Showing posts with label La Liga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label La Liga. Show all posts
Apr 28, 2011
Real Madrid and Jose Mourinho Left Embarrassed By Barcelona Champions League Defeat
Barcelona beat Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabeu last night thanks to two sublime goals from Lionel Messi. In truth, it was all that La Blaugrana deserved after Jose Mourinho and Real Madrid thoroughly embarrassed their own great names and standing in the game.
Apr 2, 2011
Jose Mourinho's Unbeaten Home Record Ends as Sporting Gijon Beat Real Madrid
Jose Mourinho's nine year, 150 games unbeaten home record stretching all the way back to March 16 2002 came to an end on April 2 2011 after Sporting Gijon beat his Real Madrid team 1-0 at the Santiago Bernabeu.
Mar 10, 2011
Village Football President Banned by the FFF after Audacious Bid For Lionel Messi
The President of a French village side has been suspended for six months by the French Football Federation after he launched an incredible bid to bring none other than Barcelona superstar Lionel Messi to his club!
Cedric Enjolras, otherwise known as President Buch, decided to make the audacious bid for the little Argentinean after a few drinks with friends one evening. The President, who describes himself as handsome as a god, mounted like a horse, as smart as Einstein and a hero like Messi, obviously thought that the FFF would see the funny side.
Unfortunately, they did not and promptly banned him for six months.
Jan 4, 2011
World Football: Heroes of 2010
The highs and lows of 2010 have been extreme to put it mildly. From gun toting separatists in Africa last January to an Octopus called Paul in June and possibly the greatest team of all time in November, 2010 has been a year to remember, or forget depending upon which team you follow.
Here, we look at some of the heroes of the last 12 months. Some stories have been covered by every media outlet under the sun and some have just slipped past their mighty radars.
However, each and every one is just as important as each other as they thread a careful weave through the labyrinthine tapestry that is the footballing year of 2010.
January’s Hero: Andres Iniesta
Most people on the list are there because of instances in 2010’s calendar year, not Andres Iniesta though.Nine months on from Iniesta firing Barcelona into the Champions League final with a late winner against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge we have what is now known in the Catalan capital as “The Iniesta Generation.”
To put it mildly, Iniesta’s goal seemed to the main catalyst for a month of “celebrating.” The strike on May 2 was the first magical moment of a month that will last in many a Barca fans dreams…
They then went on to win La Liga and the Champions League.
While little Lionel Messi may have been the inspiration behind an incredible season, it would seem that Iniesta has become the inspiration for something entirely different…
A survey in the Catalan capital has revealed that birth rates are currently experiencing a 45 percent increase.
And strangely enough, it was around nine months since those monumental games took place…
February’s Hero: Glen Whelan
The vibrations from Ryan Shawcross’ bone juddering tackle on Aaron Ramsey still linger. Indeed, the promising midfielder has only just returned to action in a loan move to Nottingham Forest and as we stand it remains unclear as to whether he will get back into the Arsenal team in the near future.On the night in question, Shawcross dived in recklessly and prematurely ended the Welsh youngster’s season. It was obvious to everyone watching that Ramsey was in some distress, some of his team mates namely captain Cesc Fabregas and the experienced Sol Campbell just roared at the referee, some even vomited, some just became involved in handbags type pushing with Stoke players.
The only man on the pitch to keep his cool during the entire maelstrom that followed was Stoke’s Glen Whelan.
The Irish midfielder immediately went over to Ramsey and comforted him while the medical team ran on.
It made a big impact on the budding Arsenal star as he singled Whelan out for special praise a few days later.
March’s Hero: Gergely Rudolf
Gergely Rudolf recently signed a four year deal with Genoa after leaving Debrechen on a free transfer. The highly rated 25-year-old striker was scouted by many teams from major leagues and could have gone for a lucrative transfer fee that his club could barely afford to do without.April’s Hero: Jose Mourinho
April was the month that “the interpreter” came back to haunt his old club.Over the two legs of their Champions League Semi Final tie against Barcelona, Inter Milan and Jose Mourinho showed that organisation and superb defence can and will out shine flamboyant superstars if given half a chance.
