Jack Wilshere must be wary of becoming Wayne Rooney

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There will always be that performance at the Camp Nou.

The 2010-2011 Champions League First Knockout stage. The second leg between Arsenal and Barcelona in Catalonia. Underneath the starry skies and upon the canvas of the European stage. Inside the amphitheater that forms Barcelona’s majestic football stadium. Amidst the brilliance of Lionel Messi, within the kaleidoscopic passing of Barcelona and beyond the controversy of a Robin Van Persie red card — there was Jack Wilshere.

The then 19-year old showed why many had Continue reading “Jack Wilshere must be wary of becoming Wayne Rooney”

Why the Champions League will be open and more competitive than previous years

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Not many would have disagreed with Arsene Wenger. His observation seemed spot on, his assertion quite right on the money. For the 2013-2014 Champions League season, Bayern Munich were the favourites.

In fact, as Wenger aptly put it, they were the super favourites.

And that truly showed in the opening rounds — especially against Manchester City. At the Etihad Stadium, Bayern Munich out-passed and outplayed the Citizens. It seemed then as if the Bavarian club was on course to achieve the unachievable. Maybe, they could become the first club in the Champions League era to defend the European Cup.

But laboured wins against Arsenal and Manchester United in the knock out rounds brought about a sense of Continue reading “Why the Champions League will be open and more competitive than previous years”

Champions League Final: Real Madrid face Atletico in a Derby for the Ages

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Down the Paseo do Prado stands two monuments that have been adopted as symbols by Madrid’s two fondest football clubs. To the north is the Cibeles fountain, where the goddess Cybele sits upon a chariot, majestically pulled by two lions. Further south is the fuente de Neptuno, the god of the sea watching over the springing waters while holding onto his trident.

On Saturday after the Champions League final, one of these fountains will see Continue reading “Champions League Final: Real Madrid face Atletico in a Derby for the Ages”

Arsenal and Dortmund Light Up the Champions League

Henrikh Mkhitaryan scores the opener
Henrikh Mkhitaryan scores the opener

Rarely is a Champions League group stage game of such overall quality and of such high significance.

That could be because of a seeding system that precludes the Champions League draw. The rationale for seeding is to keep the giants away from each other so that less superior teams get eliminated early on. It thus forms the truism of Champions League football. The more it progresses, the more exciting it becomes as big teams clash in titanic battles.

For the fan however, it forms a somewhat anti-climactic opening Continue reading “Arsenal and Dortmund Light Up the Champions League”

Changing Times : Antonio Conte

Antonio Conte is the man behind Juventus's resurgence
Antonio Conte is the man behind Juventus’s resurgence

Like the proverbial Phoenix, Juventus has risen from the Calciopoli ashes. Hardest hit by the Italian football scandal that revealed itself in 2006, the club has withered the storm of demotion and humiliation to become Italy’s finest football club once more.

Much of this has to do with Antonio Conte.

The former Juventus midfielder returned in the Continue reading “Changing Times : Antonio Conte”

Changing Times : Manuel Pellegrini

Manuel Pellegrini -- one of football's purists
Manuel Pellegrini — one of football’s purists

Manuel Pellegrini is a man of quiet authority but immaculate intellectualism. The Chilean is thus one of the few football purist intelligentsia still around. His love for football to be played in a certain way – the attacking way – oozes out from all his teams.

What however contradicts him is that his teams rarely produce such tantalizing displays when required to.

Before his 4-1 demolition of Manchester United in the Continue reading “Changing Times : Manuel Pellegrini”

Changing Times : Gerardo Martino

Gerardo Martino points the way for Barcelona
Gerardo Martino points the way for Barcelona

Rarely do two games in the midst of a six year successful period provide such a quantum conclusion. Indeed, with the emphatic semi-final loss to Bayern Munich last season, there was a sense that the end of an era had arrived for Barcelona.

That is a somewhat hurried conclusion. For if that had been the case, semi-final defeats in 2010 and 2012 would have indicated that long before 2013. But while that had been the short conclusionContinue reading “Changing Times : Gerardo Martino”

Changing Times : Jürgen Klopp

Jürgen Klopp -- The Charismatic One
Jürgen Klopp — The Charismatic One

A charming charisma typifies Jürgen Klopp’s managerial style. In many ways, he is the German equivalent of Brian Clough. So full of punch lines and so animated on the touchline as he leads his team. In the process, he has made his team a firm favourite among the neutrals.

That charisma however is so engulfing that much like Clough, it is sometimes difficult to assess Klopp’s tactical acumen. Indeed, while every game is somehow about him, there is a way in which he sets out his team that makes every game about them.

With quick transitions, ferocious pressing and rapid counter-attacks, Borrusia Dortmund has come toContinue reading “Changing Times : Jürgen Klopp”

Changing Times

Sir Alex Ferguson holds aloft the Champions League trophy in 2008
Sir Alex Ferguson holds aloft the Champions League trophy in 2008

A look into four managers who may need to change in order to attain Champions League success

It was not that Manchester United played badly. It just was that Real Madrid played better.

Tactically, they proved superior. Technically, they were supreme. Every Madrid player caressed the ball with subtlety – as if it was a crown jewel and passed it around intelligently, seemingly fearful of losing a precious possession.

All this was summarised by the third Madrid goal. Fernando Redondo running down the touchline then, Continue reading “Changing Times”

The Sign of Four : Arsene Wenger

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A gaping blank – an unexplained one at that – exists in Arsene Wenger’s managerial CV. For all his achievements at club level, it is odd that a manager of his status has never won a continental title.

Twice, he was denied in UEFA’s secondary cup competitions. In 1992, his Monaco lost to Werder Bremen in the Cup Winners Cup Final while it was the heartache of a penalty shootout that brought about loss to Wenger’s Arsenal in the 2000 UEFA Cup final against Galatasaray.

It is however Europe’s premier competition Continue reading “The Sign of Four : Arsene Wenger”