jueves, abril 28, 2011

Messi and Mourinho mask Barca shame


As a master of the art of distraction, it must have been particularly galling for Jose Mourinho that a combination of his post-match meltdown and Lionel Messi's masterpiece provided Barcelona with a very convenient diversion in the toxic aftermath of Wednesday's Clasico. It was a night that shamed all parties concerned, of course, but particularly the Catalans.

Mourinho's wild-eyed, paranoid outburst served to fill the column inches and dominate the air waves. His conspiracy theory - drawing in UEFA, Barcelona and even UNICEF, perhaps only leaving shape-shifting lizards and the Illuminati free of blame - will surely attract sanctions more severe than Wednesday's night's instruction to sit in a metal cage just metres from his own bench following his sarcastic "well done" to the fourth official. He has already attracted the attention of Barcelona's legal department.

But if we can examine the match itself in isolation, and even taking into account that wonderful slaloming run and strike from Messi, strangely this felt like a match that saw Barcelona emerge with even less credit than Real, if searching for credit on such a night is only marginally less onerous than attempting to identify flashing moments of dignity in the career of Katie Price.

Given the dramatic denouement, some aspects of this clash have been obscured or misrepresented. Firstly, Real's tactics must be addressed. While criticism of Mourinho's outrageous claims in his press conference are of course justified, condescending interpretations of his approach to the game are more problematic.

There is certainly an argument that parking the bus and fielding three defensive midfielders in Xabi Alonso, Lassana Diarra and Pepe was a betrayal of Real's rich history of attacking football, an unforgiveable act of retreat from a club that has spent hundreds of millions to collect some of the best players in the world. But what did Real expect when they hired Jose Mourinho? After all, they must have seen this before.

Strangely enough, and going against type, the Portuguese did in fact attempt to release the shackles in the away game at Camp Nou this season and was punished with a 5-0 hammering. Diarra was introduced as a substitute in November as Mourinho acknowledged his mistake, but it was too late for his side to be spared an evisceration of epic proportions. Quite simply, Mourinho could not let that happen again, and though a 1-1 home draw in the league ceded any final chance of winning the Primera Division, Real looked far more durable and applied that conservative approach again to win the Copa del Rey. Quite rightly, they did so again on Wednesday.

Criticism for failing to start a conventional striker on Wednesday night was also wide of the mark. Barcelona did not have one either, with David Villa operating in wide positions and Messi, nominally the central forward, dropping deep with regularity. Instead, Real were set up to nullify Xavi and Messi and counter-attack, and though critics cry that they ceded 77% possession at home, that is fast becoming a meaningless statistic when it comes to Barcelona. It is akin to stating that Rory Delap will launch a long throw; Barcelona will dominate possession in any game they play.

It may be unpalatable for Madrid fans to digest, but in the context of the tie and the undoubted brilliance of Barcelona, playing for a 0-0 draw at home and then hoping to snatch an away goal in Catalunya was Real's best approach. Unpalatable, yes, a possible renunciation of Real's history, yes, but it was a legitimate tactic. As Mourinho himself said: "We had the intention to keep the game at 0-0, then bring on a striker, then a third phase with a No. 10 behind three forwards. But the ref didn't allow it".

Mourinho was of course referring to the decision to dismiss Pepe. Until that point, Real's restrictive approach had ensured the match was panning out as their coach had hoped, but shorn of their defender-cum-midfield-enforcer, Real were powerless to suppress Xavi and Messi, who stamped his mark on this game in unforgettable fashion, scoring his 51st and 52nd goals of the season. At 23, he is Barcelona's third all-time leading goalscorer, a phenomenon, a marvel.

But Pepe's key dismissal feeds into the second key debate: Barcelona's behaviour. Though the Portugal international's boot was high, it certainly felt as though his dismissal had as much to do with Dani Alves' exaggerated reaction and the hounding of the referee by Barcelona players as it did the challenge itself. A yellow card would have sufficed, but Alves ensured Real, and a Mourinho team, would yet again lose a player in a match against Barcelona. His brief departure on a stretcher only added to his dramatic performance.

In this, though, Alves was far from alone. Pedro and, unsurprisingly, Sergio Busquets, were guilty of the most rank and reprehensible play-acting seen in some time. Real are far from innocent on this front of course, but seeing players of the quality and ability of the two World Cup winners indulge in the dark arts was painful. Perhaps it is the knowledge that Barcelona do not need to stoop to such depths that made it hurt so much; their ability alone is enough to ensure their superiority, and certainly over two legs.

