Feature: European Giants Circling India

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 07-07-2009

While the All India Football Federation (AIFF) is slowly improving the efficiency of its own operations, another manner in which youth development is being improved in India is foreign investment from big European clubs. This latest development is unsurprising given the manner in which Indian Premier League cricket raised £1.1bn out of the blue.

While clubs see India as another potential talent pool to tap into, there may be bigger potential to market their own club products and merchandise, given the increase in interest in the European leagues instead of the domestic game. Supporters are likely to prefer to see players such as Wayne Rooney, Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi on the small screen instead of local stars Baichung Bhutia and Sunil Chettri (who had an unsuccessful trial at Coventry City), a trend which could be detrimental to the long-term success of the domestic game.

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LiberoFootball Is Now On Twitter!

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 06-07-2009

You can now follow LiberoFootball on Twitter!

Feature: I-League Helping India Fulfil Footballing Potential

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 06-07-2009

As explored in the first article in this series exploring Indian football, there are a number of problems surrounding Indian football. The 2007 formation of the I-league (a revamp of the declining National Football League) is just the first step in the solution of improving India’s football scene, by making professional football in India a viable career. The league has been expanded by four sides for the 2009-10 season, with sides formed in Pune and Shillong and Kerala, revealing the growing interest in the game throughout the nation.

The formation of sides such as these are slowly eradicating the term ‘institutional teams’ - the notion that most sides in the country are off-shoots of companies for the social benefit of workers, with Air India FC the most obvious example. Several sides have formed in such a fashion, limiting the potential of the fan base size and economic growth of the club. This is because the majority of the clubs’ fan-base consists of the main company’s workforce. Regional pride is very important in India and clubs representing whole states instead of single companies will do well to spread the interest in the game.

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Feature: India’s Footballing Impasse

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 04-07-2009

Imagine you are a youngster growing up in India. The odds are that you are likely to idolize cricketing legend Sachin Tendulkar instead of relatively unknown Baichung Bhutia. There could even be a possibility you may have never heard of the latter and why not?

The former is one of the greatest batsmen in cricket, while the latter has reached the modest heights of playing for then Division Two side Bury in 1999. Bhutia’s seemingly modest achievement was said to be the breakthrough needed for players from the subcontinent to sign for European clubs (although Mohammed Abdul Salim, nicknamed the ‘Indian Juggler’, was the first Indian to sign for a European club when he joined Celtic in 1937 – he returned homesick after a few games despite his obvious talent (boots or barefoot)).

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Is The Hype Around Barca-bound Keirrison Justified?

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 29-06-2009

Barcelona are being tipped to complete a €13m deal for the Brazilian striking sensation Keirrison in the next few days. Yet the striker, on loan at Palmeiras from the obscure fourth division club Desportivo Brasil, will not come without controversy due to the nature of his imminent departure from Palmeiras to Josep Guardiola’s side.

Questions surrounding his third-party ownership by the sports marketing company Traffic and his mentality in a high pressure environment have led to concerns over his suitability to the impeccable standards set by the Catalan club.

After an excellent debut season as an 18-year-old, Keirrison, or K9 as he is nicknamed, scored 12 goals in Coritiba’s promotion drive in the second division of the Campeonato Brasileiro in 2007. Critics claimed that once regularly competing in the Brazilian Serie A, the youngster’s flaws would be more visible.

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Florentino Pérez’s Real Revolution 2.0

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 19-06-2009

For a billionaire director of ACS, the a construction, engineering and energy conglomerate that employs 150,000, operates in 50 countries and had revenues last year of just over €4 billion, a third of that profit, Florentino Perez does not live like one. His favourite dish consists of the exotic British fried egg and chips.

The new Real Madrid president lives in the results business, first signing AC Milan midfielder Kaka for €68m and now he looks set to break the world record of €75.1m he paid for French playmaker Zinedine Zidane by signing Cristiano Ronaldo for €94m.

Such high-profile signings come in the first few weeks of his presidency, players, who former president Ramon Calderon (now being investigated for voting irregularities) pined after for two years, failing to sign either and alienating the selling club to the extent that Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson said:

Do you think I would enter into a contract with that mob? No chance. I would not sell them a virus. That is a ‘no’ by the way. There is no agreement whatsoever between the clubs.

Perez is undertaking a high-risk strategy, which he hopes will multiply the club’s profit through merchandising, shirt sales, sponsorship revenue and increased ticket sales due to the high-profile image of Kaka and Ronaldo.

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Top 50 CL Goals Of All Time

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 03-04-2009

This is an excellent video compiling the top 50 European Champions League goals, chosen out thousands. While ITV’s punditry may leave much to be desired, the quality of the goals overshadows it by quite a distance. Enjoy! 

(courtesy of Megavideo)

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Hatchet Man Sticks Axe Into Himself Once Again…

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 10-02-2009

The anonymous HATCHET MAN, who writes for the Daily Mail, attempts ‘hard-hitting’ journalism, which is a positive spin on articles that are generally full of sensationalist drivel. No wonder the columnists who write it retain anonymity.

