No matter how many millions Shahid Zhan offers the FA for Wembley the answer should be a resounding NO. England is the home of football. From a purely football fan's point of view. Wembley is the home of English football. The home of English football should not be owned by a businessman who's primary motive is that of an American Football team. Now from the view point of a businessman. It cost £800 million to build Wembley. Shahid Khan's offer is £600 million. Minus a whole quarter from the original investment - it makes zero sense.
Now of course I am going to go into more detail then this by simply put, two concrete reasons why selling Wembley stadium is ludicrous.
I see myself as a bit of a purist when it comes to football. I feel the history of our game is being pushed further and further into the background and that simply should never happen. Now, Wembley Stadium only came into ownership of the FA in 1999, so for the vast majority of time, Wembley has been owned by an outside party. The ownership is not the problem here, the problem is the bidder. I personally have nothing again Shahid Khan or any of his business ventures, I feel however that selling to the billionaire could damage English football substantially. Simply put, the future of the home of football would be in the hands of a man who wants to use it as an American football stadium. Khan's offer would currently see the FA still able to host major cup finals at Wembley and a selection of England internationals; with the money from those events going to the governing body.
However Khan is a businessman. Say once the original contract signed with the FA runs out, Khan doesn't feel like doing business anymore and he wants total control of Wembley so he receives 100% of it's revenue. The FA will be powerless to stop him. THEN say his beloved Jacksonville Jaguars have a huge game which falls on the same day as a major international for England, which game do you think he will host at Wembley? All very hypothetical yes, but the possibility should never be there. England should not be playing their football away from their home, while American football is taking place under Wembley's arch.
Plenty of pundits and fellow Journalists have used the argument that not many of the world's elite have their own national stadium. Germany? No. Spain? No. Italy? No. The list does go on. Now, a national stadium is not essential to a country's success, a success that England have gone without since 1966. Wembley Stadium is a venue players and fans alike from all around the world dream of visiting. Right now, English football is looked down upon in a way unlike we have ever seen. Our football is shocking, our fans are embarrassing and our attitude is stuck in the past. What do we, as a country, have going for us? We have an iconic stadium which is envied the world over. Obviously Khan isn't going to airlift the ground to Jacksonville, but that isn't the point. A landmark of the game would have been struck from the map the second the new landlord decides that football is not longer the primary sport of Wembley stadium.
Staying on the topic of a Khan owned Wembley. I personally have never gotten into American Football, and a huge reason for that is the over riding sponsorship influence. An influence that has slowly leaked it's way into football. Sponsors are everywhere in the American sport, and as previously mentioned, that sport will be Khan's priority for Wembley. What happens when a multi national corporation with bottomless pockets comes along and hands Shahid a blank cheque for the naming rights of Wembley stadium? After all, Metlife, AT&T, Fedex, all major companies sponsoring stadiums the size of Wembley over in American within the NFL. Where do the Jaguar's play? The recently renamed TIAA Bank Field, you guessed it, the ground is named after the bank that sponsors them. This is the second time during Khan's ownership that he has sold the name of the ground, he isn't above it. That simply CAN NOT happen to Wembley.
Moving from pointing the finger at Khan and moving it to the FA. Without a doubt, the story pushed to the press will be that the windfall will be used to benefit grass roots football and all that comes with that. However, over the years the FA have not filled us with confidence that they will stick to their words in any way shape or form. Erratic behaviour over the past decades have lead the public to see the people making the decisions in a very negative light, and has cost the FA the trust of the people. It is 100% right to want to improve facilities for young players all around the country, building all weather pitches, providing coaches and equipment for local sides. It's what has been cried for by players across the land for years. But with the amount of money in the game right now, do you not get the idea it would have happened by now if it was going to, at all?
Solid reasoning that speaks to the football fans out there, now for the business people.
"The FA will take £600 million, clear the debt that Wembley played a part in causing, and then redistribute it within the game." Well this just isn't true at all. The money deposited to the FA's bank account will be substantially smaller then that. £112 million of public money was provided in order to finish construction of the new Wembley. That public money was donated to the FA, but not for a definite purpose so that total would be available to redistribute into grass roots football should the FA take the offer.
However, £78 millions from Sport England; £18.5 million from the department of culture, sport and media; and £16.2 million from the London Development agency were all donated for a specific cause. To build a beacon for English football upon historically significant ground. A beacon which would be under the ownership of the English Football Association who will have the opportunity to use it to move the game in this country forward.
That ideology would die the second the deed was signed over to Khan. Meaning the money invested by the previously listened organisations would be returned. That just leaves the debt still within Wembley. At one point that debt totalled over £400 million, but has now been whittled down to around £140 million. The sale of Wembley would not change this fact, and the influx of funds would have to go towards paying off the debt. Once you do the maths the only sizeable amount left of the £600 million offer is the public money, which as mentioned, would be left to redistribute into grassroots as stated. However once again, the FA have done themselves no favours and any statement made by them must be taken with a pinch of salt at this point. Would we see any of that money in grassroots? It's up in the air.
A statue of the late great Bobby Moore stands outside a ground which symbolises the home of not just English football, but the sport as a whole. Where this great game was invented. Although this new instalment of Wembley may not carry the same history as the old. The arch after all, is no twin towers. But Wembley will forever be Wembley. At this point the relationship between the English Football Association and the English fan is dwindling. The sale of Wembley might just be the nail in the coffin. Sahid Khan said that people opposed to his deal need to 'see past their emotion.' He clearly doesn't know English football. We have little all else to go on!
