nicosia's Apoel and then Istanbul's Kassimpassor.

T�hou� was experiencing a version of what in earlier centuries young aristocrats termed "Grand Tours" of Europe. His own odyssey certainly took a cultural turn when he stopped off at Konyaspor. The club is situated in Konya, Turkey's most religious city and home of the mystic Sufi sect of Islam with its famous Whirling Dervishes.

A renowned centre of Muslim art, not to mention the Turkish carpet trade, Konya sits amid an often bleak Steppe landscape and T�hou�'s ultimate desperation to leave saw him escape to Huddersfield as a triallist.

If Konyaspor's retention of his registration represented an ultimately contract-foiling complication, Clark liked what he saw. "Jonathan is strong and a bit different, he's competitive with a good touch," said Huddersfield's manager. "He's got a good change of pace and when he gets the chance to shoot he hits the target on a regular basis with quite a powerful shot."

A year later, following several months spent kicking his heels in Paris while Fifa helped resolve the dispute with Konyaspor, he was back in England, this time at Brisbane Road, where Orient's then manager, Geraint Williams, extended a lifeline.

"Leyton Orient gave me the chance to play football again," says T�hou�. "I know Orient is not a big club but at the moment it is what I want. Right now I don't need something more. I'm still young so the next few years will show if I can play at a higher level or not."

With Russell Slade's inspired management having prompted a League One play- off challenge, a striker who missed much of the early part of the season due to a serious hamstring tear and is still battling on-going weight and fitness issues knows he could be in far worse places.

He also appreciates that the hitherto elusive fame that his stunning goal against Arsenal is currently affording him will most probably be transitory. "I don't pay attention to the attention," he says. "I'm just doing my job and trying to enjoy my football. I know that, if we are eliminated in the replay, all of this is going to end."

Slade, who is in the habit of keeping the Frenchman's pace and power on the bench until the closing stages of games, suspects the glory days might endure were T�hou� only to get himself into better shape.

"Forget about David Fairclough [once of Liverpool]," said Orient's manager. "T�hou� is the super-sub, he's our secret weapon. But when Jonathan has started he has not always made the desired impact. Fitness is an issue. Jonathan is sometimes not as fit as we would expect; he can be a little unpredictable in that way."

T�hou� acknowledges a problem. "I'm still overweight by four or five kilos, let's say four," he agrees. "When the season started I was out for four months with my hamstring and I'm struggling to get my fitness back.

"I want to start games, it's not nice being on the bench all the time. But, even if I'm not happy with the manager's decisions, I must stay professional. I have to show him what I can bring to the team and do my job the best way I can."

If his interpretation of "professionalism" does not quite synchronise with Slade's, at least T�hou�'s ruthlessly Solskjaer-esque execution of a substitute striker's duty has finally been sufficient to make Wenger take notice.


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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Kenny jumps back into the fire

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Arsenal have puncher's chance after coming out swinging

Arsenal have puncher's chance after coming out swinging

09:18 GMT, Thu 17 Feb 2011
Arsenal have puncher's chance after coming out swinging

LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuters) - The extraordinary saga of Arsenal's last three games against Barcelona makes predicting the fourth -- their Champions League last 16 second leg at the Nou Camp on March 8 -- an exercise in futility.

UK Football

Wednesday night's amazing last 11 minutes encapsulated all that had gone before as the Londoners trailed to David Villa's early goal and looked fortunate to be escaping with just a 1-0 defeat.

Like a boxer entering the 11th round behind on points, Arsenal landed an equalising punch almost out of nowhere when Robin van Persie fired the ball past Victor Valdes at his near post.

Buoyed by a crowd previously hypnotized into silence by Barcelona's mesmeric passing suddenly screaming feverishly, they then landed the knockout blow with Andrey Arshavin's assured finish to a brilliantly executed 80-metre counterattack.

The victory showed Arsenal that even the toughest nut in world football has a glass chin and they now travel to Spain with belief coursing through their veins.

