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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/2/2018 8:15:41 PM   
Zorch

 

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Belgian is England's A Team.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 9:17:29 AM   
rico21


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Belgian is France's B Team.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 3:55:18 PM   
shunwick


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Belgium is Belgium's A team.

Best wishes,
Steve

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 4:01:02 PM   
shunwick


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The seventh game of the Last Sixteen knockout round sees:

Switzerland 0 Sweden 1. Undiluted stodge for 68 minutes. Then Sweden scored a lucky goal from a deflection. The remaninder of the game was undiluted stodge until the excitement of a Swedish VAR induced free kick which was the last kick of the game that kept up with the undiluted stodgeness of the rest of the game. Thank God for VAR. This is what you get when you are so scared of losing that you simply can't play foootball.

We will find out who Sweden's opponents will be later today but is likely to be Sweden v Colombia.

Best wishes,
Steve


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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 4:19:56 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: shunwick

The seventh game of the Last Sixteen knockout round sees:

Switzerland 0 Sweden 1. Undiluted stodge for 68 minutes. Then Sweden scored a lucky goal from a deflection. The remaninder of the game was undiluted stodge until the excitement of a Swedish VAR induced free kick which was the last kick of the game that kept up with the undiluted stodgeness of the rest of the game. Thank God for VAR. This is what you get when you are so scared of losing that you simply can't play foootball.

We will find out who Sweden's opponents will be later today but is likely to be Sweden v Colombia.

Best wishes,
Steve

warspite1

Wow sounds like a doozy.... shame I missed it

At least it was the right result though Only problem is that if, by some major miracle, England scrape, luckily into the quarters, they will play a country they have a pretty poor record against in matches that matter. Only once have England beaten Sweden in the World Cup or European Championship. Whoops....

But I get ahead of myself, can anyone seriously see England beating Colombia? And yes, that was a rhetorical question

I wonder which team will play in Yellow in the next round?



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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 5:55:28 PM   
Orm


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quote:

ORIGINAL: shunwick

The seventh game of the Last Sixteen knockout round sees:

Switzerland 0 Sweden 1. Undiluted stodge for 68 minutes. Then Sweden scored a lucky goal from a deflection. The remaninder of the game was undiluted stodge until the excitement of a Swedish VAR induced free kick which was the last kick of the game that kept up with the undiluted stodgeness of the rest of the game. Thank God for VAR. This is what you get when you are so scared of losing that you simply can't play foootball.

We will find out who Sweden's opponents will be later today but is likely to be Sweden v Colombia.

Best wishes,
Steve


You said it perfectly.

Even though I am not completely sure what "undiluted stodge" means I suspect that it describes the match perfectly.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 5:59:00 PM   
Orm


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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

But I get ahead of myself, can anyone seriously see England beating Colombia? And yes, that was a rhetorical question


Yes, I can see England beating Colombia. In fact, I expect England to win.

Only thing I can think of jinxing it for England is that the players might get nervous, because England expects that every player will do his duty, and then some.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 8:24:17 PM   
ernieschwitz

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm
quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1
But I get ahead of myself, can anyone seriously see England beating Colombia? And yes, that was a rhetorical question

Yes, I can see England beating Colombia. In fact, I expect England to win.
Only thing I can think of jinxing it for England is that the players might get nervous, because England expects that every player will do his duty, and then some.


I think I've changed the channel... It seems the television is showing some sort of wrestling event, involving two 11 man tag-teams...

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 8:28:01 PM   
TulliusDetritus


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Turn tv on, penalties are coming... or not

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 8:59:45 PM   
Orm


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Told you. Easy win for England.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/3/2018 9:02:09 PM   
shunwick


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The final game of the Last Sixteen knockout round sees:

England 1 Colombia 1 AET 4-3 on penalties.

A morbidly watchable encounter both frenetic and spicy, with surprisingly few chances the best of which fell to Colombia. Colombia edged the game overall and will be disappointed to lose it on penalties. England need to be worried by their lack of penetration throughout the game. The quarter final is Sweden v England and if I were the Swedish manager I would mightily relieved that they are not facing Colombia.

Some cracking quarter finals coming up. Uruguay v France, Brazil v Belgium, Russia v Croatia, and Sweden v England.

Best wishes,
Steve

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/4/2018 6:22:35 AM   
warspite1


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Well England don't do anything easily... That was another emotionally draining experience that is watching England.

So here's the line up - two South Americans left and at least one European team guaranteed in the final.




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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/4/2018 12:51:38 PM   
rico21


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Africa.
We are the only football team supported by a continent.




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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/4/2018 1:45:18 PM   
TulliusDetritus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: rico21
Africa.
We are the only football team supported by a continent.


That's some glory hunting. Where their [players] fathers or grandfathers are coming from, it's irrelevant: they were produced by the French football machine. They are a 100% French product.

I'd like to see a team that never won the WC to bag it: Croatia or Belgium. I suspect France or Brazil will bag it though.