So... simply put.
To Whom It May Concern,
Don't you dare sell Wembley.
Yours faithfully,
The future of English football.
Monday, 30 April 2018
Wednesday, 11 April 2018
Champions League Quarter Finals - WHAT JUST HAPPENED?
UEFA Champions League. The elite competition of European football. The pinnacle of continental competition. Time and time again we see incredible stories play out and this year's most recent batch of games might just have topped the lot. When the draw was made, we knew it had the potential to be special. The two remaining English sides, Liverpool and Manchester City to face off in a whole new Battle of Britain. A replay of last year's final, Real Madrid took on Juventus. And in the two more one sided ties (We'll get into that later) Roma and Sevilla challenged Barcelona and Bayern Munich respectively.
So what exactly was so special? Well...
LIVERPOOL 5-1 Manchester City.
Well if you've been living under a rock for the last week, you might have missed the English champions elect bottling the biggest week in their history. Starting with a lesson in intimidation from Liverpool at Anfield in their quarter final first leg.
From before the Citizens had even stepped inside Anfield, the Liverpool fans were making their lives hell. Now I can not condone what the fans flanking Anfield Road did, launching bottles and everything else at their opponents team bus. But it worked. The damage on route translated to a damaged and fragmented performance on the pitch, but the credit has to go to Liverpool - and Jurgen Klopp. As managers go, no one has a record against Pep Guardiola that compares to Klopp's. Three wins from four games this season speaks wonders for the German's ability to outsmart the Spanish coach.
Now onto the match. From the first whistle City actually dominated possession so nothing out of the ordinary just yet. It was when given the chance to stretch the away side's defence that Liverpool changed through the gears. Who else but Mo Salah would you back to score the biggest of goals in the biggest of games for Liverpool. When Bobby Firmino's effort was turned away from Ederson, Salah reacted faster then anyone else. Before having the composure to fire into the net under pressure from back peddling City defenders. 1-0. One turned into two just eight minutes later when Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain fired in a rocket from 25 yards into the goal at the Kop end. He LOVES a goal against City. Pep's men were shaken. Struggling to string two passes together, Ox's goal came from them being disposed in a poor position. Lighting would strike twice as Liverpool's heavy pressing again forced City into a mistake, again allowing Salah to break. His initial shot was blocked, but what followed was a beautifully weighted ball onto Sadio Mane's head at the back post. 3-0 on the night. City blown away after a half hour.
That was how the game would end. Pep's men seemed fresh out of ideas. A solid Liverpool defence sat back throughout the second half, not allowing a single shot on target. Karius having one of the more quiet night of his Liverpool career. Going into the second leg, City needed a miracle.
Liverpool's arrival in Manchester was quite the contrast to their opponents the week before. City needed quite the contrast in performances to progress. Despite the 3-0 defeat in the first leg, a poll on BT Sport found over 40% of people still backed the Premier League leaders to overcome the odds. Two minutes in you could see why, Raheem Sterling pouncing on a mistake to slide in Gabriel Jesus to score an incredibly early opener. Game on. After an early wobble Liverpool were pinned back through out the first half, Bernardo Silva rattling the post with a deflected effort. Leroy Sane had the ball in the net on the stroke of half time, but was chalked off for offside - wrongfully, with Liverpool's James Milner getting the final touch before Sane poked in.
Protest at half time saw Pep sent to the stands, and it was the beginning of the downfall for his side. Again despite dominating possession in the second half, much like in the first leg Liverpool punished on the counter attack. Mo Salah sliding the ball into the on running Sadio Mane who did brilliantly well to ride the challenge before going down in the box. Not one to take any chances, it was that man again Mo Salah who was on hand to round Ederson and produce the most beautiful chip over a man on the line and into an empty net. An away goal, an equaliser on the night, 4-1 on aggregate. Former captain Steven Gerrard described it best on the BT Sport studio.
"Game over."
But not before Liverpool's number nine could get in on the act. You'd think defenders would learn not to be sloppy with the ball at the back when Liverpool come to town. But Otamendi, who was at fault for Liverpool's third at Anfield was disposed by Firmino just to the right of his penalty area. It was as easy as strolling up to the goal and slotting past countryman Ederson for Bobby to seal not only the tie, but the win on the night. Handing City their third defeat on the bounce, two of which at the hands of Liverpool. Next came the final whistle, a nightmare week for the home side, jubilation for the visitors. Another failure in Europe without Lionel Messi for Pep. An upset in the 2018 Champions League quarter finals, the first but not the last.
Barcelona 4-4 ROMA (Roma progress on away goals.)
Now I made predictions for the quarter finals the day of the draw in March (feel free to check out the article on this blog.) And after the first leg, Barcelona leading 4-1 against Roma, I felt as if my prediction for this tie was safe. Well...
Barcelona came into this quarter final with potentially the kindest draw (oops) and have failed to progress past this stage in each of the last two Champions League campaigns (oops.) Despite what looks like a very dominant scoreline, Barcelona failed to really impress at the Nou Camp. Their dominance in La Liga has given many fans a false sense of security as to just how good the Catalan's are, and the scoreline from the first leg does the same thing. Two incredibly unlucky own goals on Roma's part, from captain De Rossi and Kostas Manolas (We'll get back to them) and Barca lead by two. A very well taken Gerard Pique goal was capped off with Luis Suarez finally ending his draught in the competition this year with a fourth - but not before Dzeko struck. Edin Dzeko clawed an away goal back for his side in the 80th minutes, giving them something to fight for in Rome.
