Chievo - Most popular for 2009
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This is the new Nike ball that you will see being kicked around next season. It's called the
Nike Total 90 Ascente and will also be used in the EPL and in Spain's La Liga. The ball will be
used in all Serie A, Serie B, and Coppa Italia matches as well as the SuperCoppa this August and in
all Primavera matches.
Yesterday the Lega Calcio announced the dates for the 2009/2010 Serie A season. Serie
A begins the weekend of August 23rd and will end on May 16th to give the national team
enough time to prepare for the World Cup. There will be 4 midweek rounds (September 23, October 28,
January 6, and March 24).
Before we dive into Serie A transfer news, I just want to report on a transfer from Serie B that
as fairly important, which was Torino's Alessandro Rosina signing for Zenit St. Petersburg. Nobody
expected a player with Rosina's talent to stay in Serie B, but the move to Russia seemed a little
surprising, however it makes sense.
Often we see a young player explode onto the calcio scene and everyone turns heads and says
"Where did this kid come from?". Well, now is your chance to gain some knowledge about some
promising Italian young players and maybe in a year or two when one of these players starts to do
some good things on the pitch you'll know who they are.
Today the list of 35 players was announced that will play in a friendly on June 6th in Pisa vs.
Northern Ireland and the upcoming FIFA Confederations Cup. 22 players were called up for the
Northern Ireland game, while 13 will skip that match and go straight to South Africa. Lippi said in
recent weeks that the roster for the Northern Ireland match would be mainly experimental and would
give national team experience to the players that merited a call-up based on their play throughout
the Serie A season.
Last week I posted the first edition of Transfer Tuesdays, where every week we round up what
every Serie A club is doing on the transfer market. Today is the last day of June, which means
tomorrow the transfer window is officially open and you'll see all the transfers made in the past
few weeks become "official".
While Italian football provides excellent quality and entertainment on the pitch, we all know
that it equally provides excellent quality and entertainment off the pitch. The crazy owners, the
fights in the media between opposing managers and directors, the outbursts in press conferences,
and all that other great stuff that keeps us entertained during the week.
So when I was a little kid watching calcio back in the '90's, my idol was none other than
Roberto Baggio. Everything about him amazed me: his technique and skill, his perfect free kicks,
the way he just slipped past defenders like they were practice cones, the amazing goals he scored,
everything.
Ever since 17 year old Manchester United striker Federico Macheda has scored those two goals in
the last two league games, the Italian media has been publishing articles about how Italy doesn't
put faith in young players. On the one hand, it is true, Italy is a traditional society and most
managers have the traditional view that players have to mature first and if you play them regularly
too early you will "burn" them.
Inter have signed Brazilian youngster Kerlon most known for his "seal dribble" where he bounces
the ball on his head while running. He's been at Chievo but hasn't had the best start in Serie A
after a lot of injuries. He's 21 and joins on a three year contract. Not sure if it's a signing to
get too excited about as he's unproven and will have a tough time with all the other strikers at
Inter.
Let me just start out by saying that I have never liked Goal.com (the English version at least.
The Italian version is actually pretty good because it just posts articles from Italian newspapers,
so at least you know you're reading from a source). The English version always seems to have
stories without sources that look like they were just thought up at that instant and posted, and I
have never liked their opinions on Italian calcio.
How great it was to have Serie A back after the winter break. I missed my weekly calcio fix.
Roma-Milan highlighted the return of Serie A. Both teams desperate for the 3 points, as Roma wanted
to inch closer to the top half of the table and Milan wanted to get closer to Juventus and
Inter.
After a day full of tension, Berlusconi announced late today that Kaka will be staying at Milan
and that he closed the deal himself. So Milan fans everywhere can now breathe a sigh of relief
(unless you were in favor of him leaving). We'll see what happens over the next few days though.
Regarding Serie A, we are now officially at the half-way point.
Funny sign caught in the stands this week. It says "To the Sheik, if you want Kaka now
you'll have to eat prunes." I thought that was pretty clever and funny. The midweek round
was supposed to be Milan and Juventus' chance to catch Inter as they had a difficult away tie in
Catania.