Surprises in the Euros, yes (Denmark, Greece etc) but in the WC, never.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/4/2018 2:37:49 PM   
rico21


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A few days before the World Cup, The New York Times paints a picture of the role of French suburbs for French football. Often criticized in the media, these neighborhoods are yet at the heart of the construction of the team of France.
Saturday, June 9, in Lyon, the United States, not qualified for the World Cup, face the French football team for their last preparation match before the kickoff of the World Cup. For the occasion, The New York Times has made a long article (translated into French on its website) about the importance of the suburbs for French football: "Of the 23 players that the French coach Didier Deschamps is preparing to take to Russia, 8 began their journey at the feet of the HLM towers of the suburbs of Paris.
Social integration is, according to The New York Times, at the heart of the role of coaches in these disadvantaged neighborhoods: "Their reach is extraordinary. There are 30,000 coaches in Île-de-France, for 253,000 affiliated players, more than a third of whom are under 18 years old. This gives sports and coaches an important social role. "The article states:" All footballers know that, after São Paulo, it is in the Paris region that we find the largest number of recruiters in the world. "

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/4/2018 3:24:37 PM   
shunwick


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Well, their is one obvious and burning question on the lips of all football fans. If you cloned Edinson Cavani, could the Uruguayans win the world cup?

Football Manager 18 provides the answer...

Introduction and pre-tournament friendlies

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INZNGSAjLao

The Group Games

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWlVEO4c9eM

The Cavani's march on. The Last Sixteen and Quarter-finals.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dgx9tL4_ovI

The semi-Final and beyond.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OO-brDKLnGU

Best wishes,
Steve



< Message edited by shunwick -- 7/6/2018 1:40:57 PM >


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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 4:30:18 PM   
warspite1


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I see certain members of the Colombian nation are taking the defeat well. 190,000 have signed a petition to FIFA to get the game against England replayed in the name of fair play.....

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 5:23:29 PM   
rico21


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Surprising, cartels are known for their fairplay

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 5:52:42 PM   
Orm


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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I see certain members of the Colombian nation are taking the defeat well. 190,000 have signed a petition to FIFA to get the game against England replayed in the name of fair play.....

Why in the name of fair play?

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 7:35:23 PM   
Zorch

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I see certain members of the Colombian nation are taking the defeat well. 190,000 have signed a petition to FIFA to get the game against England replayed in the name of fair play.....

Why in the name of fair play?

Yes, especially after an English player called Columbia the dirtiest team.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 7:51:07 PM   
shunwick


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Zorch


quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I see certain members of the Colombian nation are taking the defeat well. 190,000 have signed a petition to FIFA to get the game against England replayed in the name of fair play.....

Why in the name of fair play?

Yes, especially after an English player called Columbia the dirtiest team.

And clearly because Kane forced Sanchez to wrestle him to the ground as well as a perfectly good Colombian goal that was disallowed. The referee was obviously biased in favour of England and the English team were guilty of some outrageous dirty tactics. Even Raheem Stirling, who forced the Colombian official to barge into him on the way back to the tunnel, got in on the dirty tricks that England used. Disgraceful. I signed the petition.

Best wishes,
Steve

< Message edited by shunwick -- 7/5/2018 8:02:41 PM >


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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 8:30:25 PM   
TulliusDetritus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: shunwick
Disgraceful. I signed the petition.


er, satire?


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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 9:13:01 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: shunwick

quote:

ORIGINAL: Zorch


quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I see certain members of the Colombian nation are taking the defeat well. 190,000 have signed a petition to FIFA to get the game against England replayed in the name of fair play.....

Why in the name of fair play?

Yes, especially after an English player called Columbia the dirtiest team.

And clearly because Kane forced Sanchez to wrestle him to the ground as well as a perfectly good Colombian goal that was disallowed. The referee was obviously biased in favour of England and the English team were guilty of some outrageous dirty tactics. Even Raheem Stirling, who forced the Colombian official to barge into him on the way back to the tunnel, got in on the dirty tricks that England used. Disgraceful. I signed the petition.

Best wishes,
Steve
warspite1

Me too. That Sterling should be done for assault. And who ever heard of a referee stopping a game just because there were two balls on the pitch? England are a disgrace and it must be so because Maradona said so and he would never bring football into disrepute by conning a referee or playing for his country in the World Cup while off his t*** on coke.


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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 9:23:41 PM   
Zorch

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: shunwick

quote:

ORIGINAL: Zorch


quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I see certain members of the Colombian nation are taking the defeat well. 190,000 have signed a petition to FIFA to get the game against England replayed in the name of fair play.....

Why in the name of fair play?

Yes, especially after an English player called Columbia the dirtiest team.

And clearly because Kane forced Sanchez to wrestle him to the ground as well as a perfectly good Colombian goal that was disallowed. The referee was obviously biased in favour of England and the English team were guilty of some outrageous dirty tactics. Even Raheem Stirling, who forced the Colombian official to barge into him on the way back to the tunnel, got in on the dirty tricks that England used. Disgraceful. I signed the petition.