Inter raced into a 3-1 lead after the first leg in Milan with a supreme performance where they attacked and defended at precisely the right moments throughout the match. Then in the return leg in Barcelona they were cruelly reduced to ten men when Thiago Motta was wrongly adjudged to have elbowed Segi Busquets.
The resulting ten men behind the ball was a lesson in defending for the ages.
In the end it was a night where the right team went through but the aftermath of the game left a distinctly bad taste in the mouth.
May’s Hero: Shane Duffy
The 18-year-old Everton centre half was playing for an Irish developmental side when he clashed with the opposing goalkeeper following a corner.Unbeknownst to anyone watching, Duffy had severely lacerated his kidney and was mere moments away from death. The FAI’s team surgeon came on expecting to treat the player for being winded but noticed that his blood pressure was dangerously low and immediately called an ambulance.
Duffy had lost over half of his body’s blood through the injury.
Following a number of operations, Duffy was expected to be out of action for over a year as his body recovered and few thought that he would ever return to the game.
However, the prodigious defender played a friendly for Everton against Sligo Rovers in August, just three months after incurring an injury that few people ever fully recover from.
The incident was described as “a freak injury and one we might never see in another 100 years of medicine…”
June’s Hero: Diego Maradona
You either loved him or you hated him but there is little doubt that Argentina were one of the great, if not only, entertaining teams of the early stages of the World Cup in South Africa.Be he running over reporters that he did not see or cursing at television interviewers the entire football world tuned in to see Diego self destruct.
Instead, Argentina were good. They entertained and Maradona kicked every ball on the side line like he was playing the very match himself.
In the end his wild exuberance was overcome and cruelly exposed by German tactics but up until that stage they were almost everybody’s favourite team.
July’s Hero: Andres Iniesta
Two mentions in one year and neither for his phenomenal exploits on the football pitch!Andres Iniesta gets a second mention in the 2010 hero list for his beautiful gesture following his World Cup winning goal.
On scoring, he wheeled away and took off his shirt revealing a message to the friends and family of Daniel Jarque, “Dani Jarque is always with us.”
Jarque, Iniesta’s best friend, died in August 2009 of Sudden Death Syndrome while training with Espanyol in Italy.
The goal was a just ending to a match that was almost destroyed by Holland’s shameful tactics and it was fitting that it was scored by Iniesta.
Augusts’ Hero: Craig Bellamy
The much maligned Welsh striker has had his fair share of ups and downs in football but even he must have been shocked at the speed he was drummed out at Manchester City at.Particularly when you consider that he was easily the Citizen’s most influential player in the 2009/10 season.
City refused to do business with clubs that wanted him (Spurs, Villa, and Everton) and so poor Craig found himself being loaned out to Championship side Cardiff City.
On his first press conference for Dave Jones side, every journalist waited with baited breath to hear the fireworks go off.
But a very dignified Bellamy chose his words carefully and said that he understood what City had done and that his time at the club was an enjoyable one and that he had no ill feeling towards Roberto Mancini.
September’s Hero: The Champions League
The Cup with the big ears returned with a bang in September and washed away all those bad memories of the World Cup in one fell swoop.Attacking football was the name of the day as teams actually went out to beat each other, unlike in South Africa.
During the first round of games in the World Cup group stages in South Africa, only 25 goals were scored across 16 matches.
Compare this to the Champions League this week, where an astonishing 44 goals were scored across 16 games.
Overall, there were 145 goals scored in the entire World Cup of 64 matches, an average of 2.26 goals per game.
The Champions League average sits at 2.75 goals per game at the moment, only half a goal per game in the difference.
But in terms of entertainment, enjoyment, and sheer enterprise, the club competition outstrips its senior counterpart in every way.
