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  • Top 10 soccer stories of 2010

    1. FIFA corruption. It's been a long time since anybody thought of FIFA as a bunch of do-gooders, but this has been a damaging year for its reputation nonetheless. As Sepp Blatter's merry troupe was courted by World Cup bidders, two members (Nigeria's Amos Adamu and Tahiti's Reynald Temarii) were suspended for offering to sell their votes, and the rest of the executive committee did nothing to quell suspicions that it was standard practice by giving the 2018 and 2022 tournaments to mega-rich, risky options Russia and Qatar, respectively. Blatter says he wants to give soccer to the world -- though South Africa saw not a cent of the $2 billion profit that FIFA, which refuses to pay tax in host countries, made from last summer's World Cup.

    2. The world goes loco for Spain. This was the year everyone got down with tiki-taka. First came the ticker-tape finale to La Liga, which saw Barcelona claim the title with a typically decisive contribution from Leo Messi (34 goals for the season, and 15 in Barca's first 12 league matches this term). Then Spain -- the reigning European champion -- unleashed its hypnotic pass-and-move soccer, orchestrated by midfield magicians Xavi and Andres Iniesta, to claim the World Cup. A new standard has been set: There is winning, and then there is winning. No wonder that Ballon d'Or short list, announced at the start of December, is composed of this trio. One will be named world player of the year on Jan. 10.

    3. Are the Europeans coming or going? At the other end of the World Cup scale was France, or les farceurs. Abject on the pitch, brawling off it, the French were literally laughed out of the tournament. With England not much better, the demise of European soccer was apparently in the cards -- except that Spain, Germany and the Netherlands rather jinxed that theory. The Germans were uncharacteristically bewitching, with Thomas Müller seducing a generation before the group stage was over. Meanwhile, Dutch stock dropped faster than its bruised opponents, and the brutality of the final -- Nigel de Jong's chest-high boot on Xabi Alonso, in particular -- shocked and disappointed everyone. Somehow, referee Howard Webb failed to show a red card until the 109th minute -- let's not get started on the standard of refereeing in South Africa.

    4. Internazionale does the treble. Jose Mourinho's Real Madrid was emphatically humbled by Barcelona recently, but it was quite another story earlier in the year as he led Internazionale to a Champions League, Scudetto and Coppa Italia-winning treble, the first in Italian soccer history. Mourinho's Catenaccio (defensive system) stood obstinately in Pep Guardiola's way in the Champions League semifinals, laughing in the face of accusations of anti-football and all the way to a comfortable win over Bayern Munich -- despite having just a third of the possession -- in the final. Domestic honors haven't been hard to come by at San Siro, but this was Inter's first European Cup triumph since 1965.

    5. An up-and-down year for England's talisman. In late March, when Wayne Rooney had racked up 33 goals with Manchester United in first place, it seemed certain that we'd spend this time looking back on an exceptional year in the life of the striker. And we are reflecting, but mainly because his reputation has flipped a spectacular 180 in the past nine months. In that time, he's scored only three goals, reaching his on-field nadir in South Africa, where he played like a lost tourist. Off the pitch, his worst moment came in September, when Sunday newspapers broke stories about his affairs with prostitutes while his wife, Colleen, was pregnant. But his most expensive flirtation was with Manchester City -- a dalliance that cost United a five-year, £220,000-a-week ($347,000) contract.

    6. Thierry Henry moves to MLS. It was an eventful year for New York Red Bulls, starting with the opening of its new stadium and ending with an almighty choke against San Jose in the Eastern Conference semifinals. But for MLS fans, it was the arrival of Thierry Henry from Barcelona -- augmenting the league's most expensive roster -- that stood out. He may not have the celebrity va-va-voom of David Beckham, but he had more medals in his cabinet and an appearances/goals/assists record of 651/306/157 prior to signing. Just ask Toronto what the trio of Henry, Juan Pablo Angel and Rafa Marquez is capable of doing.

    7. Liverpool sold ... eventually. Human evolutionary changes must have taken place in the time it took for Tom Hicks and George Gillett to relinquish power at Liverpool. The club was put up for sale in April against the warring pair's wishes (they were holding out for a big-money sale), and was finally signed over to New England Sports Ventures in October, at a loss of around £150 million ($237 million). In that time, Hicks and Gillett had brought a taste of Dallas (the TV series) to Merseyside, with a dubious Texan injunction their final, undignified attempt to prevent the sale. Although manager Roy Hodgson is unlikely to have received too many Christmas cards, results have started to pick up since the arrival of John Henry.

