Thursday, 31 October 2013

Bale bags brace at the Bernabeu

 

 
By David Lee Wheatley
 
Gareth Bale bagged two goals of his own and set up another two for Real Madrid as they romped to an emphatic 7-3 victory against Sevilla at the Bernabeu last night.
After a listless display in El Clasico last Saturday versus arch-rivals Barcelona, many in the Spanish media seemed determined to denounce Bale as a waste of money. This was in spite of the fact that he’d hardly played for Los Blancos since his world-record end of summer transfer from Tottenham through a catalogue of injuries that severely hampered his ability to settle into his stride in the Spanish capital.
Despite such strong and unwarranted criticism, the Welshman didn’t appear to be letting it affect him when playing an instrumental part in everything good about the home side yesterday evening. The winger was the chief reason they held a handy cushion to fall back on when Sevilla made a concerted effort to get back into the match from three-down, at one stage advancing to within one goal of their illustrious opponents.
Just 27 minutes in, Bale had already notched a nifty double to put his new club in command of the clash, before goalscoring phenomenon Cristiano Ronaldo bagged a third. A few jittery moments ensued when Sevilla brought the score back to 3-2 with five minutes of the first-half remaining through a Rakitic penalty and a Bacca strike. However, Benzema and Ronaldo stretched the lead further after the break prior to Sevilla grabbing a third, before the Portuguese superstar completed a fine hat-trick and Karim Benzema sealed the game with his second through a neat header.
Cristiano’s treble elevated him above the great Ferenc Puskas into fourth spot on the all-time scorer chart with an incredible 157. It’s a mark of the player that he’s reached such a landmark at the relatively young age of 28 and with many more years in the tank. At just 24, Bale will look to emulate his feted colleague in becoming a living legend in the eyes of those fans that behold him at the Bernabeu during his spell there; on this evidence, he may well have a realistic chance to do just that.
Twitter: @davewh1980

Time to get tough on racism in football

By David Lee Wheatley


UEFA’s punishment of CSKA Moscow for the latest in a string of racism-related incidents inside various football stadia is far, far too lenient.

What do the ‘fans’ involved care if they must uproot themselves from their usual position to another part of the stadium in order to continue conducting their vitriolic abuse of opposing players from other ethnic groups and races?

The only way for the leaders of European and world football to make a clear stand against such hideous prejudice is to begin deducting points and even banning clubs from European competition altogether.

Actions such as those will send a strong message that such vile behaviour will not be tolerated and will truly strike at the very core of clubs and their followers. A lack of top-tier continental action would harm them from a financial point of view, as well as taking away the prestige which taking part in the Champions League and Europa League delivers. Only then will it prove the zero-tolerance policy that UEFA claim to have for this kind of situation actually exists, as partially (or fully) closing stadia does absolutely nothing at all to deter the morons who perpetrate these heinous crimes.

More drastic and assertive measures from the powers-that-be would also act as a kick up the backside for the clubs themselves, making it impossible for them to ignore what is going on in front of their very eyes. Piffling fines and stadium bans serve not as a deterrent, but more as a way of proving just how toothless the aforementioned organisations are.

Tough new regulations must be put in place swiftly and what a legacy it would be for either or both Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini if they were to spearhead a disciplinary revolution leading to the eradication of such abusive and unwanted behaviour in the seating decks of football grounds across the world.

As we currently stand, the degenerates causing all of the aggravation and trouble are simply laughing at the governing bodies at present and have been doing so for a very long period of time. They would be laughing on the other side of their faces if their beloved clubs were kicked out of European competition for such offences.

With the assistance and backing of lawmakers and the police forces that patrol matches, it’s now high-time FIFA and UEFA got a grip to help rid this disease from the sport we love as soon as possible.
Twitter: @davewh1980

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Are the wheels coming off for Wenger?


By David Lee Wheatley
 
 

With Arsenal losing key home contests twice in the space of a week, could it be that the red-and-white juggernaut has ground to a shuddering halt?