October’s Hero: Gareth Bale
Another Welshman and another flyer. The Tottenham Hotspur left sided midfielder has had an incredible 2010.He only broke into the Spurs first XI in January because Benoit Assou-Ekotto was suspended and since then he hasn’t looked back.
His superb season probably hit its highest point in October when he scored a fantastic hat trick against Inter Milan at the San Siro in what was certainly one of the best individual performances of the calendar year.
He followed that impressive performance up two weeks later at White Hart Lane as the Champions League’s most exciting team literally tore Inter Milan apart.
November’s Hero: Barcelona
Pep Guardiola’s current Barcelona side are now what many people are calling the greatest team of all time.Most certainly there has never been a team that play as attractive a brand of football.
November was an incredible month for football lovers everywhere, but particularly Barcelona football lovers.
The month didn’t start in the greatest of fashion as La Blaugrana eked out a 1-1 draw away to FC Copenhagen in the Champions League, but from there they did not look back.
Over the next 22 days they beat: Getafe 3-1 (a), Cueta 5-1 (h), Villareal 3-1 (h), Almeria 8-0 (a), Panathinikos 3-0 (a) before they destroyed their long time rivals Real Madrid 5-0 at the Nou Camp in what many feel is the greatest team performance of all time.
December’s Hero: Juan Roman Riquelme
At one stage in his career, Juan Roman Riquelme was regarded by many as the world’s best midfielder. Every team of stature in the game either tracked him or offered him riches beyond imagination to tempt him away from his beloved Villareal.Now, at 32, the playmaker known as “the Lazy Magician” has returned to his homeland to play for Boca Juniors.
Since 2007 he has easily been the standout player in South America, guiding Boca to the Copa Libertadores in 2007, the Argentinian Primera Division Title in 2008, and the Recopa Sudamerica in 2008. He has also claimed individual honours during the same period so it came as no surprise to see big European sides begin to hover around Riquelme as 2009 drew to an end.
To fend off obvious bids for afar, Boca made Riquelme one of their highest paid players and gave him a new four year deal worth $5 million.
Then Riquelme got injured.
This season he only played one and a half games in the Apetura as he was out injured and in a show of good faith to Boca Juniors he refused to accept payment while he was out injured.
A nice touch from one of the games great professionals.
May 20, 2010
Barcelona Move For Cesc Fabregas and David Villa Leaving The Door Open For Arsenal To Move For Ibrahimovic or Toure
Barcelona are on the verge of a sensational double signing after the Arsenal captain Cesc Fabregas told Arsene Wenger that he wanted to return to his spiritual home. The Catalan side have now opened talks with the adviser's of Fabregas and David Villa over proposed moves to the Nou Camp, while Barca also made it known that Zlatan Ibrahimovic has an escape clause in his contract if an English Premier League team places a bid for him.
The highly ambitious move to sign two of Spain's best players came mere hours after Barca claimed their 20th La Liga title with a record 99 points. It is believed the transfers were sparked byLa Blaugrana's exit from the Champions League at the hands of Jose Mourinho's Inter Milan side.
Ibrahimovic was widely criticised for his lack of effort in the Champions League games against Arsenal and Inter Milan where statisticians were able to point out that at the Emirates he ran for only 450m when the average is over 10,000m and that against Inter Milan Victor Valdes, the Barca 'keeper, actually ran further than the striker.
From then on, the giant Swede found himself on the bench and was little more than a spectator as La Blaugrana closed in on the title.
Ibrahimovic was supposed to be "Plan B" if their fluid passing game did not work. However, his shocking performances against Inter Milan left Pep Guardiola, Barcelona's manager, highly unhappy, especially as he had paid Samuel Eto'o plus £47 million for his strikers services.
This defeat to Inter has caused Guardiola to move quickly in an effort at re-building his team with winning the Champions League in mind.
