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Camisetas Jugadores Noticias de Noticias Fútbol – Estadio deportivo.

Champions League – Second Round Preview

The 21-22 February will see the 16 remaining teams in the Champions League battle it out for a place in the coveted final held on 17 May in Paris. The second round fixtures have been decided so here is a run down of who is left in the competition and their chances of progressing to the quarter finals:

Inter Milan vs Ajax

Inter qualified comfortably from Group H as winners and have a favourable match against Ajax. The Dutch side qualified as runners up of Group A without too much trouble. Inter are overwhelming favourites to qualify for the quarter finals and striker Adriano, with four goals so far in this competition, poses the main threat. Manchester City.

Verdict: Inter to qualify at 2/5.

AC Milan vs Bayern Munich

Milan stuttered through the first round, with just three wins in six matches, before eventually topping the group ahead of PSV Eindoven. Andriy Shevchenko is the tournament’s most dangerous striker with six goals. However, Bayern Munich should not be underestimated. They dumped out Arsenal at this stage last season and were only edged out by a single goal against Chelsea in the quarter finals.

Verdict: AC Milan to qualify at 4/6.

Liverpool vs Benfica

The Reds take on the team who dumped Manchester United out of the Cup and are firm favourites to progress to the quarter finals. Liverpool were unbeaten and hadn’t conceded a goal in 11 league and Cup games until Sao Paulo denied them the World Club Championship on 18 December. Benfica’s 2-1 win over Manchester United was a shock result, but one they are unlikely to reproduce. Ronald Koeman’s side are only sixth in their domestic league and are likely to see their interest in the Champions League come to an end at this stage of the competition.

Verdict: Liverpool to qualify at 4/9.

Barcelona vs Chelsea

This was the most «anticipated» draw in terms of a replay of last season’s second phase encounter. Barcelona have won 13 games straight in La Liga, while Chelsea have topped the Premiership since August, losing just one match, against Manchester United, all season. Barcelona have also been unstoppable in Europe, winning five out of the six group. Despite the unquestionable talent at his disposal, Jose Mourinho may find his Chelsea team outgunned this time around.

Verdict: Barcelona to qualify at 5/6.

Lyon vs PSV Eindoven

Lyon are a team not to be underestimated in this season’s Champions League and won their group ahead of the glamorous Real Madrid. John Carew is Lyon’s top goalscorer with four goals while Juninho has laid on three assists. PSV will have their backers but Lyon remained undefeated in the group stage and should edge this encounter.

Verdict: Lyon to qualify at 1/2.

Villarreal vs Rangers

An upset could be on the cards in this encounter with Rangers a large price to qualify ahead of Spaniards Villarreal. Under-fire Rangers boss Alex McLeish may be ridiculously off-the-pace in the Scottish Premier, but he has got it right in Europe and Rangers have become the first side north of the border to venture this far in the competition. Villarreal scored just three times in six group stage matches.

Verdict: Rangers to qualify at 5/2.

Real Madrid vs Arsenal

This is the first time the two have clashed in Champions League and the bookmakers are having difficulty separating them. The Gunners won their five opening matches in the group stage before an experimental line-up drew 0-0 with Ajax in the final round of fixtures. Real Madrid have plenty of attacking power in their line up but are suspect at the back which could be to Arsenal’s advantage.

Verdict: Arsenal to qualify at 10/11.

Juventus vs Werder Bremen

Juventus stormed through the group stage, winning five out of six matches, with David Trezeguet scoring four goals. The «Old Lady» have already beaten and lost to German opposition in the competition this season, with two 2-1 results against giants Bayern Munich in the group stage. Werder Bremen are at their best at home, demonstrated in the 5-1 demolition of Panathinaikos and 4-3 victory over Udinese.

Verdict: Juventus to qualify at 4/11.

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The Story Of The Premier League

The English Premier League (EPL) is a top flight league for association football teams, in England. The League is run as a corporation of which the 20 member clubs are shareholders.

Every season, matches start in August and go on till May the next year. Each team plays every other team, once at its home venue and once away, thereby playing 38 matches in all, which translates into 380 matches played mainly on weekends, with occasional week day matches.