The Gunners went an impressive 12 matches unbeaten across all competitions, sitting pretty at the top of their tough Champions League group and the Premier League table to boot, when met by the prospect of facing last season’s European surprise package Borussia Dortmund at the Emirates.
A pivotal match-up that could have all but confirmed Arsenal’s spot in the knockout phase of the tournament turned sour when Dortmund deservedly took home the spoils thanks to a late Lewandowski winner.
Fast forward seven days and the League Cup clash between the Premier League’s top two teams took place at the Gunners’ north London residence, with a resumption of the intriguing battle of wills between Arsene Wenger and his arch-nemesis Jose Mourinho.
Portuguese tactician Mourinho hadn’t lost against his French counterpart during eight previous games and therefore the first meeting between the pair since his much-hyped return to Stamford Bridge was viewed as a prime opportunity for the Arsenal boss to begin setting that particular record straight.
However, the Blues had other ideas and took the lead midway through the first-half through Azpilicueta following an awful headed back-pass from right-back Carl Jenkinson under little pressure.
Matters worsened in the second period when stylish Spanish playmaker Juan Mata sealed Chelsea’s progression into the last eight with a swerving shot from distance that gave Fabianski no chance. It was a sweet strike to settle a tie that was reasonably even in terms of possession and shots at goal, but with the hosts severely lacking a cutting edge.
Star man Mesut Ozil and striker Giroud sat on the bench for three-quarters of the clash, as Wenger’s hopes of ending a long-running trophy drought were dealt a mighty blow. Even though the long-serving Arsenal supremo insists confidence within his squad remains firmly intact, his claims cannot disguise the fact his line-up looked fragile and thin on the ground without the likes of the missing Arteta, Walcott and Flamini, plus subs for the night Ozil and Giroud.
When all Wenger’s top men are fit and in place, they are an awesome side capable of defeating any foe; however, shorn of stellar names it’s a whole different story.
Twitter: @davewh1980  






 



Saturday, 12 October 2013

The rejuvenation of Roma


By David Lee Wheatley

Everything appears to be going swimmingly for AS Roma, as they sit proudly atop the Serie A table under a bright coach alongside myriad new players who've quickly integrated and are performing out of their skins for the league leaders.

The Giallorossi hold the only 100% record in the division following seven straight wins, putting them two points clear of strong contenders Napoli and reigning champions Juventus at this early stage of proceedings. They further stamped their authority on top spot with a stunning 3-0 battering of fourth-placed Inter at the Giuseppe Meazza last time around and there appears no let-up in Roma's relentless march towards what would be a first Scudetto since 2001.

Former Lille coach Rudi Garcia arrived in the summer amid very little fanfare, but has since inspired a start to the campaign that very few observers saw coming.

One of the biggest surprises has been the form of ex-Arsenal misfit Gervinho, who looked completely devoid of confidence during an ill-fated spell in north London. Now all of a sudden, the Ivorian is a bone fide match-winner finally showing the capabilities Arsene Wenger always believed he possessed within him, but only now coming to fruition in the Eternal City under the wing of his former mentor Garcia.

Along with Gervinho's three strikes so far, the goals have been shared out healthily across the squad with captain and inspiration Totti, new man from Fiorentina Adem Ljajic and even defender Mehdi Benatia getting amongst the scoring free-for-all.

Out on top of the charts, though, is right winger Alessandro Florenzi with four, including the opener that set Roma on their way versus Inter. At 22, Florenzi is just beginning to make his mark in a team that have clicked markedly better than anyone expected and in spectacular fashion to boot.

Garcia's attack-minded side have brushed aside all before them and the Frenchman will be determined to push his charges on to even greater heights with a summit meeting against Napoli set for Friday evening at the Stadio Olimpico. Victory in that titanic clash would present further evidence of Roma's championship credentials against their arch-rivals, while putting some serious daylight between themselves and Rafa Benitez's pretenders to Juve's crown.

Roman icon Francesco Totti has an extremely exciting opportunity to lead his hometown team to a league title that he never thought possible. One step at a time, a first Scudetto for 13 years is drawing ever nearer for the Giallorossi in the most open Serie A battle of recent years.

