Monday, May 31, 2021

Copa Del Rey 2011 2012 Real Madrid Barcelona

Quart Finale Aller
18 Janvier 2012
Santiago Bernabeu
Madrid

Liga 2010 2011 Real Madrid Majorque

Estadio Santiago Bernabéu, Madrid
23 janvier 2011
Referee: E. Iturralde Gonzalez
Attendance: 74000

Après la nouvelle victoire du Barça face à Santander (3-0) samedi soir, les hommes de José Mourinho, deuxièmes, comptent désormais sept longueurs de retard sur le double champion d’Espagne. Face aux joueurs de Michael Laudrup, ancien Madrilène, les Merengues tenteront de revenir à quatre points du leader catalan.De son côté, la formation des Baléares, qui avait accroché le club de la Maison Blanche (0-0) à l'aller, tentera de se rapprocher des places d'honneurs en Liga. Dixièmes, les Bermellones restent sur une cinglante défaite encaissée sur la pelouse de l'Atlético de Madrid (3-0) et pointent à trois longueurs de ces mêmes Colchoneros, sixièmes.

Liga 2010 2011 Real Madrid Real Sociedad

Estadio Santiago Bernabéu
6 Fevrier 2011


Real Madrid booked another date with Barcelona in the Copa del Rey final by winning through against Sevilla on Wednesday night, but though the knockout competition is clearly precious to Jose Mourinho, it’s the league that earns the greatest kudos.
Los Blancos have seen their title aspirations slip away with a couple of poor performances away from home since the turn of the year. A draw in Almeria hinted that all was not right in the Madrid camp, but this was made clear last weekend when they went down to stubborn Osasuna, who were value for their 1-0 success.

Europa League 2010 2011 Paris SG Bate Borisov

16e de Finale retour
Parc des Princes Paris
24 février 2011

Arbitre: K. Blom
Attendance: 5000


 

Une semaine après le match nul (2-2) entre les deux équipes dans un froid polaire en Biélorussie, le PSG et le BATE Borisov sont une nouvelle fois opposés pour le match retour. Les Parisiens viennent de gagner largement à Nice (0-3) et espèrent décrocher un billet pour les 8èmes de finale de la compétition. Après sa large victoire en championnat ce week-end à Nice (0-3), les Parisiens reçoivent pour le match de retour des 16èmes de finale le BATE Borisov. Une semaine après leur confrontation lors du match aller qui s'est soldé par un score nul (2-2) dans un froid polaire avoisinant les -20°C, il est l'heure pour les deux équipes de se départager et l'avantage est du côté parisien puisque les Rouge et Bleu ont obtenu un nul à l'extérieur en marquant deux buts très importants. En Ligue 1, le PSG est classé cinquième mais n'a que quatre points de retard sur le leader lillois.


Serie A 2011 2012 Milan AC Palermo

Day 7
15 October 2011
Stadio Giuseppe Meazza,
Milan
Referee P. Valeri

  Actuel 15e du championnat, le Milan AC est un champion en panne, qui regarde les prétendants à sa succession (Juventus et Naples en premier lieu) s’éloigner au classement. Lors de la dernière journée, les Rossoneri se sont incliné face à la Juve à l’issue d’une prestation particulièrement mauvaise (2-0). Massimiliano Allegri attend donc une réaction de ses joueurs face à Palerme et, pour cela, il peut compter sur les retours de quelques joueurs majeurs au sein du groupe, à l'image d'Ignazio Abate et surtout de Robinho, enfin débarassé de sa pubalgie. 

Champions League 1997 1998 Dynamo Kyiv Barcelona

22 octobre 1997
Group C 
NSC Olimpiyskyi Kyiv
100.000 spectators
Referee: Markus Merk 

Dynamo Kyiv:  Oleksandr Shovkovsky, Oleg Luzhny (57' Mykola Volosianko), Oleksandr Golovko, Vladislav Vashchuk, Yuri Dmitrulin, Yuri Maksimov (84' Dmytro Mikhaylenko), Yuri Kalitvintsev, Vitaly Kosovsky, Andriy Husin, Andriy Shevchenko, Sergiy Rebrov. Coach: Valery Lobanovsky.