The League is sponsored by Barclays Bank, and is officially known as the Barclays Premier League.

The 80’s marked a low point in English football, when the football infrastructure began to crumble, English players’ standards fell, as compared to those of European players, and football hooliganism became rife.

The lowest point was reached when English football teams were banned for 5 years from 1985. Things took a turn for the better when England performed well at the 1990 World Cup, reaching the Semifinals. Also, after the Hayworth tragedy, a decision was made to improve the infrastructure of stadia across Britain.

The EPL was formed in 1992 by teams that decided to break away from the Football League, founded in 1888. Their chief incentive was a television rights deal. They would also be free to negotiate their own sponsorship agreements.

However, the television rights are sold collectively. From 1996-97 onwards, the tournament has been dominated by the big four, namely, Manchester United, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool. Manchester united have never featured outside the top three, in any Premiership season.

This is the story of one of the world’s richest Football Leagues, with the combined revenues exceeding 3 billion dollars, per annum. It is also the highest rated league in Europe by UEFA, ahead of Spain’s La Liga and Italy’s Serie A.

Since 1888, 23 teams have won the football league. The EPL which has completed 18 seasons has had 4 winners. Manchester United has won it 11 times, Arsenal and Chelsea, 3 times each, and Blackburn Rovers, once.

Once the EPL came into existence, the relationship between the Premier League and the Football league was exactly simlar to that between first and second division footbal in the previous era.

Initially there were 22 teams. This was reduced to 20 in 1995 when four teams got relegated and only 2 teams were promoted from the Football League (now called the Championship League).

Thereafter FIFA wanted all European leagues to have no more than 18 teams, a move that has been resisted by the EPL.

Of the 20 teams that take part in a EPL season, the bottom three are relegated and replaced the next year by the top three teams in the Champions League, (the finalists and the winners of the third place play off).

The top four teams of the EPL qualify for the UEFA Champions League, with the top three directly entering the group stage.

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International Football (Soccer) Academy Tips – Achieving Your Soccer Fitness Goals

When you set out to train at an elite football (soccer) academy, or work out your own football training in advance at home, it can be difficult to stay on target. But if you have a goal in mind, and specific steps to achieve that goal, you’re miles ahead of other people who do nothing but dream.

This kind of preparation makes all the difference in the world. Our international football academy coaches can always tell the difference between players who work to prepare, and those who just show up at our football academies. For you, it could be the difference between watching from the sidelines and actually achieving your football goals.

International football academy training and conditioning

The first step is setting targets and goals you want to reach in football. You can do that on a per-month basis. For example, if you’re arriving at your football academy in September, set yourself a 6-month program to decide where you want to be in terms of physical condition.

The idea is to set realistic, measurable targets. Set your targets based on an assessment of yourself, not your peers. You know where you’re at right now, and you know you want to be in the best possible shape when you arrive at an international football academy to begin your soccer training.

Look to make that improvement every week, every month. Month one can have a number of fitness elements: pushups, 50-yard sprint, 400-yard at half-pace, etc. Bear in mind that in football one must be match fit. You’ll need a lot of strength in both your upper and lower bodies, and the endurance to run for 90 minutes with little rest, in order to achieve success at the highest level.

You’ll be better off making goals you know you can meet to improve yourself little by little. And you’ll be more likely to stay on target. You can count the number of reps you do, and increase by 15 percent by the end of the month. That’s realistic. Increasing it by 75 percent? That’s probably not realistic.

International football academy language and culture

For international football academies that have an associated educational curriculum, you need to consider the language component also. If you’re going into another country with a different language, you need to work towards a basic understanding of that language.

Traveling to another country to study football, language, and culture will make for a well-rounded experience and will increase your professional marketability. Being bilingual is an obvious advantage in any business.

Set targets for both academics (linguistics) and football. If you’re continuing high school academics and you’re going into an environment where you haven’t spent time speaking the language, your goal should be arriving day one with basic communication skills. Get acclimated to the language as much as possible, studying, listening, and speaking beforehand.