    8. Bursaspor's explosive Super Lig triumph. In the first 50 years of Turkey's Super Lig, only four teams claimed the trophy, and because Galatasaray and Fenerbahce had hogged 34 titles between them, even Besiktas' 2008-09 victory, its 13th, looked out of place. But that was nothing compared to Bursaspor's leap from nowhere -- it had never even finished in the top three -- to win the crown in May. It needed to beat Besiktas (head-to-head record of 13 wins to 3 in Besiktas' favor), and hope that Fenerbahce failed to beat fifth-place Trabzonspor, to win. When exactly that happened, Bursa's elation was only helped by news that someone at Fenerbahce had mistakenly announced it champion over the PA system, prompting wild celebrations that were abruptly cut short -- then dissolved into a riot.

    9. Champions League gate-crashed. The times they are a-changing: Not only did the 2010 Champions League semifinals proceed without an English club (the first time in seven years), but a French side graced the last four for the first time in six years after Lyon beat Bordeaux in the quarterfinals. Les Gones fell to Bayern Munich, which thus made its first final in nine years; Internazionale trumped Barcelona to make its first in decades. A blip? Perhaps. But in the 2010-11 season, there have been group stage debuts for FC Twente, Bursaspor and Tottenham, which unexpectedly topped its group, and FC Copenhagen has become the first Danish side to reach the last 16 of the Champions League.

    10. Philippines beats Vietnam. The Asean Football Federation's biennial Suzuki Cup might not be too high up on your list of priorities, but this year's tournament produced arguably the biggest upset in its history: Defending champion and federation powerhouse Vietnam lost 2-0 to the Philippines, ranked 151st in the world and without so much as a point off Vietnam in nearly 20 years. Accusing the Azkals of parking the bus, Vietnamese coach Henrique Calisto refused to shake his opposite number's hand after the match. Simon McMenemy was upset by the gesture but wouldn't be drawn into a slanging match after a result that prompted the country's vice president, Jejomar Binay, to promise a national training program.

    Honorable mention: A memorable year for Luis Suarez, who was named Netherlands Player of the Year for his goal-scoring exploits at Ajax before his World Cup "save" put Uruguay into the semifinals at the expense of Ghana. Though that play in South Africa made him a hero back home, any rehabilitation of his image elsewhere will probably have to wait until after his seven-match suspension for biting PSV's Otman Bakkal on the shoulder during a match in November.


    link: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...ml?xid=shareFB

    Comment


    • Originally posted by semikotne View Post
      Top 10 soccer stories of 2010

      1. FIFA corruption. It's been a long time since anybody thought of FIFA as a bunch of do-gooders, but this has been a damaging year for its reputation nonetheless. As Sepp Blatter's merry troupe was courted by World Cup bidders, two members (Nigeria's Amos Adamu and Tahiti's Reynald Temarii) were suspended for offering to sell their votes, and the rest of the executive committee did nothing to quell suspicions that it was standard practice by giving the 2018 and 2022 tournaments to mega-rich, risky options Russia and Qatar, respectively. Blatter says he wants to give soccer to the world -- though South Africa saw not a cent of the $2 billion profit that FIFA, which refuses to pay tax in host countries, made from last summer's World Cup.

      2. The world goes loco for Spain. This was the year everyone got down with tiki-taka. First came the ticker-tape finale to La Liga, which saw Barcelona claim the title with a typically decisive contribution from Leo Messi (34 goals for the season, and 15 in Barca's first 12 league matches this term). Then Spain -- the reigning European champion -- unleashed its hypnotic pass-and-move soccer, orchestrated by midfield magicians Xavi and Andres Iniesta, to claim the World Cup. A new standard has been set: There is winning, and then there is winning. No wonder that Ballon d'Or short list, announced at the start of December, is composed of this trio. One will be named world player of the year on Jan. 10.

      3. Are the Europeans coming or going? At the other end of the World Cup scale was France, or les farceurs. Abject on the pitch, brawling off it, the French were literally laughed out of the tournament. With England not much better, the demise of European soccer was apparently in the cards -- except that Spain, Germany and the Netherlands rather jinxed that theory. The Germans were uncharacteristically bewitching, with Thomas Müller seducing a generation before the group stage was over. Meanwhile, Dutch stock dropped faster than its bruised opponents, and the brutality of the final -- Nigel de Jong's chest-high boot on Xabi Alonso, in particular -- shocked and disappointed everyone. Somehow, referee Howard Webb failed to show a red card until the 109th minute -- let's not get started on the standard of refereeing in South Africa.