Best wishes,
Steve
warspite1

Me too. That Sterling should be done for assault. And who ever heard of a referee stopping a game just because there were two balls on the pitch? England are a disgrace and it must be so because Maradona said so and he would never bring football into disrepute by conning a referee or playing for his country in the World Cup while off his t*** on coke.


The Columbians are conforming to the stereotyped image of male Latin athletes.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/5/2018 9:25:31 PM   
TulliusDetritus


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What I don't get is this: why would you bash the other team when you won? 99,999999% of the time, you do that only when you lose. That's some Freudian slip eh

The nouveaux riches can't believe they are still alive ROFL This Stones guy thing sounds like the archetypical [half-starved for decades] nouveau riche.

And it was just miserable Colombia. Imagine they win. It's hilarious.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/6/2018 5:54:10 AM   
warspite1


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I really shouldn't ask but what on earth was that post about? I mean I genuinely have no idea what point you are making. Nouveau riche? Freudian slips? Miserable Colombia? Bash the other team when you won?

I'm sure it means something.... damned if I understand though.

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England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/6/2018 8:55:46 AM   
TulliusDetritus


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= 0 interaction, little englander.

Do you understand this or I should I write it in Mandarin?




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< Message edited by TulliusDetritus -- 7/6/2018 8:56:01 AM >


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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/6/2018 9:04:49 AM   
Orm


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Could you, please, write it in mandarin.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/6/2018 9:10:55 AM   
VPaulus

 

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Please guys, be civil.

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RE: All things Football (soccer) related - 7/6/2018 10:07:02 AM   
rico21


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France-Uruguay: facing the Blues, a whole country ready to "suffer until the final whistle"
Before the quarter-finals of the World Cup, the Uruguayan press gauge the chances of his team. Press review of "Courrier international".
A semi-finalist of the World Cup in 2010 and eliminated in the round of 16 in 2014, Uruguay will play Friday "the most important match of recent years" against the France team, ensures La República. For the daily of Montevideo, after the win against Portugal, "the joy of having qualified was immediately mixed with anxiety when it came to realizing what is happening to us".
Stuck between the two giants Argentina and Brazil, Uruguay has an extraordinary record for a country of three million inhabitants. La República sees in this quarter-final of the World Cup "a clash between world champions", even if the last Uruguayan title goes back to 1950. The newspaper recalls that the two teams "arrive undefeated" in this tournament: "Uruguay has won all his matches and conceded only one goal [against Portugal], and the Blues left Argentina in the ditch after a spectacular match. "
Players "trained in pure sacrifice"
Since the qualification of the Celeste for the quarterfinals, the press of Montevideo speaks only of the team of France, "this volcano in permanent activity", as summed up El Observador. "Uruguay is a team ready to suffer," adds the daily, which describes this feeling so special for the country:
"If there is one thing that the inhabitants of this earth do not need to learn, it is the feeling of agony. They live with. To pay for electricity, to arrive at the end of the month, to fight day by day. That's what we are. And this power inexplicably translates into our football. Uruguayans like to win in suffering. In the agony of a match. Players are trained in pure sacrifice. "
So, against the Blues, Uruguay "will play as he has always done, with courage and heroism," warns El Observador. "And on this side of the world, that of this country of three million inhabitants, we will be sitting in front of the television with a limpid instruction: to suffer until the final whistle. "
The Blues, so many talents
With this in mind, Uruguay expects to suffer for two main reasons: the quality of the French squad and the absence of his best player, Edinson Cavani.
"If, against Portugal, the name of Cristiano Ronaldo immediately came to mind when we thought about the threats against France, this exercise is impossible as its talent is multiple and well distributed," says La República. The newspaper believes that "the names of Pogba, Griezmann or Mbappé alone would be enough to crack the nerves of steel of any coach." But according to the Uruguayan daily, it will first of all "stop the engine of the French team, the one that has the most influence on it": the defensive midfielder N'Golo Kanté.
Without Cavani, not even afraid
For that, the Celeste will not be able to count on his striker Edinson Cavani, hurt with the calf during the match against Portugal. For the newspaper La Ovacion, "it's the worst possible news", but the verdict is implacable: the player of Paris-Saint-Germain will not be handed in time and "the Uruguayan staff hopes only to be able to register as that substitute ".
Moreover, adds El Telegrafo, "as the coach never aligns players who are not 100% of their means, it is impossible for Cavani to be present against the Gauls. The paper does not admit that it has been beaten, and says that "the Uruguay team have learned a recipe they've learned for twelve years: they know that not taking a goal gives them more opportunities and that they must realize all his opportunities before. She can also count on the experience of her most important players, who know that a World Cup can be reduced to killing or dying. "
The Diaria goes so far as to write that this absence of the striker makes "blow a wind of freedom and sink the combativity in the blood" of the Celeste. "If Edi fails to recover for the match, his natural substitute will be the talented Cristhian Stuani, one of the best scorers in the Spanish Liga, which will also bring its intense laundry, advance the Uruguayan daily. Exactly as Cavani does. "

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