"We are not favourites and I still believe they are the best team in the world but we know we can beat them -- we didn't know that last year," manager Arsene Wenger said after one of the proudest nights of his distinguished career.

"I'm very proud for Arsenal Football Club tonight because everybody urged us to play differently to our nature. We can be proud of the result, but more than pride it can strengthen the belief in our philosophy."

A year ago when the teams met at the Emirates in the quarter-finals Barcelona were arguably even more dominant in the first half, yet failed to score.

They did race into a 2-0 lead early in the second half but, just as on Wednesday, they sat back to admire their own handiwork and allowed Arsenal to scramble a 2-2 draw.

After 20 minutes of the second leg, having been given the runaround for the best part of 110 minutes of action, Arsenal were, against all logic, actually leading the tie after Nicklas Bendtner put them ahead in Spain.

For all the marvelous inter-play of a side who provide the bulk of Spain's World Cup-winning team, it fell to Argentine striker Lionel Messi to turn the contest with a brilliant night of individual class as he rattled in four goals to secure a 6-3 aggregate win.

Arsenal are unlikely to implode again as they did then and Wednesday's experience of being largely out-passed on their own ground yet still winning puts them in a healthy state of mind for the second leg.

Barcelona's ice-cool coach Pep Guardiola did not seem overly concerned after the game but, having been dumped out by Inter Milan last season when his team had seemed nailed on for the title, Arsenal have at least succeeded in sowing another seed of doubt.

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Newcastle ease away from danger with win at Birmingham

Newcastle ease away from danger with win at Birmingham

23:15 GMT, Tue 15 Feb 2011

 LONDON, Feb 15 (Reuters) - Goals from Peter Lovenkrands and Leon Best helped Newcastle United to a 2-0 win at Birmingham City as they moved further away from the Premier League drop zone on Tuesday.
   Lovenkrands was on hand at the near post to tuck away a Jonas Gutierrez cross after two minutes and Best headed in another centre from the Argentine five minutes after halftime to lift Newcastle to ninth in the table with 35 points.
   Birmingham remained 14th on 30 points but have played one game fewer than Newcastle's 27. 
 

UK Football

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All aboard the K-Train?

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Monday, February 21, 2011

Senad Luli? Strikes Again

Senad Luli? had another great game in European competition yesterday. He was one of the top players in Young Boys' Europea League Round of 32 home tie against Zenit St. Petersburg, capping off his performance with an excellent goal in the 46th minute. With a deft touch and a final burst of speed, he swept past two Zenit defenders before ultimately lobbing the keeper:



Young Boys went on to win the game 2-1, giving themselves a fair shot at advancing into the Round of 16. Luli? himself gave the following analysis to Uefa.com:

"In the first half we made too many mistakes,"

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Biding time, leaving it where it should be left and Blackburn

I really am getting a bit fed up with the speculation. Of the 83 player rumours that surfaced in January, only two rumours turned out to be true and during all this time it was just a nightmare.

But I appreciate why this is done. We like a rumour. We like to believe that we are going to sign someone and if he is foreign and fairly decent, we like to think we have a chance. But it is February, not even a month after the window closed - can the three people that sit there making these rumours up, just give it a break for a few weeks?

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Bruce looking forward to further consolidating Sunderland?s Premier League position

Sunderland

With Sunderland now an established Premier League team, boss Steve Bruce is now up for the challenge of bringing silverware to the Stadium of Light.

The Black Cats climbed into the last European place last month and although they have lost their last three, Bruce believes a top seven finish is still achievable.

"The club has had fantastic support from the owner, but I think that's exactly what it needs if it's going to make that breakthrough where it becomes genuinely successful," he told the Northern Echo.

"There's a pressure in the North East that's created by the size of the crowds and that's one of the challenges any manager faces when he comes here.

"I think that the only way to break that cycle is to bring in the sort of genuine, top quality players who can take it in their stride.

"I think that's what has held so many North East teams of the past back - the fact that they've had the crowds, they've had the expectations, but it is very difficult to live up to that if the squad just isn't good enough.