      4. Internazionale does the treble. Jose Mourinho's Real Madrid was emphatically humbled by Barcelona recently, but it was quite another story earlier in the year as he led Internazionale to a Champions League, Scudetto and Coppa Italia-winning treble, the first in Italian soccer history. Mourinho's Catenaccio (defensive system) stood obstinately in Pep Guardiola's way in the Champions League semifinals, laughing in the face of accusations of anti-football and all the way to a comfortable win over Bayern Munich -- despite having just a third of the possession -- in the final. Domestic honors haven't been hard to come by at San Siro, but this was Inter's first European Cup triumph since 1965.

      5. An up-and-down year for England's talisman. In late March, when Wayne Rooney had racked up 33 goals with Manchester United in first place, it seemed certain that we'd spend this time looking back on an exceptional year in the life of the striker. And we are reflecting, but mainly because his reputation has flipped a spectacular 180 in the past nine months. In that time, he's scored only three goals, reaching his on-field nadir in South Africa, where he played like a lost tourist. Off the pitch, his worst moment came in September, when Sunday newspapers broke stories about his affairs with prostitutes while his wife, Colleen, was pregnant. But his most expensive flirtation was with Manchester City -- a dalliance that cost United a five-year, £220,000-a-week ($347,000) contract.

      6. Thierry Henry moves to MLS. It was an eventful year for New York Red Bulls, starting with the opening of its new stadium and ending with an almighty choke against San Jose in the Eastern Conference semifinals. But for MLS fans, it was the arrival of Thierry Henry from Barcelona -- augmenting the league's most expensive roster -- that stood out. He may not have the celebrity va-va-voom of David Beckham, but he had more medals in his cabinet and an appearances/goals/assists record of 651/306/157 prior to signing. Just ask Toronto what the trio of Henry, Juan Pablo Angel and Rafa Marquez is capable of doing.

      7. Liverpool sold ... eventually. Human evolutionary changes must have taken place in the time it took for Tom Hicks and George Gillett to relinquish power at Liverpool. The club was put up for sale in April against the warring pair's wishes (they were holding out for a big-money sale), and was finally signed over to New England Sports Ventures in October, at a loss of around £150 million ($237 million). In that time, Hicks and Gillett had brought a taste of Dallas (the TV series) to Merseyside, with a dubious Texan injunction their final, undignified attempt to prevent the sale. Although manager Roy Hodgson is unlikely to have received too many Christmas cards, results have started to pick up since the arrival of John Henry.

      8. Bursaspor's explosive Super Lig triumph. In the first 50 years of Turkey's Super Lig, only four teams claimed the trophy, and because Galatasaray and Fenerbahce had hogged 34 titles between them, even Besiktas' 2008-09 victory, its 13th, looked out of place. But that was nothing compared to Bursaspor's leap from nowhere -- it had never even finished in the top three -- to win the crown in May. It needed to beat Besiktas (head-to-head record of 13 wins to 3 in Besiktas' favor), and hope that Fenerbahce failed to beat fifth-place Trabzonspor, to win. When exactly that happened, Bursa's elation was only helped by news that someone at Fenerbahce had mistakenly announced it champion over the PA system, prompting wild celebrations that were abruptly cut short -- then dissolved into a riot.

      9. Champions League gate-crashed. The times they are a-changing: Not only did the 2010 Champions League semifinals proceed without an English club (the first time in seven years), but a French side graced the last four for the first time in six years after Lyon beat Bordeaux in the quarterfinals. Les Gones fell to Bayern Munich, which thus made its first final in nine years; Internazionale trumped Barcelona to make its first in decades. A blip? Perhaps. But in the 2010-11 season, there have been group stage debuts for FC Twente, Bursaspor and Tottenham, which unexpectedly topped its group, and FC Copenhagen has become the first Danish side to reach the last 16 of the Champions League.

      10. Philippines beats Vietnam. The Asean Football Federation's biennial Suzuki Cup might not be too high up on your list of priorities, but this year's tournament produced arguably the biggest upset in its history: Defending champion and federation powerhouse Vietnam lost 2-0 to the Philippines, ranked 151st in the world and without so much as a point off Vietnam in nearly 20 years. Accusing the Azkals of parking the bus, Vietnamese coach Henrique Calisto refused to shake his opposite number's hand after the match. Simon McMenemy was upset by the gesture but wouldn't be drawn into a slanging match after a result that prompted the country's vice president, Jejomar Binay, to promise a national training program.

