Monday, April 27, 2009
PMS + Fantasy Battle Round 5
Since its last weekend, there are EPL matches, so gt EPL matches, mean gt fantasy battle. Got nothing to said, except kena tapao again lo.
Friday, April 24, 2009
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Fantasy Battle Round 4
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Why good management is important for a football club~
Once a provincial capital with very few tourist attractions (the authentic paella, no less, and the San Juan feast with plenty of firecrackers and noise), Valencia made the most of the economic bonanza Spain went through between the late nineties and 2008. Its infrastructure was vastly improved (roads, trains, airport), and the city changed its face with the addition of several marquee locations (the amazing Ciudad de las Artes y las Ciencias or the L'assut de l'or Bridge are must-sees), most of them designed by local architecture genius Santiago Calatrava.
Valencia CF was already a team of large tradition in Spain, but their titles were precious few, most of them won back in the forties and fifties, with President Luis Casanova at the helm. With both the country and the city blooming, the football team refused to be left behind. In 1999, Claudio Ranieri led the club to win the Copa del Rey, their first silverware in twenty years, which started an amazing spell in which Valencia also won two Ligas (2002 and 2004), one UEFA Cup (2004), and got to the Champions League final in 2000 and 2001.
If you are not familiar with the demanding Valencia fans, you would think no supporter would ever complain during such a successful phase. You'd be wrong, as things were never easy for the gaffers in Valencia, even when the victories were piling up. Their supporters always want to win in style.
When you take into consideration that Claudio Ranieri, Hector Cúper and Rafael Benítez were prominently involved with the club in that spell, you can imagine that the fans' thirst for top class entertainment wasn't really satiated. Valencia became a top tier club through a very physical approach, based on an inexpugnable defence and a tireless midfield that scored more often than the strikers, with the exception of Claudio López.
Like their approach or not, the fact is that, by 2004, Valencia CF were serious contenders in every competition, and appeared to have conquered the unofficial title of "Third Spanish Club" in its own right. And then a certain Juan Bautista Soler became President.
Mr. Soler's negative impact on the club is beyond belief. He broke each and every sensible rule to running a club, starting with the lack of stability for the executives (an endless parade of sporting and medical directors, director generals, and coaches have worked for the club in the last five years), followed by amounting a huge level of debt (over €400m, not surprising when you continuously hire and fire all those executives and players) and obviously finishing with the chaotic management of the footballing aspects, the Ronald Koeman fiasco being the cherry on the cake.
In pure Spanish fashion, the solution for all these troubles was real estate. Inspired by other clubs (Florentino Pérez had pulled a similar stunt for Real Madrid a few years back), Soler designed an operation to sell the current Mestalla stadium for a stunning profit, and then move the team to a new, more modern, cheaper home already under construction.
Soler, just like many others in Valencia and the rest of the country, did not see the real estate crisis coming. And once it came, he did not think it would last long.
Finally, he understood he had no way of selling the current stadium nor finishing the new one, and decided to quit. The following three presidents (Morera, Villalonga and Soriano) promised several measures but delivered none, and eventually the club stopped paying the players and most of its creditors.
At that point, during the last week of March, it seemed impossible for Valencia to get out of the hole without selling their best players, David Villa (with several proposals in England and Spain) and David Silva (linked to Italy's Juventus and also Liverpool). The team had gone six matches without a win, and the near future looked bleak, especially if they had to sell their best two players.
Then Bancaja, the regional savings bank and Valencia's largest creditor, decided to take over and appointed a new CEO, Javier Gómez, who gained management responsibilities over those of the current President, Soriano. Fortunately for Valencia, Gómez has done more in two weeks than the combined last four presidents have in two years. Last week the club obtained a €50m loan from a local company that will cover the players' salaries and the debt with the construction company that's building the new stadium. The club also announced a €92m capital increase to be done in June. "
Hope Valencia do not do a 'Leeds United' version. If not i got no team to support over in Spain!!!
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Fantasy Battle Round 3
About the fantasy, the third round battle between me and Ooh Yeah ended in stalemate. Both earned 63 points. Miss the opportunity to close the gap on Ooh Yeah, sigh~~~
Monday, April 13, 2009
Fantasy Battle Round 2
On the other hand, Ooh Yeah was boosted by good performance from the other big clubs, namely Arsenal, Chelsea and Liverpool. Andrei Arshavin, Frank Lampard, Cesc Fabregas and surprisingly Abdulaye Faye from Stoke City contributed a whopping 44 points, more than the entire Ruud United squad.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Sunderland 1-2 Manchester United
Federico 'Kiko' Macheda
The routine is becoming familiar.
Manchester United aren't winning. Liverpool are, as it stands, top of the league. A goal is required. Sir Alex Ferguson has turned to an utterly untried striker. And he has delivered: once with his last touch, once with his first. Both have transformed one point into three. Both have thwarted Rafael Benitez and Liverpool as much as the side who have had to retrieve the ball from their net.
Federico "Kiko" Macheda has done it again. Once was remarkable enough. Twice verges on the incredible.