"And the challenge for managers in building a top club in the North East - that pressure is always on - whatever success you bring, the crowds are big enough to want and expect more. That's quite a pressure, but it's what makes the challenge so attractive.

"There are some clubs where the fanbase is such that just staying in the Premier League will see you hailed as a success. But in the big two in the North East, it has been very rare in the modern era that the quality of the teams has managed to reflect the quality of the size and passion of the home crowds.

"That's why, I think, the North East has found it hard to create sustained success at the top of the table. But what a great challenge to take on, and I've got to say that I'm happy with the direction we're going in at the moment, where we've got someone like Asamoah Gyan at the club, who was a World Player of the Year nominee."

Bruce added, "I don't think there's any denying that we're getting a top quality squad here now, and you need that up here.

"You have to be able to handle the ball and not take notice of the crowd and we have players who have that confidence.

"The results might not have been the greatest of late, but we've had terrible injury problems which are now starting to ease and I know that, as a squad and as a club, we're heading in the right direction."

 
Click here for the No1 coverage of all the gossip and transfer news around Sunderland.

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Wenger sticks to his principles in battle of pass masters

Wenger sticks to his principles in battle of pass masters

15:50 GMT, Tue 15 Feb 2011
Wenger sticks to his principles in battle of pass masters

LONDON COLNEY, England, Feb 15 (Reuters) - Arsene Wenger has no intention of sacrificing his principles to blunt Barcelona and instead is backing his Arsenal team's ability to outpass Spain's pass masters in their Champions League last-16 tie.

UK Football

Having tried to play Barca at their own game in last season's quarter-finals and come unstuck with a 6-3 aggregate defeat, Wenger says his team are better equipped to have another crack, beginning with Wednesday's first leg at The Emirates.

The Spaniards found things tougher in last year's semi-final when Jose Mourinho's Inter Milan sat deep and let Barcelona play in front of them, only getting involved when danger threatened.

The tactic paid off as Inter triumphed 3-2 on aggregate having limited Pep Guardiola's side to a solitary late goal in a 1-0 win at the Nou Camp in the second leg.

Wenger said on Tuesday he would stick with the approach that has been his career trademark, paving the way for a match that could set new records for the number of passes made.

"I think everybody expects an exciting game as it's two teams who play quality football," the Frenchman told a news conference at the club's training ground.

"To be faithful to our philosophy, make sure we dominate the game, that we pass the ball and have possession of the ball and if we are capable of doing that we have a very good chance."

 

GOOD OPPORTUNITY

Last season Barcelona led 2-0 at the Emirates and though Arsenal fought back to draw 2-2 and then led the away leg 1-0, four goals by Lionel Messi sent the Spaniards through.

Wenger, whose side also lost to Barcelona in the 2006 final, said the defeat would be a help rather than a hindrance.

"Last year I said after the 4-1 that we lost to the better team," he said. "But we now have a good opportunity to show that we are not any more the team that played against them last year.

"We have the belief, a strong togetherness to show that, and a highly motivated team to go out tomorrow to show that we are a different team. This team has attitude, this team has focus.

"I've been a manager for a long time but I've not seen many teams with such a consistent focus every day to improve.

"We have the players available, 90 percent in February which was not the case last year, so we are in an ideal position to face them. This season it's down to your performance not down to history. It's about how good you are on the day.

"At the moment, Barcelona are the best team in the world -- if we knock them out we have straightaway a good chance to win the competition."

 

DIFFERENT PROPOSITION

Midfielder Cesc Fabregas missed the second leg last season and Arsenal are a different proposition with him in the side.

His former club's annual enquires about his availability and his reciprocal affection may have some Arsenal fans questioning his motivation but Wenger dismissed the notion out of hand.

"He will approach it how he approaches every single game -- with a huge desire to win," Wenger said. "Cesc Fabregas is an exceptional player but he is also a winner and he wants to win every single game and when he doesn't he's hugely frustrated.

"So he will be even more in that frame of mind tomorrow -- thinking 'What can I do to win, to help the team win?'"