      Honorable mention: A memorable year for Luis Suarez, who was named Netherlands Player of the Year for his goal-scoring exploits at Ajax before his World Cup "save" put Uruguay into the semifinals at the expense of Ghana. Though that play in South Africa made him a hero back home, any rehabilitation of his image elsewhere will probably have to wait until after his seven-match suspension for biting PSV's Otman Bakkal on the shoulder during a match in November.


      link: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...ml?xid=shareFB

      Calisto really hates the double decker bus. Lol.
      Follow my blogs and tweets. http://dxjayrocksnotes.blogspot.com/ and https://twitter.com/dxjayrock


      Road To Rio 2016.

      Kwentong Gilas ~ Gilas Serye. LMAO!!!

      Comment


      • We can bring football right to the Azkals’ lair
        Recah Trinidad
        Bare Eye
        First Posted 02:55:54 23/12/2010

        No, this is not Thank God that the Azkals of the Philippines failed to win the Suzuki Cup.
        A win is a win is a win, no substitute for going all out and bagging the real thing.
        But the merrily ringing truth is that, by failing to move into the Cup final against Indonesia over the weekend, the Azkals, named after obscure, messed-up street pups, made a sensational impact on Filipino sporting life.
        They are now honored, celebrated like luminous gold-medal winners in exacting dog shows featuring select thoroughbreds.
        * * *
        Their dignified, gritty stand against the best from Southeast Asia was noble enough to shift barnacled Olympic priorities hereabouts.
        Tycoon Manny V. Pangilinan readily wrote a P1-Million check for the new darlings of Philippine sports.
        An anonymous Binondo stock broker coolly donated P 3-Million-no name mention, please-through a young broadcaster who followed the Azkals all the way to Jakarta on his own.
        Assorted support and pledges poured in happy spontaneity.
        * * *
        “Congratulations for taking the cudgels for football and what’s good for our country,” texted Herman Basbano, president and incoming chair of the KBP (Kapisanan ng mga Broadcaster sa Pilipinas).
        Basbano, who’s coordinating with Philippine Football Federation vice-president Mike Batiles, has vowed to bring football to the masses through 838 KBP member stations nationwide.
        “Yes, it can be done, we’re with you in willing to help-it’s part of our social responsibility,” the KBP head added.
        * * *
        You see, past attempts to rescue Philippine football from the pits of neglect and mediocrity, made mostly by ego-trippers, had predictably failed before they could take off.
        But true enough, it took a low-key executive, Dan Palami, to successfully goad and support the underrated Azkals to spell-binding achievement in the Suzuki Cup.
        Palami, my personal choice for a sportswriters’ achievement award this year, came out of nowhere.
        He also sent the message of the moment: It can be done.
        * * *
        Anyway, in the final month of his tenure as chair of the Philippine Sports Commission, Ambassador Harry Angping was quietly finalizing a blueprint for no-nonsense football development and resurgence.
        The core of the Angping plan was anchored on a program to honestly go to the grassroots.
        Angping wanted to appeal to various city and municipal government to identify idle lots in their localities.
        These lots were to be cleared and converted into football playgrounds, mini pitches, where poor, barefoot kids, mostly the ones out of school, could learn and play soccer to their hearts’ delight.
        * * *
        Angping had said he would next involve private firms, like Smart and Milo, also various chambers of commerce, to sponsor tournaments in these localities.
        The mini tournaments could eventually lead to regional tilts and finally a national championship.
        In the plan, the Philippine Football Federation was to be directly involved, mainly in the teaching of basics and the conduct of tournaments.
        It has no legal loophole, and the Aquino government could consider this proposal and, with the help of the DILG, help bring the universal game right to the dusty lair of poor, stray kids, the original Azkals-from where future native stars could emerge.
        * * *
        (BIG YES: Veteran sports scribe Percy Della swears grassroots boys football will surely be a hit in his adopted barangay, seaside Tamurong Primero, in Candon where kids try to do their soccer thing on the seashore, rain or shine… Sportsman Bambi Rivilla, who again gave generous support for the Christmas gift-giving drive for farm kids in Pangao, Lipa City scheduled on Dec. 27, can also be depended to help in reviving football in the country.)

        link: http://www.inquirer.net/sports/artic...kals-lair.html


        Hmmm, young broadcaster? Is he referring to his son Chino Trinidad?

