THE FOOTBALL THREAD Vol 2

Arsenal



Newcastle United









official


  • Referee
    Rob Styles



By Richard Clarke
Perhaps Arsène Wenger should swoop for Rebecca Adlington before the transfer window closes on Monday.
Despite winning three games out of four so far this season, the Arsenal manager feels he is “swimming against the stream” at the moment so Britain’s new double Olympic freestyle champion would surely help.
Arsenal were hit by a tidal wave of negativity after they went down 1-0 at Craven Cottage last Saturday. Wednesday’s 4-0 win against Twente was a welcome fillip and, crucially, gave Wenger’s men Champions League football for another season but they will need to dismiss Newcastle in similar fashion before they can truly poke their heads above water again.
“For me success is consistency,” remarked Wenger at Friday’s pre-match press conference. “I believe that the most important thing to achieve in the game is to be consistent at the top level and move forward in the way you play and with your results.
“Last year we made a big move forward compared to the season before. We got 83 points last year, that would have won the title in the whole of Europe but not here as one team made 87 and another 85. But we were very close.
“At the moment, we have to swim a bit against the stream as we get only negative vibes. But it's a good test, we have to be strong enough to keep our belief even if everyone around our environment does not believe in us.”
The gradual return of Arsenal’s injured players will help them pass the examination. Cesc Fabregas played his first competitive game of the season in midweek and came through with no ill-effects. They same cannot be said of William Gallas (knee), Theo Walcott (knee) and Samir Nasri (sickness). But all have shaken off minor ailments.
Wenger has named the same 18-man squad as Wednesday for the visit of Kevin Keegan’s side but he will rotate a few players between the bench and starting XI.
Despite the clamour for another player before Monday, Arsenal’s squad is undoubtedly classy when fit.
The same can be said of Michael Owen. But the Newcastle striker has still averaged more than one goal every two games for the Magpies and notched in both outings during the past seven days.
“He's an intelligent player and he has quality,” said Wenger. “When I arrived in England, Owen was a young boy, very promising, and he looked absolutely fantastic because he was very quick, sharp and intelligent in front of goal. His career was disturbed a lot by injuries but that's the luck you must take as a great football player. You must have your body on your side and in his case it was disturbed.
“And, as a player, I always think people have been a bit harsh with Owen. He is not just a goalscorer, he can make assists, has good link play and makes runs. But of course his main focus is to score goals.”
You can argue public opinion has been equally severe on Arsenal this week. They were poor at Fulham but four games, three wins and three clean-sheet is hardly the record of also-rans.
Wenger’s men have been dismissed as such on the basis of one, admittedly woeful, 90 minutes.
But then after such early adulation last season perhaps ‘low-key’ is the better path to tread.
To be honest, even a colourless victory would be enough against the black-and-whites on Saturday.
Arsenal have a winning reputation to re-build.
 
Wenger happy to leave it late on new signing

By Richard Clarke
Arsène Wenger is ready to burn the midnight oil in order to land the right player on transfer deadline day.
The Arsenal manager has consistently said he is looking for a central midfielder and he has also consistently said he will only accept the right player at the right price.
The Frenchman believes his squad is good enough without a new addition. That said, he’ll still be working overtime over this weekend.
The transfer window closes at midnight (UK time) on Monday. In the past two seasons, Arsenal have announced big-money moves just before the deadline. If the deal is right, the Frenchman will do it again.
“We are ready to stay up all night if it is needed,” said Wenger. “This season it is at midnight on September 1 so you never know. We have still a long time to go.
“There is always an acceleration of signings. You can see that when you watch TV. For a while they talk the talk and nothing happens. Then in the last four or five days every half an hour comes a headline saying someone has signed somewhere.
“We are out to look, if we find the right player we will do it. But I believe it's more interesting for us to focus on our strengths and quality rather than looking outside. I know that makes headlines but it doesn't make you win games.
“We do not need to strengthen but maybe for the numbers in the squad we can take one more player but no more.”
 
Wenger - Deadline day is like a poker game

By Chris Harris

Arsène Wenger expects the final days of the transfer window to be like a 'poker game'.

The Arsenal manager has been linked with a number of central midfielders and could reveal his own hand before the deadline passes at midnight on Monday. However, the most high-profile move of the next few days could involve Dimitar Berbatov.

The Bulgarian striker has been linked with a move from Tottenham to Manchester United but, according to reports, there is stalemate between the clubs over Berbatov's transfer fee. Wenger is not concerned over the outcome but expects plenty of manouevring between now and Monday night.

"In the end, it's a poker game," said the Frenchman. "Who will be the winner, it's always difficult to predict. But, from what I read, it's £5million that is the difference and, at that level, £5million doesn't make a difference any more.

"It usually finishes on [August] 31st with everybody going halfway, and everybody thinking they are the winner."