As mentioned, despite the scoreline Barcelona did not blow Roma away. What's worse for the Spanish giants is their opponents knew this. You could see at full time they felt hard done by in Spain, and went into the second leg knowing they have the quality to give almighty Barcelona a run for their money. But much like Manchester City on the same night, the Italian's needed a miracle.
For years now the slick passing Barcelona have been criticised for being sloppy at the back. This season a league high defensive record has put that claim to rest. But Roma brought it right back up. Gerard Pique, FIFA World Cup winner was bullied by Edin Dzeko. After six minutes the Bosnian ran onto a loose ball, holding of the Spaniard and slotted home the first of three goals Roma needed to progress. Rome's Olympic Stadium was rocking. Much of the first half played out exactly the same as the game taking place in Manchester. The home side, needed a big win, struck early - but failed to add to it. Then however, came the second half. Again Dzeko bullying the Barca defence, strolling into the box before being brought down for a penalty. Captain and eldest statesman Daniele De Rossi, the man who's own goal but them on the back foot in Spain a week before, stepped up. And fired it into the bottom right hand corner with some venom, 2-0 Roma. One goal needed and one man left to make up for his own goal, step up Kostas Manolas.
"The Greek god!"
The words that will go down in commentary history. As a corner from the right hand side was whipped into the near post, Roma's big centre back flicked the ball delicately towards and into the side netting of the far post. Ter Stagen stranded, Roma jubilant, Italy's capital ecstatic. And that was it, one of the greatest comebacks in the competitions history. Perhaps the biggest upset of the last decade. Roma may have ruined my predictions, but I'll let them off.
Sevilla 1-2 BAYERN MUNICH.
Much like Barcelona vs Roma, when this tie was drawn there appeared to be a very clear favourite. Bayern Munich have made a habit of turning it on as the games start to mean more and more, showing that in the round of 16. Despite this, Sevilla are no pushovers. Going to Manchester and beating United in the last round, they were already in the middle of their best every performance in the Champions League. And welcomed the German champions to Spain in the first leg.
Bayern as expected had the better of the possession, but didn't do anything with it in the early stages of the first leg - Sevilla standing strong. After the half hour a good night for the hosts became great, as Pablo Sarabia opened the scoring and sent the home fans to cloud nine. Pouncing on a rare defensive error from the Germans. But all this goal did was wake the beast, and Bayern started to play with much more purpose. Only minutes later a fast paced attack from the away side saw a dangerous ball in by Frank Ribery turned into his own net by Jesus Navas. Just creeping in at the near post to level the game up once again, sucking the life from the fans.
The second half saw Bayern playing what could easily be seen as a training game. Clearly the better side, but not really playing in top gear. However it took 20 minutes of the second half for Sevilla to switch off, Ribery again involved, his cross to the back post met by Thiago. A slight deflection and the ball bounced into the net. Two away goals on the night for the Germans a victory and one foot in the semi-finals.
A decent first leg in Spain was followed by the one game out of eight in the quarter finals that failed to entertain.
Sevilla had something to fight for in Munich, but failed to register a single shot on target. Bayern never really had to get out of first gear, still looking far superior in a game they didn't have to win. With their domestic league title already secured, a cup final to play and now a Champions League semi-final place. The treble is on.
There is always one tie that lets the rest down, and this is that tie. Not to say it was a bad tie, far from it. Bayern were their usual clinical self, Sevilla gave it all they had in their most successful ever Champions League campaign. It just isn't quite up their with the three other quarter finals. Don't worry. I've left the best till last.
Juventus 3-4 REAL MADRID
In a replay of last years final, champions of their respective leagues met off in a clash of the titans. All hell broke loose, I can't think of a more appropriate way to explain it. Allegri's Juve coming off the back an impressive tactical display against Spurs, Real Madrid strolling past heavily fancied PSG despite their domestic troubles.
In Turin the man who will have haunted Buffon's nightmares after his brace in last years final struck again. Cristiano Ronaldo of course - believe it or not he comes up quite a bit over the two games. Sweeping in the opener, a key away goal just three minutes in as the experienced Juventus back line crumbled. Wave after wave of blue shirts, you'd be forgiven for thinking it was Madrid who were the home side, if it wasn't for the boisterous Juventus fans. Kroos rattled the bar with what would have been a stunning strike, but as the half went on Juve came more and more into the game. Forcing Navas into a handful of fine saves towards the end of the first 45. However the away side had a 1-0 lead going into the break - up steps CR7.
He tormented Juve's back line from the start of the second half, and it was only a matter of time before he struck again. But, no one could have seen this coming. The Portuguese record scorer latched onto a defensive mistake before laying the ball back to Lucas, his shot batted away from Buffon. Dani Carvajal picked up the loose ball left of the goal and floated it back into the Juventus area when Cristiano Ronaldo - running away from goal, launched himself into the air, his right boot easily seven feet from the ground. Before connecting with the most perfect overhead kick, back into Buffon's bottom left corner. An hour played and Ronaldo had torn apart the Italian champions almost on his own.
"The greatest marksman in the history of the Champions League."
