Posts Tagged ‘FC Barcelona’

Barca Getting Rid of Henry?!?!?!

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Thierry Henry
The flame thrower, make your peeps afraid to know ya.

How many times I told ya, “play your position” small soldier

Gangstarr – “Full Clip”

It’s now one of those rare moments where I post a transfer rumor and I refuse to believe that it’s true. But if it’s true, then it’s tied to a recent football learning experience of mine so I need to get my feelings out on the subject ASAP!!!!!

It’s rumored that FC Barcelona will unload striker Thierry Henry. Supposedly, they’ll try to dump the ex-Arsenal man while simultaneously attempting to snag current Arsenal man, Cesc Fabregas.

I spoke to my Barca-loving wife prior to posting this and if it’s true (and again, “if”), then she’s fine with it. Henry’s rumored to have an arrogant streak and she’s not a big fan of arrogant players (hates Cristiano Ronaldo). She also feels that he only scores when he wants to and that there are other players that can easily fill his Barcelona role, so he’s not as special as many think he is, including himself.

Maybe. But in an old Manchester United post, I stated that United in its current form is unbeatable, partially due to its scoring armada of a lot of forwards and attacking midfielders. Barcelona is Man U’s Spanish counterpart in this sense and Henry, I feel, has gone above and beyond in contributing to this makeup.

And there’s more. As I spend this season painfully observing the two teams I support, Real Madrid and Chelsea, I’ve learned that a whole bunch of new players doesn’t mean that that the team will immediately start to win. I’ve watched Madrid bring in Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, Rafael van der Vaart and other “good” players in the hopes that they’ll win games for the team. And although Madrid’s on is winning right now, the value of the contributions from the new guys is questionable. Huntelaar has rarely played since he came over and van der Vaart’s been benched a lot lately. With this, it’s tough for me to make the case that these new additions deserve a whole lot of credit for Real Madrid’s current winning streak.

And Chelsea? Well, Nicolas Anelka’s been making me eat my words all season. I’ve implied that the striker has been of no value to Chelsea since he came aboard last year. Fast forward to now and he’s the current leading scorer in the English Premier League!!!!! I’ll be touching on my Anelka mistake in (maybe) my next post.

I’ve learned that it takes time for a player to get accustomed to a new team in footie, so Thierry Henry is no different from Huntelaar, van der Vaart and Anelka in this respect. He had a crappy season last year, putting the ball in the back of the net on the rarest of occasions. Now look at him…kicking a** alongside Samuel Eto’o and Lionel Messi. And speaking of Messi, he may be putting in some awesome strike work for Barcelona now, but remember that he barely caused a ripple for the team for the two years prior. He was given time to find himself.

Thierry Henry is consistently delivering results for FC Barcelona in the results-oriented business that is football. FCB needs to let this small soldier stay where he is and let him play his position.

Okay…he’s 6′2″ so he’s not that small. But the opening Gangstarr quote fits in nicely anyway.

Courtesy Yahoo/UK.

Kobe Bryant Is A Barcelona Man

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

Kobe BryantThe L.A. Laker guard joins Kevin Garnett as another pro basketballer that supports footie. Kobe throws love to FC Barcelona as does his teammate Pau Gasol, who keeps Bryant in the loop of all the La La Liga happenings. Their other teammate, Sasha Vujacic, supports Madrid…I’ll assume he means Real and not Atletico.

I remember reading somewhere that US basketball players hung out with some global football stars in the Olympic village during the 2008 Olympics, and that some great friendships came out of this. This is probably why there’s been an upswing in American sports figures throwing love to football. But to give Bryant his due (and he brings this up in the story), he grew up in Italy and was surrounded by footie during his impressionable years. So I believe that his football love is genuine.

My Barca-loving wife despises Kobe so this story didn’t exactly make her happy. It’s courtesy of the L.A. Times but it’s part of an upcoming article in ESPN Magazine.

Book Review: How Soccer Explains The World

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

How Soccer Explains The World
I’m trying to drum up a new section called “Soccer Books,” which is a collection of my personal reviews of footie-related literature. Franklin Foer’s How Soccer Explains The World has received wide praise from football fans of all stripes so this is the best book with which to start things out.

A bit about Foer. As of this writing, he’s the editor at The New Republic whose writing has appeared in Slate and New York magazine. In the interest of full disclosure, it seems that Foer went to my high school (go Hoppers), so I’m slightly biased going into this post. He played soccer as a kid, although not well by his own admittance. Along with a plethora of document research, Foer traveled to far reaching corners of the world to interview a wide array of subjects in order to tell this story: from soccer players to old-time footie hooligans to former henchmen of Slobodan Milosevic.