Once again, the January transfer window (and the associated interacting between scouts, player
agents, club investors, sporting directors and presidents) comes to an end, freezing the current
European club rosters all the way until Summer and making us wonder who won the prize for
"bargain buy" or "overpriced fatty" of the month.
(highlights di Napoli-Chievo 3-0)
TABELLINO:
NAPOLI (3-5-2): Navarro (1'st Gianello); Santacroce, Contini, Aronica; Montervino, Blasi,
Bogliacino (16'st Gargano), Hamsik, Vitale; Pi (39'st Denis), Lavezzi. A disp.: Rinaudo, Grava,
Amodio, Zalayeta. All.: Donadoni.
CHIEVO (4-3-1-2): Aldegani; Sardo, Morero, Mandelli, Mantovani; Pinzi, Italiano (10'st Hanine),
Bentivoglio; Colucci (29'st Burato); Pellissier, Esposito (11'st Kerlon).
I thought now that the season is over and we've moved into the craziness of the off season where
transfer rumors are posted by the minute on every calcio website possible, I would start a new
weekly post called "Transfer Tuesdays" where we can sift through all these rumors and see what all
20 Serie A teams are up to during this summer's calciomercato.
The new season is quickly approaching (many teams have started pre-season training) and I
realized that I never put up a best goals post for last season. So I searched the internet for
videos of that showed the "top 10 goals" but I realized that I didn't agree with any of the videos
because I felt that so many good goals were being left out.
We are now at the third volume of Transfer Tuesdays, and now we dig further into the transfer
market. Most teams have started training again, and the new season is quickly taking shape. Now
with all teams in pre-season training the sporting directors are moving frantically to make deals
so that new signings can start pre-season training with the team.
Today the schedule was released for the 2009/2010 season. Lega Calcio finally decided to do the
schedule EPL-style, with no seeding for teams, which meant you could have big games on the first
day of the season. The first day of the season which starts the weekend of August 22 and 23 has two
very interesting encounters, with Genoa-Roma and
Palermo-Napoli.
Well, it's that time of the summer again. I'm off to the old country tomorrow, so the blog will
be inactive for a couple of weeks. However I will be back right before the start of the Serie A
season so I'll be able to maybe get a mega-preview up like last season and we'll wrap up the
important news that happened while I was gone.
The Italian Serie A is just about to start as Internazional (Inter Milan) aim for their 5th
straight league title. Can they win it again or will AC Milan or Juventus finally stop their
streak? Here's a preview of the upcoming season along with predictions.
Who will win the Scudetto this year?
The Weekend Round-up will be up tomorrow since today was the last day of the summer transfer
market and teams made last minute deals. Many clubs were scrambling until the very last minute to
get contracts deposited into the league offices and some transfers had to be canceled because they
weren't completed in time.
After 3 giornate, only 3 clubs are still at full points: Sampdoria, who defeated Atalanta 1-0 in
Bergamo with a goal from Daniele Mannini; Juventus, who saw Lazio off with a 2-0 win thanks to
Martin Caceres and David Trezeguet; and Genoa, who thumped Napoli 4-1 with Sergio Floccari,
Giandomenico Mesto, Hernan Crespo, and Houssine Kharja all scoring their first goals of the
season.
And so, with Serie A starting up again this weekend, the second half of the season begins
(although technically it begins January 25th when the girone di ritorno begins). I thought
it would be a good idea to give each team a grade for their efforts so far. Serie A has been very
interesting this season and has provided us with some top quality football to gaze our eyes
upon.
Inter-Milan yesterday turned out to be one of the better derbies of recent years. It was filled
with intensity, exciting play, and featured two star-studded squads. Adriano's goal was subject to
much debate, but even a Milan fan like myself has to admit that it was a call that could have gone
either way.
While we all know that our favorite calcio stars are all highly skilled athletes with unique,
rare talent, we must also remember that they are also, you know, human. Are you shocked? Are you
sitting at your computer with your mouth wide open thinking "Human? Really?" Well
thankfully there is a video to prove it.
