Sunday, December 20, 2009

Four Star Teams

COT
1899 Hoffenheim
Ajax
Atalanta

GORM
Bayer Leverkusen
Benfica
Besiktas

ROTS
Bolton
Blackburn
Deportivo La Coruna

MINA
Fenerbahce
Galatsaray
Genoa

SIV
Getafe
Lazio
Palermo

SMOOVE
Paris Saint-Germain
PSV Eindhoven
Portsmouth

JOE
Racing Club Santander
Sampdoria
Schalke

RIV
Sao Paulo
Sporting
Stade Rennais

SEHL
Sunderland
Udinese
West Ham


Espanyol
vfb Stuutgart
Fulham
Borrussia Dortmund
Atlethic Club Bliboa
Olympiakos
Panathinaikos

Monday, July 13, 2009

draft

Time to Abandon fake trophies

The last time an MLS club reached the CONCACAF Champion’s League final, in 2000, the twelve teams were split into three conferences. Two (arguably three) of them are no longer in existence. Now a mainstay in the United States backline, Carlos Bocanegra earned Rookie of the Year honors. The league, in it’s fifth year, was struggling to sign big names and earn the respect of a footballing continent dominated by Mexicans for decades. Nearly ten years later, the same sentiments could still be argued.
Nine years have passed since the once-dominant, now flailing Los Angeles Galaxy overcame CD Olimpia and the landscape of US Soccer is still struggling to find it’s identity with the rest of the continent. The talent is certainly improving, and we’ve seen big names come and go, yet clubs are still finding difficulties in attaining success in international cup competitions. If US Soccer and MLS are searching for a villain, I suggest they look inside their own offices. The main culprit has been, and seemingly will continue to be the schedule.
Mid-season friendlies, plastic trophies, and fixture congestion are destroying clubs health and fitness. Once a game of the Champions League’s caliber rolls around, they’ve nothing left to give.
First, and in my opinion the most important to go, is the mid-season friendlies. The All Star Game is great fun and I really do enjoy it, but when you schedule league games the next day, it doesn’t provide ample time for the true All Stars to return to their clubs, and therefore provides no purpose in testing the best MLS has to offer. I believe if you’re going to keep the All Star Game, you have to make it a true break and give clubs at least a ten day break from their already-congested schedule.
Continuing with friendlies, why is it necessary that MLS clubs add one more game to their schedule to play one of the world powers? Can’t Superpower A v Superpower B still draw in a double-header with an MLS club’s already-scheduled game? Again, I understand it creates revenue for the league overall, but add it to a game that wouldn’t normally sell like the Open Cup and throw it in a larger stadium. You open up your club to a much larger audience while giving fans of the game a treat. If that’s not reason enough, the money will still be there.
Moving on to faux tournaments, the existence of Superliga, the Carlsberg Cup, Pan-Pacific Championship, etc is farcical, these cups have run their course and have to go. Superliga is an excuse for MLS’ poor performance in the Champions League and aims solely to cash in on the US-Mexico rivalry. I’ve seen some high-quality games and it’s given younger players experience against talented opposition, but it’s completely unnecessary.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Playoffs

QUARTER-FINALS

Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar) 0 v 1 Aston Villa FC (Minky71191)
Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89) 0 v 0 Chelsea FC (judb215)

BYE: Arsenal FC (Cellular26)


Chelsea FC (judb215) 0 v 4 Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89)
Aston Villa FC (Minky71191) 1 v 0 Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar)

BYE: Arsenal FC (Cellular26)


SEMI-FINAL

Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89) 1 v 0 Aston Villa FC (Minky71191)

BYE: Arsenal FC (Cellular26)


FINAL

Arsenal FC (Cellular26) 2 v 3 Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89)

Saturday, January 31, 2009

League Standings

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Schedule and Rules

Every team plays the opposition home and away, for a total of eight games per club. After all regular-season playoff games have been played, the #1 club advances to the final. #2 plays #5, and #3 plays #4 in a two-game set. The winners of the series advance to a one-leg game, the winner advancing to the final to play the #1 team.

WEEK 1
Chelsea FC (judb215) 1 v 1 Arsenal FC (Cellular26)
Aston Villa FC(Minky71191) 1 v 0 Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89)

BYE: Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar)


WEEK 2
Arsenal FC (Cellular26) 4 v 0 Aston Villa FC (Minky71191)
Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar) 2 v 1 Chelsea FC (judb215)

BYE: Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89)


WEEK 3
Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89) 2 v 0 Chelsea FC (judb215)
Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar) 3 v 3 Arsenal FC (Cellular26)

BYE: Aston Villa FC (Minky71191)


WEEK 4
Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89) 1 v 1 Aston Villa FC (Minky71191)
Arsenal FC (Cellular26) 6
v 1 Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar)

BYE: Chelsea FC (judb215)


WEEK 5
Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89) 0 v 3 Arsenal FC (Cellular26)
Chelsea FC (judb215) 0 v 1 Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar)

BYE: Aston Villa FC (Minky71191)

WEEK 6
Aston Villa FC (Minky71191) 0 v 1 Arsenal FC (Cellular26)
Chelsea FC (judb215) 1 v 2 Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89)

BYE: Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar)


WEEK 7
Aston Villa FC (Minky71191) 0 v 1 Chelsea FC (judb215)
Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar) 4 v 2 Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89)

BYE: Arsenal FC (Cellular26)


WEEK 8

Aston Villa FC (Minky71191) 0 v 3 Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar)
Arsenal FC (Cellular26) 1 v 1 Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89)

BYE: Chelsea FC (judb215)

WEEK 9

Chelsea FC (judb215) 1 v 1 Aston Villa FC (Minky71191)
Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89) 3 v 0 Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar)

BYE: Arsenal FC (Cellular26)


WEEK 10

Arsenal FC (Cellular26) 3 v 1 Chelsea FC (judb215)
Liverpool FC (Wayne SkyIar) 3 v 0 Aston Villa FC (Minky71191)

BYE: Olympique Lyonnais (RevsFan89)