Monday, 7 September 2009

Djourou sidelined for 6 months

Arsenal centre-half Johan Djourou has been ruled out of action for up to 6 months after undergoing knee surgery. The Swiss International sustained the injury last month prior to a friendly with Italy.

So where does this leave Arsenal?

Having sold Kolo Toure to Manchester City, Djourou would have been confident of staking a claim for a regular place in Arsene Wenger's side. The arrival of Thomas Vermaelen from Ajax probably dispelled those hopes slightly, but with Arsenal also looking to offload Philippe Senderos in the near future, Djourou would have been near the front of Wenger's plans.

With the transfer window now closed, and with only 3 fit central defenders, Arsenal may have a couple of problems, should William Gallas, Vermaelen, or Senderos pick up knocks. It may open the door for a couple of youngsters to make the break through to the first team, or perhaps Wenger may even draft in a replacement on loan, as there is no deadline for loan signings in England.

Whatever the reaction to Djourou's injury, a few questions will be raised of Arsenal's backline. Gallas and Vermaelen have made very impressive starts to the season, in particular the Belgian who has a £10m price tag to live up to. Other teams will be taking note of the Gunner's lack of depth in this department, so it'll be fundamental for them to try and keep Gallas and Vermaelen fit. Alexandre Song is a player who has filled in at centre-half in the past, but you certainly wouldn't rely on him to fill the vacancy on a permanent basis.

A few things to ponder then, for Mr. Wenger.

Sunday, 6 September 2009

England: Too many superstars?


Having witnessed England scrape past a very mediocre Slovenia side on Saturday, I couldn't help but ponder England's trials and tribulations over the past few years. They're a team who continue to be surrounded by question marks, and I can't see that changing in the near future, no matter how hardCapello works.

Can Lampard and Gerrard play together? Which formation should we be playing? Why is Gerrard playing left wing? Why does Heskey constantly get a start? These are all questions that have been asked in the recent past, and as of today, are yet to be answered by anyone. Despite the Slovenia match being no more than 'preparation' for Wednesday's much more important clashwith Croatia, Capello still fielded a full-strength side, with the odd exception. Jermain Defoe probably should have started instead of Heskey. Nevertheless, on paper England should have hammered Slovenia, who only had 2 players British fans would have recognised. Bostjan Cesar and Robert Koren have both had spells with West Bromwich Albion. Instead, it was a flat, cautious performance from a side ranked 7th in the World. That's 47 places above Slovenia.

The visitors failed to show any kind of attacking intent or ability for the whole of the 90 minutes, yet somehow managed to score through substitute Ljubijankic. Although this was only a friendly, had England been as cautious in attack in a game that mattered, the final outcome may have been different.

The question I want to ask is do too many cooks spoil the broth? England's makeup is one of mainly 'superstars'. Ashley Cole, John Terry, Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard, Wayne Rooney, and David Beckham are all amongst the top earners in World Football, but when it comes down to it, they seldom click for England as a unit. To this day I'm yet to seeLampard play as well for his country as he does for Chelsea, with or without Gerrard playing alongside him. It also continues to stagger me how Ashley Cole gets into the side, let alone being the most expensive left-back in Football. The simple fact is, all these players are picked on reputation. Some of them can back that up, and I'm not denying that. Rooney is a World-class talent, and he often performs admirably for England. Gerrard also, generally plays very wellwith the three Lions on his shirt, and Terry is a genuine winner, but as a team, I'm yet to be convinced.

6 or 7 'superstars' out of a team of 11 aren't necessarily going to win you silverware. The best International sides in the World are made up of one or two, three at the most, players who cangenuinly be called superstars. Brazil have Kaka, Robinho, and Ronaldinho. Spain have Torres, Fabregas, and Villa. The rest of their sides are made up of proven performers who don't always steel the limelight. They work well as a unit, and there's never just one person who stands out. England, however, seem to be the opposite.

All the aforementioned players are classed as World stars. They're players you'd put in your World XI, or Fantasy sides. You forget about the players who have proved to everyone that they are very very good players in the Premier League, the best League in the World. If you take Gerrard,Lampard, Terry, and Rooney out of the side you can easily replace them with Carrick, Huddlestone, Baines, and Defoe. These are not World class glamour-boys but they're players whom you know will do the business. So why aren't they in the regular starting XI at Wembley? If the so-called stars can't work together as a team, why not give the players that you can rely on to do just that a chance?

England has a massive pool of players. Definitely one of the biggest in the World, possibly the biggest. The problem with the English way is that we're afraid to change. We have the attitude that the same players will put it right in the end, but that's not the case. If you look at the England team of 4 years ago, it's very similar to that of today and we've still won nothing. But if you take the Italian team of 4 years ago, a lot of players have gone, whether dropped, retired or what have you. The point is, change isn't necessarily a bad thing. Yes reputations are built and they're built for a reason, but having a reputation for being one of the most expensive players in the World isn't the done deal. In International Football it's the team that counts.

