Welcome

So I did this football blog a fair few years back, but haven't done much in the last few years. Anyway, now this blog will contain occasional posts about everything in the football world... just to contain my boredom. So please read and comment or whatever, I love a debate!

Tuesday, 24 November 2009

Football Informer Quiz!


Think you know football? Try this mind-scratching batch of questions for this month...

1. What ground do Ipswich Town play at?

a) Bloomfield Road
b) Portman Road
c) St. Michael's Park

2. What squad number is Darren Fletcher for Man United?

a) 14
b) 8
c) 24

3. Who is the manager of A.S Roma?

a) Jose Mourinho
b) Claudio Ranieri
c) Luciano Spalletti

4. Who is the assistant manager of Liverpool?

a) Sammy Lee
b) Mauricio Pellegrino
c) John McMahon

5. What is Aberystwyth Town's biggest league away win?

a) 6-0
b) 8-0
c) 9-1

Beckham ahoy!


a guest contributor writes...

In the flashy world of American sports one finds many distinctive cultural events. Hotdogs, popcorn, cheerleaders, huge costumed mascots, marching bands, and a very "US" feel.

This also applies to US soccer, as one would imagine. The big teams, which include LA Galaxy, Real Salt Lake, Columbus Crew, the steadily rising Seattle Sounders, and the soon-to-be-admitted-to-MLS Philadelphia Union. It seems to be big business. But is soccer really all that popular?

You may be surprised to hear that football is the most played sport in US schools, and the team sport which is most participated in. While American football and baseball are the big spectator sports, soccer is the People's Game. It is hoped that grassroots fervour around this sport will build it up into an industry to rival that of Europe. And it seems that the 34 year old David Beckham wants to be a part of it.

Beckham's contract with the League and LA Galaxy states that he will be allowed to operate an MLS team. He told the BBC: "I have the right to own an M.L.S. franchise, which I will action immediately after I have stopped playing". In 2010, Philly Union will enter the league's hallowed halls, and in 2011, Portland Timbers and the Canadian Vancouver Whitecaps will step onto the big-money field. Beckham is allowed to start running a team in 2012. One of the teams looking for 2012 entry will be another Canadian club, Montreal.

The owner of Montreal Impact, Joey Saputo, along with other high-profile parties, are dropping hints in the media suggesting Beckham involvement in a deal. Saputo, confirming that potential parters had approached him, stated "I can say yes, we were approached about two months ago, but I can’t say by whom."

Will the worldwide football landscape be affected by David Beckham steering the 19th ship in the Major League Soccer fleet? Only time will tell. But I will say this, American interest in association football is soaring.

Story here.

Friday, 20 November 2009

A replacement for football?

a guest contributor writes...

With the recent scandal concerning Thierry Henry and the Ireland-France playoff, we can see how important football has become to national identities. Even the Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach), Brian Cowen has stepped in, demanding a rematch. This seems to have blown the whole thing out of proportion; perhaps it should be accepted that it is a fundamental rule of the game that the referee's decision overrides the fundamental rules of the game.

As someone with close to no knowledge of the game of foot-the-ball, you may find it insulting that I am attempting to comment on the recent events at the playoff match between the teams of the Republics of Ireland and France. I don’t care; I’ll do it anyway.

As I understand it, the player Thierry Henry touched the ball one, nay two times in the Irish penalty area, leading to a goal. This seems to me as wrong; surely there is a rul that forbids non-goalkeeper players from handling the ball. I looked it up in the FA 1981 Book of Rules and Stuff, and apparently there is such a thing as the “hand-ball-rule”, or something. In other areas, players are being bought and sold like commodities, and managers are being mutinied against and thrown out like bottles of sour milk.

Football as a whole seems to have been blown out of proportion. It is no longer the realm of pleasant university matches, leather balls and top-hatted spectators. The commentator with the clearly enunciated Received Pronunciation is also a thing of the past. Perhaps it is time to return to that age, and to start afresh with the core elements of the game, or perhaps it is time to find a replacement.


I feel that an ideal replacement for the noble game of footy would be the ancient South Asian team sport of Kabaddi. It has some very interesting rules which would certainly stop it from becoming part of a serious world full of serious economics and highly-paid-slave-trading. In the game there are two teams in different halves of a field, and they take it in turns to throw members of their own team into the opposite half to writhe and wrestle on the floor with members of the other team, and to "tag" them. Once this strange practise is completed, the player must return to his own half. The players must hold their breaths during all of this. Genious.

A website has provided me with a list of the skills needed to play Kabaddi like a pro. I'm sure not all football players could pull these off. They include "Taunting" (well...), "Touching with the hand" (fine, OK...), "Raid" (yeah, but...), and "Penetration" (we won't go into that). All in all, a wider portfolio of fun skills, thrills and spills which will enthrall a British and worldwide audience once they are disillusioned with the crazy world of football. So, think about it. Soon football itself could be a thing of the past, replaced by the All-UK Kabaddi League. Of course, that would mean the end of this blog. Sorry.

Now, move along. Go back to watching I'm a Celebrity, or hitting each other, or whatever it is people do these days...

Thursday, 19 November 2009

World Cup 2010 - Who's there?

After much hard work and effort from all teams in a brilliant World Cup Qualification term, the following teams have qualified:

UEFA (Europe):
Denmark, France, England, Greece, Germany, Netherlands, Italy, Slovakia, Serbia, Portugal, Spain, Slovenia, Switzerland.
AFC (Asian Football Confederation):
Japan, Australia, Korea Republic, Korea DPR.
CAF (African Football Confederation):
Cameroon, Algeria, Ivory Coast, Ghana, South Africa, Nigeria
CONCACAF (Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football):
Mexico, U.S.A, Honduras.
CONMEBOL (South American Football Confederation) :
Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay.
OFC (Oceania Football Confederation):
New Zealand

Good Luck to all teams involved. And real sympathy for the Republic of Ireland following their cruel exit in the play-offs following that hand-ball. More to follow on that soon....