Archives for the month of: December, 2009
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Following a 17-year “drought”, legendary Flamengo wins it all! Fla, as all Brazilian fans nickname the club, is one of the most popular clubs in Brazil. Its last Brazilian championship title goes back to 1982, an eternity! Flamengo has now won 6 national championship titles and 31 carioca ones, the local championship between all Rio area clubs. That’s one more title than their eternal rival Fluminense. So who will the next clasico Fla-Flu?

Here is the extract of Flamengo’s 2 to 1 win over Gremio that clinches the title.

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The FIFA organised the draw of the 32 contenders yesterday in Cape Town. I almost had a fit when my preferred countries Uruguay and France got picked in the same group! Many specialists consider this a lucky draw for France who are also with South Africa and Mexico but I don’t agree. I actually think this group is quite balanced. Many people also thought France would cruise through its qualifying group (Serbia, Austria, Romania, Lithuania and Feroe Islands) only to see France finishing a weak 2nd and barely eliminating Ireland in the final playoff. Uruguay have a great attack with Forlan and Suarez and a charismatic captain Lugano who symbolizes the famous garra celeste. South Africa, despite bad results since 2 years now, will be backed by a whole country and you just can’t dismiss the 12th man. Mexico is more of a mystery but they can have their good days.

As I previously posted, there is a once again a “Group of Death”. This is Group G with Brazil, North Korea, Ivory Coast and Portugal. Brazil should go through but the Auriverdes will have to be in their top form right from the beginning which could penalize in the second round. Portugal has a slight advantage over the Ivory Coast since they play Brazil in the third and last match. By then the Brazilians could already be qualified and tempted to have their B-team play against the Portuguese.

Both Italy and Spain have relatively easy groups I feel. Germany should also go through but the fight for the second place in this group will be intense between Australia, Serbia and Ghana. Something tells me that Group B could be a surprise where even Argentina could be impacted. I still think the Albiceleste will go through but perhaps not in the 1st place. I also see England finishing first of their group but it’s all open between the USA, Algeria and even Slovenia who eliminated Russia in the playoffs.

Group A: South Africa, Mexico, Uruguay, France
Group B: Argentina, Nigeria, Korea Republic, Greece
Group C: England, USA, Algeria, Slovenia
Group D: Germany, Australia, Serbia, Ghana,
Group E: Netherlands, Denmark, Japan, Cameroon
Group F: Italy, Paraguay, New Zealand, Slovakia
Group G: Brazil, Korea DPR, Côte d’Ivoire, Portugal
Group H: Spain, Switzerland, Honduras, Chile

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The big day has arrived; after 2 years of intense qualifying games, the 32 countries participating in the 19th World Cup will finally know in what 1st round groups they will be in. The draw ceremony in just about 3 hours will be followed by over 200 million tv viewers worldwide. The level of the competition this year is unheard of with all the existing World Cup champions taking part (Uruguay, Italy, Brazil, Germany, England, Argentina and France) as well as the current European champion Spain.

This is also the first World Cup to take place in Africa. I remember well when for the first time an African country paved the way to the idea that some day an African nation would win the World Cup. That was the famous Cameroon team of Roger Milla who almost beat England in the 1990 World Cup in Italy. Will this edition be the right one for the African contenders? Amongst the African teams, I feel that Cameroon, Ghana and Ivory Coast have the highest chances to go far. Let’s see!

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The Fifa announced the 4 pots of 8 teams each which will be used to draw the first round of the World Cup. The biggest surprise is that France is not part of the seeded teams making way for England instead. Knowing the French coach Domenech, he will use this to motivate his team in his typical “we against the world” fashion.

I really enjoy the days before each World Cup draw with everyone trying to imagine what the best mix of teams would be to get their favourite country to the second round. World Cups have often had one of these first-round groups nicknamed the “Group of Death” with a very balanced mix of 4 teams. In recent World Cups, I particularly remember the 2002 World Cup with a memorable Group of Death composed of Argentina, England, Nigeria and Sweden. That group saw England and Sweden qualify.

My Group of Death would be something like : Brazil, France, Ivory Coast and Mexico. What would your worst Group of Death look like?

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There is a lot of talk these days on how to deal with helping referees make less errors. There are many things to be said around this subject so this will be quite a long post :-) .