And above all, show commitment, respect, and effort while studying abroad. Sometimes those extra efforts make the difference in receiving a passing grade or not!

Determination and perseverance

The NIKE slogan, «Just do it,» applies nicely here. Daily individual training discipline is the most obvious key to success. It’s about what you do when no one else is around. Sticking to your plan is the most important part of your preparation.

When you put a training program into place for yourself, it’s easy to let it slip when you don’t feel like training. It’s easy to say things like «I’m too tired, so I think I’ll skip that two hours I set aside for language or academics.» Or let yourself get distracted by friends or going to the movies instead of training.

This is where 95 percent of people don’t succeed: they don’t stick with the plan they put into place. One difference between the pros and those who don’t make it: pros stick with the program. Only the athletes with true grit and determination make it to the highest level.

Ask yourself to be that special athlete (and student) by showing extreme commitment and determination. You can do it if you are mentally disciplined enough to commit fully!

It’s easier to achieve training targets or goals when you’re in an international football academy program. Players have less trouble sticking with the football training schedule because someone else (the football coach or manager) is setting up the training program for you. Everyone around you is pushing you to perform. You have teammates doing the same thing.

Attending an international football academy is much more demanding than any other academic or cultural exchange program abroad. You’re committing yourself to being ready, mentally and physically, to participate as a footballer in the football development academy. You will be training daily over a nine-month period.

Put it in your mind that the work starts the day you commit to register to get the maximum benefit. This means you should arrive ready and prepared to get the most out of your international football academy experience.

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Money Speaks Volumes

The European Cup or UEFA Champions League, as it is now know, is a cash cow that eclipses every other Cup competition in the world in terms of money. The revamped trophy is set to generate 750 millions Euros (£502 million) gross this season. But is UEFA’s flag ship competition killing off home grown domestic Cups and the UEFA Cup?

This season UEFA are going to make in excess of 750m Euros (£502m) from the Champions League, with TV rights sold to 230 markets (with Italy’s RAI and Spain’s Antenna networks signing up for first time) and also from their commercial partners. UEFA have also increased the number of their official commercial partners from four to six as Vodafone and Sony have joined PlayStation, Ford, Heineken and MasterCard.

If you look into how UEFA distribute the money from the Champions League, you will find out why the competition is so appealing to the hundreds of clubs vying for qualification for the tournament each season.

This season UEFA have promised to distribute up to 530m Euros between the 32 clubs which qualified for the group stages. There is a minimum of 4.4m Euros just for being in the group stage, with a further 600,000 Euros at stake per game for a win and 300,000 Euros each for a draw.

A further 10.5m Euros will be distributed to clubs eliminated in the qualifiers, such as Northern Ireland’s Linfield. The amount they will receive is peanuts to some clubs (like those from La Liga, Serie A etc), but to a club of Linfields size it is a small windfall.

Going back to the group stages – clubs which qualify for the last 16 get another 2.2m Euros and another 2.5m Euros for reaching the quarter finals. Clubs who reach the semi finals earn another 3m Euros and if they win the trophy earn 7m Euros or 4m Euros for losing.

The Champions League with all its financial benefits has become a dominant feature in football as clubs race for the qualifying places in their domestic league. This is because they believe the financial rewards are more important then winning silverware.

Take Italian Serie A club Palermo for example, their chairman, Maurizio Zamparini, has stated on numerous occasions this season that the UEFA Cup is secondary to qualifying for next seasons Champions League.

He wants the club to take advantage of Juventus and AC Milan being out of contention of a top four finish in Serie A (due to this summers match fixing scandal) and sees this as an ideal opportunity for his club to finish in the top four.

Due to Zamparini placing Champions League qualification above everything else, Palermo have been fielding a second string side in this seasons UEFA Cup (further devaluing the competition in some peoples eyes).

Other Italian Serie A clubs take a similar approach to the Copa De Italia and field second string sides. This is also the case in Spain when some La Liga clubs adopt the same approach in the Copa Del Rey.

In England the League Cup is seen as a distraction to many Premiership clubs who have ambitions of qualifying for the Champions League. This has resulted (over the past ten years) in many top tier clubs fielding their reserves in the competition.