The subhead of the book is “an {unlikely} theory of globalization” and I agree that it is. Merriam Webster defines “globalize” as “to make worldwide in scope or application” and if you want to make a comparison centered around a worldwide application, soccer’s a really good a centerpiece. Foer describes the backdrop role that footie plays in ten social, political and economical instances. the Kosovo Conflict, the role of the church in Old Firm Derby, Islam’s archaic rules preventing women from participating in soccer, the strong Jewish football community in pre-Nazi Austria…to name just a few instances.

How Soccer also provides an excellent case study in the global gentrification of the game mostly due to the fourth and sixth chapters-respectively “How Soccer Explains the Sentimental Hooligan” and “How Soccer Explains the Black Carpathians.” The former takes an in-depth look of Chelsea’s role in moving football’s traditional hooligan and middle class fan base out of view in order to gain an upper class one. The latter observes football in the post-communist Ukraine, where the new club owners went on a buying spree for top Nigerian footie talent. The new talent didn’t fit into the country’s fabric too easily as the simultaneously enjoy praise and racism from the fans.

But Foer’s states in the prologue that the How Soccer story “begins bleakly and grows progressively optimistic” and the optimism is best expressed in the book’s eighth chapter, “How Soccer Explains the Discreet Charm of Bourgeois Nationalism,” the chapter that put a smile on my face six pages into it. Here, Foer recalls Franco-era Spain and how the forward thinking region of Catalonia held it’s own against the many backwards thinking ones. How the Catalonian capital’s team, FC Barcelona, fits into all this is a fascinating story. And Foer, and admitted die-hard Barca supporter, waxes poetically about all that’s good about not only the team but of Barcelona itself. So poetic that I told my wife, a lover of all thing’s Spain like me and herself a die-hard Barca supporter, not to read the book because of this chapter. If she did, I warned, then she would insist that we move to Barcelona ASAP.

Football’s long-standing xenophobic fabric isn’t How Soccer’s central theme, which is correct since there’s so much more to the game then that. Sadly, racism is part of the game and Foer didn’t try to hide or dress up this fact, also correct. Along with the “Black Carpathians” chapter, the racist past of many big name clubs is reviewed, including my that of my beloved Real Madrid whom Francisco Franco staunchly supported. Chelsea’s long past of hooligan-led antisemitism isn’t glossed over. And in the books final chapter, “How Soccer Explains the American Culture Wars,” America itself is held accountable it’s own long-standing soccer prejudice.

This post may seemingly suggest that the book is more down than it is up, but that’s incorrect. While there are sections where the content is tough to take in, the sum is greater than the parts. How Soccer’s simply describes how football is an integral part of the global stage (except for the states) and it’s effect on past, present, and future communities. The second-to-last a chapter may discuss why women can’t play soccer in Islamic communities, but that chapter is called “How Soccer Explains Islam’s Hope.” And hope is the operative word here as it tells of a people’s rebellion to get women involved in the game.

As an addendum, the book is filled with some fascinating trivia. I didn’t know that Pele was broke, got rich, went broke again and then got rich again. I learned the “hows” and “whys” of Celtic’s and Ranger’s seemingly infinite hatred of one another. And if your curious as to how Real Madrid aquired David Beckham, Ronaldo and Zinedine Zidane seemingly all at once, How Soccer explains why.

I highly, highly, HIGHLY, suggest the book to everyone. Die-hard football fans, those curious about soccer itself or people that simply just like to read! How Soccer Explains The World is a fascinating sociological study of the beautiful game. And while the story is a tough read sometimes, the story doesn’t make the game any less beautiful.

Buy it at either Amazon or Barnes and Noble.

Really Funny Barcelona Post…And Know Your Ray Hudson!

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

From The Offside. There are a lot of inside football jokes here but it’s quite funny.

And the comment about “The Ray Hudson” is friggin’ hilarious!!! Ray’s a color commentator for GolTV and man, is he colorful…he’s actually one of the reasons why I passionately follow the game so much. That being said, I’m going to use this post to offer everyone some classic Ray moments via YouTube. Hopefully, I’ll convert some of you in to footie fans.

Following are two snippets from the final minutes of David Beckham’s last Real Madrid game and of course, Ray had some things to say. Watch ‘em in the order they appear for maximum effect.

Note: check out the Tom Cruise comment at :50 on this one.

Lionel Messi Is Worth USD $330 Million

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Lionel Messi
I’ve been planning to grab a book called The Soccer Business which dissects the invasion of big business into footbal in recent years. When I’m done reading it, I hope it helps me make sense of this post.

