Good luck to Spain against Germany - they'll need it.
That said, the tournament pre-favourites have looked dire, but generally only when Torres is starting. As soon as he's taken off, they come to life. The benefit of having a mobile frontman in Villa and a creative but steely Fabregas in support seems to liberate them, mainly in the way England would have benefited with Rooney up top on his own.
Torres is yet another of the big guns who've been piss-poor - Torres, Ronaldo, Rooney, Kaka, Messi. The top five players in the world at club level, and they've been shockingly out of sorts.
Torres does not look fit, does not look motivated, does not seem to have the belief of his colleagues.
Make sure that you don't start with Torres, Del Bosque, now will you?
Sunday, 4 July 2010
Viva Espana
Posted by
Edwin James
at
15:43
2
comments
Labels: spain, worldcup2010
Woy of the Pool
Good appointment by Liverpool. Very smart.
Woy Hodgson is a nice bloke, intelligent, eloquent, multi-lingual, and an achiever. Despite his poor spell at Blackburn, he's achieved everywhere he's gone. He turned Fulham from relegation fodder to the league position that Liverpool finished this season just gone. Then a Europa Cup final playing the opposite of the sort of football Rafa Benitez played in the Champions League.
But he's got a big challenge on. He's just lost one of the few decent players - Benayoun to Chelsea on a Free - and he's only got a report £15m to spend.
Not wishing to come over all Football Manager, but Woy has some simple choices to make:
- Sell Gerrard, Mascherano and Torres - that'll net £100m, probably.
- Ship out Benitez' duds - Kuyt (who is astonishingly having a good world cup, so might go in group 1), Lucas, Arveloa, N'Gog, etc (to the power of a million).
- Spend whatever you get left over on decent players.
Posted by
Edwin James
at
15:38
0
comments
Expectation
A similar post to the previous one - what is expectation?
32 Countries go to the World Cup, and each one has an expectation.
There are duffers like New Zealand, Algeria and North Korea (and my native Scotland, should we ever qualify again) whose expectation is that they'll go out first round, without a win. Exceeding that expectation - scoring a goal, winning - is easy, you might think. Paraguay are the greatest example at 2010.
The middle-ranking nations - Ghana, Slovenia/akia, Australia, US, Mexico, Uruguay - all expect a gallant run to the second round, not necessarily getting there, and being pumped by the group winner and the second round opponents. That is easy to manage - qualify for the second round. Uruguay are greatly exceeding this. Ghana should be
The so-called big guns, though. Okay, I'll list them:
- England
- Germany
- Spain
- Netherlands
- Italy
- France
- Portugal
- Argentina
- Brazil
All of these nations have an expectation that they would win the World Cup. Add in Uruguay, and that's 10 countries for whom anything less than the semis is abject failure - sack the coach, ditch the team. Of those, two went out in the group stages, two in the second round, two in the quarters, so six nations have abjectly failed. However awful England were, they and Argentina lost to the current favourites, the Germans. Arguably, only Brazil, Germany and Italy have the history, and Spain the current squad and form, to have such an expectation.
Looking at the (flawed) FIFA rankings the following expectations are obvious:
- Brazil & Spain - finalists
- Netherlands & Portugal - semis
- Italy, Germany, Argentina & England - quarters
- France & Uruguay - 2nd Round
So there is over-achievement - Germany & Uruguay - and underachievement - England's is not as abject as Italy or Portugal. (Portugal were incredibly lucky to get even that far, they were abysmal - Ronaldo looked lost, Queiroz shared the incompetence of his predecessor at Man Utd.)
A final point - England were used to Quarter Finals according to the press. The Euros' Quarters are equivalent to the World Cup second round - 16 teams start the tournament, not 32.
Posted by
Edwin James
at
15:32
0
comments
Labels: England, FIFA, Germany, worldcup2010
Capello
So, the Team England suits have given Capello a stay of execution. Interesting.
Posted by
Edwin James
at
15:13
0
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