Back to the Future Manchester City Chelsea Premier League 2011 2012

21 March 2012
Etihad Stadium,
Manchester

Referee: M. Dean


  After their elimination from the Europa League, Manchester United and Manchester City have no choice but to focus absolutely on their Premier League face-off. The context of the rivalry only heightens the intensity: there are no consolations for the club that comes second. United have the one point advantage and will seek to extend that lead at struggling Wolverhampton Wanderers, knowing that Manchester City have to face a resurgent Chelsea on Wednesday. This is how it is going to be from here on in. Which club is better positioned? Manchester United certainly have the momentum, having won seven of their last eight league games. What happened in the other game? They came back from 3-0 down to draw with Chelsea. Their domestic confidence has been in complete contrast to their European fragility. 

Premier League 2011 2012 Manchester United Chelsea

18 September 2011
Old Trafford,
Manchester
Referee : Dowd
Attendance: 75,455


 On attend toujours de voir la patte de Villas Boas à Chelsea, à moins que cette patte ne sache pas encore trop dans quel sens caresser le poil des Blues. Une présaison proche de la perfection, avec sept victoires en sept matches, dix-huit buts marqués et un seul encaissé, laissait espérer que le tout jeune entraîneur portugais (33 ans, comme Drogba et Lampard) imprimerait un rythme nouveau à l'équipe vieillissante dont il avait hérité. Au lieu de quoi, on a eu droit à des prestations souvent poussives qui ressemblaient comme deux gouttes de porto à celles qu'on ingurgite depuis le limogeage de José Mourinho, en septembre 2007. «AVB», comme l'a surnommé la presse anglaise, a assuré l'essentiel, à savoir les résultats. Chelsea demeure au contact des deux clubs de Manchester, bien qu'on soit très loin - à dix unités - des 17 buts inscrits lors des quatre premières journées de Championnat la saison passée. 

Friday, May 28, 2021

Fa Cup 1984 1985 Leeds Everton

Third Round
4 January 1985
Elland Road Leeds

Referee: Mr D. Richardson
Attendance: 21,211


Everton, the FA Cup-holders, produced a professional performance worthy of their growing reputation to move safely into the Fourth Round at Elland Road in this experimental Friday Night Cup-tie at Elland Road at the expense of Leeds United. Leeds, in front of a live TV audience, showed a high level of commitment, but rarely unsettled their First Division opponents in a match which produced enough passion to compensate for its lack of goal-mouth incident. A penalty by Graeme Sharp, his twentieth goal of the season, put Everton ahead after thirty-nine minutes and they needed to soak up persistent Leeds pressure in the second half before Kevin Sheedy settled the matter six minutes from time. Increasing stress on the Leeds defence in the opening half finally told on Andy Linighan, the tall central defender, who beat Graeme Sharp to the header from Gary Stevens’ throw but as the ball fell between them handled it in his anxiety to clear. Referee, Mr David Richardson’s suspicions were confirmed by his linesman and, although Phil Hughes guessed correctly, Graeme Sharp’s spot kick had the necessary power. It took another set piece to give Everton their first win at Elland Road in thirty-four years. Kevin Sheedy’s free-kick crashed against the bar as it beat Phil Hughes for pace and, as Leeds failed to clear, the Everton midfield man completed the job by hooking it in from six yards. The ageless Peter Lorimer, showing a consistency of passing not always shown by his colleagues, was Leeds’ inspiration and his example rubbed off on John Sheridan, the Eire Youth International midfield player, who rose to the occasion with a confident display. The presence of the TV cameras did not unduly affect a fine Cup-tie atmosphere as the holders attracted  21,211, Elland Road’s third highest of the season. Leeds gave them most heart in the first minute when George McCluskey fell on the edge of the area under pressure from Gary Stevens and Neville Southall needed to respond quickly to turn John Sheridan’s curling free-kick round the post. Lorimer, gathering himself to shoot in typical fashion, brought Neville Southall to his knees from twenty yards from the resulting corner but Leeds could not maintain such pressure. Everton worked hard in midfield where Peter Reid, Paul Bracewell and Trevor Steven, hungry for possession, produced a succession of one-touch moves. The most incisive move of all involved Gary Stevens and Andy Gray, both recalled after injury. The full-back’s long cross from the right was headed back into the path of Paul Bracewell, whose low drive raced wide. Early on, Leeds existed on scraps. Further forward, Tommy Wright’s pace was cancelled out by equally swift Everton central defenders and McCluskey, playing despite suspected tonsillitis never figured until his substitution after sixty-eight minutes.