Wenger had to endure plenty of speculation over his own centre forward this summer before Emmanuel Adebayor agreed a new long-term contract at Emirates Stadium. The Frenchman does not see similarities in the Berbatov affair.

"There is a difference," said Wenger. "As I've said, Adebayor was committed first and he kept his word. He said if I have a choice, I want to stay and from the outside, I only read the newspaper, that doesn't look to be the case with Berbatov.

"It looks like he wants a move. So you are in a different situation. When a player says to you, I always want to stay, you are not in a situation where if he doesn't go I have a problem.

"That's what Tottenham could consider if he [Berbatov] doesn't go. Do we have a problem or not?"
 
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Emmanuel Adebayor... has the backing of his manager

http://www.arsenal.com/match-menu/3003071/first-team/arsenal-v-newcastle-united Arsenal v Newcastle United
Barclays Premier League
Saturday, August 30, 2008, 17:30




Wenger - Ade only made public relation error

By Richard Clarke
If Emmanuel Adebayor has any problems right now they are in his public relations rather than his contribution at Arsenal, according to Arsène Wenger.
The Togolese striker has had a mixed reaction from a minority fans this season after summer speculation suggested he could be leaving Emirates Stadium.
For his part, Wenger believes Adebayor actually deserves credit for staying. Both manager and player have admitted that bigger money lay away from North London.
“His transfer saga - and the fact he was wanted by all the clubs in Europe - was not down to him,” said Wenger at Friday’s press conference. “It was down to his performances. In the end he chose to stay here so why should it turn against him?
“We have to be realistic. When a player like that is wanted, it is as well an honour for Arsenal. The fact that he has decided to stay is an honour as well. And the fact that he made financial sacrifices is an honour again.
“If he made some mistakes, they were PR mistakes maybe. But I like it when a football player is not ‘PR’ because, when they are, they always have the right behaviour outside and the wrong inside. I prefer the reverse situation.
“In Adebayor's case, he made maybe a little PR mistake. But, for what is really important - the way he practised, the way he worked, the way he behaved on a daily basis – it is credit to him. And I think we have to be intelligent enough, the fans as well, to support him.
“Yes, some of them [have reacted]. But I think the majority are behind him.
“Here we have a story that has been manipulated against him by the media. But if you look at just the facts, and I have dealt with many players face-to-face on this, there is also a lot of credit [due] because he has always said to me he wants to stay. But of course if you can earn £10 here and £130 there, you are ready to stay for £60 but not for £10.”
 
hey guys, i have a brand new Fabregas No.4 08/09 arsenal home jersey for sale. Goin for just $75. Do pm me if interested, 100 percent real. thanks!
 
UEFA CLUB FOOTBALLERS OF THE YEAR.
BEST GOALKEEPER = PETR CECH
BEST DEFENDER = JOHN TERRY
BEST MIDFEILDER = FRANK LAMPARD
BEST STRIKER = CRISTIANO RONALDO

2008 winners
Cristiano Ronaldo's performances in inspiring Manchester United FC to victory in the 2008 UEFA Champions League earned him the UEFA Club Footballer of the Year prize as well as being named Best Forward. Chelsea FC's consolation for missing out on the European title came with individual awards for Petr Čech (Best Goalkeeper for the third time in four years), John Terry (Best Defender) and Frank Lampard (Best Midfielder). New voting procedures were introduced in 2005/06 with the head coaches of the 16 sides which reached the UEFA Champions League knockout rounds all having a say.


UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE 08/09 Full draw:

Group A
CHELSEA
Roma
Bordeaux
CFR Cluj

Group B
Inter Milan
Werder Bremen
Panathinaikos
Anorthosis Famagusta

Group C
Barcelona
Sporting Lisbon
Basel
Shakhtar Donetsk

Group D
LIVERPOOL
PSV Eindhoven
Marseille
Atletico Madrid

Group E
MAN UTD
Villarreal
Celtic
Aalborg

Group F
Lyon
Bayern Munich
Steaua Bucharest
Fiorentina

Group G
ARSENAL
Porto
Fenerbahce
Dynamo Kiev

Group H
Real Madrid
Juventus
Zenit St Petersburg
Bate Borisov



The UEFA Champions League, which evolved from the European Champion Clubs' Cup, is a seasonal club football competition organised by UEFA since 1992 (or overall in its older format since 1955) for the most successful football clubs in Europe. The prize, the European Champion Clubs' Cup (more commonly known as the European Cup), is one of the most prestigious club trophies in the sport. The UEFA Champions League is separate from the UEFA Cup.

The tournament consists of several stages. In the present format it begins in mid-July with three preliminary knockout qualifying rounds. The 16 surviving teams join 16 seeded teams in a group stage. Eight group winners and eight runners-up enter the final knockout rounds, which end with the final match in May. Previously only the champions of their respective national league could participate in the competition; however, this was changed in 1997 to allow the runners-up of the stronger leagues to compete as well.