Barcelona uber-forward and all-around good guy Lionel Messi is hot sh*t right now, so hot that where he be auctioned off today, he would fetch approximately 254 million euros (around USD $330 million).

There’s a lot in this story that I don’t get. Why is it practically a law that he’ll cost this much? Why must Messi have to fork over some of his personal cash if the deal goes through?

I gotta get this book.

An AMAZING Weekend Of Soccer

Monday, November 10th, 2008

For the past couple of weekends, I haven’t been able to watch as much footie as I wanted to. A big project at work sapped all of my energy and our new condo required a ton of attention to details that were both physically and mentally draining. All of this forced me to catch up on my sleep during the weekends and miss two weeks worth of football. I also missed pretty much every Champions League match within that time period but since Roma and Juventes respectively beat my Chelsea Blues and Real Madrid Whites, I can’t say that I’m really disappointed about this.

So when this past weekend came around, my work project was pretty much in the can and the condo issues were as in control as we could get them. This meant a weekend free to watch as much football as I could fit in. And what a weekend of football it was.

The theme of the weekend for the two big Spain La Liga matches was “a hat trick-plus-one.” One of them, the Real Madrid/Màlaga match I’ve already gushed about in my previous post. This, for me, was the game of the weekend. I’ve watched my beloved Madrid take quite a few knocks since the season began and I pray that that Gonzalo Higuaín’s four goal performance will restore the team’s confidence. A few hundred miles away, their El Clàsico rivals, Barcelona, delivered a brutal performance against Valladolid. Not only did Barca’s Samuel Eto’o put for balls in the net, he put all of them in in the first half! Two more goals from both Eidur Gudjohnsen and Thierry Henry finalized a 6-0 shout for Barcelona.

If the theme in Spain was “a hat trick-plus-one,” then the theme in England was “a hat trick-minus-one.” Happily, my Chelsea Blues shut out the Blackburn Rovers 2-0 off of two Nicolas Anelka goals. I’ve talked mad trash about Anelka recently and he’s consistently making me eat my words, seeing how he’s the leading EPL scorer with 10 goals as of this post. Along with this and my erroneous pre-season hyping of Tottenham, I learned that while a little trash talk is a must for me as a footie blogger, I need to balance it out with a more structured understanding of the game’s fundamentals. I’m going to try and direct future posts to this specific point.

It needs to be said that all the matches mentioned up to now were matches where top notch teams pounded teams that kinda suck. Not so, with the Arsenal/Manchester United match that led to a 2-1 win for the Gunners thanks to two goals from Samir Nasri. Like Real Madrid, Arsenal needed this win to boost their confidence. They’ve done well enough this year to stay in the EPL’s top four but their overall performance has been lackluster…teams like this shouldn’t lose to the Fulhams and Hulls of the world.

A new learning experience for me was my first French Ligue 1 game: Paris Saint-Germain vs. Lillie OSC. I also finally saw ex Barcelona/ex Roma man Ludovic Giuly play a live match…something I’ve really wanted to do for a while now. PSG took the game 1-0 off of a Giuly goal and I’ll leave my comments at that. I did want to point out some differences that I saw between the style of Ligue 1 games and that of other European leagues, but it’s much too early for me to do this as I’ve only seen one game. I plan to watch more though and will then share my observations.

GREAT weekend and about time…I needed it!

Barcelona Close To Setting Up an Expansion Team in the MLS. Real Madrid Already Has One.

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008


Maybe this is old news but I’m just hearing about it. SI.com is reporting that FC Barcelona is in talks with MLS officials in setting up a sister team in the Miami area, provided that they get some sort of tax break. And apparently, Real Madrid has already set one up with Real Salt Lake.

If the deal goes through, then the new club will setup two soccer academies. I have a couple of nephews that are really REALLY good at footie and are based in Atlanta…which is a little less than 700 miles from Miami. So my nephews have a chance to hit that camp if all this works out…a little greedy on my part perhaps but I’m cool with that.

The Role Of The Fullback…I Learned Something Here

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

From yesterday. Nice assessment/explanation of how the fullback has developed from simply defending the goal to attacking it when needed. Seen from the perspective of Arsenal and courtesy of Gunners blog, the Arsenal Column.

For the record though, I think Man. U’s Rio Ferdinand is the best attacking defender while Barcelona’s Carles Puyol is a close second. Yes, this statement was made by one that supports both Chelsea and Real Madrid passionately, but you have to give credit where credit is due. All this being said though, I put RM’s Sergio Ramos in third place on this list and have high hopes for Jose Bosingwa.

