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Viva la Barca!

April 19th, 2006

Ludovic Giuly, like he usually does, maximised the clean Ronaldinho pass to score and gave Barcelona the crucial 1-0 lead in the 57th minute. Reports BBC:

Just before the hour mark, Ronaldinho finally stamped his class all over the contest. He picked the ball up 40 yards out, skipped past Jaap Stam and whipped an inch-perfect ball in to Giuly, who did not need to break his stride before lashing left-footed past a stranded Dida.

The first half saw Barcelona dominate possession early. However, Milan came back strong and had more chances of scoring. They could not make good of any of those chances though. A few more open chances in the second half (specially for Gildardino) meant Milan had only themselves to blame.

After starting the second half more promisingly than Barca, Milan were deflated by the Giuly strike when they should have become all the more fast footed. Perhaps the prospect of going into the Nou Camp with a goal deficit plus Barca having an away goal in their kitty put too much pressure on Milan.

Both teams hit the post once without scoring. The Ronaldinho strike had brilliance written all over it. Alas, it did not convert into a goal.The game was played very open with lots of chances making it a thrilling contest. All the focus now shifts to the Arsenal-Villareal first leg tie. For Barca fans like me, it is time to rejoice and celebrate.

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Forca Barca!

April 18th, 2006

The whole world will be watching when Barca take on Milan at the San Siro in the first leg of the Champions League Semi Final. Check the Sky preview here and the preview from the FCB blog here. Also, check some stats from The Telegraph UK here.

Many of the young players of Barcelona haven’t been to a Champions League semis before. In contrast, as Milan reached the finals last year, the Milan players would be better equipped to handle the situation. Barca has no Larsson, no Messi and no Deco. But Milan will also miss Inzaghi.

I predict a 2-0 Barca win despite the lack of experience and lack of players factors.

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I am a cule?

April 11th, 2006

FC Barcelona Blog says:

…but FC Barcelona supporters’ nickname derives from the Catalan word “cul” which means simply “ass”. So, “Els Culés” are nothing else than “The Arses”. The reason is simple and goes back to the early 20th century and the old Barca stadium “Les Corts”. Passers-by could see the rears of fans sitting in the upper stand. Therefore quickly a new name for the supporters had been found. It seems that the name “Culés” has attached itself to the famous institution of FC Barcelona forever.

Hmm.

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Barca in the semis

April 6th, 2006

Barcelona has seen through the possible Benfica scare winning the second leg 2-0. Not until the injury period goal by Eto’o, though, were Barca completely safe as Benfica could always have scored another one to enforce extra time and penalties. Too bad I sacrificed watching the game as I had work to attend to.

None of remaining Barca games in the Champions League will be missed be me. :) Arsenal too have qualified for the semis holding out in the second leg and thus upsetting Juventus. The semi final line up reads:

  • Barcelona vs AC Milan
  • Arsenal vs Villareal

Will it be a memorable Champions League for Barca? I am certainly backing Barcelona to go all the way. Go Barca!

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Scoreless Benfica-Barca first leg

March 29th, 2006

Barca missed their chances and in the end the score line read 0-0. It is all down to the Nou Camp now. A dangerous position. Benfica won in Liverpool and would be hoping to repeat the away track record. But certainly playing at the Nou Camp will be a lot different to playing in Liverpool.

The below photograph shows one of the things I enjoy about FCB so much:

Eto’o has missed another chance and is disappointed. Ronaldinho plays the role of the guy who encourages, boosts up the team in the face of this disappointment. Ronaldinho is quite the team man - creating chances, motivating players and always smiling.

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Benfica in the quarters

March 10th, 2006

Barca have been drawn to face Portuguese club Benfica in the quarters of the Champions League. They will next face AC Milan or French Champions Lyon should they advance to the semis. In the final, they will face any of Juventus, Arsenal, Inter, Ajax or Villarreal.

A revenge for the 1994 Champions League finals loss to Milan in the semis, victory over the superb Juventus in the final. I can see it right now! )

I do hope Arsenal does not do any thing extra ordinary in the first game or even comes up with a draw. They have been struggling domestically and are the only English Club left. Any promise would mean all the English newspapers yelling for Arsenal to do a repeat of Liverpool last year. Well every day is not Sunday and it ain’t gonna happen!