The title has been held by 21 different clubs, 12 of which have won the title more than once. The all-time record-holder is Real Madrid with their nine wins.

The current holders are Manchester United who beat Chelsea 6-5 on penalties, 1-1 after extra time, in Moscow on 21 May 2008.
 
arsenal.png
newcastle.png
Arsenal 3-0 Newcastle United
Barclays Premier League, Emirates Stadium
Saturday, August 30, 2008, 17:30
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arsenal.png
3

Arsenal


0

Newcastle United





  • Van Persie 19 (pen), 40,
  • Denilson 59





Arsenal




Newcastle United


  • Shay Given
  • Fabricio Coloccini
  • Steven Taylor
  • Habib Beye
    (89)
  • Sanchez Jose Enrique
    (43)
  • Charles N'Zogbia
  • Nicky Butt
  • Danny Guthrie
  • Jonas Gutierrez
  • Shola Ameobi
  • Michael Owen
  • Substitutes
  • Joey Barton
    (89)
  • Sebastien Bassong
    (43)
  • Steve Harper
  • David Edgar
  • Ben Tozer
  • Ryan Donaldson
  • Nile Ranger

official


  • Referee
    Rob Styles



By Richard Clarke
What a difference a week makes.
Seven days ago, Arsenal were outplayed and outfought by a team in black and white. As a result, their entire campaign came under scrutiny.
This afternoon, 10 of those 11 players were asked to repair their reputation against another team in black and white. They responded with a performance of champions.
Robin van Persie scored with a penalty and a close-range shot in a lop-sided first half. Denilson added another just before the hour.
In the end it was 3-0 but it could have been double that. Newcastle were listless all afternoon and their only real danger came from Michael Owen. Even that was fleeting.
The home fans were singing the name of Emmanuel Adebayor by the end. A significant moment in, perhaps, a significant week.
Of course, Arsenal won’t win anything on the back of this performance like they did not lose anything at Craven Cottage. The real benefit will be to their confidence.
And, if you are wondering about the player who did not feature last week but did today, it was Cesc Fabregas.
Of course, the Spaniard had made his competitive comeback on Wednesday in the 4-0 drubbing of Twente.
Compared to that side, there were three changes. Kolo Toure and Emmanuel Adebayor resumed their regular positions at the expense of Johan Djourou.
Meanwhile, Emmanuel Eboue came in on the right for Theo Walcott.
Having struggled so strangely at Fulham, Arsenal seemed intent on showing their true colours straight from the kick-off this afternoon.
In the first 90 seconds they had shout for a penalty when Fabricio Coloccini appeared to bring down Van Persie close to the byline.
A couple of minutes later, the Dutchman clipped a corner to the near post, Bacary Sagna flicked on and William Gallas seemed certain to sweep home from five yards out. Somehow he hacked his shot over the bar.
The early Arsenal fire continued to smoulder when Kolo Toure strode forward and left fly from 30 yards with a drive that was turned brilliantly round the post.
It took a further 10 minutes for Arsenal to create the goal but, territorially, they were in total control.
The strike owed something to good fortune. Adebayor’s cross from the right certainly hit the outstretched arm of Charles N’Zogbia. However it was one of those decisions that is sometimes given, sometimes not. This afternoon referee Rob Styles pointed to the spot.
Newcastle keeper Shay Given went the right way but Van Persie’s spot-kick was near-perfect – low, fast and whipped into the sidenetting.
Arsenal now had their strut back. The confidence so lacking last week was back in abundance.
Van Persie was clipped has he ran laterally just outside the area. The Dutchman took the kick himself and forced a flying open-handed stop from Given.
A couple of minutes later, Toure rattled a drive into sidenetting. It was more than one-way traffic. It was like a motorway heading directly at Newcastle’s goal.
That said, Michael Owen had a wonderful opportunity to equalise eight minutes before the break. Jonas Gutierrez skipped past Fabregas and Gael Clichy on the right and his cross found the England striker unmarked at far post. His shot was poor but the proximity of team-mate Shola Ameobi may have put him off.
However normal service was restored soon afterwards.
Firstly, Adebayor burst through to trickle a shot wide. Then, four minutes from the whistle, Van Persie got his second.
Eboue nudged the ball to Adebayor on the right and raced into the area to get the return. The Ivorian was facing away from goal but was aware the Dutchman had scampered into the area behind him. Eboue’s clever back-heel allowed a sliding Van Persie to stab home from eight yards.
You sensed that was game over. But Owen was proving to be a continual threat. In injury time he drifted a far-post header just over the bar.
Arsenal appeared content with their lead immediately after the break. Nicky Butt even caused a minor scare by scuffing a header on to the top of the bar.
However the home side secured the points just before the hour when Samir Nasri cut inside and Adebayor cleverly fed Denilson to slot home from the edge of the area. A beautifully-crafted goal.
Two minutes later, Van Persie collected the ball close to the left-hand byline, beat his marker and lashed an audaciously angled drive against the underside of the bar.
It was the Dutchman’s final contribution. Seconds later he was substituted for Carlos Vela; the Mexican’s first competitive appearance for Arsenal.
The party had now officially started. The fans celebrated by singing the name of Adebayor and Gael Clichy, still to score as a pro, tried his luck from 30 yards.
More chances followed. Toure hammered a header into the chest of Given with 16 minutes left, Nasri’s free-kick forced another fine save from Given and Gallas saw his effort cleared off the line.
But the closest Arsenal would come to another 4-0 was in the 88th minute when an unmarked Walcott collected Adebayor’s pass on the right of the area.
He had time and space to shoot but dragged his shot wide.
The whistle blew soon afterwards.
It has been a good week.
 