A poll on BT Sports voted Ronaldo's strike as the second best in Champions League history, behind his manager's (Zidane) sublime volley in the 2002 Champions League final. But Madrid weren't done yet. Left back Marcelo, a key figure in Los Blanco for the last decade, added the third and final goal of a 3-0 thumping.
If Juventus were to overcome the odds and progress, they'd have to do it without the talents of Paulo Dybala who was sent off in Turin for a high footed challenge on Carvajal. The second leg in Madrid came 24 hours after Roma's incredible comeback against Barcelona by the same margin, so it was possible.
But much like Ronaldo's stunner in Turin, no one could have expected what the second leg would bring. The Galacticos. Los Blancos. 12 time European Champions. They wouldn't let a three goal advantage slip at home would they?
Just like Madrid struck early in Turin, Juventus fired right back at the Bernabeu. Douglas Costa floating a lovely ball into the back post for Mario Mandzukic to head in to give the away side the lead, the first of the three goals they needed. Juventus pressed high and fast, Real Madrid looked out of ideas and flustered. Half an hour played another ball into the back post, another Mandzukic header, same result. Navas got a hand to this one but not enough to keep it out as Juventus had exploited a poor start by the holders and scored twice. When the half time whistle blew Real Madrid looked a shadow of themselves from a week prior, and more like the side which are 4th in La Liga.
You can not afford to make mistakes in this competition, especially this far into the competition. The talk of Madrid targeting David De Gea will certainly be back after this game, when Navas handed Juventus a third goal to equalise the tie. Spilling a simple cross into the path of Blaise Matuidi, who was excellent on the night. The Frenchman tapped in, as it stood, extra time was calling. Zinadine Zidane has to win the Champions League to keep his job. 100%. This season the legendary midfielder has been found out tactically, and Allergi had him all ends up in the Bernabeu. Juventus, knowing another goal would make Madrid's night even harder, pushed on further. Testing the home defence, which started to hold firm. As time ticked on it became very apparent at Juve's desire to break up play. Six yellow cards on the night for what can only be described as identical incidents. Jabs at the ankles of the players in white, it wasn't pretty, but it was effective and clearly put onto them by the manager.
I have personally called out Zidane on this blog for relying on his players to do the magic and offering very little in a solution when backs are against the wall. And as play ticked on, this appeared to be biting Zidane's men. Cristiano Ronaldo had been very quiet for 90 minutes. But it had to be him didn't it!
Toni Kroos floated the ball up to the back post, Ronaldo's incredible leaping ability allowed him to somehow get the ball back across goal were Lucas was brought down from behind by Benatia. Penalty to Real Madrid in the 93rd minute. The protest commenced. Leading those protests was Gianluigi Buffon, who had lost his head. Sprinting towards the referee, thinking the Englishman had potentially cost him his last every Champions League game (Buffon is said to be retiring at the end of the season.) However it was the reaction of the Italian that cost him, when Michael Oliver produced a red card for Buffon. Meaning even if back up stopper Wojciech Szczesny was to produce the save and the Old Lady went on to win, the great Italian would have been suspended for both legs of the semi final. A cruel moment of Irony, Buffon sent off in his last Champions League match against Zidane's side, mirroring Zidane being dismissed in his last match as a professional against Buffon's Italy.
The protest and subsequent commotion saw the clock tick over to the 98th minute by the time Cristiano Ronaldo stepped up to face Szczesny. A goal would send Juventus packing, anything else and the tie goes into extra time. With the weight of the world on his shoulders, and what must have felt like an eternity passing between the award of the penalty and the whistle being blown to take it. Many would collapse under the pressure. By this isn't just any ordinary player. Not only did Ronaldo put away the penalty, he riffled it into the top right hand corner with virtually the last kick of the tie. He was never going to miss, just like he was never going to keep his jersey on. The famous white shirt pulled off as he posed in the corner of the pitch as 80,000 Madrid fans lost their minds. No words can put the 98 minutes of football in Madrid into perspective, it was just incredible viewing.
That is it. We have out Champions League semi-finalists for 2018. In a rare occurrence there is a representative from each of Europe's top four league left in the running. Liverpool from England, Roma from Italy, Bayern Munich from Germany, and finally Real Madrid from Spain. Roma being the biggest underdogs of the round, after overturning their 4-1 defeat in the first leg to giants Barca - with one of Euorpe's most famous comebacks. Liverpool rocked English football by comfortably dispatching of the soon to be champions. Bayern did as expected in overcoming Sevilla. And finally, in typical dramatic style. Cristiano Ronaldo inspired Real Madrid to overcome a resilient Juventus side to reach their record breaking eighth consecutive Champions League semi-final.
Onto the draw on Friday 13th April.
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Saturday, 7 April 2018
Mo Salah - The Closest Thing to Messi on Planet Earth.
Now. Now. Now. I am not in any way saying Liverpool's Mo Salah is on the same level as Lionel Messi. The Argentinian is the greatest of not only his own generation, but any generation before him. But, a tricky left footed winger, who is more then capable of playing down the middle. Can glide past opposition defenders effortlessly and is posting record breaking goal scoring stats. For years these attributes have been the calling card of Barcelona's number 10. This season however, he's got some competition. In the form of the man dubbed as, The Egyptian King.