The Spaniard's combinations with Samir Nasri have played a big part in Arsenal's success this year although the 14-goal Frenchman will probably start on the bench after a quick recovery from a hamstring strain suffered on Jan. 30.

"Everyone is absolutely adamant that he is completely medically available so it's up to me," said Wenger.

The Arsenal manager is unlikely to repeat the gamble that backfired three weeks ago when Nasri aggravated the injury after starting against Huddersfield in the FA Cup.

Czech international Tomas Rosicky is available after a groin injury but fellow midfielder Abou Diaby has been ruled out haing injured his calf on international duty last week.

Fellow Frenchman Bacary Sagna is suspended, with Emmanuel Eboue expected to step in at right back.

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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Arsenal stage late fightback to stun Barcelona

Arsenal stage late fightback to stun Barcelona

22:12 GMT, Wed 16 Feb 2011
Arsenal stage late fightback to stun Barcelona

LONDON, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Arsenal struck two late goals to snatch an unlikely 2-1 win over Barcelona in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 clash at The Emirates on Wednesday.

UK Football

Barcelona dominated possession with wonderful passing, working tirelessly to harass the home side in their short spells on the ball, and deservedly led through a David Villa goal after 26 minutes.

They could have had three or four more but Arsenal levelled out of the blue through Robin van Persie in the 78th minute.

That would have been kind on Arsenal, beaten 6-3 on aggregate by the Spaniards in last season's quarter-finals, but they got a huge bonus seven minutes from time when substitute Andrei Arshavin swept in the second after a superb counter-attack.

"They are the best side in football's history in my opinion. That is one game and this is halftime," Arsenal captain Cesc Fabregas told ITV Sport.

"It is a nice victory but that's all. If we show it here and not the Camp Nou, it is nothing for us."

Dutchman Van Persie, who missed both matches in last year's quarter-final, said Arsenal had beaten Barcelona at their own game.

"In our opinion if you drop back too much they are so good they will beat you, " he said. "We had to beat them in their own style. It was a fantastic result in the end."

Arsenal actually started well and it needed a good save by Victor Valdes to block a Van Persie shot after five minutes following a clever flick by Fabregas.

But it was a false dawn as the visitors quickly settled into their well-worn rhythm, moving Arsenal this way and that before slicing them open repeatedly with practically identical passes between the centre backs.

 

DINKED FINISH

Messi ran on to the first from Villa after 15 minutes but though the striker's dummy took Arsenal keeper Wojciech Szczesny out of the equation his dinked finish rolled inches wide.

The goal came when Messi returned the compliment and Villa, in acres of space, tucked the ball away with the minimum of fuss.

It could have been more as Arsenal were chasing shadows with the Spaniards enjoying 61 percent of possession in the first half and completing more than twice as many passes as their hosts during the match.

When Arsenal did begin to get some of the ball after the break Barca gave them another lesson, this time in the art of closing down, as they showed that like all great teams they know how to work hard and defend when they have to.

The game seemed to be heading only one way until the ball broke to Van Persie wide on the left with little apparent danger but from a tight angle he lashed a shot that sneaked inside the near post of a flat-footed Valdes.

The goal lifted the crowd and Arsenal responded with a Barca-style counter-attack that ended with Samir Nasri squaring for substitute Arshavin to sweep in the winner.

"It is one of those special nights. It was a great game that did not disappoint," Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said.

"When you play Barcelona you are always on the border of collapsing but we showed great resilience. It's open now, we will go there and play our game because you can't go to the Nou Camp and just defend."

Barca coach Pep Guardiola, whose side's record 16-match winning sequence in La Liga was ended in a 1-1 draw with Sporting Gijon on Saturday, was not too troubled by defeat.

"I think we more or less controlled the game and we just need to create the chances we did tonight in the Nou Camp and then take them," he said.

"It will be an open game I am sure. Yes we have lost tonight, but we still have the second leg."

The second leg at the Nou Camp Stadium is on March 8.

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Fifa World Ranking February 2011

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Champions League Shooting Accuracy: North London On Top

It’s all well and good to talk about the Champions League leading scorers. It’s easy enough to list them, and it’s a solid, easily understandable, and obviously important statistic – who scores the most goals. But now that we are into the Round of 16, and the matches are starting to be really [...]