Twitter: @davewh1980

Friday, 11 October 2013

Match preview: England v Montenegro

By David Lee Wheatley


England take on Montenegro this evening knowing only a win will do in their quest to reach the World Cup finals next year.

A decisive double-header awaits Roy Hodgson’s men against tricky opposition in the shape of the Montenegrins and Tuesday’s foes Poland, with maximum points required in order to make it mathematically impossible to be caught by closest rivals Ukraine in Group H.

Hodgson will be thankful that he can count on a clean bill of health going into tonight’s clash, having lost Ashley Cole to a rib injury before squad training began. Everton’s in-form left-back Leighton Baines is likely to take his place in the starting line-up, with Kieran Gibbs acting as back-up.

Aside from that, the predatory Daniel Sturridge regains his squad place after missing out on the last round of qualification matches with a thigh strain. The Liverpool star’s return hands the manager a dilemma as to how much attacking intent he wishes his side to portray at Wembley; does he plump for three out-and-out strikers, a tandem up-top or play his cards more conservatively?

The good news – if it’s to be believed – surrounds stylish forward Mirko Vucinic’s inability to feature through a knock picked up on Champions League duty for Juventus, which would be a huge boost for the home side but a bitter blow for the visitors. Others expected to be unavailable to Montenegro coach Branko Brnovic include goalkeeper Mladen Bozovic, defender Marko Basa and midfield player Miodrag Pekovic.

Lying one point clear of Ukraine and Montenegro, the English can seal their spot in Brazil with successive victories over the coming days. However, Montenegro held up well against England in past meetings and Poland are no pushovers. It’d be a massive disappointment should the Three Lions end up in a play-off or worse, making it imperative the men tasked with gaining the results Hodgson desperately seeks perform when it really matters.

Let’s hope England avoid any more astonishing embarrassments such as their demoralising failures in the run up to the USA World Cup of 1994 and Euro 2008. Crunch time is upon the nation and the finest footballers in the land must deliver the goods, despite the weight of expectation on their shoulders.
Twitter: @davewh1980

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Golden generation or Belgian waffle?



By David Lee Wheatley


Belgium approach their final two World Cup qualifying fixtures requiring only a point to make sure of a place in Brazil next year.

The nation from the Low Countries have developed a squad that would appear the mightiest they’ve mustered for many years; not since the heady days of current head coach Marc Wilmots’ playing era alongside legends such as Enzo Scifo, Jan Ceulemans, Franky Van der Elst, Michel Preud’Homme and Eric Gerets have so many excellent footballers’ careers converged.

Now, a new crop have emerged as the Red Devils attempt to deliver trophy success to a nation starved of it throughout their history.

44-year-old Wilmots spent three years as assistant coach before taking on the mantle as leader of the pack in 2012, while inheriting a set of stars handily reaching their peak all at the same time. Looking at the line-up on paper, each and every department looks supremely strong and the potential of the team seems limitless.

Between the sticks, top talents Simon Mignolet and Thibaut Courtois fight it out for the number one spot and are closely matched. Mignolet joined Liverpool in the summer having established himself as one of the greatest goalkeepers in the English Premier League with Sunderland, while Courtois has forged a fine reputation on loan at Atletico Madrid from Chelsea during the past two seasons and continues to perform well in La Liga at the Stamford Bridge club’s behest.

World-class Manchester City centre-back Vincent Kompany usually marshals a well-oiled defensive machine, but unfortunately misses out on the two upcoming clashes against Croatia and Wales due to a thigh injury. Even without him, though, the squad possesses quality in abundance in that area of the field with the experienced Daniel Van Buyten joined by Thomas Vermaelen, Jan Vertonghen and Toby Alderweireld amongst others.

Midfield is arguably even more impressive, with Eden Hazard, Fellaini, De Bruyne and Witsel fronting up a section of the side that also boasts the considerable skills of Napoli winger Dries Mertens, Steven Defour, Nacer Chadli and long-standing international Timmy Simons.

Then, up-top, powerful strikers Romelu Lukaku and Christian Benteke regularly frighten the life of their opposition, while versatile attacking midfielders Mousa Dembele and Kevin Mirallas round off a remarkable side that is ready to fire Belgium to the World Cup finals over the coming days.