At first it was mainly Premiership clubs adopting this approach (mainly Manchester United and Arsenal), but some Championship sides have taken lead this season (Birmingham City are a prime example).

Managers will claim that this is to give fringe/youth players experience but commentators have suggested this is to keep players fresh for important league matches in the race for European qualification.

There are even some suggestions that the FA Cup is going to go down the same route as the League Cup, as the trophy in the eyes of some Premiership clubs simply is not worth the hassle. A club can expect to receive £3m if they lift the trophy and in terms of Champions League qualification the financial reward is not worth it.

If a manager had a domestic semi final Cup tie midweek and an important match at the weekend against a key rival in European qualification, where would his priorities lie? On the one hand he has a Cup match that could earn potential prize money of £3m (if they lift the trophy on reaching the final) and on the other a match that could see them cement Champions League qualification and net £10m.

It is sad to say that the majority of Europe’s big clubs are starting to put money before silverware. They would rather qualify for the Champions League at the expense of winning a domestic Cup.

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Philosophic-Historical Truths Confer Juventus Winner of 2018/2019 UEFA Champions League

One natural occurrence that has greatly affected man in recent times has been the volcanic eruptions of 2010 in Iceland. The Eyjafjallajokul as it is called released ashes into the skies of Europe on the 14th of April. This eruption caused a massive disruption in flights coming into and out of Europe with the closure of several airports. Several thousands of flights were reported to have been cancelled leaving millions of passengers stranded across the world.

Little did many know that the Eyjafjallajokul was an occurrence whose object was the first leg semifinal match between FC Barcelona of Spain and Inter Milan of Italy. The volcanic eruption made the former its target with the aim to wear them out and create an advantage for the home side. The first leg was scheduled in Italy and given the busy soccer calendar the match had to go ahead as planned. The constraints of time meant the visitors had to go by road to Milan, a journey that had psychological consequences of fatigue for the travelling team. The result was that Barcelona lost the match and was eliminated from the competition.

Eyjafjallajokul happened primarily for historical reasons. Its cause, the mover of the eruptions was however philosophical. The historical factor behind this event had already been fleshed out in the paper The Philosophy of the UEFA Champions League. The philosophical aspect had been thoroughly detailed in my book The Philosophy of the Cosmos.

According to The Philosophy of the Cosmos, the origins of the universe started when incorporeal entities called the abstracts imparted their force into some stuff of the material universe. The abstracts are spirit, soul, air, mind, consciousness, reason and ideas. The objects brought into existence are cosmic bodies, plants, animals and man. These constitute the real. There is also the material which are rocks, mountains etc. Therefore the cosmos is categorized into the abstract, the real and the material. These abstracts that caused the evolution and its objects continue to subsist in them.

In The Philosophy of the UEFA Champions League, those abstracts that still form part of the universe developed with man, specific traits or characteristics owing to certain circumstances in the past. For example the people of Ijebu Ode acquired the traits of intelligence, organization and commercial enterprise owing to centuries of maneuvering with non-military options for their survival. Those traits of intelligence have become fixed and permanent even when the people are no longer engaged in those activities that engendered the traits. The point where the activities lead to these traits is the metaphysic. This is where the traits begin to flow naturally continuing the generational transfer that those activities too, passed through.

In Europe’s premier club competition, the decades of existence of the European Cup represents the centuries of Ijebu Ode’s maneuvering for survival with non-military options while the UEFA Champions League is the fixed, permanent and irreversible period of the developed traits of intelligence and organization of the Ijebu Ode people. The introduction of the UEFA Champions League in 1992 is the metaphysic point of the European Cup era of 1956 to 1992.

For the UEFA Champions League the metaphysic formed is based on the historical antecedents of the participating leagues and clubs. It is based on historical precedence. This rule first started to take shape in 2000 when La liga leveled Serie A and Premier League for its 9th European silverware. The rule formally came into effect in 2002 when La liga won its 10 European cup. From that year till date, neither have Serie A moved ahead of La liga nor did Premier League leapfrog Serie A. This was exactly the reason why Eyjafjallajokul released its ashes into European airspace in 2010.