        Comment


        • From footballalliance.ph

          UFL-LBC Cup: Global, Stallions in key quarterfinal clash

          Global Smartmatic, one of the teams that underwent a roster upgrade during the off-season, has been drawn with newcomer Stallions in the quarterfinals of the UFL-LBC Cup.

          The Global-Stallions duel emerged as the marquee showdown of the last eight after the draw attended by coaches, owners and managers
          held Wednesday night at the Makati Sports Club.

          The draw also resulted in a duel between last year’s league champion Air Force and Group C No. 2 Navy, Army against Nomads and unbeaten Union versus ManilaSudanese Club.

          The quarterfinals will begin Jan. 9.

          MSC was the last team to reach the quarterfinals after beating a short-handed Air Force side, 3-2, last Dec. 19.

          The Airmen had little to play for having advanced as the top seed in the group after two straight victories over Pasargad and Laos.

          Air Force also missed almost half of its roster, including strikers Ian Araneta and Yanti Barsales and winger Chieffy Caligdong who were playing for the national team in theAFF Suzuki Cup semifinals.

          MSC was a long shot to reach the quarterfinals with just a point to show in their first two matches. But they made the most of their chances against Air Force and nipped Pasargad on goal difference to reach the knockout stage.

          The Stallions boast of former national players from Iloilo, including the fleet-footed Jovanie Simpron, who has tormented teams with his pace.

          It will be interesting how Global, with its beefed-up side, handles a Stallion squad teeming with talent and experience.

          Philippine team skipper Aly Borromeo will lead Global, along with Misagh Bahadoran, Badrelin El-Habbib and Izzeldin El-Habbib, who emerged as the league’s top scorer last season.

          Army will be in for a tough battle against Nomads, who, like MSC, made the quarterfinals after winning their last game.

          In Roel Gener and Nestorio Margarse, the Armymen have a wealth of experience at midfield.

          But Nomads have shown a knack for scoring when needed especially in c
          rucial matches.

          Air Force has been widely tipped to repeat its league success this season, despite the roster revamp undergone by Global and Union.

          With half of its roster training with the national team, the Airmen have players who are in shape and with loads of international experience. Striker Ian Araneta, for example, started all five games for the country in the Suzuki Cup.

          Navy has been considered the weakest among the teams from the Armed Forces, but could cause Air Force problems with its attack line led by Reydric Viliran.

          Navy finished sixth in the league last season in a campaign highlighted by a two-game sweep of rival Army.

          With an infusion of fresh talent that has combined well with some of the finest African recruits playing in the league, Union had become the latest force in the league.

          Its come-from-behind 2-1 victory over Global have boosted their stock considerably. But Union proved that victory was no fluke by sweeping all of their Group D assignments.
          Follow my blogs and tweets. http://dxjayrocksnotes.blogspot.com/ and https://twitter.com/dxjayrock


          Road To Rio 2016.

          Kwentong Gilas ~ Gilas Serye. LMAO!!!

          Comment




          • Above is a photo of Azkals team 2005 SEAG version. can anybody here name evryone in the picture?

            i must say, our goal keeper was kinda small before. for a goalie, di ba?
            Dead Lizard.

            Comment




            • 0- 8 against a Thai Div II club, this was their warm up game before the Suzuki Cup
              you know why I am happy

              Comment


              • Manny Pangilinan calls on business community to back football

                source: Ronnie Nathanielsz | sports.inquirer.net

                Businessman-sportsman Manny Pangilinan has thrown his support to the Philippine football. Now, he hopes others follow his lead.

                “[I] cannot do it alone,” said the PLDT/Smart top honcho. “I hope other corporations, other individuals will support football and I hope the country does as well along with our people.”

                Pangilinan’s pledge of support came after the country’s current team of the moment, the Philippine footballers, also fondly referred to as the Azkals, made a surprising run to the semifinals of the AFF Suzuki Cup.

                “[Football] is the greatest spectator sport in the world and we have to be up there in the map of the world and we are not there at all, except this time, the (national) team has done well in Vietnam and Indonesia,” Pangilinan said.

