Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Champions League: Barcelona v Celtic

This game has lingered in the back of my mind for the past month, or however long it's been since the bracket was announced. With Celtic my favorite club, and Barca second, obviously I felt torn. So I sit here at the office, wearing my Celtic kit, ready to cheer on my two favorite teams. The game started well, as both teams were determined to get the opener. In the 16th minute, Celtic played the ball down the left flank, and Barca's defense was unable to clear as the ball bobbled around in the box, eventually crossed by a Celtic player into the diving head of Venegoor of Hesselink, who drove the ball past Valdes. Barcelona, always dangerous, stepped their game up while Celtic were patting themselves on the back. Messi and Deco linked up for a one-two to tie the game, as Messi one-timed his shot over the diving Boruc. Nearing the end of the second half, which Barca controlled for the vast majority, another Celtic possession in Barca's half, this time the cross came in behind the attacker, Robson, leaning off balance, he nudged the ball toward goal, a desperate attempt that nonetheless beat Valdes, who paid for his positioning as the perfect lob fell over his outstretched hand. I was ecstatic and had to hold in my joy, as watching soccer is not necessarily the most kosher thing to do in an office. As halftime came, I found myself just hoping for the status quo to hold. Unfortunately, Barcelona had something to say about that.
A few minutes into the second half, Henry curled a beautiful goal from the top-left corner of the box, bending the shot to the left into the side netting. Boruc had no chance and this goal shows Henry back in form, the type of shot that made Henry famous. In the 79th minute, as Celtic's defense continued to tire, Barcelona scored again, with Messi the malicious messenger. A failed Celtic clearance ricocheted off another defender and fell to Messi's feet. He made a quick move and struck, scoring the winner and once again exhibiting his quality. A sad result but a great game, it will be hard for Celtic to not only win at the Camp Nou, but win while scoring at least 3 goals. Quite a challenge.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

UEFA Cup: Bayern Munich v Aberdeen

In the ugly duckling of European club competitions, we saw today a giant club (Bayern) in one of the best leagues take on a good team (Aberdeen) in a truly B-level league (Scotland). The game began with some real back-and-forth action, as both sides strove to score the opener. Bayern came into this match a two or three goal favorite and I think the 11 from Aberdeen were the only ones who thought they stood a chance. Well, 24 minutes in, a ball bounced around in the Bayern area, was controlled by Aluko who deftly laid off a pass to an oncoming Walker, who bent the ball right around de Michelis and under diving keeper Rensing. The boys in Red had done it, scoring the opener in fine form. But Bayern is a beast, as all fans know, the counterattack coming strong as a ball forward from Lucio came into the top of the box, Luca Toni headed the ball in Klose's direction. The Polish-born striker crushed a volley across the face of goal into the upper-left corner. All credit to Bayern, but even more to Aberdeen, as the young Scots battled forward time and again, their will keeping them in the contest. And, with less than five minutes to go in the half, it paid off, as the men in red rushed forward on a counter, the ball was quickly played on, a one-touch putting Aluko one-on-one with a defender with the ball at chest height. Aluko touched the ball to his chest, turning inside on the defender, chested the ball to his left foot and ripped his running volley under Rensing. Another great goal for Aberdeen. The second half saw more of the same, but Bayern's depth showed, as Philip lahm played a strong role in the second half in place of Christian Lell, and a penalty was conceded on a handball in the box. Altintop struck well but the Aberdeen keeper stopped the shot, only to have the rebound fall to Altintop for a poke-in finish from inside of five yards. A great game of football which saw a lot of heart, this was a huge upset for Aberdeen even though they only drew. It will be hard for them to advance, as the second leg will be played at the Allianz Arena.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

EPL: Arsenal v Newcastle United

Arsenal played a more conventional lineup today than last week, starting Adebayor, Fabregas, Hleb and Flamini, giving them a considerable advantage in midfield against a Newcastle United side that tried to push forward and were rewarded with (at last count) eight offsides penalties, many of which were too close to call. Nonetheless, Arsenal struck when they had chances, as in the 40th minute when Mathieu Flamini attacked down the left flank, hurtling a defender's tackle and running toward the flag. Flamini's cross was perfect, meeting an onrushing Adebayor who outmuscled his opponent to the ball and headed it home. Arsenal dominated the possession battle (59-41) and the second half saw more of the same, as Owen and Smith were called offside more often than they deserved. Arsenal's second goal came in the 73rd minute, when Flamini blasted a curling shot from the upper-left side of the box: the ball curled to the outside, away from the goalkeeper and into the side netting. Arsenal's final goal came in the 80th minute, and should have been called offsides, but the refs seemed a bit preferential and let it go, allowing Bendtner to one-touch the ball to Fabregas who ripped a volley with his left into the back of the net. Arsenal played very well, Hleb looked electrifying, Fabregas played his role well as usual but Flamini made the game his, tackling well and assiting on the game-winner and scoring the insurance goal on a play he created himself, from outside the box. Newcastle's scoreline could have differed quite a bit but the offsides calls hurt their determination and some were simply wrong.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Chelsea v Everton Carling Cup