At the winter break, most people had already hypothesized that Chievo would be returning to
Serie B next year. But with the arrival of coach Domenico Di Carlo, the Flying Donkeys have played
with a reborn spirit in this second half of the season, and have racked up 21 points since the
winter break (only Inter, Juve, and Milan have earned more).
Happy Easter and Happy Passover to everybody celebrating holidays today. Even on days like
today, you know that many of you will find a way to watch some soccer.
If you are one of those people, then you are in luck because today has plenty of action on tap,
with quality games from Mexico to Spain, Brazil to England.
So now that my hangover's subsided some after the 2-2 tie that was Valencia-Barcelona this
Saturday, what do we make of the match?
Lots of good, some not so good.
The positives flow easily.
Valencia CF played one of their best games of the season against the Best Team on Planet Earth.
I'm sorry there was no Weekend Round-up this week, I was away for Memorial Day Weekend and then
yesterday my internet was down, so I figured by now it's Wednesday and everyone knows the results
of this past weekend. So I'll just post the goals of the week for everyone to admire. Goals after
the jump.
So since this is the last time we'll be seeing Serie A goals until late August, this week I
figured I'd show a video of all the goals of week 38. Since it was the last day and most teams were
just playing for fun, there were many goals, and many nice ones to boot. There is also a video of
all 25 of Zlatan Ibrahimovic's goals that won him the capocannoniere title this
season.
The last day of the season was a Sunday of goodbyes. Goodbye Maldini (retirement), goodbye
Nedved (retirement, but may come back with another team), goodbye Figo (retirement, desk job with
Inter probably), goodbye Ancelotti (Chelsea), goodbye Mazzarri (has to look for a team), goodbye
Zenga (all signs are pointing towards Lazio, but maybe taking a year off), goodbye Quagliarella
(signed for Napoli), goodbye Torino, Lecce, and Reggina (Serie B), goodbye Milito and Thiago Motta
(off to Inter), goodbye Serie A every weekend, and then the two almost goodbyes that will be
followed all summer by the press are those of Ibrahimovic and Kaka (who if reports are right will
be playing each other in La Liga next season).
In Italy, if you want to watch all things calcio, you watch Sky. Sky shows every Serie A game
plus analysis shows and other shows about calcio. They also make some clever commercials, and some
are like the "This is Sportscenter" commercials in the USA on ESPN. Commercials after the jump.
The 2010-2011 season will be a little different for Serie A. The collective bargaining tv rights
will go into effect which should mean more money for the little teams as the tv rights are shared
throughout the whole league similar to the EPL model. But this also means they have decided to
follow the EPL model in regards to schedule as well.
With most news being transfer rumors now and calcio being in a lull period, I thought this would
be an interesting thing to do. I call it Calcio Quiz! (name stolen from an iPhone application. My
apologies if the creator is reading this), and I'll test your knowledge of the calcio world with
random questions that I made up.
I just got back from vacation so I won't have time to put up a mega Serie A preview like I
would've wanted, but by now we have an idea at where the 20 Serie A clubs stand for the coming
season. So Serie A finally kicks off tomorrow with Bologna-Fiorentina and Siena-Milan, and the rest
of the games come our way on Sunday.
Serie A is back which means Goals of the Week is back! You can't always expect the first day of
the season to have the greatest goals, as the teams are just starting to get all their summer rust
off and haven't hit their peak yet. But there were still some nice goals for us to watch this past
weekend.
Dos realidades chocaron en el OlÃmpico. La Roma llegaba tras una derrota ante el complicado Genoa
de visita, mientras la Juve buscaba ratificar su triunfo por la minima en casa ante el Chievo. Iba
a ser imposible presenciar un encuentro como el Derby della Madonnina de la jornada de ayer, eso
seguro, aunque no perdÃa las esperanzas de observar un buen cotejo entre dos usuales protagonistas
en la
It was a weekend of some nice goals. First, let's just say that Fabio Quagliarella ALMOST scored
the goal of the season (he did however score 2 goals on the night). You can watch that video here.
Diego scored his first goals in Serie A, Julio Cruz scored his first goals for Lazio, Alberto
Paloschi continues to look more and more like the new Pippo Inzaghi, Giampaolo Pazzini continues to
score, and Antonio Cassano worked some magic again.