Dynamic Zenit taste Super Cup glory


Zenit are the 2008 UEFA Super Cup winners (©sportsfile)Photos/Wallpapers »

FC Zenit St. Petersburg produced a fine display of passing football to claim the UEFA Super Cup for the first time, a goal in each half from Pavel Pogrebnyak and debutant Danny securing victory against Manchester United FC in Monaco.

Further glory
It has been a memorable few months for Russian football, Zenit's UEFA Cup triumph in May preceding the national side's run to the UEFA EURO 2008™ semi-finals, and the St Petersburg club wrote another proud chapter in their history in Monte Carlo, both goals coming from players with particular motivation to shine. Pogrebnyak, who missed both the UEFA Cup final and UEFA EURO 2008™ through suspension and injury respectively, headed the first a minute before half-time and man of the match Danny marked his first game with a goal in the 59th minute. Although Nemanja Vidić halved the deficit, United had left themselves too much to do and lost Paul Scholes to a late red card as Zenit held on to add another trophy ahead of their maiden UEFA Champions League campaign.
Lively start
United lost Owen Hargreaves to a long-standing knee injury earlier in the day while Zenit left Andrei Arshavin, so influential in their UEFA Cup triumph and the inspiration behind Russia's run to the UEFA European Championship semi-finals, on the bench. One player who did start was Pogrebnyak, keen to impress after a summer of frustration and the striker could have broken the deadlock as early as the seventh minute only to lash Aleksandr Anyukov's low right-wing cross over. The right flank provided a promising avenue for Zenit to explore in the early stages yet the Russian champions were unable to find a way through.

Long-range efforts
Instead the sides opted to try their luck from long range, Anatoliy Tymoshchuk and Alejandro Dominguez missing the target for Zenit while Carlos Tévez tested Vyacheslav Malafeev. The Argentinian international then set up Wayne Rooney as he tenaciously held off Radek Šírl to deliver a low cross, but the United No10 was unable to get his shot away swiftly and Malafeev blocked. Any thoughts that might herald a period of United dominance were quickly expelled as Ivica Križanac crept round the back of their defence to meet Dominguez's deep free-kick with a volley that drew a smart reaction save from Edwin van der Sar.

Pogrebnyak pounces
The goalkeeper was powerless a minute before half-time, however, as Igor Denisov flicked on Dominguez's left-wing corner at the near post and Pogrebnyak showed the predatory instincts that made him the top scorer in last season's UEFA Cup, thumping in a header from unmissable range. Arshavin was introduced at half-time and running dangerously at the United defence within 60 seconds. The European champions regrouped, but were two down a minute before the hour mark. Zenit paid FC Dinamo Moskva a Russian record €30m for Danny and the Portugal midfielder returned a chunk of that fee, collecting possession midway inside the United half before taking advantage of some hesitant defending to advance, cut inside Rio Ferdinand and drill low past Van der Sar.
Late hope
Malafeev then made a sharp double stop to deny substitutes John O'Shea and Ji-Sung Park, before Vidić brought the UEFA Champions League winners back into the contest from a corner 17 minutes from time. Revived, United pressed forward, yet Zenit regained their composure and Denisov might have added a third before Scholes was sent off for a second bookable offence, the first player to be dismissed in the UEFA Super Cup. It mattered little to Zenit, however, as their new European season started in similar fashion to the way the last one ended
 
Hahaha..saw the highlights man.The handball incident cracked me up la..this one handball match or soccer??..The pundek scholes thinking he Maradona or what.There is only one Maradona..only one hand of god.
 
loldude - u are right man! hahah so that AFC can catch up

why 0-0? let both sets of supporters enjoy a "boring" game ahahahhahaaa:p
 
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