Real Madrid was the first club to win the European Cup in 1956. It won the trophy consecutively for five years. No other club in European football has ever managed a feat near this. FC Barcelona won the trophy once in the European Cup era. The club lagged teams like Bayern Munich and Liverpool that achieved trebles in the European Cup. In 2009 FC Barcelona won the UEFA Champions League. About 6 months later, the club had claimed all the trophies it competed for. Thus in 2010 Guardiola’s men set about the task of becoming the first club side to retain it. It was this objective of Barcelona that caused the Eyjafjallajokul to spew ashes into the skies. Eyjafjallajokul happened because of the message underlying the rule of precedence which for Barcelona reads Ye Cannot Be At Present What Thou Has Not Been in the Past. The import of this message is that Barcelona doesn’t have the pedigree to defend the cup. That only Real Madrid possessed such pedigree. Therefore only Madrid which boasts that pedigree in Europe could accomplish such a feat. Hence, the eruption of the volcano.

What Barcelona tried and failed to accomplish from 2010 to 2012 was what Real Madrid attempted and succeeded with from 2016 to 2018. Barcelona encountered obstacles not in Inter Milan and Chelsea who were merely the instruments of execution but in Real Madrid. That Barcelona failed collectively with their managerial acumen, team ethic and exceptional talents all in their prime while, Real Madrid, at the last round of its consecutive treble, successfully blazed past all its knockout stage opponents with the aid of a highly consistent string of fortunes never enjoyed by any club else in recorded history tells the entire tale: the woes of Barcelona and triumph of Madrid were contrived and planned.

One inexplicable match result at the 2017/2018 season which had an indirect influence on Real Madrid’s eventual victory was the 3-0 thumping of Barcelona in Rome. AS Roma’s dumping of FC Barcelona out of the 2017/2018 Champions League helped prevent a possible clash with Real Madrid which could have resulted in an almost certain defeat for the eventual champions. This elimination by Roma also has far greater implications for Barcelona in the near future. The Rome defeat meant that Liverpool escaped a possible meeting with Barcelona. The resurgence and appearance of Liverpool in the finals portends a worrisome development for Barcelona. Given that on head to head basis, Liverpool won the last contest in season 2006/2007’s first series of knockout ties, therefore, Barcelona would have had a semifinal clash with Liverpool at her advantage.

The issue which the Roma victory and the emergence of Liverpool has brought to light is that the problems that Barcelona confronted from 2010 to 2012 and which caused the Eyjafjallajokul to create an advantage for Inter Milan is about to rear its ugly head once more. The fact is Liverpool and Barcelona are currently on five European titles apiece. Together with Bayern Munich, this trio constitutes three of the teams that have won five titles at the highest level in European football. Liverpool and Bayern Munich achieved trebles out of their quintuple in the European Cup era. Both of them had golden eras of club football that predate Barcelona’s.

The English and German clubs have a pedigree that Barcelona doesn’t possess and cannot boast of. Real Madrid, too, had its golden era at its inception that predates all the clubs. The precedence of Real Madrid’s golden era was the factor behind why Barcelona failed to flourish in Europe from 2009 to 2012 as did Madrid from 2014 to 2018. With Liverpool and Bayern Munich now on queue for European glory, Barcelona is about to face the exact situation of 2010 when Eyjafjallajokul unleashed itself on Europe.

Barcelona’s problems in Europe are mainly with Liverpool and Bayern Munich. These are the obstacles to the Catalan’s success in Europe. The rule of precedence at the club level means Barcelona will lag Liverpool and Bayern Munich for its 6th European title. But, at the league level, the Serie A and Premier League are currently tied at 12 European silverwares apiece which means Juventus will be the first to achieve European glory, to be followed by Liverpool afterwards. However being in the position to win ahead of Liverpool, Juventus still faces formidable opposition from the reigning champions. This threat though has been put out with the signing of Cristiano Ronaldo.