Aston Villa could count themselves unfortunate to be defeated by a glorious goal. Sunderland were still unluckier, beaten by a strike that contained an element of fortune. Some 46 seconds after his introduction, Macheda positioned himself in the penalty area when Michael Carrick took aim. The ball ended up, via Macheda, in the Sunderland net. The deflection may have contained more luck than judgment, but the result was the same.
"What he knows about it is immaterial," said an admirably phlegmatic Ricky Sbragia. "Everything he touches seems to turn to gold." He was almost right: everything he touches seems to turn to goals.
"He has got something special about him, the boy," said Ferguson. "He is quick thinking. Goalscorers have that. He's got the instinct. He isn't fazed by anything, I have had a chat with his family this week and he will be ok. He will keep his feet on the ground."
That might not be easy. Players can go through an entire career without enjoying a week like Macheda's. Whereas Carlos Tevez had chugged around energetically and Dimitar Berbatov strolled around languidly without either suggesting they would score, Macheda managed it in a matter of seconds. It is now four points that can be attributed solely to the substitute. It is the difference between first and third place. It is scarcely credible.
When Cristiano Ronaldo had been left among the replacements, it appeared he was Ferguson's insurance policy. Events proved Macheda was. If his manager is grateful to the 17-year-old Italian, his team-mates ought to be. For the second successive match, their failings have been obscured by his finishing.
Defensively, once again, United were fragile. There were reasons to rest, or omit, the out-of-form Patrice Evra. Nevertheless, Wednesday's Champions League tie at Porto appeared to have been prioritised with the left-back, alongside Ronaldo, Ryan Giggs and Edwin van der Sar on the bench. It meant Ben Foster was given his first Premier League start of the season and the goalkeeper appeared fallible when failing to claim Teemu Tainio's cross, allowing Kenwyne Jones to equalise at the second attempt.
Nor was it a lone threat. Sunderland may have sensed that their best hope of a result lay, despite a meagre tally of two goals in their six previous games, in attack, and they committed men forward. "All we did today was to try and get the ball into the box as often as possible," said Sbragia. It was a policy that could have brought a reward. Indeed Nemanja Vidic, with a misplaced back-pass, and Jonny Evans, when he touched on Carlos Edwards' cross, both came close to scoring an own goal.
United had begun with purpose. Wayne Rooney had been exiled to the left flank by Ferguson as Dimitar Berbatov returned to partner Carlos Tevez, but he did not interpret it as a slight. Instead, Rooney delivered a terrific display, attempting a shot within 20 seconds and creating a goal within 20 minutes when Paul Scholes headed in his cross.
For much of the season, 1-0 appeared enough for United. Now their games are altogether more unpredictable. But, for the second time in a week, the twist in the tale involved a previously unknown Italian boy. Logically it can't continue, but then logic appeared to have left the title race long before Manchester United's teenage substitute joined it.
MAN OF THE MATCH: Wayne Rooney - Few United players have retained their form in recent weeks. Rooney, however, seems to have improved his. Until Macheda's arrival, he was instrumental in everything United did, tracking back with trademark vigour and serving as creator and, almost, scorer from the left flank.
SUNDERLAND VERDICT: An injury-hit side produced a display of real spirit. The shame for them is that past failings have put them in danger of relegation. "I just question why we didn't get the same performance in the West Ham game," Sbragia said. "We've set ourselves a good standard." There were fine performances across his side, from the overlapping Phil Bardsley to Jones, who ended something of a goal drought, but results are required. Their next match - Hull at home - is huge.
MANCHESTER UNITED VERDICT: They can derive comfort from another victory and the knowledge that three key men - van der Sar, Evra and Giggs - should be rested for the reunion with Porto. Nevertheless, it is hard to name their strongest side at the moment. With each game he misses, Rio Ferdinand's reputation grows higher.
NAUGHTY NEVILLE: With Ronaldo on the bench, his mantle as talisman appeared to have been passed to Rooney. Another of his habits, however, appeared to have been borrowed by his captain. Gary Neville has been called many things in his time, but rarely a diver. This was a rare occasion when he was cautioned for simulation.
Source: Richard Jolly (My favorite writer in ESPNSoccernet)
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Hong Kong Trip Day 4
Visited Ngong Ping in Lantau Island, which is famous for the largest Buddha Statue in Hong Kong. Boarded MTR from Mongkok to Tung Chong and cable car from Tung Chung to Ngong Ping. Snaps some interesting pictures while on the way to Ngong Ping.
I miss HK MTR...
小妹妹也不放过。。。。
Hong Kong Airport...
Buddha statue from far...
Our demostrator-> Ada 姐. She have beautiful fingers....
Tea got served. Really different taste from the one in Malaysia...
Had beef noodles as lunch.. Taste good...recommended!
Buddha here I come!!!!
Up close with Buddha...
In Wisdom Path....Concentrating to be more wisdom! See the white light behind my head!!
I am enlighten!!
And he is not....lol : )
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Fantasy Battle Round 1
The second round is due to start next week. Lets hope i can get my revenge!