I do hope Arsenal crash out as fast as possible also because it could mean they cannot afford Thierry Henry for long and he might come to Barcelona. Certainly mouth watering prospects for me!

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Revenge is sweet

March 7th, 2006

Barcelona drew with Chelsea 1-1 in the second leg of the Champions League pre quarter finals to advance on aggregate (3-2) having won the first leg 2-1.

Revenge is sweet. Last year was heart breaking for the fans of Barcelona including yours truly. The exit after losing to Chelsea in the two leg Champions League pre quarters was very hard to digest. After all Barcelona was playing excellent football. Being excellent is not good enough though. The game is so uncertain that it can change within minutes. You have to fight against the unpredictable nature of the game itself. That is when a team keeps winning which translates to real greatness.

Coming to the game. Chelsea started off controversially arriving late in the tunnel. Jose Mourinho was already there but the team wasn’t. It meant that the start was delayed by three minutes. The early game saw some excellent passes between Lionel Messi and Ronaldinho. A great and a possible future great combining to create magic. Messi limped off in the 25th minute, which may explain why he missed the weekend La Liga match, to be replaced by Henrik Larsson.

The first half was tight with Barcelona having more possession. They had a lot more chances as well. Chelsea managed a few chances which were more dangerous but without result. Crespo replaced Drogba in the 58th minute while Mourinho theatricals were showing no signs of reducing in the back ground. Crespo soon had a real chance of scoring but strike was wide to the anguish of Chelsea.

Ronaldinho kept up his skill and as the clock ticked on, the task at hand kept becoming tougher. It became near impossible when Ronaldinho scored the first goal of the match in the 78th minute. John Terry’s defense had no answer to the Ronaldinho brilliance. All Chelsea could do was hope to score two goals to force an over time. Had the shot of Eto’o gone in instead of hitting the pole for a 2-0 score line, the victory would have been more convincing.

It didn’t matter. Neither did the penalty scored by Frank Lampard in the 90th minute when John Terry was fouled in the box. The 1-1 score line was enough for Barcelona to advance into the quarters of the Champions League, having already won the first leg 2-1. Mourinho can lay no charges on Messi for play acting. He cannot lay charges on Rijkaard. He may well have some thing to say. I don’t care if he appreciates Barcelona or lays more allegations on it actually.

I know what the score line says. To state I am happy would be to say there has been death when there was man slaughter. Moments like these when the feelings are so over whelming reiterates the beauty of sport. There are wins, there are lessons. There aren’t any losses.

Barcelona: Valdes, Oleguer, Puyol, Marquez, Van Bronckhorst, Deco, Edmilson, Motta, Messi (Larsson 25), Ronaldinho, Eto’o.

Subs Not Used: Jorquera, Belletti, Giuly, Sylvinho, Van Bommel, Iniesta.

Booked: Motta, Puyol.

Goals: Ronaldinho 78.

Chelsea: Cech, Paulo Ferreira, Ricardo Carvalho, Terry, Gallas, Joe Cole (Huth 83), Makelele, Lampard, Duff (Gudjohnsen 58), Robben, Drogba (Crespo 58).

Subs Not Used: Cudicini, Maniche, Geremi, Wright-Phillips.

Booked: Joe Cole.

Goals: Lampard 90 pen.

Att: 98,000

Ref: Markus Merk (Germany).

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The strenghthening of Barcelona

February 27th, 2006

I had spoken regarding the bright future ahead for Barcelona last year some time after they had won their first Spanish la liga under Rijkaard.

The official FCB site says:

Barça are as regular this season as they were in their 2004-05 championship winning season. They have the same number of points as they did after the same number of matches last season, and are also eight points clear of the second placed team.

Add to the fact that fact that Ronaldinho and Larsson are scoring more goals. Larsson, a Swedish and Celtic legend has to fight for his place. Messi is creating the early waves. Maradona has already called Messi his successor.

The players are happy at the club and no one is talking about leaving or making uneasy sounds. They are signing big long term contracts, a process which has continued from last year and are generally happy at the club. Marquez said this on his position with the club:

Things are going very well. The team has, once again, the dynamics to fight and win more trophies and I help that we will be celebrating at the end of the season with our fans. For me, it is also important to keep growing as a player. I feel very comfortable at Barcelona and my target is to stay here for many years to come.

