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Thursday, July 26, 2007

Liverpool's new stadium



Liverpool will retain their famous Kop end when they move into a new 60,000-seater stadium in the city's Stanley Park in 2010.
Computer-generated images of the new stadium were revealed by the Premier League club on Wednesday with a steeply banked, 18,000 capacity Kop end an integral part of a design which veers away from the bowl-like appearance of many new grounds.
An official planning application has been submitted to Liverpool City Council for the 300 million pounds ($617.9 million) development in the north of the city.
Moving from the club's spiritual Anfield home is an emotive subject for fans of the five-times European champions, but chief executive Rick Parry said the new Kop end would become the "heartbeat" of the four-sided stadium.
"We've always recognised the central importance of the Kop," Parry said in a statement. "It will have a significantly increased capacity of 18,000 seats in a single tier structure that will be the heartbeat of the new stadium.
"The rake of the stand will be steeper and the seats tighter together, with the acoustics of the roof designed to accentuate the atmosphere during games."




European nights at Anfield are one of the most colourful sights in British football. The current Kop end becomes a sea of red banners while thousands bellow out the club's anthem "You'll Never Walk Alone".
Many Premier League clubs have abandoned their historic roots for new stadiums with Arsenal being the latest example, leaving their Victorian Highbury stadium in 2006 for the bowl-like Emirates complex just down the road.
Liverpool's current Anfield capacity of 45,000 is deemed insufficient to compete with the likes of Manchester United (76,000) and Arsenal (60,000) while the likes of Newcastle United also have much bigger stadiums.


Club captain Steven Gerrard said keeping the Kop was vital.
"The fact that a massive Kop end in incorporated in the new stadium is great," he said. "I was completely blown away by the plans. I've played in some great stadiums but this is something special."
Stadium designers, American-based architects HKS, have been involved in many sports arenas including the Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles and the new venue for Super Bowl champions the Indianapolis Colts.

Friday, July 20, 2007

50 Worst ever transfers in EPL contd...


25 Stephane Guivarc’h, Auxerre to Newcastle United, £3.5m, June 1998



The World Cup winners’ medal that the striker collected with France needed to be seen to be believed by frustrated Newcastle fans.


24 Glen Johnson, West Ham United to Chelsea, £6m, July 2003


The first signing of the Roman Abramovich era has still to establish himself four years and one loan spell at Portsmouth later.


23 Corrado Grabbi, Ternana to Blackburn Rovers, £6.75m, June 2001



The Italian striker scored two goals in 30 Premier League appearances. That’s £3.38m per goal.
22 Adrian Mutu, Parma to Chelsea, £15.8m, August 2003



As if six goals in 27 league games was not bad enough, the Romania striker was sacked after failing a drugs test for cocaine.


21 Tore Andre Flo, Rangers to Sunderland, £6.75m, August 2002



Four goals in 29 league appearances by the Norway striker helped Sunderland towards an ignominious relegation.


20 Joey Beauchamp, Oxford United to West Ham United, £1m, June 1994



The Oxford-born winger was so homesick after joining West Ham that he left two months later without playing a competitive game. He returned closer to his roots with a move to Swindon Town.


19 Hugo Viana, Sporting Lisbon to Newcastle United, £8.5m, June 2002



The young Portuguese midfield player spent most of his two years at the club on the bench.


18 Andrea Silenzi, Torino to Nottingham Forest, £1.8m, August 1995



The Italian striker was so poor that Forest allowed him to leave for nothing.


17 Florin Raducioiu, Espanyol to West Ham United, £2.4m, July 1996



Lasted only six months after missing training to go shopping.


16 Sasa Curcic, Bolton Wanderers to Aston Villa, £4m, August 1996


Fell out with Brian Little, the manager, amid accusations of a wild lifestyle off the pitch.


15 Alex Nyarko, Lens to Everton, £4.5m, July 2000



Complained that the English league was too physical. Walter Smith, his manager, appeared to side with the Everton fan who ran onto the pitch at Highbury to confront the Ghanaian over a supposed lack of effort.


14 Ade Akinbiyi, Wolverhampton Wanderers to Leicester City, £5m, July 2000



Known to some Leicester supporters as Ade Abadbiyi, he was lampooned by fans across the country for his desperate misses.


13 Chris Sutton, Blackburn Rovers to Chelsea, £10m, July 1999


The striker was a regular goalscorer with Norwich City, Blackburn and Celtic but never recovered from missing a couple of sitters on his debut for Chelsea, for whom he scored once in


28 Premier League appearances.


12 Jean-Alain Boumsong, Rangers to Newcastle United, £8m, January 2005



Somehow made it into France’s World Cup finals squad last year but Newcastle fans were relieved when the error-prone central defender left for Juventus.