Revered ex-international Wilmots has been blessed with an embarrassment of riches provided he utilises them effectively by blending their individual abilities into a working unit. Judging by their five-point lead in Group A, it suggests the former Schalke forward has found a way to extract the very best out of the players at his disposal.

At least a point away to closest challengers Croatia on Friday and they’re there.
 
Twitter: @davewh1980

Monday, 7 October 2013

Too much, too soon for England starlets?


By David Lee Wheatley

There was once a time when a player had to achieve success and hold down a regular place at club level before being elevated to the senior England national team, but now it seems a handful of impressive performances domestically is a sure-fire route to a first cap. Is it all too much, too soon for the young crop of stars currently trying to make their way in the game?

Ross Barkley and Andros Townsend are the latest beneficiaries of the fast-track mentality prevailing within the English game following a promising start to the season from both. Predecessors in recent times include Phil Jones, Kyle Walker, Chris Smalling, Tom Cleverley, Jack Wilshire and Danny Welbeck - all of whom were simply required to display a short stint of good form to ensure a place in the England squad.

This suggests a dearth of established talent in between the older and younger generations; there's very little competition at national level to force the up-and-coming footballers into producing high quality performances over a longer period of time domestically to earn their selection.

Further evidence of that is the fact that a large majority of fans and media immediately crowned Jack Wilshere as the 'savour of English football' when making his international bow in August 2010, just 21 months after signing his very first pro contract with Arsenal. Since that debut, he's featured on ten occasions for England and come up against severe pressure for a position in the Arsenal starting eleven this campaign thanks to the much vaunted transfer-record signing of German superstar Mesut Ozil.

Now, that moves me on handily to the next issue with plunging inexperienced players into the England side. With so many foreign talents in the Premier League, what happens if the potential of those aforementioned players ends up laying dormant while they warm the bench at club level? Will they be dumped by England never to be seen again? Should they be considered for international duty even if they can't get a look in for their Premier League club?

All those problems will likely come to face England boss Roy Hodgson head-on in the run-up to the World Cup, should the Group H leaders negotiate their way safely through to the tournament proper in Brazil next year.

The ability of Barkley, Townsend and others mentioned isn't in doubt, but would it equip them better for the rigours of a qualification campaign and subsequent high-pressure competitions if they had to become absolutely solid picks over a number of seasons for their clubs before advancing to play for the Three Lions?

Or, is it the case that Hodgson has no choice but to throw the largely untried young men into action earlier than he'd ideally wish and therefore it's just the way it has to be?

Much of the situation behind that conundrum comes down to the plethora of non-English footballers in the top-flight blocking the progress of players as they get a little older. The best English starlets will always burst through the red tape, but holding down a spot in the starting line-up is the tricky bit. They should be expected to do that before getting a full cap and it would give them extra motivation to prove themselves and make it completely unnecessary for their club manager to introduce any new blood from abroad in their favoured position. If they're going to be handed the keys to the kingdom after a few weeks of first-team football, then where is the incentive to become the best they can be?

That goes hand-in-hand with the fact that those kids who begin to make a name for themselves often get a massive wage rise after creating an impact. Once they've got the £50,000+ per week pay packet and an England cap before the age of 21 or 22, what more do they have to do to make it big? Precisely nothing - that's what. They've already made it in their minds and there's no prize of an England career at the end of a long road. Too much, too soon indeed.

Twitter: @davewh1980

Wednesday, 2 October 2013

Bayern look every bit the Champions of Europe



By David Lee Wheatley

Bavarians Bayern travelled to the Etihad today ready for a battle, but were greeted by a meek surrender from a Manchester City side that look a million miles behind the European champions in every single department.

City were out-passed, out-thought and out-classed on their home turf by illustrious visitors who played with such power, pace and poise that the hosts simply couldn't keep up. Pellegrini's men had absolutely no answer to Pep's boys, as Arjen Robben et al ran riot in this second game of the Champions League group stage.