When their backs were against the wall against the 10-men of Inter Milan Barcelona struggled to create anything of real note. Having been robbed of the sublime Andres Iniesta through injury all Inter Milan had to do was shut Xavi out of the game, with the Spanish international in shackles the supply route to Lionel Messi was effectively shut off.
Cesc Fabregas' signing would repair this immediately. The Arsenal midfielder weighed in with a highly impressive 19 goals and 19 assists before his season was ended with injury, somewhat ironically against Barcelona which could turn out to have been his last game in the red and white of the Gunners .
The ties between Fabregas and the Catalan side are well known and it is generally accepted that it is only a matter of time before he returns to the team where he began his career. Such is Fabregas' stock in Catalunia that the youth side he played for is still referred to as the dream team or class of '87.
Gerard Pique and Lionel Messi who have progressed to the first team are also noteworthy graduates from the conveyor belt at La Masia.
David Villa's move to the Camp Nou makes a lot of sense when you realise that Zlatan Ibrahimovic is unwanted by Guardiola. He is probably the best striker in the world at the moment and is one of the first names on the team sheet for Spain.
He was on the verge of a move away from Valencia last year but chose to stay and help the Mestalla based team to finish a highly impressive third in La Liga this season, and in effect has secured the financial future of the club.
The 28 year old has been in blistering form for Valencia over the last five seasons, scoring 108 goals in just 168 league games and is only moving into his prime now. At a believed £30 million he would be a far cheaper and better option than Barcelona's Plan B, the injury prone £50m rated Fernando Torres.
His signing will prompt Barca to offload Ibrahimovic. La Blaugrana have just announced that the Swede has an escape clause in his contract whereby he can be sold to a team in the English Premier League if they agree to pay a certain fee for the player, clubs in Italy or Germany would have to pay far more.
With that in mind, Ibrahimovic could become a pawn in the transfer of Fabregas if Barcelona can convince Arsene Wenger to take the striker.
It could be a good option for the Gunners who really struggled for goals when the injury prone Robin van Persie missed almost half the season with ankle problems.
The Dutch striker only averages 25 games a season at the Emirates and Wenger could look at the extra options Ibrahimovic could bring.
Marouane Chamakh will join the club on a free transfer from Bourdeaux, but he is more a right sided forward than the central figure the club require. Van Persie naturally drifts out to the left so a triumvirate with Ibrahimovic at it's centre could be highly attractive to Le Prof, especially if he is also given another £20million to £30 million for Fabregas. This would enable him to replace his captain immediately and with a player at almost the same standard.
However, the most likely situation to occur will be Barcelona offering Yaya Toure plus money for Fabregas' signature, but that could depend upon whether the Ivorian wants to leave or not.
The next couple of weeks will be crucial to Fabregas and Villa. Outgoing President Joan Laporta has told the fans he wishes to leave them a parting gift; Fabregas? The incoming candidates have all focused on either Villa or Torres as the centre piece of their campaigns and with Real Madrid expected to bring in a new manager, possibly Rafael Benitez , and spend another fortune La Blaugrana have made the first move.
The World Cup has yet to start and already the summer is shaping up to be one to remember.
Mar 29, 2010
Football Is Not Recession Proof, Now UEFA Know and 2012 Begins a New Era
The landscape of football is about to take a dramatic change if UEFA and Michel Platini are to get their way.
Since Platini took over as UEFA President in 2007, the Frenchman has always stated his desires for financial fair play across Europe.
Mar 3, 2010
FIFA Out To Ban The Slide Tackle
Since the start of this season's English Premier League, referees have been under the spotlight. As the FA launched their pitiful "Respect" campaign, FIFA also made it known that they wanted certain types of tackling eliminated from the game...
Mar 2, 2010
Real Madrid and Barcelona Head Football's Rich List, Arsenal Up To Fifth
Manchester United have dropped out of the top two richest teams in the world for the first time as Spanish giants, Real Madrid and Barcelona, have established themselves as the new dominant financial forces in football.