In the race for the European golden boot. Messi and Salah are tied. 29 league goals each. Since signing for Liverpool in the summer of 2017, Mo has gone from strength to strength, and the Liverpool fans have fallen in love with their new talisman. He looks set to win the Premier League golden boot in his Premier League return. And with five league games to play, is just two goals off of the record of 31 goals in a 38 game season. Cristiano Ronaldo, Luis Suarez and Alan Shearer are all tied with that amount, illustrious company for Salah to compete with. Not just for him to compete with, but to surpass.
Chelsea legend Didier Drogba has held the record for most goals scored in a single season by an African since 2010. When Salah scored a late winner against Palace on March 31st, he pulled up right besides him. He has already comfortably broken the record for most league goals scored by a foreigner in their debut season. A tally which stood at 24 goals, scored by former red Fernando Torres. Salah's goal against Palace was also the 21st league game he has struck in this season, a joint highest. Cristiano Ronaldo and Robin Van Persie also scored in 21 league games during a single season, and with five games to go, one more goal will make that record his own.
Records continue to tumble with Salah. With 38 goals in all competitions this season, scored in just 41 games, that is the third highest amount ever chalked up by a Liverpool player. Trailing to tallies of 40 and 47 goals, both held by Ian Rush. Mo's debut season for the redmen is the most prolific in the clubs history, and seeing him surpass Rush's record with a minimum of six games left to play is not an impossibility. This season has also seen Robbie Fowler's record for 20 left footed goals in a season surpassed, no prizes for guessing who by.
I'm sure by now I've explained just how good of a season Salah is having. But how does it explain a comparison to Lionel Messi? That would be the execution of his play style. An ability to take on defenders and make them look like amateurs is one that Messi has used to great effect throughout his career. This season, Salah is following in suit. Taking of opposition at full flight, his composure never ceases to amaze. Whether the ball is bouncing, gliding along the turf, or being floated over to him, Salah doesn't panic. Take his most recent goal. The opener against Manchester City in an already famous night at Anfield. Inside 10 minutes, the ball fell to the Egyptian, 6 yards from goal, with the goal gaping. But with Ederson and Kyle Walker both throwing themselves in his direction. The Kop screaming in front of him, and huge expectation on his shoulders. So many would crumble, Salah made it look just as easy as it was. Never rushing, never lashing at it, just firing the ball home.
Now you might be asking. "How does scoring a goal as easy as that compare him to Messi?" If you're asking that you've clearly missed the point but I present, exhibit B. Salah recently struck four (yes four) at Anfield against Watford. His third goal being the pick of the bunch in my opinion. With six (yes six) yellow shirts around him, Liverpool's number 11 twisted and turned, taking every one of them out of the game. Somehow keeping his balance, and then hooking the ball out from underneath his feet, past a stranded goalkeeper and into the corner. That goal wasn't even the only one from that 90 minutes which drew comparisons to Messi. For his first he drove at Watford's defender, gestured to come inside and quickly dropped his shoulder to go outside. Leaving the back tracking defender to fall back as Salah slotted in the goal. In almost identical fashion to how Lionel Messi left Boateng scrambling at the Nou Camp in 2015.
Anyone who still disagrees with me might be saying. "Oh that's just one game." Again, I'd question just how much football you watch. Salah has been hitting these heights all season and playing to a remarkable standard. Away at Porto in the Champions League, Salah was not the star man for the night, with Sadio Mane hitting a hat-trick. However the goal of the night went to the Egyptian, for perhaps the most composed goal you will see all season. After the ball came back off of the post and bounced up for Salah he proceeded to flick it up, before keeping it alive with his head. Knocking it over a diving goalkeeper. As it dropped a defender threw himself in the way of the ball, so Mo allowed it to drop, waiting for the man to over commit. Which he did, before tapping it into an empty net on the volley. The goal oozed class. The man oozes class.
So... this season Salah has demonstrated the play style of Lionel Messi. Scored at the rate of Messi. Broken record after record, and did it with a class and style we're use to seeing from Argentinian number 10's. The key wording there however is 'this season.' This season, Salah has been as good as Messi. But what about next season? And the one after that and so on. I personally believe Salah, if he continues to grow and evolve his game, can be at that level. He has all the tools, a talented set of team mates who all know his quality, and a fan base who quite literally worship him. When Jurgen Klopp signed Mohamed Salah from Roma last summer, no one would have predicted this. Four Premier League POTM awards already to his name, he has also been nominated for March's award. A front runner for the PFA POTY award, competing mostly with Man City's Kevin De Bruyne. The accolades do just continue to stack up and they don't appear to be slowing down.
In the race for the European golden boot. Messi and Salah are tied. 29 league goals each. Since signing for Liverpool in the summer of 2017, Mo has gone from strength to strength, and the Liverpool fans have fallen in love with their new talisman. He looks set to win the Premier League golden boot in his Premier League return. And with five league games to play, is just two goals off of the record of 31 goals in a 38 game season. Cristiano Ronaldo, Luis Suarez and Alan Shearer are all tied with that amount, illustrious company for Salah to compete with. Not just for him to compete with, but to surpass.
Chelsea legend Didier Drogba has held the record for most goals scored in a single season by an African since 2010. When Salah scored a late winner against Palace on March 31st, he pulled up right besides him. He has already comfortably broken the record for most league goals scored by a foreigner in their debut season. A tally which stood at 24 goals, scored by former red Fernando Torres. Salah's goal against Palace was also the 21st league game he has struck in this season, a joint highest. Cristiano Ronaldo and Robin Van Persie also scored in 21 league games during a single season, and with five games to go, one more goal will make that record his own.