Cable and thus the sports channels have returned to my life. I will catch as much of FCB as I can. I have watched Barcelona build despite the criticisms under Rijkaard. I feel attached and a natural supporter having seen them grow. This is just the beginning.

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Half the job done and a lot of unnecessary jabs

February 23rd, 2006

Barcelona won the first leg 2-1 after dominating possession and could have scored more than they did. The header from Eto’o sealed it. So that should have been the end of it with all the focus on March 7.

Well this is Barcelona versus Chelsea. The clash which has developed into the biggest game in club football. Of course there was more.

Jose Mourinho, the loudmouth that he is, likes to speak. Mourinho said this on Messi:

How do you say cheating in Catalan? Can Messi be suspended for acting? Barcelona is a cultural city with many great theatres and this boy has learned very well. He’s learned play-acting.

Of course he forgot, as Jonathan Stevenson from the BBC points out:

It is only 17 days since English football widely condemned Blues winger Arjen Robben for theatrically diving to get Liverpool keeper Jose Reina sent off in a key Premiership encounter. There is little doubt that Robben’s acting was greater than Messi’s, yet Mourinho accused Reds boss Rafael Benitez of sour grapes for bringing up the incident in his post-match analysis.

Step back in time at this juncture. Chelsea was down after the first leg similarly. In a few minutes of inspirational football in which they caught Barcelona napping. Chelsea capitalised and took the tie away from Barcelona. Did Barcelona fans cry over the fact that Barcelona dominated possession for much of the two matches last year and still lost?

Step back further now. Mourinho attacked the referee Anders Frisk of talking to Barca coach Frank Rijkaard at half-time in Chelsea’s 2-1 first-leg defeat at the Nou Camp last year. This followed Frisk announcing his decision to retire from the game because he had received death threats, and Mourinho was fined and banned for two games for his comments. So in that light the comments which directly implicate the referee Terge Hauge of wrong doing were unwarranted.

Even if Messi did play act to an extent (if he did - we can never be sure either way) isn’t it a part of football. Players from most teams do it despite the rules hoping not to be caught. I do not see why such a big deal has to be made out of it.

Even if it was a gross error from the referee, aren’t errors part of the game? Isn’t it all about facing adveristy and triumphing or at least trying to triumph in the face of it? I can understand Mourinho making as much of an issue out of this as he can. There is still one match to go. So the more he tries to show the loss was undeserving, the more he can avoid his players from going into a shell or thinking negatively. He did it last year and his players came out triumphant.

What I do not understand is why fans, who act neutral need to do it. Chelsea and English Premier League fans who wanted Chelsea to win have been speaking loudly over the red card since it happened. The attitude will not deny Barcelona any thing. But a better attitude and applauding Barcelona for playing well could have probably meant these fans themselves getting more respect.

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Controversy as usual ahead of match

February 22nd, 2006

The much anticipated encounter between Barca and Chelsea has meant the usual war of words between the managers. No use going into that.

Barca decided to take the sensible approach of practising on the poor pitch yesterday as they are to play the match there itself. Chelsea were bemused Barca wanted to practise on that pitch despite compaining about the obvious poor pitch and offering Barca their own facilities. Well was it that difficult for Chelsea to understand Barca wanted to adjust as much as possible to the difficult conditions?

Chelsea went out of their way to complain to FA when Barca wanted to practise 15 minutes extra and denied Barca practising more than an hour. I do see the concerned Chelsea over the obvious Barca threat in all this.

Barca plays a free flowing game and uses one touch passes. This means the smoother the pitch, the better it is for the club. As Puyol said:

The state of the pitch will affect us more. We like to move the ball quickly and play at a high tempo. We’re not used to playing in these conditions. If we concentrate hard and not give the ball away in midfield where Chelsea are strong we should be able to cope. There are no excuses. We are experienced enough to play on all kinds of surfaces.

Chelsea made sure the pitch was further watered on Tuesday. So the conditions will very tough for Barcelona despite Rijkaard taking the diplomatic route in his response:

Chelsea will be affected by the pitch just a much as ourselves. They have quality players with good technique and skill and they would prefer a better pitch. We are not complaining.

As a Barca fan I will be rooting for the Catalanians. But it will be very tough in the first leg.

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