Seven of the top 20 richest teams in the world are based in the English Premier League, but it now looks as if La Liga is where the real power lies.
Over the last 18 months, La Liga has seen itself attract some of the best talent in the world, some of it from the EPL, and become the new dominant league in Europe, and the world.
Rising tax rates in Britain combined with an ailing currency have become a vital ingredient in seeing Spain become the destination of choice for footballers.
Currently the high tax rate in Britain is 50 percent, meaning that half of everything a player earns goes directly to the government. While this has been going on in England, the Spanish government has reduced the tax rate for "foreign executives" down to an amazing 24 percent.
This in turn enables Spanish teams to attract bigger names and pay bigger wages. This then returns to the clubs through advertising and merchandise revenue streams making Spanish teams winners on every angle.
English football also has another cross to bear.
The current amount of debt the Premiership owes is £3.5billion.
Incredibly, that is 56 percent of all the debt owed by football teams in the whole of Europe. And £2billion of that total is owed by just four teams, Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United, and Liverpool.
Barcelona's rise on the list is due to their phenomenal success on the pitch over the last two seasons, and last year in particular.
In the 2009/10 season, Barcelona entered six competitions, and won every single trophy available. Something no other team in world football has ever matched before.
This has sent their annual income soaring above previous high levels.
Alan Switzer, director of Deloitte's sports business group, warned: "Real Madrid and Barcelona have created a clear revenue gap between themselves and their main competitors.
"They look set to contest the top two positions in the money league for the foreseeable future, particularly if the pound doesn't strengthen against the euro."
Dan Jones, a partner in Deloitte's sports business group, added: "Just like it was in Rome last May, Barcelona just proved too strong for United. Like other English clubs, United were impacted by the continued depreciation of sterling - and the scale of this is shown by the fact that, if exchange rates remained at their June 2007 level, they would be top of the money league table."
Real, whose new class of Galacticos include the £80million Cristiano Ronaldo, became the first club to generate more than €400 million of revenue in 2008-09.
Despite the drop seen by most Premiership clubs, Arsenal have replaced Chelsea as the fifth richest club in world football. Returning the favour for the Pensioners taking their place over the last couple of years.
This is quite remarkable especially when you consider that the Gunners are trophy-less for the past five seasons.
A prudent financial footing and a huge revenue creating stadium the main reasons why Arsenal have moved back up. However, the Gunners do have large debts hanging over them, although they look well placed to deal with them if they continue with their current policies.
In recent times speculation has begun to mount about an American consortium being interested in acquiring Arsenal. This rumour spread after Liam Brady resigned from his post as Assistant Manager to Giovani Trappatoni, the Irish national team manager.
Speculation is rife that Arsene Wenger was happy to let Brady double job, the Irishman is in an extremely important job at Arsenal as "Head of Youth Development", but that he was put under pressure by the board to resign as they did not want to be seen to be allowing an important member of staff to take his eye of the main job at hand.
Despite the top fours empires being built on massive debt, Jones believes leading English clubs are still well-placed to survive.
With speculation arising that the EPL will sign a £1 billion TV deal, Jones said: "While there has been much recent comment on the finances of English clubs, we believe problems are experienced at the very highest level are more likely to be a result of mismanagement, weak cost control or a lack of credit than any problems with revenue generation."
How will Premier League teams survive their massive debt strains and still be competitive in Europe is something that will occupy the minds of many owners and chairmen over the next couple of years.
Already, the league has proposed a "39th game" which would be played outside England in the hope of each Premiership team being allowed to generate millions as cities bid to have certain teams play there.
That idea was scrapped but another has surfaced in it's place. A set of playoffs between the four teams who finished from fourth to seventh, allowing the winner to play in the Champions League.
As these playoffs would be outside a normal season they could be brought abroad to the highest bidder...