Records continue to tumble with Salah. With 38 goals in all competitions this season, scored in just 41 games, that is the third highest amount ever chalked up by a Liverpool player. Trailing to tallies of 40 and 47 goals, both held by Ian Rush. Mo's debut season for the redmen is the most prolific in the clubs history, and seeing him surpass Rush's record with a minimum of six games left to play is not an impossibility. This season has also seen Robbie Fowler's record for 20 left footed goals in a season surpassed, no prizes for guessing who by.
I'm sure by now I've explained just how good of a season Salah is having. But how does it explain a comparison to Lionel Messi? That would be the execution of his play style. An ability to take on defenders and make them look like amateurs is one that Messi has used to great effect throughout his career. This season, Salah is following in suit. Taking of opposition at full flight, his composure never ceases to amaze. Whether the ball is bouncing, gliding along the turf, or being floated over to him, Salah doesn't panic. Take his most recent goal. The opener against Manchester City in an already famous night at Anfield. Inside 10 minutes, the ball fell to the Egyptian, 6 yards from goal, with the goal gaping. But with Ederson and Kyle Walker both throwing themselves in his direction. The Kop screaming in front of him, and huge expectation on his shoulders. So many would crumble, Salah made it look just as easy as it was. Never rushing, never lashing at it, just firing the ball home.
Now you might be asking. "How does scoring a goal as easy as that compare him to Messi?" If you're asking that you've clearly missed the point but I present, exhibit B. Salah recently struck four (yes four) at Anfield against Watford. His third goal being the pick of the bunch in my opinion. With six (yes six) yellow shirts around him, Liverpool's number 11 twisted and turned, taking every one of them out of the game. Somehow keeping his balance, and then hooking the ball out from underneath his feet, past a stranded goalkeeper and into the corner. That goal wasn't even the only one from that 90 minutes which drew comparisons to Messi. For his first he drove at Watford's defender, gestured to come inside and quickly dropped his shoulder to go outside. Leaving the back tracking defender to fall back as Salah slotted in the goal. In almost identical fashion to how Lionel Messi left Boateng scrambling at the Nou Camp in 2015.
Anyone who still disagrees with me might be saying. "Oh that's just one game." Again, I'd question just how much football you watch. Salah has been hitting these heights all season and playing to a remarkable standard. Away at Porto in the Champions League, Salah was not the star man for the night, with Sadio Mane hitting a hat-trick. However the goal of the night went to the Egyptian, for perhaps the most composed goal you will see all season. After the ball came back off of the post and bounced up for Salah he proceeded to flick it up, before keeping it alive with his head. Knocking it over a diving goalkeeper. As it dropped a defender threw himself in the way of the ball, so Mo allowed it to drop, waiting for the man to over commit. Which he did, before tapping it into an empty net on the volley. The goal oozed class. The man oozes class.
So... this season Salah has demonstrated the play style of Lionel Messi. Scored at the rate of Messi. Broken record after record, and did it with a class and style we're use to seeing from Argentinian number 10's. The key wording there however is 'this season.' This season, Salah has been as good as Messi. But what about next season? And the one after that and so on. I personally believe Salah, if he continues to grow and evolve his game, can be at that level. He has all the tools, a talented set of team mates who all know his quality, and a fan base who quite literally worship him. When Jurgen Klopp signed Mohamed Salah from Roma last summer, no one would have predicted this. Four Premier League POTM awards already to his name, he has also been nominated for March's award. A front runner for the PFA POTY award, competing mostly with Man City's Kevin De Bruyne. The accolades do just continue to stack up and they don't appear to be slowing down.
Sunday, 1 April 2018
The Untouchables - Are Pep's Manchester City side the best in Premier League history?
After rolling over Everton at Goodison Park, Manchester City are one win away from history. A win in the Manchester Derby in the coming weekend will secure the Premier League title in record time. Right now Pep's men side sit 16 points clear with eight games to go, and the margin has been substantial for most of the campaign. While everyone below them has been dropping points, City have been winning football matches. Only losing one game all season, and drawing just three, the so far illusive 100 point mark is within their grasp. A minimum of five wins and one draw will make The Citizens the first Premier League side to ever hit 100 points, but will it make them the best?
Pep Guardiola was called a fraud by many after his lacklustre first season in charge of City, and now on for a potential treble, he's left his neigh-sayer's red in the face. The question of the best of all time is thrown around way too often in football. Lionel Messi vs Cristiano Ronaldo dominates the conversation in the minds of modern day football fans. But with so many changes in style football has undergone over the years, picking the best of all time is a tall order. However, with the Premier League starting in 1992, only 26 years ago, picking the best Premier League side of all time is much more accomplishable.
THE INVINCIBLES!
That is what any Arsenal fan reading this article would have been screaming since they clicked on it. I went into a lot of detail in an article I had published at THE VERSED (FKA Clickon Sports) about why the Invincible's were not as great as you remember. That same article was posted on this blog last October so feel free to click off this and give it a read but to quickly put this argument to rest. A lack of points when compared to other champions. A lack of goals when compared to other champions. A style of play towards the end of the campaign which SCREAMED fear of losing. Speaking of losing, LOSING the biggest game of the season in the Champions League to Chelsea. If you aren't convinced check out my full article on the matter, but although historic, Arsenal's Invinicbles are not the greatest. Sorry.