Both goalkeepers were largely inactive for the entire match. Phil Hughes, deputising in the Leeds goal for the injured David Harvey, settled his nerves after twenty-three minutes as he caught a corner and his first save, purely routine, came eight minutes from half-time as Paul Bracewell’s shot lacked conviction. When Sharp’s penalty flew past him, he had hardly been in the game. Trevor Steven’s whip-lash volley a minute later, fractionally too high, almost settled the match there and then. Leeds approached the second half with renewed vigour. From one rare Everton break Peter Reid fluffed a left foot volley and Mark Gavin’s introduction on the left, allied with Peter Lorimer’s presence on the right, saw United begin to provide crosses on either flank. Neville Southall, however, apart from his save in the opening minute, remained uninvolved. When even Peter Lorimer’s angled free-kick finished near the corner flag it was symptomatic of a tight Cup-tie laden with effort but bereft of chances. Eddie Gray, the Leeds Manager reacted, “Neither side created many chances. The first goal came at a bad time and I don’t think Andy Linighan intentionally handled the ball. They are a good side who work hard for each other all over the field and I thought we competed well.” Everton Manager, Howard Kendall, said, “It was a very impressive performance. We were never really in any trouble. The anxious moments were in the first couple of minutes. Our goalkeeper made an incredible save from a free-kick, which was vital because if we had gone one down it would have changed the course of the game. There are some saves you think that he has no right to pull off and that was one of them. He is a brilliant goalkeeper.” (Mark Ledgard)

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Leeds United: Hughes; Irwin, Hamson; Sellars, Linighan, Aspin; Wright, Sheridan, McCluskey (Gavin), Lorimer, F. Gray.
Everton: Southall; Stevens (Atkins), Van der Hauwe; Ratcliffe, Mountfield, Reid; Steven, A. Gray, Sharp, Bracewell, Sheedy.
Scorers: Leeds United: Nil Everton: Sharp (pen), Sheedy.










 In July, popular Scottish winger Eddie Gray was named player-manager of the club he had served so loyally for nearly two decades. Gray had no managerial experience but during one of his lengthy spells of injury as a player, he had impressed when coaching the juniors. A quiet family man, some thought he would struggle to adapt to the hard, frantic world of soccer management, but he carefully dismantled the existing team, at the same time ending his own playing career in May 1984. He brought back old favourite Peter Lorimer as skipper and blooded a batch of talented youngsters from the juniors and reserves, all of which helped check United's slide. Gray, who received an MBE for his services to football, was unable to win back United's First Division place although they were promotion candidates for three successive 54 seasons. Bookmakers reckoned that the team's rich promise would bear fruit in 1985-6 and installed them as promotion favourites. Indeed, Leeds looked a good bet, but the skilful squad lacked physical presence and lost out to less able but harder-tackling opponents.
United made a bad start and soon began to lack confidence, but with only one defeat in eight games they seemed to have turned the corner when 38-year-old Gray was sacked on 11 October 1985, along with his right-hand man Jimmy Lumsden. For Gray it ended a 22-year association with the club. As coach Peter Gunby was put in temporary charge, chairman Leslie Silver paid tribute to Gray's work but said that 14th place in Division Two was not good enough. The board had voted 6-2 to end Gray's stewardship and one of the directors, Brian Woodward, a former United reserve, resigned in protest.
The repercussions went further still. Some senior players cried openly after being told of the sacking and Lorimer handed a statement to the board in which the players condemned the timing and handling of the announcement, although they pledged to continue to do their best for the club. The day after the shock news, United beat Middlesbrough with a Lorimer penalty as Leeds fans demonstrated against Gray's dismissal, calling for Silver's resignation. The board, however, were adamant.
Gray, typically, showed no bitterness at the decision and bowed out quietly from the Elland Road scene, later joining his old teammate David Harvey as a player for non-League Whitby Town, to where Lorimer also moved. It did not take long for a man of Gray's quality to get back into the full-time game and at the start of the 1986-7 season he was working as Middlesbrough's reserve and youth-team coach. In December 1986 he was appointed team manager at Rochdale but quickly stepped up the managerial ladder when he became Hull City's boss in June 1988. Sadly, he was sacked by Hull in May 1989. The following September he became manager of Whitby Town but quit in May 1990 to concentrate on outside business interests.
In 1984-5, Leeds United showed some signs of improvement and a splendid late run gave them a flicker of hope for promotion until defeat in the final game, at Birmingham when both sets of fans ran riot, dashed their First Division dreams. A young man died at St Andrew's during the trouble the game was played on the same day as the Valley Parade fire disaster and United were later fined £5,000 for their fans' part in the affair. Moreover, it was ruled that all Leeds 1985-6 matches must be all-ticket. There had been crowd violence involving Leeds followers at Oxford, Barnsley and Huddersfield in 1984-5 and there was genuine talk of closing the club down to avoid further trouble. After a mediocre start to 1985-6, Gray was sacked and Billy Bremner appointed in his place, but United slipped closer still to the relegation zone before a frustrating season ended in safety, although the team's defensive record gave the fans real cause for concern...