Either way, the EPL has some way to go to gain on La Liga, whilst Serie A is in real danger of becoming a mid-tier league in Europe.
The pressure is on for all European teams in Serie A. The league faces losing it's coveted fourth Champions League place next year unless an Italian team wins in Europa and every German team gets knocked out in the current rounds of competition.
Given the strong cases being built by Bundesliga teams, that looks a distant prospect.
The power in football is currently residing in Spain, it will stay there for some time until it finds a new lover, expect the new mistress in the coming years to speak German, the Bundesliga is a league on the up.
The Top 20 Rich List:
Position Club Revenue (£m)
1 (1) Real Madrid 341.9
2 (3) FC Barcelona 311.7
3 (2) Manchester United 278.5
4 (4) Bayern Munich 246.6
5 (6) Arsenal 224.0
6 (5) Chelsea 206.4
7 (8) Liverpool 184.8
8 (11) Juventus 173.1
9 (10) Internazionale 167.4
10 (7) AC Milan 167.4
11 (15) Hamburger SV 124.9
12 (9) AS Roma 124.7
13 (12) Olympique Lyonnais 118.9
14 (16) Olympique de Marseille 113.5
15 (14) Tottenham Hotspur 113.0
16 (13) Schalke 04 106.0
17 (n/a) Werder Bremen 97.7
18 (20) Borussia Dortmund 88.1
19 (n/a) Manchester City 87.0
20 (17) Newcastle United 86.0
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Seven of the top 20 richest teams in the world are based in the English Premier League, but it now looks as if La Liga is where the real power lies.
Over the last 18 months, La Liga has seen itself attract some of the best talent in the world, some of it from the EPL, and become the new dominant league in Europe, and the world.
Rising tax rates in Britain combined with an ailing currency have become a vital ingredient in seeing Spain become the destination of choice for footballers.
Currently the high tax rate in Britain is 50 percent, meaning that half of everything a player earns goes directly to the government. While this has been going on in England, the Spanish government has reduced the tax rate for "foreign executives" down to an amazing 24 percent.
This in turn enables Spanish teams to attract bigger names and pay bigger wages. This then returns to the clubs through advertising and merchandise revenue streams making Spanish teams winners on every angle.
English football also has another cross to bear.
The current amount of debt the Premiership owes is £3.5billion.
Incredibly, that is 56 percent of all the debt owed by football teams in the whole of Europe. And £2billion of that total is owed by just four teams, Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United, and Liverpool.
Barcelona's rise on the list is due to their phenomenal success on the pitch over the last two seasons, and last year in particular.
In the 2009/10 season, Barcelona entered six competitions, and won every single trophy available. Something no other team in world football has ever matched before.
This has sent their annual income soaring above previous high levels.
Alan Switzer, director of Deloitte's sports business group, warned: "Real Madrid and Barcelona have created a clear revenue gap between themselves and their main competitors.
"They look set to contest the top two positions in the money league for the foreseeable future, particularly if the pound doesn't strengthen against the euro."
Dan Jones, a partner in Deloitte's sports business group, added: "Just like it was in Rome last May, Barcelona just proved too strong for United. Like other English clubs, United were impacted by the continued depreciation of sterling - and the scale of this is shown by the fact that, if exchange rates remained at their June 2007 level, they would be top of the money league table."
Real, whose new class of Galacticos include the £80million Cristiano Ronaldo, became the first club to generate more than €400 million of revenue in 2008-09.
Despite the drop seen by most Premiership clubs, Arsenal have replaced Chelsea as the fifth richest club in world football. Returning the favour for the Pensioners taking their place over the last couple of years.
This is quite remarkable especially when you consider that the Gunners are trophy-less for the past five seasons.
A prudent financial footing and a huge revenue creating stadium the main reasons why Arsenal have moved back up. However, the Gunners do have large debts hanging over them, although they look well placed to deal with them if they continue with their current policies.