Now that's out the way let me explain why I believe Pep's City have a very strong case.
Anyone with a footballing brain can appreciate how Guardiola not only manages his side, but
coaches individual players on how to reach their full potential. Raheem Sterling being a prime example. Since the 2013/2014 season at Liverpool, Sterling has floundered, living off of his potential. Rumours off a move to Arsenal in part exchange for Alexis at the start of the season added more fuel to the fire. But now, with the current season still going strong, Sterling is enjoying his best year yet. A guaranteed starter with over 20 goals this campaign, and a shoe in for the World Cup. His erratic movements have been replaced with finely timed and methodically thought out runs. His sloppy final balls it no more, 16 league goals speaks for itself. Perhaps more clearly then any other player, Guardiola has been there to put an arm around the young winger and keep guiding him. Whether in training or mid way through a match, an arm around the shoulder and words of encouragement makes any player feel like gold. Sterling oozes confidence, and it is no coincidence that it coincides with Pep getting is team to play his way.
Speaking of Pep's way. City's Brazilian keeper Ederson was quoted stating that his side's tactics bring joy to all football fans. And he isn't wrong. An incredibly high pressing style, reminiscent of that of Pep's Barcelona side, forces opposition into submission. Keeping the ball away from their goal, and in the rare occasion Ederson does find the ball in his possession, a 60 yard cross field pass is one of the many strings to his bow. David Silva has been having a career defining season in midfield, when many tipped him to be on the way out. A Spaniard over looked for years in the Premier League now can not be ignored. Alongside Fernandinho who has been consistently solid, sometimes going un-noticed but never in a bad way. Of course the talisman Kevin De-Bruyne running the show will draw the headlines, and rightfully so, he's sublime. But every single player in the starting eleven is there because they fit the system. Sane and Sterling have been untouchable down the wings, and are leaps and bounds ahead of where they were 12 months ago.
You can criticise City for 'buying the league' but instead of just throwing money at star names like Arsenal and Manchester United have done this season, they've spend big on players who make their system fit. £50 million on a right back is ludicrous right? Is it when Kyle Walker has been comfortably the best wing back in the league all season and has been a nightmare of any opposition flank that has came across him. The same to be said about £60 million on a centre back right? Laporte has slotted into a defence that has been the stand out this campaign, after being called out for being shaky over the last couple of years. Very little has been spent going forward, and that's because Pep KNEW where the weaknesses were, and fixed them. Yes he had the financial means to bring in the best players, but so do Arsenal and they're in 6th. Pep and his team also has the tactical know how to spot and bring in appropriate targets.
Now into some good old fashion statistics. As mentioned, a win for City this coming week would mean they have secured the title quicker then any other side in Premier League history, which is historic in itself. Also as I mentioned, the form table would indicate that the champions will finish with over 100 points for the first time in Premier League history. Which wasn't even done in the old 42 game season format. Moving away from points. If the season was the end right now, they would have scored more then any of the champions from the last four years. And remember there is seven games to play, the record is in sight. 103 goals is the current record, held by Chelsea's 2010 title winning side. An average of two goals a game would ensure they beat that amount; so far they've averaged 2.8 per game. Switching lanes to defence, City would have to concede 8 more goals between now and the end of the season to end with the joint best defence of the decade. Any less and of course they'd end as the best defensive champions in recent times. With an average of 0.6 goals conceded per game, it's likely they'll hold that record as well.
So broken down, the stats point to Manchester City's 2017/2018 team - Winning the Premier League title, finishing with over 100 points which has never been done before, as well as winning it with 6 games to spare which is a record. On top of that - breaking the record for most Premier League goals scored in a season, and registering the best defensive record in the past decade (fourth best record for the champions this century.)
Now moving away from stats. City play with a style that is eye catching, and enjoyable for any football fan to take in. A style similar to that of the great Barcelona side of 2009-2011, said to be the best club side in European history. During a season when some of England's big guns have been torn apart by the media for playing unattractive and boring football, Pep's men have not only been entertaining, but incredible efficient. One league defeat makes them the second most winningest side currently in Europe's top five leagues this season, only behind the unbeaten Barcelona. With English football under constant scrutiny recently, Manchester City are a shining light. World class players from back to front. World beaters like KDB and Sergio Aguero. Breakthrough superstars like Sane, Sterling and Jesus. Proven masters such as David Silva and Vincent Kompany, The Citizens have it all.
A Champions League quarter final Wednesday 5th April is so far Pep's and City's biggest game of the season, a huge test away at Anfield. A reply of the one Premier League fixture they have lost this season. Nearly impossible to call (But I did, check out my most recent article). But win, lose or draw in Europe, a domestic season to remember Manchester City have put in. The best side in Premier League history? It's hard to argue against it.
Pep Guardiola was called a fraud by many after his lacklustre first season in charge of City, and now on for a potential treble, he's left his neigh-sayer's red in the face. The question of the best of all time is thrown around way too often in football. Lionel Messi vs Cristiano Ronaldo dominates the conversation in the minds of modern day football fans. But with so many changes in style football has undergone over the years, picking the best of all time is a tall order. However, with the Premier League starting in 1992, only 26 years ago, picking the best Premier League side of all time is much more accomplishable.
THE INVINCIBLES!
