World Soccer Togel Hongkong News 19 February 2010
World Soccer News for week of 2/19 Ozren Podnar reports
Plague of injuries torments Barcelona
An unprecedented wave of injuries and suspensions led to
Barcelona's first defeat in the Spanish League and the first away defeat in all
competitions this season. Four defensive players were injured and two suspended
within a couple of days of the big match between Atletico Madrid and Barcelona
at Vicente Calderon forcing Josep Guardiola to play winger Jeffren Suarez as
the right full back.
Without Alves, Abidal, Toure and Chigrinski due to muscular
injuries plus the red-carded Pique and Marquez, Barcelona lost 2-1, allowing
Real Togel Hongkong Madrid
to close the gap at the top to two points with 16 matches to go.
Not only did Barcelona lose the points but also two more players,
as Keita and Xavi succumbed to – you've guessed – muscular injuries! The events
led to an emergency meeting of Barcelona's medical staff in hope of
ascertaining the causes of the players' muscles' fragility and preventing
future casualties.
Buffon under fire for
blaspheming
Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon has upset the religious part of
the Italian public for his alleged swearing during the Juventus vs Genoa game.
The sports programs have employed lip readers in order to clarify if Buffon
took God's name in vain.
The public interest is due to the fact that in a couple of weeks
swearing in soccer will become an offence punishable by a red card if the
referee hears it, or with a ban if the foul language is captured on film.
The rule, approved by the FA, has not yet entered into force, but
Buffon's apparent blaspheming against God has turned into an experiment for the
media. The question on everybody's mind is how the soccer authorities will
prove what exactly a player shouted just based on his lip movement or facial
expression.
Buffon admitted that punishing somebody who offends God or the
faithful may be the right thing to do, but failed to clarify what he himself
said on the occasion and noted that the regulation would be hard to apply.
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"I wonder who will be able to prove whether a player said
Dio (Italian for God), Zio (uncle) or Dino," Buffon was quoted as saying.
Ovrebo and Hansson in action again
UEFA's human resources department is due for some heavy
maintenance after the organization's controversial decision to name Tom Henning
Ovrebo and Martin Hansson for last week's Champions League matches.
Ovrebo made a name for himself last May when he singlehandedly stopped Chelsea
from reaching their first Champions League finals by denying them at least
three and possibly four good penalty claims against Barcelona. The Norwegian
was also wildly wrong to send of Barcelona's Eric Abidal late in the second
half. Still, good of UEFA to select him again to referee Bayern vs Fiorentina
(2-1), where he showed that his eye for offside was just as acute as for
penalties.
With a minute to go, Bayern's Ivica Olic headed the ball forward
towards Miroslav Klose deep in an offside position for the German international
to score the home side's winning goal. Since Klose was about two meters behind
Fiorentina's defense, it is not clear what Ovrebo and his linesman were thinking
when validating the goal.
Deep down south in Oporto the home crowd admired the performance
by Sweden's Martin Hansson, the very same guy who denied Brazil a good goal in
last year's Confederation Cup finals and overlooked Thierry Henry's handball in
the World Cup qualifier between France and Ireland (1-1).
This time Hansson allowed Porto players to execute an indirect
kick before Arsenal's defense had any chance to set up a wall or perhaps even
to realize just what the ref had ruled. The play produced the second goal for
Porto, who will travel to Emirates Stadium with an undeserved 2-1 advantage.
Hansson also failed to award a clear penalty to Arsenal for a blatant foul on
Rosicky.
And such a referee, inevitably, will be among the officials
featured at the World Cup. Possibly because FIFA's human resources department
belong to the same school of thought as their counterparts at UEFA.
Playoff to determine a CL berth in England?
According to UK press reports, the Premier League is studying a
change in the qualifying system for the Champions League. The change would
affect the fourth berth for the prime soccer competition, which is currently
automatically awarded to the fourth placed team.
Under the proposed new regulations, the teams occupying the
fourth through seventh position would play-off for the remaining spot in the
Champions League. The playoffs would very much look like the post-regular
season games in England's lower divisions between the teams placed from third
to sixth in order to determine who goes up.
According to the proponents, the modification of the qualifying
system would give added hope of reaching the European elite competition to a
few more teams beyond the classic "big four" of Manchester United,
Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool.
The Premier League apparently plans to discuss the measure at an
assembly scheduled for April, while a spokesman for the organization declined
to confirm or deny the reports regarding the proposed changes.
Advocaat not replacing
Hiddink in Russia
Russia's debacle in the World Cup qualifiers against Slovenia put
an end to Guus Hiddink's tenure as the national team coach, opening the
floodgates to rumours as to who will succeed the Dutchman in one of the world's
better paid jobs.
The Russian press claimed it would be another Dutchman with
knowledge of the local game, Dick Advocaat. Still, the former Zenit Petrograd
coach rejected the speculations saying no-one from the Russian FA has contacted
him regarding the job. Even if they had, it would be highly unlikely that
Belgium would release Advocaat from his current contract tying him to the Red
Devils' squad.
On the other hand, the Turkish FA announced they had reached an
agreement with Hiddink and that the ex-Chelsea manager will take over Turkey
starting next July.
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