In recent times speculation has begun to mount about an American consortium being interested in acquiring Arsenal. This rumour spread after Liam Brady resigned from his post as Assistant Manager to Giovani Trappatoni, the Irish national team manager.
Speculation is rife that Arsene Wenger was happy to let Brady double job, the Irishman is in an extremely important job at Arsenal as "Head of Youth Development", but that he was put under pressure by the board to resign as they did not want to be seen to be allowing an important member of staff to take his eye of the main job at hand.
Despite the top fours empires being built on massive debt, Jones believes leading English clubs are still well-placed to survive.
With speculation arising that the EPL will sign a £1 billion TV deal, Jones said: "While there has been much recent comment on the finances of English clubs, we believe problems are experienced at the very highest level are more likely to be a result of mismanagement, weak cost control or a lack of credit than any problems with revenue generation."
How will Premier League teams survive their massive debt strains and still be competitive in Europe is something that will occupy the minds of many owners and chairmen over the next couple of years.
Already, the league has proposed a "39th game" which would be played outside England in the hope of each Premiership team being allowed to generate millions as cities bid to have certain teams play there.
That idea was scrapped but another has surfaced in it's place. A set of playoffs between the four teams who finished from fourth to seventh, allowing the winner to play in the Champions League.
As these playoffs would be outside a normal season they could be brought abroad to the highest bidder...
Either way, the EPL has some way to go to gain on La Liga, whilst Serie A is in real danger of becoming a mid-tier league in Europe.
The pressure is on for all European teams in Serie A. The league faces losing it's coveted fourth Champions League place next year unless an Italian team wins in Europa and every German team gets knocked out in the current rounds of competition.
Given the strong cases being built by Bundesliga teams, that looks a distant prospect.
The power in football is currently residing in Spain, it will stay there for some time until it finds a new lover, expect the new mistress in the coming years to speak German, the Bundesliga is a league on the up.
The Top 20 Rich List:
Position Club Revenue (£m)
1 (1) Real Madrid 341.9
2 (3) FC Barcelona 311.7
3 (2) Manchester United 278.5
4 (4) Bayern Munich 246.6
5 (6) Arsenal 224.0
6 (5) Chelsea 206.4
7 (8) Liverpool 184.8
8 (11) Juventus 173.1
9 (10) Internazionale 167.4
10 (7) AC Milan 167.4
11 (15) Hamburger SV 124.9
12 (9) AS Roma 124.7
13 (12) Olympique Lyonnais 118.9
14 (16) Olympique de Marseille 113.5
15 (14) Tottenham Hotspur 113.0
16 (13) Schalke 04 106.0
17 (n/a) Werder Bremen 97.7
18 (20) Borussia Dortmund 88.1
19 (n/a) Manchester City 87.0
20 (17) Newcastle United 86.0
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Feb 28, 2010
Benzema Is Much Happier At Real Madrid Than Cristiano Ronaldo
For those of you who think Karim Benzema is unhappy warming his ass on the bench at Real Madrid, think again...
For reasons that now seem quite obvious, the French international is enjoying the kind of treatment that Cristiano Ronaldo can only dream about.
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Feb 9, 2010
Spanish Radio Station Claims Arsenal Have Agreed A Deal To Sell Fabregas To Barcelona
The news that every Arsenal fan is dreading may have moved a step closer today. The largest radio station in Spain, Cadena SER, have claimed that the deal to bring Cesc Fabregas to Barcelona in June is a done deal but that a price has yet to be agreed.
Jan 30, 2010
Birth Rate in Barcelona Explodes By 45 Percent: The Iniesta Generation?
It would seem that Barcelona is not just a hotbed for footballing passion. Barely nine months since their famous wins over Chelsea and Manchester United in the Champions League, the birth rate has soared by 45 percent in the Catalan city...