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Hearn will fight his corner for Orient

Hearn will fight his corner for Orient

20:39 GMT, Wed 16 Feb 2011
Hearn will fight his corner for Orient

LONDON, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Boxing promoter Barry Hearn will fight his corner to stop West Ham United's move to London's Olympic Stadium putting his soccer club out of business.

UK Football

Hearn, whose sporting empire includes snooker, darts and fishing, is chairman of League One (third division) Leyton Orient and fears the humble 130-year-old club could vanish if West Ham's proposed relocation is approved by the government.

Letters were sent by Hearn to Prime Minister David Cameron and London Mayor Boris Johnson on Wednesday and he will meet Premier League chief Richard Scudamore on Friday.

Hearn's main gripe is that West Ham would be breaking Premier League rules in moving to the 500 million pounds ($803.6 million) stadium which towers close by Orient's ground in east London.

"I want to let people know that we will not just be swept under the carpet and forgotten about," Hearn told Reuters by telephone on Wednesday after a series of meetings to discuss his club's next course of action.

"We have a voice and we want to be heard. We don't believe that the process has been properly carried out."

The Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC) earlier this month recommended West Ham's bid to move into the stadium after the 2012 Games rather than a rival proposal from Tottenham Hotspur.

However, Hearn says the only way West Ham could fill a 60,000-seater stadium is to offer cut-price tickets which in turn would eat into Orient's 4,000 fanbase.

A Premier League rule exists which stipulates that no club can relocate to a ground that will "adversely affect" another club in the immediate vicinity.

"I will sit down with my colleague Richard Scudamore at the Premier League to understand his views on how he interprets his own rules," Hearn said. "After that we will consider legally our position and we will make our next move from there.

 

FORGOTTEN TRIBE

"We hear so much about the 2012 legacy but the danger of legacy is that it may involve the destruction of a community football club that has served its community for 130 years.

"We are the forgotten tribe of the east end of London. If West Ham go there with their much-publicised ticket swamping, cheap tickets, kids tickets, family tickets they would kill us.

"I know my duty as a chairman and I will fight my corner. People who know me know that when I fight my corner I will fight it properly."

Hearn, who has revitalised darts, is in the process of re-branding snooker and even made angling a TV sport with his "Fish 'O' Mania" launch said Orient could ask for a judicial review of the decision which is expected to ratified by the government in the next few weeks.

"There is legislation in place for a judicial review of the entire process," he said. "Also, legal advice is that we could have a case against the Premier League if their own rules have been completely ignored."

Orient's 9,000-capacity stadium, the club's home since 1937, is little more than a javelin throw away from the perimeter fence of the Olympic Park.

On Sunday it will be packed to bursting when the O's will again be fighting their corner against the big boys, only this time on the field when they host Arsenal in the FA Cup fifth round, their biggest match in the competition since losing to Arsenal in the 1978 semi-final.

"Win, lose or draw and this game has improved our profile and is helping us get our message across on the Olympic Stadium," Hearn said. "It's very good timing. For once we have a voice and it deserves to be listened to." 

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Saturday, February 19, 2011

George's Premiership Predictions January 15

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Andre-Pierre Gignac to miss Marseille's Champions League meeting with Manchester United due to groin injury

Gignac injury (Panoramic)
Remy also picks up knock but should be available for last 16 tie

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Toffees send Blues tumbling

Chelsea's defence of the FA Cup came to an end as Everton scraped into the fifth round on penalties.

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Man Utd midfielder Carrick says Crawley Town being taken seriously

Manchester United

Manchester United midfielder Michael Carrick says they won't take FA Cup opponents Crawley Town lightly.

Carrick says the draw is a classic FA Cup tie.

"I smiled when the draw came out," said Carrick.

"It's a classic draw and one that a lot of people probably wanted to see. It's one of those great things the FA Cup is capable of throwing up.

"A lot of people are going to have a great day.