                Pangilinan, known as MVP in the business and sports communities where he has stamped his mark, could not have picked a better time to rally for football’s cause. The sport in the country moved several steps forward when the International Football Federation (Fifa) ended the leadership dispute within the Philippine Football Federation by recognizing Mariano “Nonong” Araneta as president in lieu of Jose Mari Martinez.

                “They can start the cause of unification hopefully much more quickly than we did in basketball,” said Pangilinan, who assumed leadership of a fractured basketball association after years of internal wrangling led to the country’s suspension from international events four years ago.

                Pangilinan and his Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas went through a long and difficult campaign to get the international governing body for basketball (FIBA) to recognize him as president.

                Araneta himself said “it’s time to move forward and capitalize on the momentum brought by the Azkals” and indicated his first priority would be “to prepare the team for the Challenge Cup this February.”

                “I have full confidence in team manager Dan Palami,” Araneta added.

                Palami welcomed support from Araneta and said he would “make sure we do the country proud, do the federation proud and we make sure we further earn the respect we already gained from our neighbors.”

                Palami also welcomed the FIFA decision stating “at least now we can concentrate on playing the game and in the preparations for future tournaments. That’s what we want for the team: To be competitive and really do well.”

                Pangilinan hosted a lunch for the football team at the Smart Tower in Makati City where they received a rousing welcome from the executives and employees of Smart led by its president Napoleon Nazareno and Smart Sports head Pato Gregorio.

                Pangilinan said “I hope we can sit down with the team and the management of the team and see what we can do to help the sport.”

                Pangilinan said he learned that several Filipino players born or raised abroad who have been playing top class football mainly in Europe would like to suit up for the Azkals.

                “That’s great and if we could do that we can produce a good, competitive international football team,” he said.

                However, Pangilinan stressed that “we would also need facilities and a football stadium. Maybe not necessarily accommodating 80,000 but one of some size. I don’t know where we could build one or locate one. The Rizal memorial is OK for a start. Just refurbish it.”

                The AFF has granted the Philippines provisional hosting rights for the 2012 Suzuki Cup, on the condition that the country can come up with a venue suitable for the event
                welcome back! lost kings of Asian basketball!

                Comment


                • This is a message from Rick Figueiredo, the man Mari Martinez said was going to replace Coach Simon McMenemy, to FilipinoFootball's Jonny Kirkeeide.
                  welcome back! lost kings of Asian basketball!

                  Comment


                  • For the most part Nathanielzs is a clueless git. But at least he knows just because of this recent surge by the Azkals doesn't mean the development of football should be at the cost of other sports. Particularly the "one".

                    http://www.inquirer.net/sports/artic...p-dispute.html

                    Comment


                    • Booters’ upset of Vietnam gets SI top 10 nod

                      Cedelf P. Tupas
                      First Posted 03:16:36 24/12/2010


                      Respected American sports magazine Sports Illustrated has picked the Azkals’ stunning 2-0 victory over defending champion Vietnam in the AFF Suzuki Cup as one of its Top 10 football stories for 2010.


                      The selection comes as a welcome surprise since 2010 was also a World Cup year.

                      The Azkals, who will end the year with their highest Fifa ranking of 150, have competed abroad with little fanfare until their triumph over Vietnam sparked a newfound interest in the sport.

                      The story, written by England-based football journalist Georgina Turner, said the Azkals’ victory was arguably the biggest upset in the history of the tournament.

                      Turner noted the criticism on the Philippines’ defensive approach hurled by Vietnam coach Henrique Calisto, who accused the Azkals of “parking the bus” in front of goal.

                      Calisto’s unsportsmanlike gesture of refusing to shake hands with Philippines coach Simon McMenemy also caught Turner’s attention.

                      Meanwhile, national team manager Dan Palami said Stephan Schrock, a Filipino-German standout, has renewed his interest in joining the team for several tournaments next year.

                      Palami said Schrock promised to process his passport, which he failed to do in time for the Suzuki Cup main tournament in Hanoi.

                      “He will be a big help with his experience and his skills,” said Palami.

                      Although Schrock plays right fullback with Greuther Furth in the second Bundesliga, Palami said he can be converted into an attacking player if he plays for the national team.

                      The 24-year-old Schrock has played for Germany in the Under-18, Under-19 and Under-20 levels, but a Fifa rule erasing the age-limit on players switching nations paved the way for the defender to become part of the PH Team.

                      The Azkals‘ lack of attacking options was exposed in the two-leg AFF Suzuki Cup semifinals against Indonesia, which prevailed twice, 1-0, to make the finals against Malaysia.