11 Juan Sebastian Veron, Lazio to Manchester United, £28.1m, July 2001; United to Chelsea, £15m, August 2003



To spare the Argentinian from appearing twice, these two moves have been placed together. If anything, Chelsea’s signing was worse, given that they knew Veron had failed to adjust to English football.



10 Darko Kovacevic, Red Star Belgrade to Sheffield Wednesday, £2m, December 1995



The forward made no impression at Hillsborough but promptly became a prolific goalscorer in the Spanish league with Real Sociedad when he left.


9 Robert Fleck, Norwich to Chelsea, £2.1m, August 1992



The Scottish striker was a cult hero at Carrow Road but a carthorse at Stamford Bridge, where he scored five times in 40 league appearances.


8 Bosko Balaban, Dynamo Zagreb to Aston Villa, £6m, August 2001



The Croatia forward did not start a league game in his two and a half years at the club.


7 Sergei Rebrov, Dynamo Kiev to Tottenham Hotspur, £11.5m, June 2000



The player who formed an outstanding attacking partnership with Andriy Shevchenko at Dynamo Kiev lost his radar after joining Tottenham.


6 Marcelino, Real Mallorca to Newcastle United, £5m, June 1999



Dubbed the “lesser-spotted Magpie”, he played just 17 Premier League games in three and a half years at St James’ Park.


5 Steve Marlet, Lyons to Fulham, £11.5m, August 2001



The Frenchman provided just one goal per five league games, fell out with Chris Coleman over his refusal to play out of position and spent two years on loan to Marseilles.


4 Tomas Brolin, Parma to Leeds United, £4.3m, November 1995



Injury had left Brolin overweight and over the hill but Leeds paid well over the odds for the Sweden striker. He left two dismal years later when his contract was cancelled.


3 Albert Luque, Deportivo La Coruna to Newcastle United, £9.5m, August 2005



One of a host of expensive signings by Newcastle to have disappeared down a black and white hole. The Stevens Inquiry placed a question mark over the transfer and the rest of the world placed a question mark over why Newcastle bought him at all.


2 Valerien Ismael, Strasbourg to Crystal Palace, £2.75m, January 1998



Hopeless in South London, the French central defender has since won the German league and cup double both with Werder Bremen and Bayern Munich.


1 Per Kroldrup, Udinese to Everton, £5m, June 2005



Everton paid a fortune for the Denmark central defender but then showed no interest in actually playing him amid suggestions they had suddenly discovered he couldn’t head the ball. Made one league appearance before returning to Italy.

50 Worst ever transfers in EPL


Out comes the chequebook, up go the expectations; then down to earth come the fans. Here are the 50 worst signings made by Premier League clubs since its inception in 1992, based on the size of transfer fee and impact made by the player. Do you agree?

50 Stan Collymore, Liverpool to Aston Villa, £7m, May 1997

The striker scored just seven goals in 46 league appearances for the club he supported as a boy.

49 Khalid Boulahrouz, SV Hamburg to Chelsea, £7m, August 2006

The “Cannibal” has devoured only the weakest of Premier League opponents.

48 Eddie McGoldrick, Crystal Palace to Arsenal, £1m, June 1993

The Ireland winger was reunited with Ian Wright but could not supply crosses for his former Crystal Palace team-mate as he had done at Selhurst Park.

47 Mark Hateley, Rangers to Queens Park Rangers, £1.5m, November 1995

The England centre forward was a hero in Glasgow but the fans at the other Rangers did not take to him.

46 Darren Huckerby, Coventry City to Leeds United, £4m, August 1999

A world-beater on his day, the forward was not one of David O’Leary’s successes at Leeds.

45 Georgios Samaras, Heerenveen to Manchester City, £6m, January 2006

A lack of goals led to Stuart Pearce’s sacking as manager and the Greece striker was among the chief culprits.

44 Massimo Taibi, Venezia to Manchester United, £4.5m, August 1999

United splashed out in the hope of finding the next Peter Schmeichel, to no avail. The Italian goalkeeper lasted just four months.

43 Titus Bramble, Ipswich Town to Newcastle United, £5m, July 2002

Bramble looked like a future England player when at Ipswich but became a byword for calamitous defending at Newcastle.

42 Fernando Morientes, Real Madrid to Liverpool, £6.5m, January 2005

The striker who helped knock Chelsea out of the Champions League as an AS Monaco player failed to trouble English defences much while at Liverpool.

41 Francis Jeffers, Everton to Arsenal, £8m, June 2001

Signed as Arsene Wenger’s “fox in the box”, he was sold as a donkey in the box at a loss of £5.4m.

40 Michael Owen, Real Madrid to Newcastle United, £16m, August 2005

The English striker has fared reasonably well when fit but injuries mean Newcastle have yet to see anything like a decent return for their money.
39 Chris Kiwomya, Ipswich Town to Arsenal, £1.25m, January 1995

Signed in the dying days of George Graham’s reign and later allowed to leave for nothing.