"But for us it is about getting through to the next round.

"We will give Crawley the respect they deserve and we are certainly not taking the game lightly.

"But we do believe, if we play well we will win."

 
Click here for the No1 coverage of all the gossip and transfer news around Manchester United.

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Friday, February 18, 2011

Qatar v Uzbekistan: A match minus the football

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PREVIEW-Arsenal must end Barcelona worship to progress

PREVIEW-Arsenal must end Barcelona worship to progress

02:00 GMT, Tue 15 Feb 2011
PREVIEW-Arsenal must end Barcelona worship to progress

LONDON, Feb 15 (Reuters) - Arsenal undoubtedly admire Barcelona but they must put that out of their minds to have any chance of beating the Spanish side in the Champions League last 16 starting at the Emirates on Wednesday.

UK Football

Cesc Fabregas, Arsenal's most influential player, sometimes gives the impression that he is on sabbatical in London, sharpening his game for when he returns to the Barcelona club he left as a 16-year-old.

"We know they are the best team in the world and it is a big task for us but we will do our best," Fabregas said in a lukewarm war-cry hardly likely to get the fans jumping.

Asked about the lessons of last season's 6-3 quarter-final hammering by the Spaniards, Fabregas said. "It's difficult to learn. They are such a good team, they have so many quality players that can make the difference. They were great last year, they played us at our own game and they were brilliant".

It is hardly surprising Fabregas worships at the Nou Camp shrine but manager Arsene Wenger too seems to hold the team he lost to in the 2006 final as the ultimate footballing model.

Wenger's ideal side is one full of short, skilful players with a great touch, wonderful vision and the ability to pass all day -- just like Barcelona.

Arsenal's intricate passing, though too-often overcooked in and around the area, is usually enough to find a hole in Premier League defences.

 

BADLY WRONG

However, as Wenger discovered last season, when his team come up against a side doing the same only better and with superior front men to finish it all off, things can go badly wrong.

"In the first half we gave Barcelona too much respect and we were lucky to get away with it," he said of the first leg when Arsenal trailed 2-0 but fought back to draw 2-2.

Lionel Messi's four goals in the second leg ended Arsenal's interest but Barcelona found things much tougher in the semi-final against Inter Milan. The Italians sat deep, allowed their opponents to pass themselves to sleep and swarmed all over them whenever they approached the box.

Wenger, however, said he had no plans to adopt that successful spoiling tactic, certainly at home, and would again go to-to-toe in trying to outpass the pass-masters.

"The question at the Nou Camp is 'will we change the way we play?' but here we will try to play to our strengths. We will try to attack the other team," he said before his side's 11th successive foray into the knockout phase.

"If we play in the final third defensively, it will not be our game. We have matured from last year so it is important we play with belief."

Wenger said he was unlikely to take a "crazy gamble" on Samir Nasri, who has just about recovered from a hamstring strain but does seem likely to throw young midfielder Jack Wilshere in for the toughest test of his fledgling career.

Barcelona go into the game having seen their record 16-match winning run ended with a 1-1 draw at Sporting Gijon but they still lead Real Madrid by five points.

With Arsenal also going well domestically, four points behind leaders Manchester United, Barcelona forward Pedro, one of eight Spanish World Cup-winners in the Catalan club's squad, said he expected an attractive and open game.

"Arsenal are a fantastic side and a very tough opponent with very good players," he said. "Maybe they are more dangerous this year."

Probable teams:

Arsenal: 6-Wojciech Szczesny; 7-Gael Clichy, 18-Sebastien Squillaci, 6-Laurent Koscielny, 28-Kieran Gibbs; 23-Andrei Arshavin, 7-Cesc Fabregas, 17-Alex Song, 9-Jack wilshere,14-Theo Walcott; 10-Robin van Persie.

Barcelona: 1-Victor Valdes; 2-Dani Alves, 3-Gerard Pique, 22-Eric Abidal, 19-Maxwell; 6-Xavi, 16-Sergio Busquets, 8-Andres Iniesta; 17-Pedro, 10-Lionel Messi, 7-David Villa.