First of all, television coverage and progress in filming have increased tremendously in the past 20 years. I remember that in the 1970s you were lucky if you got to see one or two games per month on TV. And then the cameras were fewer and much more static than they are now not to mention that slow motion was quite rare. That puts much more pressure on referees since millions of viewers can now scrutinize every single decision they make. There is often a big gap between what you see in a stadium and on TV. I happened to be in the Stade de France for the infamous France – Ireland qualifying game for the 2010 World Cup and I can assure you that very few people saw Thierry Henry’s “Hand of God” assist. When we left the stadium hardly anyone was mentioning the incident. My view is that the decision to go for video or other technological tools should in no way be considered because of TV interests and the money that is behind it. The decision should be made on the basis of the game itself and how it will help or hinder it.

How do you practically implement video coverage to assess referee decisions? At what point in time do you use the video? Take the Thierry Henry example again. Proponents of video assistance simply say, you see using the video would have clearly shown the hand and the referee would have canceled the goal. Right, but now imagine that the same video would have shown a split second earlier an Irish player committing a foul on a French player in the penalty area. According to FIFA rules, the referee’s decision is based on the first foul when there is a succession of them. This scenario would have led to a penalty for the French team! What I am trying to get to here is that you can’t use video because football can’t be chopped into sequences. Take another famous example, Geoff Hurst’s blasting shot (see video at the end of this post) on the goal post during the England- Germany 1966 World Cup final in Wembley. The goal was awarded, but here again, what if the video would have spotted an English player committing a foul just before; do you go back the original foul or do you only concentrate on if the ball entirely crossed the goal line? Using video just doesn’t make sense to me because due to the sequence of actions in a game, the decision to use video coverage at a certain point in this sequence is in itself completely subjective.

My last point is linked to the tag line of this blog : “Football is the universal sport because it is the closest to human nature”. This is maybe the most important part in my mind. The history of football is made of mistakes, many of them unfair. Mistakes are part of our human DNA, to try and eradicate them is to convert us into robots. The FIFA Laws of the Game are in many cases dependent on the referee’s appreciation of the action. Take for example Law 11 regarding offside. For an offside to be decided, the referee has to decide whether the player being considered for offside is also involved in active play. My opinion is that it is because football is so much about appreciation that so many of us identify with it. We endlessly discuss with others, blame the referees, the FIFA, the commentators, regarding referee decisions and that is the way it should be! How sad it would be if the clinical coldness of a video would have canceled Maradona’s “Hand of God” goal in the 1986 World Cup or Geoff Hurt’s above mentioned shot. These uncertain moments have become legends of the sport and have been told from generation to generation. This is why we are so passionate about football, these discussions are close to our own weaknesses and act as a living mirror. Introducing technology in this human equation will break the game.

That is why I fully support Michel Platini’s plan of reinforcing the human factor by having 2 additional referees – one behind each goal – backing up the existing referee and 2 assistant referees on the sides. It’s no suprise that Platini has had this idea, he is a living example of someone who truly understands football and its human dimension.

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Lionel Messi is my favourite player and I am thrilled that he has just been awarded France Football’s famous Ballon d’Or. The Ballon d’Or is football’s equivalent to the Oscars or Nobel Prize. From 1956 to 1994 it was only awarded to players of European nationality playing in a European championship. That was then changed from 1995 to 2006 to a player from any country playing in Europe and since 2007 is open to all championships worldwide.

Messi (FC Barcelona) won with a record 473 points out of 480 way ahead of Cristiano Ronaldo (Real Madrid) who came in second with 233 points followed by Xavi (FC Barcelona) with 170 points. I don’t quite agree with the ranking as I would have put FC Barcelona’s Iniesta second to Messi.

I really like Messi’s style of playing where you get the impression the ball is literally glued to his feet. He is one of the rare players who still has the guts of dribbling, an art which seems to become very scarce these days. Messi is also a scoring machine, notably with the FC Barcelona, where he scored 90 goals in a total of 176 matches! Messi took a great part in the Barça’s incredible 2008/09 season where they won the Spanish Liga and Cup as well as the Champions League. Now they only need to win the FIFA Club World Cup (the only trophy that the Barca is missing) to do the grand slam.

Many people have seen Messi’s incredible goal against Getafe which is stunningly similar to the other famous goal Maradona scored against England in the 1986 World Cup quarter final. However, my favourite one is when Messi scored with the head against Manchester United in the last Champions League. It shows that a small little man measuring 1m69 can use his talent to beat 2 defenders and a goalkeeper who are all about 20 cm taller than him. Another example of the underdog spirit that my blog tries to convey :-) .

Enjoy it!

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