38 Massimo Maccarone, Empoli to Middlesbrough, July 2002

Views on the Italian range from not picked enough to not good enough. Either way, 18 league goals in four years was a poor return for the striker, who was allowed to leave on a free transfer.
37 Gerry Creaney, Portsmouth to Manchester City, £1m, September 1995

The Scottish striker was a prolific scorer at Portsmouth but misfired at City.

36 Jon Dahl Tomasson, Heerenveen to Newcastle United, £2.5m, July 1997

Played as a striker rather than his more familiar attacking midfield role, the Dane was out of position and out of luck.

35 Ned Zelic, Borussia Dortmund to Queens Park Rangers, £1.25m, July 1995

Blamed the hard English ground for his injuries and quickly returned to Germany.

34 Dean Saunders, Galatasaray to Nottingham Forest, £1.5m, July 1996

The striker who specialised in relegations endured a barren run in front of goal as Forest plunged from the Premier League.

33 Eoin Jess, Aberdeen to Coventry City, £2m, February 1996

An unsuccessful spell at Highfield Road had the Scotsman scuttling back to Aberdeen for a third of the original transfer fee.

32 Paul Furlong, Watford to Chelsea, £2.3m

Chelsea would spend this on a team bus nowadays but it was their record transfer fee in 1994. The striker’s spell was characterised by howlers in front of goal.

31 Ramon Vega, Cagliari to Tottenham Hotspur, £3.5m, January 1997

The Switzerland central defender gave Tottenham fans countless nervous moments.

30 Salif Diao, Sedan to Liverpool, £5m, August 2002

Gerard Houllier, the Liverpool manager who signed the midfield player, compared him to Patrick Vieira. Well, he is tall and from Senegal, but otherwise...

29 Milan Baros, Liverpool to Aston Villa, £6.5m, August 2005

Nine goals in 42 league games was not what Villa had in mind when signing the Czech from Liverpool and they were happy to offload him to Lyons.

28 Faustino Asprilla, Parma to Newcastle United, £6.7m, February 1996

The Colombian was a fine player who enjoyed some good times at Newcastle but his mid-season arrival appeared to unbalance a team that had seemed destined for the Premier League title.

27 Kevin Davies, Southampton to Blackburn Rovers, £7.5m, June 1998

The burly striker is having more luck down the road at Bolton Wanderer but at Blackburn he managed just one goal in a whole league season.

26 Andriy Shevchenko, AC Milan to Chelsea, £30.8m, May 2006

The Ukrainian may yet justify his fee but so far his arrival has contributed little apart from prompting a change in formation that arguably hindered Chelsea last season.



Just wanna knw who are in the TOP 25: visit this space tommorrow. Please leave a comment if u dont think any of the above aint as bad as it is made out to be.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

What they Earn???


Premier League's Top Ten Earners


News that Chelsea have agreed a new £6.8 million-a-year deal with their captain John Terry means that the central defender - who is also England skipper - is set to become the highest-paid player in English football.

Terry's wages will be £131,000-per-week uner the terms of his new five-year contract.
But how does that compare with the wages of other big-earners in the Premiership?
According to The Sun, the table of the Premier League's top ten earners prior to Terry's new deal looked like this:


1= Andriy Shevchenko, Michael Ballack (both Chelsea) £121,000 a week


3 Steven Gerrard (Liverpool) £120,000


4 Cristiano Ronaldo (Man Utd) £119,000


5= Wayne Rooney (Man Utd), Michael Owen (Newcastle) £110,000


7= Frank Lampard (Chelsea), Rio Ferdinand (Man Utd) £100,000


9= Fernando Torres (Liverpool), Didier Drogba (Chelsea) £90,000

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

FIFA asked to solve Tevez issue

Manchester United remain ultra-confident Carlos Tevez will eventually become their player after chief executive David Gill confirmed the Red Devils bid to sign the Argentina forward was heading for FIFA.
With no end in sight to the row over Tevez's registration, the 24-year-old, who has scrapped plans to have a medical in Manchester this week, has called in the world governing body in a bid to resolve the issue once and for all.
A special 'Dispute Resolution Chamber' will be set up, possibly within a fortnight, to effectively determine who currently owns Tevez, West Ham or his adviser Kia Joorabchian.
"There has been a lot of discussions over the last few days between Manchester United, West Ham and the Premier League but the case will probably go before FIFA's dispute resolution chamber," said Gill.
"We are very confident this will be resolved in favour of the player and he will be free to achieve his wish of joining Manchester United."
West Ham confirmed they have written to the Premier League this morning requesting the matter be referred to FIFA.
A West Ham spokesman said: "It now makes sense for this to be dealt with by FIFA.
"All parties agree this is the best way forward and of course we will be involved in helping this be resolved as quickly as possible."