C1 1966 1967 Real Madrid Inter Milan

Quarter-finals Second Leg
1 March 1967
Santiago Bernabéu Madrid

 That season, Inter would get another crack at their third European Cup after coming up against Real for an amazing third time in four seasons. This time Suarez ran the show, particularly in Madrid where he scored in the 2-0 win that effectively began the rather dramatically named wilderness years'. Jock Stein's Celtic provided the Spanish (and most of Europe) with some comfort later in that tournament, winning a wonderful final in Lisbon and putting Herrera's hated system to the sword. But it was to be 14 long years before Real would return to dispute a final of the competition they had once considered their own. Summarising what remained of the 1960s, it is worth pointing out, once again, that Real's consistency in the league was not something easily maintained. No longer able to rely on automatic qualification as European champions, the domestic competition was as important as ever.  

Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1959 1960 Birmingham Barcelona Resumes AR

Birmingham and Barcelona were enjoying vastly differing fortunes ahead of their eagerly-awaited showdown at St. Andrew's. The English club were languishing second from bottom of the First Division and without a win in their previous four fixtures. Pat Beasley's team would have climbed out of the drop zone had they held onto a first half lead given to them by Don Weston in their last game before the European clash away to fellow strugglers Luton Town. But the bottom side rescued a draw courtesy of a penalty leaving Beasley's side in a spot of a bother in the league and hardly the best preparation for taking on what was considered to be the best club team in the world. In contrast Barcelona were fresh from a 3-0 victory over Betis that retained their position at the top of the La Liga table. Helenio Herrera's side were high in confidence, so much so that they turned down Blues' offer of training facilities and instead prepared for the big match with a shopping trip around Birmingham. The size of the challenge that lay ahead for Blues had been brought into sharp focus earlier that month when Barcelona completed a 9-2 aggregate win over reigning English champions Wolves in the European Cup quarter-finals. Winger Harry Hooper admitted to Blues News recently: "After the hammering they gave Wolves at Molineux all the press were saying that we would need the scoreboard from Edgbaston because there would be a lot of goals!" But when asked ahead of the game whether his team were daunted by the prospect of facing the mighty Barca, boss Beasley insisted: "Overawed? Why should we be? We start level with Barcelona…and every team has its day - or night." Blues made one change from the side that had drawn at Kenilworth Road three days earlier with Bryan Orritt earning a recall at outside left in place of Billy Hume. The out-of-favour Welshman had not featured in the team for over three months and looked set to be on his way out of St. Andrew's before this opportunity rose. The 22-year-old was clearly determined to make the most of his chance as he spent the morning of the game doing extra training to ensure peak fitness. Manager Pat Beasley commented: "He is the man I want to fetch and carry in the forward line. Bryan can be useful both in an attacking and defending sense from the inside-left position." Barcelona travelled to the UK without tricky inside-forward Luis Suarez due to injury but otherwise Helenio Herrera's side was at full strength.

Kenny Dalglish Blackburn Rovers 1993 1994 "The Boss"

 Blackburn chose the right season to win promotion from the Second Division. They went straight into the new Premier Division after winning a Wembley play-off final against Leicester City. The last Premier spot was not decided until 25 May, more than two weeks after the Cup final. Rovers' David Speedie was brought down in the penalty area, and Mike Newell scored from the spot for the only goal of the game. Blackburn's appearance in the top flight will be their first since 1966. There were two ironies in their achievement. Their late chairman, Bill Fox, as president of the Football League, had fought tooth and nail against the new Premier League, which his club were now joining. And Kenny Dalglish, their manager, who had been lured to Blackburn by retired steel magnate Jack W'alker, with the help of £5.5 million to spend in the transfer market, found himself returning to the pressures of the top divi-sion, which had forced him to give up the Liverpool manager-ship only 15 months earlier.