                      The Filipinos have not scored in their last three matches, including against Myanmar in their final group match.
                      you know why I am happy

                      Comment


                      • Christmas spoiler: Martinez, Hammam team up to question Fifa order?


                        Sorry to spoil our christmas folks, but this is something that needs our attention.

                        It seems deposed PFF president Mari Martinez will fight for his 90-day extension and has teamed up with AFC president Mohammed Bin Hammam in questioning the Fifa order affirming Nonong Araneta’s election.

                        Columnist Ronnie Nathanielsz posted in his twitter account that Martinez will question the Fifa order in the Committee for Arbitration in Sports and Hammam will support him.

                        Martinez and Hammam wants Fifa to respect the status qou, and that is for Martinez to keep his post and for the PFF to hold elections in 90 days.

                        I hope Ronnie got it wrong. But Hammam supporting Martinez is quite expected. Hammam being the guy who gave Martinez P10 million last year. Where it went, only Martinez knows.

                        You know what? I’m mighty sick of Martinez and Hammam and I think they are partners in crime. I also think both are using the AFC Vision Asia Philippines project to enrich themselves.

                        Why? Well, even the new president, Nonong Araneta, acknowledge that the AFC has been sending money to the PFF for the Vision Asia project, which Cebu is the recepient. But the funds always stopped at the PFF.

                        Did the Cebu Football Association receive any of it?

                        Well, the fact that Richard Montayre, the CFA president, was one of the leaders of the oust-Martinez campaign should answer that question.

                        Is the Vision Asia Cebu project, a ghost project? You’re familiar with that concept are you?

                        Could it be that the AFC was/is sending millions of dollars to the PFF for the supposed Vision Asia project in Cebu and the PFF and AFC president are splitting the windfall?

                        I don’t know.

                        But I suspect it’s possible.

                        And darn, those two are using Philippine football–and Cebu football in particular–for their own goals.
                        Do you know when I started to suspect that? It was after the Cebu Football Association encountered problems regarding the Vision Asia project that I checked the AFC website for its Vision Asia page.
                        Guess what? There are links for the Vision Asia projects in Bangladesh, China, Indina, Iran, Thailand and Vietnam.

                        But nothing for the Philippines and Cebu.

                        If you doubt me, check the AFC’s website here.

                        As to Martinez taking his ouster to CAS, well, I hope, by doing so, all the things he did in the three years he was president, gets exposed.

                        By the way, you may question the logic on why Martinez is insisting on the 90-day extension when, in the next elections, he is sure to be ousted. I thought, at first, by getting a 90-day extension, he could work his magic and buy a few votes. But after all that has happened, any PFF BOG or PFF Congress member who votes for Martinez will be lynched.

                        So why fight for the 90 days?

                        A Cebu football official told me that the next release of the Fifa aid, $250,000, will be released in the first quarter of next year. Fifa might hold that pending the dispute. But that’s not the only money the PFF receives, regularly.

                        And one other thing, I got to see the PFF budget when I sneaked in to a meeting years ago, and I know the PFF receives millions of pesos as aid from the AFC. Connect the dots if you will.
                        Again, sorry to spoil your Christmas.

                        Dan Palami and the Azkals are working hard for Philippine football. Martinez is working doubly hard for Martinez.
                        Source: http://football.cebunetwork.com/chri...order/2010/12/

                        Looks like He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named of Philippine Football just won't shut up and fade away... he's like a parasite.. kind of like kikomatsing here in IBN...

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                        • Originally posted by TrueBluePinoy View Post
                          For the most part Nathanielzs is a clueless git. But at least he knows just because of this recent surge by the Azkals doesn't mean the development of football should be at the cost of other sports. Particularly the "one".

                          http://www.inquirer.net/sports/artic...p-dispute.html
                          Exactly! I'm sick and tired of our sports columnists lauding the Azkals' success and contrasting it against Smart Gilas' performance, then using it as an excuse to favor football instead of basketball. They seem to forget that we're still struggling to be competitive at a Southeast Asian level. Pit Smart Gilas against Myanmar's basketball team-- do you seriously expect a tie at the end of regulation? A 50-pt blowout is more like it. Winning against Vietnam is a forgone conclusion rather than an upset. And would you expect two close losses in a row to Indonesia rather than consecutive double digit wins?