The case of Ronaldo suffices for how man could in a peculiar situation through sustained activity, acquire the metaphysic necessary for extraordinary accomplishments. Ronaldo accepted the challenge created as a result of the Messi comparison over who was the best in the world. To this end, he crossed over to Spain in the summer of 2009 to prove he is the better player. Remember the 40 goals of his debut in Spanish top-flight. After years of intensified rivalry he would actually acquire the powers that will be the force behind 4 Champions League titles under 5 years.

No longer at Real Madrid, Ronaldo’s exit has created a vacuum, metaphysically with which he charged Real Madrid’s European Cup pedigree in recent years. And he will soon be deploying this metaphysical force soonest at Turin where there is a strong Serie A pedigree of the European Cup which Juventus currently rides on.

When Ronaldo’s metaphysical force combines with Serie A’s historical antecedents, a spark that will create the necessary impetus for glory in 2019 will be lit. It is this combination of philosophical and historical factors that will ease Juventus past its opponents in the 2018/2019 edition of the Champions League.

Besides Real Madrid, the coming years is of importance to fans, administrators, players and coaches of PSG, Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Manchester City and Juventus in the UEFA Champions League. It is important to clubs that are yearning for continental glory. The coming years, too, particularly the next three is of great importance to metaphysics and philosophy. Using the Champions League as laboratory, the course of the next three editions will help prove that metaphysics is a global phenomenon. That it exists in reality; that there are metaphysical forces in the universe; that the Eyjafjallajokul and Grimsvotn both occurred at the instigation of and as a consequence of communication between the metaphysic forces in the world; that both volcanic eruptions had Barcelona as their object; that the metaphysic forces of Champions League never wanted Barcelona to win the 2011 edition and; that the order of Juventus, Liverpool and to some extent Bayern Munich as victors of the Champions League that are all yet to kickoff, with FC Barcelona having to queue behind them before its next continental glory, will help substantiate the fact that the Eyjafjallajokul had the Catalan giants as its main target.

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FC Barcelona Players – Alexander Hleb

Alexander Hleb is, of course, well-known amongst UK football followers because of his time at Arsenal, during which time Sky pundit Andy Gray described him as one of the Premier league’s ‘most skillful players’. Born in Minsk in Belarus in 1981, Hleb, whose brother is also an international footballer, initially made his name in the Bundesliga with FC Stuttgart, whom he joined from his first club, FC Bate Borisov, at the age of nineteen, with whom he had just won the Belarus national league. Arsenal were signing a player who had already made 172 first team appearances for Stuttgart, scoring 19 goals in total.

By the time Hleb joined Arsenal in 2005 he had already been voted Belarusian player of the year three times – he has added two more awards since then – and he became respected at Arsenal because of his versatility, energy and ability to fit into the team’s smooth passing style of play. In his first season in North London, Hleb started 40 league games and scored 3 goals – figures that he repeated the following season.

It was during season 2007/08 that rumours started to link Hleb with a move to Barcelona; stories that gathered momentum after a particularly impressive performance against AC Milan in the Champions’ League. The ‘will he, won’t he’ saga kept the press occupied until July when the player signed for Barca in a deal reported to be worth about £11.8 million. During his time at Arsenal, Hleb made a total of 130 appearances, scoring 11 goals.

Alexander Hleb hardly made the most promising start to his career with his new club – picking up a series of injuries during pre-season which disrupted his progress considerably. Towards the end of the year, however, he was beginning to become a regular in the squad and to show signs of being able to integrate with the nimble, quick passing midfielders already at the club.

Internationally, Hleb made his debut appearance as a substitute in a defeat against Wales in 2001. His full debut followed, along with his first international goal, against Hungary the following April and he has been a regular in the team since then – captaining the side since August, 2007.

It is easy to see why Barcelona signed Alexander Hleb; he fits into their mould of being skillful, adaptable and pacy – with the ability to chip in with the occasional goal and, overall, an acute positional sense and an awareness of the runs of forward players. He should make a valuable addition to the squad – and his wife certainly should make an impact on the local media; in August, 2008 Alexander married Anastasia, a Topless singer. To be precise, Anastasia Kosenkova was a member of the Belarusian girl band, Topless.

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