There had been hope of a repeat performance of City's dominant 4-1 victory over local rivals Manchester United recently, but Bayern stamped their authority on the game early on with a 7th-minute strike from one half of that troublesome twosome on the flanks, Franck Ribery.

The home team huffed and puffed against supremely calm and collected opponents for the remainder of the half and 0-1 is how it remained by the halfway stage.

However, first Thomas Muller - playing in an unfamiliar 'false nine' role - hit home 11 minutes into the second period shortly before Man-of-the-Match Robben compounded City's misery with an easy third.

Alvaro Negredo handed the deflated English club a lifeline after 79 minutes with a fine turn and finish from the edge of the area, but it only provided a brief glimmer of light amid the gloom created by such a one-sided affair in favour of the impressive Germans.

Even the late sending-off involving Bayern centre-back Jerome Boateng with four minutes of normal time left on the clock, plus a subsequent whack of the bar from a David Silva free-kick, didn't detract from the overwhelming evidence on display tonight which suggests it'll be a mightily difficult task for any side to stop the 'Red Machine' from retaining their beloved trophy.

On this showing, Manchester City are no better placed to challenge for European honours than they were last season under deposed manager Roberto Mancini, while Bayern appear at least as strong as they were under Jupp Heynckes in winning an historic treble during a glittering campaign last time around.

Twitter: @davewh1980

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

The Report: Everton v Newcastle United

fBy David Lee Wheatley


A rampant Everton side were three goals up against a woeful Newcastle United at half-time, before a change of shape and personnel inspired a fight-back that almost rescued an unlikely point for the visitors at Goodison Park last night.

Powerful striker Romelu Lukaku opened the scoring in only the 5th minute after great work down the right from Belgian international team-mate Kevin Mirallas.

The Magpies were defending as if they’d never played alongside one another previously, with some particularly strange decision-making from centre-back Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa.

Alan Pardew’s men were ripped apart midway through the first period by a neat interchange between Lukaku and Ross Barkley, who dashed through to finish smartly following an intelligent move that split the United central defence wide open.

If things were looking bleak for the away team at that stage, it got even worse eight minutes before the end of the half when a hopeful long ball from Toffees goalkeeper Tim Howard somehow found its way to the ever-dangerous Lukaku; Yanga-Mbiwa inexplicably ran away from the forward rather than challenging him, thus leaving Krul and Coloccini hopelessly exposed. Lukaku gleefully accepted the generous offer of a free run at goal to take the game seemingly beyond an awful Newcastle side.

Apart from a couple of fleeting glimpses of attacking threat from Hatem Ben Arfa, there was very little for the travelling Toon Army to get excited about. However, the home supporters were in utter delirium at what they had witnessed, with chief protagonists Barkley and Lukaku looking capable of conjuring scoring chances at will.

Toon boss Pardew must have been livid at his team’s listless performance and he made two decisive substitutions in an effort to turn the tide, bringing on Williamson for Yanga-Mbiwa and Cabaye for Ben Arfa, thus pushing Sissoko out wide. Midfield man Cabaye had been a doubt prior to kick-off due to a groin strain, but Pardew had evidently seen enough and made the call to take a risk on the Frenchman.

The gamble paid off spectacularly six minutes into the new half when Cabaye picked the ball up 25 yards out, strode confidently forward before unleashing a missile of shot that was going into the net from the second the ball left his foot. Newcastle looked remarkably compact in contrast to their initial showing and were causing more than a few problems for the Everton rearguard - finally a glimmer of hope amid the gloom.

It appeared that Everton were in danger of collapsing under the pressure at times, as the black-and-whites worked tirelessly to drag themselves back into contention in a match they seemed to have lost by the halfway point.

Despite Loic Remy bundling his way through a challenge to score with a minute remaining, their remarkable turnaround in form during the second period was to no avail. Alas, no points were accrued, but at least some pride was salvaged from the wreckage of the opening 45 minutes.

For Everton, their unbeaten start to the season under Roberto Martinez continues thanks to a classy first-half display and specifically a powerhouse performance from Romelu Lukaku; how Chelsea must rue letting him go out on loan for the season in light of their ongoing issues in the striking department.
 
Twitter: @davewh1980