The second-leg clash between Everton and Chelsea turned out to be (more or less) just as expected, with Chelsea defending well in the first half, albeit with little possession, while Everton's attacks came to nothing. The second half saw Everton believing they could win, resulting in some great attacking soccer in the first 15 minutes of the second half. However, Cech came up with some tremendous saves and once Chelsea scored, the wind in Everton's sails died. As Chelsea trapped Everton coming forward, a ball was played out to Malouda just inside Everton's half and he alertly crossed the ball forward, perfectly into the on-coming run of Joe Cole, who touched the ball once to settle it, then crushed a right-footed volley past Tim Howard to the near post. Chelsea's aggregate lead of 3-1 forced Everton to push forward and Chelsea was able to create a couple more threatening counterattacks but the score remained at 1-0. Man of the Match: Petr Cech, displaying his usual brilliance in goal and his vision and passing skills were on display as well, as the Czech keeper slotted in perfectly with his shielding four defenders, spreading the ball from one of the back to the other.

Arsenal v Tottenham - Carling Cup

Arsene Wenger made a mistake yesterday, by not starting Adebayor, Fabregas or Eduardo. These three players came off the bench and, while Eduardo and Fabregas were kept quiet, Adebayor scored within five minutes of his advent, crushing a shot from outside the box. I honestly don't think Bendtner and Walcott can be a good partnership in attack, as was shown by their inability to control balls played forward and their lack of chemistry was apparent throughout the first half. All in all, though, Tottenham just outplayed Arsenal, as the Gunners looked like the team of last year, ineffective in attack, fragile in defense and without control in midfield. Jenas opened the scoring in the 3rd minute, followed by a Bendtner own goal in the 27th minute. I believe Fabregas came in soon thereafter, but to no avail. The Gunners relied on long balls forward but Bendtner and Walcott were unable to settle on the ball or link up with each other or Hleb. The Arsenal attack was anemic, until the introduction of Adebayor and Eduardo in the 65th minute. But by that time, Tottenham had already added another two goals, from Robbie keane in the 48th minute and Aaron Lennon in the 60th. Adebayor's goal was a beauty but the 5-1 aggregate deficit was too much and Tottenham scored another insurance goal in the 90th minute, as Stead Malbranque scored. Arsenal's strength lies in their central midfield and the starting absence of Fabregas and Flamini left a vacuum which the Spurs took immediate advantage of, playign great counterattacking football and feeding their strikers with good passes. This is how Tottenham should always play, with their level of talent, on a day when Berbatov didn't score but they came away with 5 goals against a weak Arsenal squad. Perhaps Wenger really doesn't care about the Carling Cup, that would be reasonable, but the alleged headbutt of Adebayor to Bendtner should be a cause for concern, as well as the severe dressing-down the Gunners received yesterday at the hands of their cross-town rivals.  Arsenal will face Newcastle United at home in their next two matches.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Transfer Rumors

Perhaps more than any other sport, soccer's trade rumors fly fast and thick, with most of them proving to be pure speculation. Some of today's latest rumors have Ronaldinho going to Inter, Drogba to Barcelona, Giovanni Dos Santos leaving Barcelona, Tottenham trageting Fred, etc. It seems that any time a player opens his mouth during the two transfer periods, hope and change reign supreme. If a player says he would like to play with someone on another team, or would like to play under a certain coach, the presses start rolling, the rumors fly across the continent. Enough, I say. Let me know when Nicholas Anelka has been bought for $30 million. Let me know when Barcelona loses some great players. Until then, let the fans speculate and don't get our hopes up. Plus, Drogba on Barca? They're enemies (if you haven't seen the knockout rounds between Barcelona and Chelsea from 2004/2005 and 2005/2006, check them out now), and Barcelona already has too much attacking talent, even with injury-prone stars such as Thierry Henry, Lionel Messi and Samuel Eto'o, not to mention Gudjonsen, Ronaldinho, Bojan Krkic (kid is amazing) and Giovanni Dos Santos. Barcelona doesn't need another goalscorer, or another player anywhere else, except perhaps a natural right-back. Barcelona signed enough great talent over the summer, just let them gel: Gabi Milito has been a rock at the back, Toure Yaya is a great d-midfielder, Eric Abidal has been great on the left, and Henry had his best game of the season against Murcia this past weekend.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

FA Cup: Liverpool v Luton Town

Luton defended admirably in the first half, attacking the Reds as they crossed midfield, often with crunching tackles. Unfortunately, their lack of skill on the ball led many Luton counterattacks to failure, as balls forward would be mistimed or could not be controlled. At the end of the first half, a Liverpool counterattack succeeded, as Fernando Torres slipped the ball around a Luton defender to the feet of Ryan Babel, who settled the pass and then struck hard with his right foot, blasting the ball into the far side of the goal. Liverpool enters the second half with a monkey off their back and we could well see Torres or Crouch subbed early in the second half as it seems unlikely that Luton will be able to create real scoring chances. Expect to see some young players in the second half and perhaps another goal or two from the Reds.
-Update-
Well, they scored four more in the second half and I can't say I'm too surprised.  Gerrard bagged a second half hat-trick and his second and third goals were crackers from outside the box.  I watch Liverpool and they look so good, but continue to underperform in the EPL.  I think they'll take out Inter in the knockout stage.  If you play against 3 of the best 10 teams in thew world, (Arsenal, Chelsea, Man U) you know how to play strong competition.  I'm not sure if Inter's in the same league (figuratively).