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Legend Raul Equals Di Stefano’s 307 Tally

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 01-02-2009

Raul had already cemented himself in Real Madrid history for the plethora of trophies that have arrived at the Bernabeu. The trio of Champions League titles, together with six LA Liga titles and four Spanish Super Cups has made the Spaniard one of the most successful players for Los Blancos. Yet in Soria this weekend, Raul Gonzalez equalled the goal-scoring record of Real’s greatest ever player and a genius who is considered by some to be the greatest of all time. Raul did so by scoring the winner in the away game to Numancia. Robben got the second, assisted by a Raul pass.

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The Greatest Defeats Of All Time (5-1)

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by LF on 15-10-2008

And here it is… the top five defeats in the history of football. And what better place for all of these to occur on the biggest stage there is: the World Cup. Controversy, huge upsets and national pride being battered…

No.5 Chile 2-0 Italy 1962 World Cup Group 2

Good evening. The game you are about to see is the most stupid, appalling, disgusting and disgraceful exhibition of football, possibly in the history of the game’. These were the words used to introduce the Battle of Santiago by BBC presenter David Coleman. Tensions ran high due to two Italian journalists (Antonio Ghiredelli and Corrado Pizzinelli – and both had to leave the country before the game) describing earthquake-stricken Chile in a deriding manner. The first foul came eight seconds after kick-off. The first sending off came eight minutes later. Next came a kick in the neck, soon followed by a broken nose. More scuffles, spitting occurred and the police had to repeatedly intervene during the came, such as escorting Giorgio Ferrini off the pitch after eight minutes. Late goals by Ramirez and Toro sealed Chile’s revenge against the Italians.

No.4 Argentina 2-1 England 1986 World Cup Quarter Final

Mention this defeat to any Englishman and it is a guarantee that Diego Maradona will be the first words out of his mouth. Forget the controversy from the ‘Hand of God’ goal or the individual excellence of the dribble (both were recently imitated by Leo Messi, one of the endless names to be dubbed as heir apparent to the legend himself). The background behind the defeat surrounding the dispute over the Falklands islands in 1982 between the two countries in question. The most recent invasion of British territory caused a strong rivalry that affected the viewpoints of the public in both countries. Thus Maradona claimed ‘Whoever robs a thief gets a 100-year pardon’, a popular Spanish saying, which is seen as a justification by Maradona as a retaliation against the British for the war four years previous.

No.3 Hungary 2- 3 West Germany 1954 World Cup Final

Das Wunder von Bern’. The Miracle of Bern saw the Germans pitted against the ‘Mighty Magyars’. Unbeaten in their previous 32 games, lead by a strike-force of Puskas and Hidegkuti, they had previously defeated England at Wembley 6-3, becoming the first non-UK team to do so at the famous stadium. They won 7-1 in the return game in Budapest. Legendary coach Josef Herberger was famous for conjuring up phrases such as ‘The ball is round and the game lasts for 90 minutes’, played his reserves that lost 8-3 in the first round. The Hungarians raced into a two goal lead in the first 8 minutes, through the unfit Puskas and Czibor. The Germans, playing with Adidas’s revolutionary removable studs, had an advantage in the ‘Fritz Walter’ (rainy) weather, named after their star player, whose best performances came ironically against the literary idea of pathetic fallacy. A film was released almost 50 years later in 2003, to commemorate the victory and it signifying the change in German society purging it from the sin of the Nazi regime. Helmut Rahn, featured in the film named: ‘Das Wunder von Bern’, scored twice in the final, and the winner caused Herbert Zimmermann to scream ‘Tor! Tor! Tor! Tor!’ followed by an eight second gap, before the celebrations continued.

No.2 Brazil 1-2 Uruguay 1950 World Cup Final

Another day… it was earlier in history but equally important in shaping another country’s mentality through football. Having taken victory for granted, after seeing the team, led by Ademir, an outstanding forward, defeat rivals, who adopted the WM formation, they were surprised when Uruguay appeared in the final with an attacking mentality and a formation that was equal to Brazil’s attacking play. The Europeans, were awestruck by Brazil, and before letting in the first goal so were Uruguay, but words from their captain inspired the team to victory. The goal by Ghiggia in the 79th minute, after shooting at the near post, rather than crossing as he did for his team’s first goal, caught out Barbosa, who dived too late. ‘The Fateful Goal’ silenced the 199,954 Brazilians in the Maracanã. It ruined celebrations, prepared, such as the golden medals with the players’ names on it, the speech in Portuguese Jules Rimet had prepared and amongst other things, it prompted a thorough post mortem into the defeat.

No.1 Germany 2-1 Holland 1974 World Cup Final

Possibly the greatest team to never win the World Cup, the Dutch raced into an early lead with a Neeskens penalty, but rather than adding to their lead, played a taunting style of possession football, perhaps in retaliation to Nazi oppressors in the second world war to which their opponents on the day had no relation to. This angered the Germans, who came back as the first half progressed, perhaps because Cruyff, in an attempt to find space and be released from Berti Vogts shackles, played too deep and lost his influence upon proceedings. The game was also a tale of two penalties, both given by the English referee Taylor, the first, a correct one, the second was given after simulation by Holzenbein, perhaps influenced by Beckenbauer’s words to Taylor (perhaps in another reference to the war): ‘You are an Englishman’. The Dutch played their usual unique style in the second half but could break down a rearguard action lead by ‘Der Kaiser’ Beckenbauer, leaving July 7th 1974 as the day when every Dutchman remembers where there were, mourning the ‘Lost Final’.