That is what any Arsenal fan reading this article would have been screaming since they clicked on it. I went into a lot of detail in an article I had published at THE VERSED (FKA Clickon Sports) about why the Invincible's were not as great as you remember. That same article was posted on this blog last October so feel free to click off this and give it a read but to quickly put this argument to rest. A lack of points when compared to other champions. A lack of goals when compared to other champions. A style of play towards the end of the campaign which SCREAMED fear of losing. Speaking of losing, LOSING the biggest game of the season in the Champions League to Chelsea. If you aren't convinced check out my full article on the matter, but although historic, Arsenal's Invinicbles are not the greatest. Sorry.
Now that's out the way let me explain why I believe Pep's City have a very strong case.
Anyone with a footballing brain can appreciate how Guardiola not only manages his side, but
coaches individual players on how to reach their full potential. Raheem Sterling being a prime example. Since the 2013/2014 season at Liverpool, Sterling has floundered, living off of his potential. Rumours off a move to Arsenal in part exchange for Alexis at the start of the season added more fuel to the fire. But now, with the current season still going strong, Sterling is enjoying his best year yet. A guaranteed starter with over 20 goals this campaign, and a shoe in for the World Cup. His erratic movements have been replaced with finely timed and methodically thought out runs. His sloppy final balls it no more, 16 league goals speaks for itself. Perhaps more clearly then any other player, Guardiola has been there to put an arm around the young winger and keep guiding him. Whether in training or mid way through a match, an arm around the shoulder and words of encouragement makes any player feel like gold. Sterling oozes confidence, and it is no coincidence that it coincides with Pep getting is team to play his way.
Speaking of Pep's way. City's Brazilian keeper Ederson was quoted stating that his side's tactics bring joy to all football fans. And he isn't wrong. An incredibly high pressing style, reminiscent of that of Pep's Barcelona side, forces opposition into submission. Keeping the ball away from their goal, and in the rare occasion Ederson does find the ball in his possession, a 60 yard cross field pass is one of the many strings to his bow. David Silva has been having a career defining season in midfield, when many tipped him to be on the way out. A Spaniard over looked for years in the Premier League now can not be ignored. Alongside Fernandinho who has been consistently solid, sometimes going un-noticed but never in a bad way. Of course the talisman Kevin De-Bruyne running the show will draw the headlines, and rightfully so, he's sublime. But every single player in the starting eleven is there because they fit the system. Sane and Sterling have been untouchable down the wings, and are leaps and bounds ahead of where they were 12 months ago.
You can criticise City for 'buying the league' but instead of just throwing money at star names like Arsenal and Manchester United have done this season, they've spend big on players who make their system fit. £50 million on a right back is ludicrous right? Is it when Kyle Walker has been comfortably the best wing back in the league all season and has been a nightmare of any opposition flank that has came across him. The same to be said about £60 million on a centre back right? Laporte has slotted into a defence that has been the stand out this campaign, after being called out for being shaky over the last couple of years. Very little has been spent going forward, and that's because Pep KNEW where the weaknesses were, and fixed them. Yes he had the financial means to bring in the best players, but so do Arsenal and they're in 6th. Pep and his team also has the tactical know how to spot and bring in appropriate targets.
Now into some good old fashion statistics. As mentioned, a win for City this coming week would mean they have secured the title quicker then any other side in Premier League history, which is historic in itself. Also as I mentioned, the form table would indicate that the champions will finish with over 100 points for the first time in Premier League history. Which wasn't even done in the old 42 game season format. Moving away from points. If the season was the end right now, they would have scored more then any of the champions from the last four years. And remember there is seven games to play, the record is in sight. 103 goals is the current record, held by Chelsea's 2010 title winning side. An average of two goals a game would ensure they beat that amount; so far they've averaged 2.8 per game. Switching lanes to defence, City would have to concede 8 more goals between now and the end of the season to end with the joint best defence of the decade. Any less and of course they'd end as the best defensive champions in recent times. With an average of 0.6 goals conceded per game, it's likely they'll hold that record as well.
So broken down, the stats point to Manchester City's 2017/2018 team - Winning the Premier League title, finishing with over 100 points which has never been done before, as well as winning it with 6 games to spare which is a record. On top of that - breaking the record for most Premier League goals scored in a season, and registering the best defensive record in the past decade (fourth best record for the champions this century.)
Now moving away from stats. City play with a style that is eye catching, and enjoyable for any football fan to take in. A style similar to that of the great Barcelona side of 2009-2011, said to be the best club side in European history. During a season when some of England's big guns have been torn apart by the media for playing unattractive and boring football, Pep's men have not only been entertaining, but incredible efficient. One league defeat makes them the second most winningest side currently in Europe's top five leagues this season, only behind the unbeaten Barcelona. With English football under constant scrutiny recently, Manchester City are a shining light. World class players from back to front. World beaters like KDB and Sergio Aguero. Breakthrough superstars like Sane, Sterling and Jesus. Proven masters such as David Silva and Vincent Kompany, The Citizens have it all.
A Champions League quarter final Wednesday 5th April is so far Pep's and City's biggest game of the season, a huge test away at Anfield. A reply of the one Premier League fixture they have lost this season. Nearly impossible to call (But I did, check out my most recent article). But win, lose or draw in Europe, a domestic season to remember Manchester City have put in. The best side in Premier League history? It's hard to argue against it.
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