You may think that my argument is unjustified considering that England have won 100% of their World Cup qualifiers under Capello, but it's all very well beating teams like Belarus and Andorra at a capacity Wembley, but when it comes down to the World Cup quarter-final next year against Brazil, Argentina, Italy, I very much doubt we'll come out on top, especially based on performances like the Slovenia game and certainly based on previous performaces in major competitions. Capello will obviously be very reluctant to make any wholesale changes in the build up to South Africa 2010, but after that I'd like to see some change. If I was England manager, I'd get rid of Lampard, in my opinion the most over-rated player on the planet, I'd get rid of Ashley Cole, and David Beckham, and I'd draft in young, homegrown talent who have proved in the Premier League for their clubs, that part of a well-functioning, performing team unit, that they can cut it.

I'll give you a little flavour of what I think the England team should be, right now.

GK - Robert Green
RB - Glen Johnson
LB - Leighton Baines
CB - John Terry (c)
CB - Matthew Upson
RM - James Milner
LM - Ashley Young
CM - Steven Gerrard
CM - Tom Huddlestone
CF - Wayne Rooney
CF - Jermain Defoe

Sub - Ben Foster
Sub - Ryan Shawcross
Sub - Joleon Lescott
Sub - Michael Carrick
Sub - Shaun Wright-Phillips
Sub - Joe Cole
Sub - Carlton Cole

There we have pure talent, and players who have consistently performed well for their clubs over the last few seasons. I may have missed a couple of players off their whom should perhaps be there, but I think you get the idea.

Kaladze apologises for costly OG's

"Everybody touch my arse, it'll make me feel better!"

Georgia captain Kakha Kaladze has apologised to teammates and supporters following a brace of own goals in his country's World Cup qualify at home to Italy.

Kaladze, who plies his trade in Italy with AC Milan, stuck the ball past his own 'keeper twice in the second half to gift an unimpressive Italian team a 2-0 victory. The centre-half was clearly very upset after the match, apologising profusely and accepting all blame for the defeat. "My team did well and we showed our heart. I'm so sorry, it's my fault. It hurts me. I don't know what to say."

You have to feel for Kakha after this Frank Sinclair-like effort. Not only did he score two own goals, but he achieved it in his first game for seven months following knee surgery. Way to re-introduce yourself K!

However, Kaladze can take heart from the fact that he won't receive the same treatment at Milan as South Korea's Ahn Jung Hwan did upon returning to former club Perugia after the 2002 World Cup. Having scored the penalty that knocked Italy out of the competition at the second round stage, the Italian club terminated his contract leaving him clubless. Having actually helped Italy on their way to qualifying, perhaps a statue of him will be built outside the San Siro, such is importance to the Italian people that their nation does well.

Liverpool name Champions League squad

Liverpool have announced their 28-man squad for the first group stage of this season’s Champions League. A couple of players will be unknown to the majority of people, but Liverpool’s lack of squad depth gives the chance for some youngsters to hopefully make an impression.

The squad is as follows:

Goalkeepers
Diego Cavalieri
Pepe Reina
David Martin

Defenders
Glen Johnson
Daniel Agger
Fabio Aurelio
Sotirios Kyrgiakos
Emiliano Insua
Jamie Carragher
Stephen Darby
Martin Kelly
Martin Skrtel
Andrea Dossena

Midfielders
Alberto Aquilani
Steven Gerrard
Yossi Benayoun
Javier Mascherano
Lucas Leiva
Jay Spearing
Damien Plessis
Albert Riera

Forwards
Fernando Torres
Andriy Voronin
Dirk Kuyt
Ryan Babel
David N’Gog
David Amoo
Nathan Eccleston

No surprises then as Liverpool go in search of a 3rd Champions League Final appearance in 5 years. There’s a chance of a competition debut for a number of youngsters, although the probability is that they’ll only be called upon if completely necessary. C’mon the Reds!

Saturday, 5 September 2009

"We're playing 4-4-f*****g-2"



Spot the odd one out? Capello.

He's not a knob.

'Mike Bassett, England Manager' is the most legendary Football film ever made. Forget 'Damned United', 'Football Factory', 'Mean Machine'. They've got nothing on Bassy. He danced half-naked on a bar infront of Pele, opened his curtains to the media completely starkers, and he liked the Christmas Pudding formation. Yes, I know it's all fiction, but sshh. His hilarious antics but awful tactics and managerial ability make him the best and worst manager England never had. He'll always be remembered as the guy who loved Kipling (not the cake maker), and the infamous speech that led to him announcing England would be playing "four-four-f*****g-two". Brilliant.