Jan 26, 2010
For those of you who don't know, Sergio Canales is the hottest young talent in Europe at the moment. The Racing Santander midfielder has put in some unbelievable performances this season, and news that he is out of contract in June has sent all of Europe's top clubs scampering to Cantabria...only for Real Madrid to sneak in and sign the player.
Dec 22, 2009
Fernando Torres To Put Country Ahead of Club and Elect for Surgery
Just when you thought Liverpool's current woes could not get any worse.
If reports in Spain are to be believed the Spanish FA are pressuring Fernando Torres to undergo surgery on his hernia as soon as possible so that the striker will be fit heading into the World Cup come June.
With Liverpool's season evaporating into a cloud of empty dreams, the liklyhood of Torres electing to move the surgery forward is becoming a very real possibility.
If reports in Spain are to be believed the Spanish FA are pressuring Fernando Torres to undergo surgery on his hernia as soon as possible so that the striker will be fit heading into the World Cup come June.
With Liverpool's season evaporating into a cloud of empty dreams, the liklyhood of Torres electing to move the surgery forward is becoming a very real possibility.
Dec 9, 2009
Embarrassing Early Exits by Liverpool and Juventus in Champions League

This year's Champions League was hailed as the most predictable of all time. But as we stand, before the year turns, some of the game's biggest names have crashed and burned and exited the competition in embarrassing fashion. Liverpool and Juventus are easily the two most prominent clubs to bite the dust...
Aug 9, 2009
Sudden Death Of Daniel Jarque Stuns Espanyol and Football World
Espanyol's captain, Daniel Jarque, has died after he suffered a heart attack during a training session in Italy with the club.
Club doctors and Italian paramedics tried to revive the 26-year-old without success.
Jarque joined Espanyol in 1995 as a 12-year-old, and has been a regular in the Catalan side since he made his debut in 2002. He was named as captain only this summer.
Aug 6, 2009
Xabi Alonso Transfer Piles Pressure on Rafael Benitez to Produce, or Else...
The worst kept secret in football finally came to a close last night as Xabi Alonso completed his protracted transfer from Liverpool to Real Madrid.
In reality, the deal was not as long-winded as most would have you believe. The two clubs amazingly agreed upon the £30 million transfer fee less than 24 hours after the 25 percent sell on clause, which would have seen Real Sociadad claim up to £7.5 million, had lapsed...
Aug 2, 2009
Rafael Benitez Sings ABBA to Xabi Alonso
Earlier this week, Xabi Alonso handed in a transfer request at Liverpool. Unhappy that his manager is holding out on the players move to Real Madrid, Alonso took that extra step and put the final nail in the coffin.
Here's a transcript of their final conversation as Rafael Benitez tries to talk Xabi into staying by singing Chiquitita by ABBA...
Jul 20, 2009
Benzema and Ronaldo Make Their Debut As Real Madrid Beat Shamrock Rovers 1-0
Shamrock Rovers came within two minutes of a historic result in Tallaght tonight, as debutant Karim Benzema's 88th-minute goal gave visiting Real Madrid the victory their play so scarcely deserved.
Jul 12, 2009
The Real Reason That La Liga Is Preferred Over the Premiership: Tax
While Manchester United fans all over the world tell themselves that CR7, or CR9 as he is now known - Cristiano Ronaldo to you and me - left because he always wanted to play for Real Madrid, and that their time together was always counting down.
And as Rafael Benitez now strives to hold onto his two main midfielders, as they both make it known that they would like to follow CR9 to the sunnier climes of Spain.
The reason for all the transfer traffic towards Espana can now be explained. Of course, Real Madrid's massive bank loans are a major part of the equation, as too, is the fact that Barcelona's fantasy footballing team are the best footballing eye candy for footie fans the world over, and the weather ain't bad, either.
All of these combine to make our algebraic equation, but that mysterious "X" factor is still missing, the final piece of the jigsaw to give us all, the answer we are seeking.
Why do the best and brightest stars of the English Premier League all want to leave for La Liga? Tax...
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