Referee: Nicola Rizzoli (Italy).

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Bale could face Milan

Gareth Bale could return from injury to play for Tottenham in the second leg against AC Milan.

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Thursday, February 17, 2011

PREVIEW-Arsenal must end Barcelona worship to progress

PREVIEW-Arsenal must end Barcelona worship to progress

02:00 GMT, Tue 15 Feb 2011
PREVIEW-Arsenal must end Barcelona worship to progress

LONDON, Feb 15 (Reuters) - Arsenal undoubtedly admire Barcelona but they must put that out of their minds to have any chance of beating the Spanish side in the Champions League last 16 starting at the Emirates on Wednesday.

UK Football

Cesc Fabregas, Arsenal's most influential player, sometimes gives the impression that he is on sabbatical in London, sharpening his game for when he returns to the Barcelona club he left as a 16-year-old.

"We know they are the best team in the world and it is a big task for us but we will do our best," Fabregas said in a lukewarm war-cry hardly likely to get the fans jumping.

Asked about the lessons of last season's 6-3 quarter-final hammering by the Spaniards, Fabregas said. "It's difficult to learn. They are such a good team, they have so many quality players that can make the difference. They were great last year, they played us at our own game and they were brilliant".

It is hardly surprising Fabregas worships at the Nou Camp shrine but manager Arsene Wenger too seems to hold the team he lost to in the 2006 final as the ultimate footballing model.

Wenger's ideal side is one full of short, skilful players with a great touch, wonderful vision and the ability to pass all day -- just like Barcelona.

Arsenal's intricate passing, though too-often overcooked in and around the area, is usually enough to find a hole in Premier League defences.

 

BADLY WRONG

However, as Wenger discovered last season, when his team come up against a side doing the same only better and with superior front men to finish it all off, things can go badly wrong.

"In the first half we gave Barcelona too much respect and we were lucky to get away with it," he said of the first leg when Arsenal trailed 2-0 but fought back to draw 2-2.

Lionel Messi's four goals in the second leg ended Arsenal's interest but Barcelona found things much tougher in the semi-final against Inter Milan. The Italians sat deep, allowed their opponents to pass themselves to sleep and swarmed all over them whenever they approached the box.

Wenger, however, said he had no plans to adopt that successful spoiling tactic, certainly at home, and would again go to-to-toe in trying to outpass the pass-masters.

"The question at the Nou Camp is 'will we change the way we play?' but here we will try to play to our strengths. We will try to attack the other team," he said before his side's 11th successive foray into the knockout phase.

"If we play in the final third defensively, it will not be our game. We have matured from last year so it is important we play with belief."

Wenger said he was unlikely to take a "crazy gamble" on Samir Nasri, who has just about recovered from a hamstring strain but does seem likely to throw young midfielder Jack Wilshere in for the toughest test of his fledgling career.

Barcelona go into the game having seen their record 16-match winning run ended with a 1-1 draw at Sporting Gijon but they still lead Real Madrid by five points.

With Arsenal also going well domestically, four points behind leaders Manchester United, Barcelona forward Pedro, one of eight Spanish World Cup-winners in the Catalan club's squad, said he expected an attractive and open game.

"Arsenal are a fantastic side and a very tough opponent with very good players," he said. "Maybe they are more dangerous this year."

Probable teams:

Arsenal: 6-Wojciech Szczesny; 7-Gael Clichy, 18-Sebastien Squillaci, 6-Laurent Koscielny, 28-Kieran Gibbs; 23-Andrei Arshavin, 7-Cesc Fabregas, 17-Alex Song, 9-Jack wilshere,14-Theo Walcott; 10-Robin van Persie.

Barcelona: 1-Victor Valdes; 2-Dani Alves, 3-Gerard Pique, 22-Eric Abidal, 19-Maxwell; 6-Xavi, 16-Sergio Busquets, 8-Andres Iniesta; 17-Pedro, 10-Lionel Messi, 7-David Villa.

Referee: Nicola Rizzoli (Italy).

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