Either way it was an unedifying spectacle, particularly from a club that prides itself on doing things the right way. More than a club? Pedro, Alves and Busquets seemed intent on convincing the referee that Madrid's challenges were more than a tackle, more than an assault even.

Real were guilty to a lesser degree, but it was Barcelona who surrendered their hard-won moral high ground with their histrionics. We can expect some devilish behaviour from Real Madrid, managed by Mourinho and containing Pepe, but it is becoming an ever more evident part of Barca's approach as well. If Real were said to have abandoned their principles by adopting an oppressive yet legitimate defensive strategy, then what of Barcelona and their behaviour?

Few would cite Emmanuel Adebayor as a paragon of virtue or the yardstick by which modern footballers should be judged, but his post-match comments, while exaggerated, still ring true.

"Whenever you play against Barca, whenever you touch them they are on the floor crying like a baby," he said. "Everyone talks about Barcelona and their fair play but I think they are very far away from fair play. Whenever you make contact when going for a one-on-one or 50-50 ball they are on the floor crying, putting their hand up near their face. Their manager, fans and the players on the bench are always crying. Barcelona is a fantastic club, has fantastic players, but they have to stop that."

On Thursday morning, Barcelona's carefully crafted, shiny image looks a little duller than usual.

Copyright ©2011 ESPN Internet Ventures.


lunes, abril 25, 2011

Gunners reach the crossroads


At times, it can feel like there is checklist of Arsenal's failings, real or imagined. Game by game, they are ticked off: the susceptibility to set-pieces; the habit of conceding late goals; the need for a dominant central defender; the profligacy in attack; the lack of leadership; the psychological frailty.

Arsenal assemble the case for the prosecution and reproduce it with disturbing regularity. The unexpected element was that, for once, Arsene Wenger crossed the courtroom to support some of their arguments. In a season that has nosedived since the Carling Cup final defeat and an era where Arsenal have polarised opinions with their seductive but silverware-starved football, perhaps this was the watershed, the day when the Frenchman accepted the masterplan of economic austerity and football finesse can only take his team so far. Then again, perhaps not.

But as their title challenge came to a depressing and definitive conclusion at the Reebok Stadium, perhaps the most frightening factor was the predictability of it all. This was the Arsenal of caricature, the side whose fragile beauty goes unrewarded because of their own flaws, the talented technicians seemingly condemned to finish third in a two-horse race now. This was justification for the pragmatists in their criticism of the purists.

After letting in a 102nd-minute goal seven days earlier, conceding in the 90th minute was comparatively early. Fergie Time means dramatic, decisive goals for Manchester United; Wenger Time late frustration for Arsenal, and on Sunday Bolton added their names to the litany who have breached the Gunners' defence in the closing minutes. Arsenal's anxiety, like United's buoyancy, turns such strikes into a self-fulfilling prophecy.

In the process, a match became a microcosm of their season, as Wenger admitted. The reality that the title is not bound for Emirates Stadium made the manager more willing to accept his side's shortcomings. "Our chances are minimal now, that's for sure," he said. "We dropped too many points. It is very frustrating because we should come home this week with nine points and we come back with two. The numbers are the numbers. We conceded six goals this week. You cannot afford to concede six goals in three games, particularly in April."

This year afforded Arsenal's best opportunity to reclaim the title they last won in 2004. "It is very unsatisfactory because that's one of the easiest run-ins we have had for quite some time," Wenger added. "We didn't take our chances many times in the season because the potential is there. We still lack something that is called maturity, experience, calm in key situations."

It was more mea culpa than an assault on the underachievers. "The facts are the facts but I feel the players had an outstanding attitude all season," Wenger added. "If someone is to blame, it is me."

On this occasion, others were culpable, too. Opportunities were squandered at the Reebok, just as they have been over the course of a couple of months: Theo Walcott, Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri all spurned chances. Only Robin van Persie displays a deadliness in front of goal, scoring with expert precision after a one-two with the captain.