Dhoni - the Man U fan...


LONDON, July 18, 2007 (AFP) - India's Mahendra Singh Dhoni is relishing being in England right now where he is far removed from the superstar adulation that has come his way at home.
The 26-year-old wicket-keeper, whose 17 different sponsorship deals dwarf the off-field commercial activities of England batsman Kevin Pietersen, has become a huge hit with India fans since making his international debut in 2004.
But Dhoni, who risks being mobbed by enthusiatic supporters when he walks out of his home in Ranchi, east India, insists his celebrity is nothing compared to that of batting great Sachin Tendulkar.
"When we are walking through airports I love to walk behind Sachin because that is a time when you can really sneak through. You sense all eyes are on him," Dhoni told reporters at Lord's where the first of a three-Test series against England starts on Thursday.
But despite his sex-symbol status, he insisted his focus was firmly on cricket.
"The day I stop playing cricket everything stops: whether it's the fan following, the endorsements, or anything else," said Dhoni, who has put his name to footwear, soap and a bank among other deals.
"My responsibility is to play good cricket and that is what I am here to do.
"It is lovely to be here. I can walk in the street, I can sit in restaurants, go wherever I want. If you go to a crowded place in India, such as a mall, you will get mobbed."
Dhoni has thrilled crowds around the world with his big-hitting, a talent he developed as a young player.
"I used to play tennis ball cricket a lot and the only thing to do is hit the ball hard," he said. "You look for a six, no singles, no fours."
Concerns, however, have been raised about his wicket-keeping with fellow gloveman Dinesh Karthik already in the side for his batting alone.
Although Dhoni averages 46.97 in 76 limited-overs internationals, his Test mark of 33.75 in 17 matches, which includes only one hundred, is only marginally better than Karthik's record.
"I always take my matches as my last," said Dhoni. "If you have a bit of pressure, which comes from having competition within the team, it brings the best out of you."
Dhoni, a soccer goalkeeper before he became a wicket-keeper, also said he was happy to be in the birthplace of football.
"I was always quite inclined towards football and so when I was 12 to 13 I went to camp and practised for those couple of years," he explained. "After that we needed a wicketkeeper in our school team.
"Our games teacher said that the basics were the same - as a goalkeeper you move well and catch the ball - so why didn't I give it a go? That's how it started for me.
"I still love football now. I support Manchester United. When our first-class season begins in September/October the Premiership has already started, so when we used to come back from the ground, there was nothing much to do, so we used to watch the games on television."

This is the worst time: Arsene Wenger


Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger wants to see his side develop a ruthless streak against weaker opposition to give themselves a chance in the Barclays Premier League title race.
The Gunners took points off the other teams in the top four last season and did the double over winners Manchester United but still finished 21 points off the pace.
"If you make a table of the results against the other teams in the top four, then we were top," Wenger said. "Then if you make a table against the teams in the top half, Manchester United have 43 points, we have 40, so do Chelsea, and Liverpool have 33.
"That shows that we lost the championship against teams in the bottom half of the table.
"So that is where we will have to be much more efficient this season. We have to be consistent in our mental preparation, in our ruthlessness as well."
Defender Kolo Toure agrees with his manager, and added: "We showed we can make it. If you can beat Manchester United you can beat any team in the league.
"Maybe sometimes what we missed was being focused on the game through the whole season. To be the champions you need to concentrate for all the games."
Meanwhile, Wenger is likely to wait until the season starts before appointing a director of football at the Emirates Stadium.
He has been looking for a new man to work with since the departure of David Dein as vice-chairman in April but is willing to wait in an attempt to keep a settled atmosphere over the summer.
Club scout Gilles Grimandi is considered the front-runner for the new post, with Reading's Nicky Hammond also suggested as a suitable candidate. In the meantime, long-serving Arsenal director Ken Friar has been working with Wenger.
"I wanted to do it before the end of the season when I started buying and selling," said Wenger on the club's official website, www.arsenal.com.
"But then I thought that now is the worst time because I have no time to tell someone how I want to do things.
"I did not want to unsettle the team before the end of the transfer market. So at the moment I work with Ken Friar and it is working well for us."
Wenger has brought Lukasz Fabianski, Eduardo Da Silva, Havard Nordtveit and Bacary Sagna to the club this summer as Arsenal plan for the post-Thierry Henry era, although the most important signing would be for the manager to agree a new contract.
The Frenchman's current deal expires at the end of the coming season, with negotiations under way.
"For me, I think he will stay," said Toure on Arsenal TV Online. "Mr Wenger brings something special to this club and to keep him would be a great thing.
"We need to win some trophies and I'm sure Mr Wenger will bring lots of trophies to the club."