Depends what this new owner at Fulham is like, really have no idea if he willing to invest or not.It doesn't have much quality but the real problem is that it's the oldest in the division. Coupled with the fact that Al Fayed has left and it's not an especially big club makes the future look a bit bleak and it's always a bad idea to take charge of a club when it looks like things are about to get worse for them. Cardiff are a mess but they at least look like they're moving in the right direction, they're the only club in a major city, the possibilities look so much better.
Both of those teams like to dominate in the midfield with a extra midfielder forming a 3 man Central midfield, but are a bit blunt in attack from Open Play. (Southampton playing more high intensity game than Spurs who play a slower tempo)Ha yeah we all know what you think about Spurs. Decent result for them though.
It's interesting that the two best defences so far have been from Spurs and Southampton, two really proactive teams that always look to dominate. Really makes the Moyes school of defending by getting everyone behind the ball look dated.
"If Barcelona's team of the last four years were the first one that I saw play when I was four years of age, with their serenity, winning 5-0, 6-0, I would have played tennis. Sorry, that is not enough for me.
"It is not serenity football, it is fighting football – that is what I like. What we call in German – English [football] - rainy day, heavy pitch, everybody is dirty in the face and they go home and can't play football for the next four weeks. This is Borussia."
I'd like some actual names, not woolly statements that mean absolutely nothing.They have some players who are enigmatic but when they blow hot, they should get enough points.
Berbatov, Ruiz, Bent, Taraabt to name a few in terms of attackers. Maybe Kasami too.I'd like some actual names, not woolly statements that mean absolutely nothing.
Haha, it surely doesn't bode well when he opens the article with:'Racist abuse of Yaya Touré is a smokescreen, real problem is at home' | Football | The Guardian
Corrin's best mate has written an article about the lack of black coaches and managers.
In social sciences the best test for whether there's institutional racism is whether the clubs that do employ the ethnic minority outperform those who don't. If there were a lot of talented black managers that clubs were refusing to hire for racial reasons, you'd think the smaller clubs that snapped them up would end up doing really well. I really don't think that's happened.
Of course it might just be that the few black managers that have got decent jobs have been ****ing hopeless and it's turned a lot of clubs off the idea. That'd be Barnes himself, then.
The whole piece seems somewhat confused to me, it's like he doesn't really understand what he's talking about. He correctly bemoans the fact that stereotypes and societal issues are to blame for a lot of problems regarding race and ethnicity, but the fact that he explicitly states he believes that black people can only succeed if they are lifted out of "blackness", whatever that means, and that he takes it as a compliment when people say he's "not like a black guy" is surely only reinforcing the stereotypes he's complaining about.I'm not interested in what happened to Yaya Touré at CSKA Moscow – as far as I'm concerned their supporters can abuse who they want...