Meanwhile, a defensive generosity manifests itself. In the build-up to both goals, a man was allowed to burst clear of their defence: first Chung-Yong Lee, then Johan Elmander. From the resulting corner, a Wanderer was granted the room to meet it with a powerful header: first Gary Cahill, then Tamir Cohen. The opener was delayed by Nasri's goal-line clearance before it was headed in by Daniel Sturridge. The second was simpler, the replacement Cohen celebrating what Owen Coyle called "an emotional winner". Cohen promptly revealed a T-shirt displaying a picture of his father, the former Israel international Avi, who died in December. "I think it was fitting he got the winner," his manager added. It was less so, but sadly inevitable, that his tribute brought a booking.

While Arsenal's character is invariably questioned, Bolton displayed theirs. Hammered 5-0 at Wembley seven days before, they responded. "What we had to do was come out and give a big performance," Coyle added. "We gave an unbelievable performance." The win could have been more comprehensive: Kevin Davies had a penalty saved by Wojciech Szczesny after Johan Djourou was adjudged to have bundled Sturridge to ground.

Previously one of the most improved players of Arsenal's campaign, Djourou endured an awkward afternoon. The debate about Wenger's failure to sign a commanding centre-half last season has never gone away, but now it may intensify, because when the weaknesses in their candidature are so apparent that even the sometimes myopic manager is accepting some of them, they have reached a crossroads. It is time for change; not at the helm, but in the team.

MAN OF THE MATCH: Daniel Sturridge. A seventh goal of his brief spell at Bolton was one indication of his potency, but his contribution went far beyond that. A delightful flick to release Lee was a sign of his skill and, while the penalty may have been soft, it highlighted Djourou's inability to deal with him.

BOLTON VERDICT: Spirited and determined, they regained some of the pride they lost at Wembley. Employing an open approach against Arsenal can be a risky policy, but Jaaskelainen's saves ensured they got away with it and Coyle, as is his wont, showed positivity in his tactics. It helped that he recalled Taylor in place of Martin Petrov, who was particularly poor against Stoke, and they remain on course for a top-eight finish.

ARSENAL VERDICT: Fabregas and Jack Wilshere played some delightful football at times and Walcott appeared to have the beating of Paul Robinson with ease. Yet Arsenal's inability to turn that into victory was all too typical. Wenger will not abandon his football principles, and nor should he, but the need for a couple of hard-bitten stalwarts to shore up his side has rarely been stronger.

Copyright ©2011 ESPN Internet Ventures.
How many times have we seen this?


Nacional venció 1-2 a Millonarios y es nuevo líder


Pabón (28 de penal) y Arrechea (85) marcaron para el verde. Candelo (45 +2 de penal) descontó.

Nacional demostró en Bogotá porque es líder del campeonato, fue efectivo, pegó en los momentos claves y se llevó una victoria que lo dejó ad portas de la clasificación.

Por su parte, Millonarios hizo el gasto, manejó los hilos del partido, pero a la hora de meterla se encontró con la falta de acierto y con un Gastón Pezzuti que estuvo inmenso bajo los tres palos.

El azul arrancó ecendido, manejando la pelota, con un Mayer Candelo inspirado y jugando en campo rival.

Por eso muy temprano, los hinchas locales se quedaron con el grito de gol en su boca, tras un pase del '10' para el goleador Toloza, que remató y desvió Pezzuti al tiro de esquina, mostrando lo que sería a la postre un tarde redonda para el argentino.

Por su parte, Nacional solo se acercaba con balones quietos y pelotazos largos.

Candelo seguía siendo el hombre de Millonarios en lo suyo, el pase filtrado, pero los de arriba no 'mojaban'.

A esa altura el partido era abierto. Toloza exigía la volada de Pezzuti. Iglesias remataba por encima un centro de Pabón.

Pero cuando mejor jugaban los 'embajadores', quedó evidenciada la lentitud de la zaga albiazul. Pase de Macnelly a Pabón y Mera llegó tarde y cometió penalti. Cobró el agredido y desató la celebración de la parcialidad 'verde'.

Los de Richard Páez sintieron el golpe y perdieron la brújula. Por el contrario, para los de 'Sachi' el juego se planteó 'a pedir de boca', para contragolpear.

Hasta que en el final de la primera etapa los locales recobraron la memoria, pero se encontraron una vez más con un Pezzuti inspirado.

En cuatro minutos el arquero argentino negó lo que era el empate. Dos de Carpintero, un cabezazo y un remate, las dos en el área pequeña, las opciones que sacó el portero de la visita.

Hasta que en tiempo de descuento, el juez Óscar Julián Ruiz sancionó un penalti dudoso de Román Torres sobre Carpintero. Cobró Mayer y anotó la igualdad con la que los equipos se fueron a los vestuarios.