Steve McClaren is just an idiot. He stood on the Wembley touchline with an FA sponsored umbrella, and a Wembley cup of Coffee (Probably decaf), and attempted to interact with a Dutch journalist (in English) by inheriting a Dutch accent. One of the most hilariously cringeworthy Youtube videos I've ever seen, and one that summed up his time as England manager. England failed to qualify for Euro 2008 with McClaren in charge, something that the majority of England fans have chosen to forget. Unfortunately for McClaren he'll always be remembered for exactly that, along with the umbrella incident. Everyone is glad he's buggered off to Holland. They can have him.

Then there's Fab Cap. I don't care that he wears speedos and poses like a page 3 girl. He's a pure legend, and I respect him no matter what he does. He can wear pink bunny ears, and jump up and down on the touchline shouting "I love cake!" for all I care. I love the guy. England are unbeaten in all competitive fixtures under the Italian, and haven't even dropped a point. Now just 3 points away from qualifying for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, Capello is right up there with the very best of England gaffers. What a hero.

Can't wait to see who England's next manager will be. Christopher Biggins? Barbara Windsor? The Hulk?

England see off Slovenia test

A penalty from Frank Lampard and a Jermain Defoe strike has helped England overcome a sticky test at Wembley against Slovenia.

With an important World Cup qualifier coming up on Wednesday against Croatia, Fabio Capello would use this game as preparation for his players ahead of the match that could see England qualify for next year's World Cup in South Africa. England dominated the first half with John Terry and Wayne Rooney both hitting the woodwork from set pieces. Indeed it was Rooney who made the biggest contribution to England's first goal, albeit with a little help from the referee. Rooney was 'bundled' over by Slovenia's ex-West Brom centre-half Bostjan Cesar, although replays showed Rooney went down far too easily. In fact it was Cesar who came out worse from the challenge, having to be dragged off the field and replaced by a substitute. Frank Lampard tucked away the spot kick with ease and confidence on the half-hour mark.

Slovenia had limited chances in the first half, although Milivoje Novakovic should have done better from 6 yards after 20 minutes.

Capello made 4 changes at half time, with James Milner, Aaron Lennon, Jermain Defoe, and Michael Carrick all coming on at the expense of Gerrard, Wright-Phillips, Heskey, and Lampard respectively. Defoe, who's been in fantastic scoring form for club and country recently, doubled the home side's lead just after the hour mark with an expertly placed drive from the edge of the box. Despite England continuing to be the better side, substitute Zlatan Ljubijankic pulled a goal back for the visitors after 85 minutes, but it proved to be no more than a consolation for the side that travel to Poland in the week.

A decent workout for Capello's men, who face a much sterner test on Wednesday. Croatia will be without playmaker Luka Modric for the trip to Wembley, surely a disadvantage for them.

Pogba signing now under question

Following Chelsea's illegal approach for Lens starlet Gael Kakuta, an approach that has recently been severely punished, Lens' French counterparts Le Havre have decided to launch a complaint to FIFA about Manchester United's approach for midfielder Paul Pogba.

You may remember my article on Pogba some weeks ago now. If you don't, look at it. Thanks.

The French side, notorious for producing exciting talent and then having them pinched by Premier League clubs - note Anthony Le Tallec and Florent Sinama-Pongolle - were upset with United's inquest into signing Pogba, deeming their act as 'foolish'. Now, with the knowledge and confidence that FIFA are willing to act on such misdemeanous, Le Havre will be taking action.

United have denied they are in the wrong, claiming everything they have done has been within the UEFA guidelines. However, Le Havre managing director Alain Belsoeur is determined for the English champions to be treated in the same way as Chelsea.

"We are still pursuing our case. It's a very serious case. We are confident that we'll win because it is in the best interests not just of our club but of sport." Belsoeur went on to say, "We spend €5m (about £4.3m) on our academy every year out of a turnover of €12m. It is a huge investment. We do that to give a chance to our players to develop for our first team, not to be an academy for others."

From a neutral perspective it would seem strange should FIFA find United guilty and not put the same ban on them as they have done with Chelsea. Punishments are punishments and at the end of the day, and whether it's Manchester United or Mansfield Town, everyone has to be treated the same. English clubs have a history with snapping up young Frenchmen. I've already mentioned Le Tallec and Sinama-Pongolle who both made the move to Anfield, and Charles N'Zogbia was the subject of some controversy as well, when he made the switch from Le Havre to Newcastle in 2004. The signs from FIFA and the governing bodies are positive however. Punishments and bans such as the Chelsea ban will show clubs that they have some sort of protection when it comes to bigger clubs poaching their young talent. However, in this day and age, the likes of United, Real Madrid, Manchester City are going to come looking for young, fresh talent, and whether they like it or not, the Le Havre's of this world are going to have to deal with it.