Old news to go over (C. Ronaldo, Messi & the Olympics, Barca v. Red Bulls)

Friday, August 8th, 2008

Because I didn’t write anything yesterday, I’ll highlight three things that peaked my interest.

Cristiano Ronaldo remains at Old Trattford

First of all, CR7 publicly states that will not be leaving Manchester United for Real Madrid. Furthermore, he takes full responsibility for the whole mess, the mess being the full-on summer long rumor mill (partially fueled by his own comments) about what he was and wasn’t gonna do. As an RM supporter, I would’ve been happy at to see him at the Bernabeu but he really should stay where he his after Fergie stuck his neck out for him. And I give him respect for taking responsibility for all this crap.

That being said, if GolTV and Dish Network don’t work out their differences, the chance of me going over to DirectTV so I can watch Real Madrid games has just lessened.

Lionel Messi scores in Argentina’s 2-1 Olympic victory over the Ivory Coast

I am EXTREMELY happy for Messi!!!! As the recent CAS ruling may prevent him from playing for Argentina’s full Olympic run, I’m glad that he scored and won a game in the Olympics. After all the legal stuff that he’s gone through, this can never be taken away from him.

Overall this was a great game. At first, I had this as an evenly-matched game, but gave the edge to Argentina after I saw the final starting lineups. Because many of the players on both sides were 23 or younger, it was a fast-paced game: lotta running up and down the pitch. MAD props to the Ivory Coast’s back four and keeper as they prevented some strong shots on goal. But in the end, experience was the deciding factor, with Messi, Juan Roman Riquelme, Javier Mascherano, and Fernando Gago on the Argentinian side. As these five players are consistently playing competitive footie, their skills were sharper and made Argentina the dominate force to win the game.

FC Barcelona v. NY Red Bulls at Giants Stadium (yawn)

My wife and I were extremely psyched when we got row 12 seats slightly behind goal to this exhibition friendly. This would have been our second game this year, the first being the Argentina/USA friendly at the beginning of the summer.

It was this early summer game that fueled the excitement for this one. The Argentina game was like a family reunion: it was as if EVERY American soccer fan in a 20 mile radius showed up. Every one commented on everyone else’s soccer jerseys (I got comments on my Didier Droga Chelsea jersey). USA supporters were in full effect to show support for the US side and gave the Argentina supporters, some of the most exuberant in the world, a run for there money in the “let’s get loud” match up. And it was a good game, ending in a nil-nil draw.

For the Barca/Bulls game, we get to stadium and the parking lot isn’t even half full. We did get there a little early so we just figured that more were coming. We then tailgate for about an hour and more people do show up, but not as much as we expected.

When that hour ends, we head to our seats expecting deep crowds at the entry gate…no crowds there. And when we get to our seats, the stadium is only half full!!! The entire lower level is packed, there are maybe 100 people in the middle deck, and the upper deck is COMPLETELY empty. On top of that, the Barca fans easily out number the Red Bulls fans 5-to-1, and I think I’m being conservative in that estimate.

And how was the actually match? Well, when one of the top 10 clubs in the world goes up against a team that’s last place in arguably the worst league in the world, you don’t expect a clash of the titans. Barcelona wins 6-2, with the second and third goals scored in a 60-second time frame and the last two goals scored in a 90-second time frame. It wasn’t all bad though. We did get to see the might Barcelona play and that was worth the price of admission.

But my wife told me that for Barca exhibition at Giants Stadium in 2007, 70,000 people showed up. Of course, Ronaldinho was on the team that year. It really does seem that American fans will support an individual player before they support the entire club.

It’s because of this last point that I’m being very careful about who to support in Serie A, the MLS, and the SPL. I want to make sure that my loyalty is properly applied for the long term instead and not on the spur-of-the-moment. I should admit that I’m leaning towards AC Milan in Serie A because I really want to see Ronaldinho succeed after the crappy year he’s had.

FC Barcelona was in Central Park Today

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Had I known, I would’ve played hooky from work today. Then again, I’ll be at the game tomorrow!!!!

Cool NYC free-read AM MY has a nice pic and story here.

Ronaldinho tells ESPN that he was "depressed"

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Wow.

Ronaldinho goes on the record with ESPN Soccernet as to why he and his game went down the tubes at FC Barcelona:

"’I was unlucky, I couldn’t be in the side, I couldn’t play. The only thing I could do was watch TV. And watching the games sat in armchair made me even more depressed."

My memory of this mess was the December 23rd ‘07 Classico when Ronaldinho had a horrible game. I also remember video images of him getting booed at the airport the day after. Next thing I knew, he pretty much disappeared. I wish him well and success at AC Milan.