La segunda parte comenzó con la misma tónica de la primera, Millonarios montado en el compromiso y Nacional al contragolpe, con Macnelly filtrando balones.

A los 53, volvió a aparecer la figura del encuentro hasta ese momento Gastón Pezzuti para meter la mano y enviar al palo un tiro libre de Toloza.

Pasaban los minutos y los capitalinos seguían inquietando el arco del argentino, pero sin acierto. Los antioqueños esperaban y salían con los pelotazos largos de Macnelly buscando a Yovanny Arrechea.

Millonarios cargaba y Nacional se defendía, pero mantenía la opción de hacer daño en la salida rápida o cuando pasaban en bloque al ataque.

Y si Pezzuti fue figura durante todo el encuentro, Nelson Ramos tuvo también sus momentos. Al minuto 85, el arquero le negó la posibilidad a Arrechea. Pero un minuto más tarde, se equivocó la zaga local, el ex goleador azul, Arrechea, remató mordido, descolocó a Ramos y el balón entró lentamente al arco para el 1-2.

Después Millonarios cargó con todo, exponiéndose al tercero, pero ya era muy tarde. Nacional ganó en El Campín luego de cuatro años, con un fútbol efectivo y práctico.

La última victoria nacionalista en el estadio bogotano, antes de la de hoy, fue el 14 de abril de 2007 cuando venció a Millonarios 0-1 con gol de Jairo Patiño.

Síntesis:

Millonarios: Nelson Ramos; Luis Mosquera, Osvaldo Henríquez, José Mera y Leonard Vásquez; Juan Esteban Ortiz, Omar Rodríguez, Mayer Candelo y Carlos Preciado; Wilson Carpintero y Édinson Toloza. DT: Richard Páez.

Nacional: Gastón Pezutti, Víctor Giraldo, Román Torres, Edgar Zapata y Juan David Duque; Stefan Medina, Daniel Santa, Jair Iglesias, Macnelly Torres; Dorlan Pabón y Carlos Rentería. DT: Santiago Escobar.

Cambios en Millonarios: Carlos Saa por Mera (46'), Jefferson Angulo por Candelo (62') y José Luis Tancredi por Rodríguez (77').

Cambios en Nacional: Víctor Ibarbo por Iglesias (46'), Yovanny Arrechea por Rentería (46') y Jairo Patiño por Pabón (88').

Goles: Pabón (29', Penalti), Candelo (46, Penalti) y Arrechea (86').

Amonestados en Millonarios: Ortiz, Vásquez, Angulo.

Amonestados en Nacional: Duque, Santa, Iglesias, Torres, Giraldo, Medina.

Expulsados: no hubo.

Estadio: Nemesio Camacho 'El Campín

Árbitro: Oscar Julián Ruiz

Diego Loaiza Gómez
Periodista Futbolred.com
diegom@eltiempo.com
Bogotá

COPYRIGHT © 2011 CEET


sábado, abril 16, 2011

El muñeco mudito




© Ediciones Deportivas Catalanas, S.A. 2010 GRUPO ZETA


Amiguito de la Federación


¿Conseguirá el portugués un cambio de día? ¿O, ya puestos, pedirá un cambio de año? ¿Accederá Guardiola a ayudarle o, con lo enfadado que está últimamente, se pelearán a lo "Pressing Catch"? ¿Se agotarán las entradas para el combate como las de la final de la Copa del Rey?



© MARCA.com


Messi en La Roja


Messi está celoso porque muchos de sus compañeros de equipo juegan en la selección española, y quiere hacer algo al respecto. ¿Conseguirá el argentino que le dejen jugar en la Roja? ¿Intentará convencer a la FIFA de que es español vistiéndose de torero mientras bebe sangría, baila flamenco y se zampa una paella? ¿O lo hará de una manera más sutil pero igualmente graciosa?


© MARCA.com


jueves, abril 14, 2011

'Pecoso' Castro, técnico del Quindio e Iván Mejía analizaron el actual escándalo del fútbol colombiano

Tomado de: http://www.caracol.com.co/oir.aspx?id=1454851
Autor: Gabriel Chemas Escandón


© CARACOL S.A.
Totalmente de acuerdo con el 'Pecoso', ojalá que está crisis y la ley del fútbol sirvan para replantear totalmente, desde el punto de vista comercial y deportivo, el fútbol profesional colombiano