                          Who says can't we focus on both sports? It is possible for a nation to excel in both. Look at Argentina-- an Olympic Gold in basketball and two World Cups in football. The home of Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi-- but also the home of Manu Ginobili and Andres Nocioni.

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                          • Originally posted by kisssabayhug View Post
                            Exactly! I'm sick and tired of our sports columnists lauding the Azkals' success and contrasting it against Smart Gilas' performance, then using it as an excuse to favor football instead of basketball. They seem to forget that we're still struggling to be competitive at a Southeast Asian level. Pit Smart Gilas against Myanmar's basketball team-- do you seriously expect a tie at the end of regulation? A 50-pt blowout is more like it. Winning against Vietnam is a forgone conclusion rather than an upset. And would you expect two close losses in a row to Indonesia rather than consecutive double digit wins?

                            Who says can't we focus on both sports? It is possible for a nation to excel in both. Look at Argentina-- an Olympic Gold in basketball and two World Cups in football. The home of Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi-- but also the home of Manu Ginobili and Andres Nocioni.
                            Not only Argentina, but more prominently Spain. On the Asian level, South Korea and Japan.

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                            • After Mari Martinez, Manolo Inigo strikes back

                              PH Football Academy a ‘must’
                              Manolo R. Iñigo
                              Clean Living
                              First Posted 01:16:05 25/12/2010


                              Philippine football has been receiving a groundswell of impressive support from individuals and firms awash with cash following the Azkals’ amazing performance in the just-ended AFF Suzuki Cup.
                              Sports patron Manuel V. Pangilinan, main man at PLDT/Smart telecom, and Asia Brewery Inc. started the ball rolling when they donated P1 million and P250,000, respectively, for the Azkals’ trip to Indonesia where they lost to the host team in two close and exciting semifinals matches.
                              Known as MVP in business and sports circles, Pangilinan urged other individuals and cash-rich companies to rally behind Philippine football. WABI, through marketing vice president Albert Tan, handed the firm’s financial assistance to Azkal team manager Dan Palami, who has been bankrolling the booters from his own pocket. Tan also offered to help the team for the next three years.
                              Now, sportswriters, columnists, TV people and legislators are riding on the popularity of football or soccer, a sport they once virtually ignored—even derided.
                              With more and more generous souls coming to the rescue, the happiest person on this planet could very well be retired Col. Julian Malonso, a former president of the Philippine Olympic Committee.
                              Now bed-ridden, Malonso has been consistently batting for soccer, not basketball, as the sport best suited for the Filipinos.
                              Said the straightforward ex-POC head: “Basketball in this country is buried six feet under the ground. I just hope the public is informed correctly.”
                              True, too many people are now agog over football. But what happens, a few months later, when the rage has died down.
                              For starters, sports leaders in both the government and private sector should pool their resources together toward the creation of a fund-raising program under the supervision of the Philippine Football Federation whose new president, 56-year-old Mariano “Nonong” Araneta, has vowed transparency in running the affairs of the PFF. And, if I may add, the PFF should also oversee the construction of international-level football fields and establishment of a Philippine Football Academy.
                              * * *
                              The best Christmas gift I ever had is the love and care of our family doctor, internal medicine-pulmonary diseases specialist Dra. Araceli M. Maliwat, who celebrated a milestone recently. Kudos too, to Municipal Health Officer Dra. Cecilia Simbulan-Fuellas of Marilao, Bulacan, med tech Merlie delos Angeles and public health nurse Graciana S. Nieto for their dedication to their profession… Congrats also to national shooting champion Tac Padilla, son of Olympic shooter Tom Ong, for dominating the recent National Open Championships. The multitalented Padilla won four gold medals—rapid fire, an event which he has ruled for 31 years; standard pistol, 25-meter center fire and 10-meter air pistol… A toast likewise to sports-minded Col. Nick Divina, who is being tapped as customs police chief and former national football player and 1984 PSA (Philippine Sportswriters Association) awardee Mariano “Nonong” Araneta for gaining Fifa (international football federation) recognition.
                              sources
                              you know why I am happy

                              Comment


                              • which is the bigger worry :

                                Old Codgers and spin doctors permeating the success of football while putting basketball down

                                OR

                                that douchebag kill-on-sight Martinez. Let's see FIFA's decision on this.

                                CAS knows the Political situation of Sports here in the PHI (It was a year ago when the affirmed SBP's status as the Basketball Fed).

                                I do hope there will be a hearing just like what happened with the SBP vs BAP.

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