I was bit sad for Mourinho yesterday, despite I was very happy that Barcelona won the Super Cup.
Mourinho, after a great summer of preparations, tactics, great players, and a lot of team work,
seemed to be left helpless again against Barcelona and the 'unfit' Messi.
The camera caught Mourinho with very good attitudes and sportsmanship, showing to the public how
stinky Messi is, and then, twisting the ear of the Barcelona assistant coach Tito Vilanova : )
After the game Mourinho was not upset of his players red cards:
"What happened, happened because somebody provoked the situation and it certainly wasn't a player
from Real Madrid"
I've never seen Arsene Wenger look as frustrated as I did on Sunday during the defeat against Aston
Villa.
He looked like a man who was told he could spend the night with Nicole Scherzinger but,
unfortunately for him, he suffers from impotence.
His demeanour and the angry looks tell me a thousand words.
Jan Versleijan and Han Berger have been slated by many over the last few weeks for their team
performances at the various World Cups.
Versleijan as manager of the teams, and Berger for laying down the 1-4-3-3 revolution, with a
little help from Rob Baan the former Dutch Technical Director.
This was the image towards the end of our previous final:-
Next month when we play on the same stage, albeit at a different stadium, this team are
determined that picture won't be replicated across the back pages the following day. They have
worked to get to their first Wembley final in a long, long time and if the attitude and
determination of the players last night is anything to go by it will be a successful one.
Argentina and Independiente have both lost 1-0 to Ecuadorian sides in the last couple of days, but
the attitudes to those defeats are very different. Argentina Under 20s' loss to their Ecuadorian
counterparts on Monday night in the first match ... Continue reading →
MANAGING a football club is a highly stressful job as there is an unrelenting pressure to grind
out results week in week out.
The past week has seen two of Britain's most decorated managers wage war on the media for
different reasons after their sides saw their domestic and European ambitions dented
respectively.
When it comes to the approach that MLS Commissioner Don Garber is attempting to take with
developing and encouraging attacking play within Major League Soccer, I do think that Paul Gardner
and I are on the same page on this one.
You hear a lot in NBA basketball about 'the star players being protected' by the officials, and
even recently, Orlando Magic head coach Stan Van Gundy has been pretty outspoken about the lack of
protection and support for his star player Dwight Howard.
This week's cover of France Football is a first for the squad - the headline "On Vous Aime!" has a
lovely double resonance. It means "We love you!" and it's used by football fans - I have a
Marseille scarf with this exact thing written on it. (Who writes that on a football scarf but the
French!
NEW Podcast starring Robbie Savage, Alexi Lalas and John Cross
The MirrorFootball podcast is back for the new season bigger and better than ever! Join host
Simon Head as he talks about attitudes towards the Carling Cup with Robbie Savage, Arsenal's
European victory and Arsene Wenger's transfer conundrum with MirrorFootball's John Cross and
discusses and Robbie Keane's move to the MLS with ESPN analyst and MirrorFootball blogger Alexi
Lalas.
Happy Friday to you! With national team thoughts, Real Salt Lake/Philadelphia coming up and the
transfer window, here's whats on my mind for this Friday.
Jurgen Klinsmann and the National Team: Klinsmann is certainly making waves in the media
despite only being in charge only a month.
Post by Pedro Gomes- Most of us remember the after school PSA commercial about drugs that
ended with one kid asking another, "What are you chicken?" and the other replying with "I'm not a
chicken, you're a Turkey." Then turns away from the peer-pressuring dope dealer and walks off
triumphantly.
Newcastle United reserves lost 4-3 to Sunderland earlier in the week but some comments by Peter
Beardsley got me thinking about team attitudes and how they might affect results. Yesterday I was
visited by a bunch of Bible-bashers called Seventh Day Adventists and their big beef with things
amongst all the problems the world [.
EXCLUSIVE: Lack of black managers shames English football says Sol Campbell
England hero backs Mirror campaign against "pathetic" attitudes to non-white bosses
View the full story here: The Mirror
A news article on 2011-09-15 20:00:41 from: The Mirror
This news item has been reproduced from today's media.
Roy Keane has been very complimentary of his former club today, claiming that thanks to the
quality of the academy, we'll only continue to improve.
"United to me are just going to get stronger and they are the team to beat as usual,"
said Keane. "At reserve and academy level, they have got such good young players coming
through.
Roy Keane has warned Manchester United's title rivals that his former club will "only get
stronger".
Keane said United were "red hot favourites" for the Premier League and believes only an injury to
Wayne Rooney could pose a serious problem.
Keane, 40, who was sacked as Ipswich manager in January after 20 months in charge, told BBC Radio 5
live's Sportsweek: "United to me are just going to get stronger and they are the team to beat as
usual.
There are a lot of funny and impressive incidents in football this week, and all of them related to
'attitudes'
I think this is the best (or worst) dive I seen in my life,
He got yellow card, however with this attitude, I think he deserved a red one :)
Well, did you think that player was cheating or he did over-dive?
For years, Manchester City were no threat to us, yet derby day was still the fixture most United
fans looked forward to. Fighting it out with your local rivals, knowing anything could happen and
form doesn't matter, playing for pride and bragging rights, is one of the best bits about football.
You win the derby and you can go on about it for days.
Overall, despite a brief scare that followed Jay Bothroyd's goal in the second half, Spurs' win
over QPR was comfortable and after the match, manager Harry Redknapp declared that his team were a
‘joy to watch' at times.
While Gareth Bale and VDV grabbed the headlines for their goals, Scott Parker and Luka Modric
were brilliant in midfield while the back four were solid enough to cope with any QPR attack.
Images via canadiansoccernews, wikipedia.
Former Montreal Impact MVP David Testo announced yesterday that he is gay.
The midfielder, who also played for Columbus Crew and the Vancouver Whitecaps, was cut from the
Impact's roster a month ago, and said in his statement that he regrets not coming out publicly
earlier.
When Brad Friedel arrived at White Hart Lane in the summer, many fans expected that he would
spend most of the season warming the bench behind Heurelho Gomes.
We were proved wrong but as soon as Harry Redknapp confirmed that the 40 year old American had
been installed as his first choice, rumours began to circulate as to who would come in to replace
him on a long term basis.