Thursday, 7 December 2017

I can see!

Day -189 WorldCup2018

Got the eye fixed today, sort of. Can see, but can't really see. So will keep this short.

Two days to go to TFC's history making moment. Starting to miss not being able to be there, not just to watch but to feel the pre-match excitement, the crowds walking to the stadium, the increasing noise in the stadium and the nerves just before kick-off. .

Wednesday, 6 December 2017

Liverpool score 7, and then ......

Day -190 WorldCup2018

First I have to get this out of the way. Liverpool, who needed a draw to make it out of the Champions League group stages, beat Spartak Moscow 7-0. How about that for making sure, without any doubt? The general message from the online commentators was that this is Liverpool. It's fine that they can score lots but now they will be up against better teams. Can they defend? In other words don't pop the champagne yet.

Now, who remembers when Manchester United beat Roma 7-1 in the quarter finals in 2007? The feeling then was that UEFA might as well have just handed the trophy to United that very night. Milan beat them in the semifinals, including a comprehensive 3-0 win in the second leg. Similar result to Liverpool's, different reaction.

Moving on. With all this excitement surrounding the World Cup draw, Argentina, Iceland, questionable opinions of Canadian sports writers, the IOC, Fifa, Russians, Vitaly Mutko, Toronto FC have barely had a mention. This Saturday is the big redemption, revenge match against Seattle in the MLS Cup. Last year it felt like more of an occasion because it was the first time TFC were so close to winning something after years of desperation. This year the excitement is a little more cautious because of what happened last year and even though they didn't win last year, this is still the second time in the final. It's not the novelty of it being the first time. However, it is still a massive occasion. The unspoken expectation is that this year TFC are ready, and there will be no repeat of the disappointment.

I don't normally make predictions but there are two I will confidently make, the first of which is probably emotion driven rather than rational.

TFC will win this year. Why? Because I'm not going to be there. Last year I felt I was going to see TFC history unfold in front of me. I was going to witness a momentous occasion. After years of backing losing teams, I was going to be present for my adopted team's greatest moment in their history to date. The emotion in the stadium was going to be amazing. Of course, none of it happened. Instead my lasting memory was of the deafening sound of silence the moment Seattle's winning penalty hit the net. So this year, with my luck, they will win. And I'll be watching on TV.

The second thing that will happen is that it will snow and the orange ball will be used. I'd like to say this is based on fact but it's actually coming from weather forecasters so, well, you know, it's really about somebody who should know what they are talking about making as much of a guess as I am about TFC winning. Last year in the days leading up to the match, I wondered whether an orange ball would be used. I reminisced about the matches I'd watched on TV in the past, played in snow with an orange ball. I felt it would add to the uniqueness of the occasion: the freezing cold, the snow and the orange ball. In the end it didn't snow and there was no orange ball. The forecast this year is for light snow late Saturday afternoon. It may not be much, but enough for the referee to potentially signal for a change of ball to the orange one.

This year the final is also at a more reasonable hour for European viewing, because of course that's important. Match time is advertised for 4pm, Toronto time. So if you are watching across the Atlantic and it's 10pm and you forgot to put the dinner leftovers in the fridge, don't worry and don't rush. You'll have about 15 minutes before the match actually starts.

Do watch, if you can. This MLS you laugh at is pretty good. And who knows you may see Seba Giovinco or Victor Vazquez score a spectacular winner.

Tuesday, 5 December 2017

More Russia, doping and Mutko

Day -191 #WorldCup2018

Thomas Bach, IOC president, said it was an historic day today as the IOC took the unprecedented step of banning Russia from the 2018 Winter Olympics as punishment for the state sponsored doping of Olympic athletes before London 2012 and Sochi 2014. But, did they really ban Russian athletes? Did they really take the "unprecedented step" Well, kind of....but not really. There will still be "clean" Russian athletes in South Korea, but they won't be competing under the Russian flag. So it's a case of the IOC did....but didn't. But that's another debate that will go on and on. There was something else that got my attention.

Vitaly Mutko, former Minister for Sport in the Russian government and a former member of Fifa's Executive Council was banned by the IOC from attending any future Olympic Games. It feels like he's finally getting what he deserves. Mutko was the Minister who oversaw the doping program and there is an abundance of evidence that he was aware of it, and involved. Mutko was barred form seeking re-election to the Fifa Council (formerly the Executive Council) because his new position as Deputy Prime Minister constituted political interference. It seemed like a good excuse for Fifa to be rid of Mutko.

Mutko is currently the head of the Russia 2018 organizing committee. So what did Fifa do after today;s news. They issued a statement an hour after the IOC had banned Mutko to say that it "“no impact on the preparations for the 2018 World Cup as we continue to work to deliver the best possible event”. That's that, then. Business as usual for Fifa, and from Fifa. Sepp Blatter is long gone but nothing changes.

I had written about Mutko many times, questioning all the controversy surrounding him. After today, he's been knocked back a little bit but he's still standing. So not to prove a point but just for my own sake here are some of my mentions of Mutko (there were more but as part of a another subject).

http://dinoworldcup.blogspot.ca/…/11/day-957-worldcup2018.h…
http://dinoworldcup.blogspot.ca/…/vitaly-mutko-and-fifa.html
http://dinoworldcup.blogspot.ca/…/same-old-fifa-always-lyin…
http://dinoworldcup.blogspot.ca/20…/…/no-comment-really.html
http://dinoworldcup.blogspot.ca/…/08/lets-all-be-positive.h…
http://dinoworldcup.blogspot.ca/…/mutok-going-or-staying.ht…
http://dinoworldcup.blogspot.ca/…/russia-2018-and-doping-ag…
http://dinoworldcup.blogspot.ca/2017/03/mutko-again.html

Monday, 4 December 2017

Benevento!

Day -192 WorldCup2018

I promised to go back to Benevento today. Argentina and Iceland took up too much space yesterday.
The team from the small town of Benevento, in the hills north of Naples won their first point in Serie A on Sunday, in the first season ever in Italy's top division. If you don't know the story by now, they scored a 94th minute equalizer against Milan for their first point of the season. The historic goal had a story of it's own because it was scored by the team's goalkeeper, Alberto Brignoli.

There's a lot of videos online of the goal, good videos from TV. But I chose this one, where you can barely see the way the goalkeeper flung himself at the ball. But that's not my point. I love watching the fans celebrate. Look how incredibly happy they are, that their team, hopelessly bottom of the league scored a last minute equalizer against Milan. And the crowd looks like it's what everybody in the town does on a Sunday afternoon: go to the stadium to watch the team. It's a mix of young and old and they all look like they are part of a happy community. It has the look of old fashioned football supporting, like the my days of old watching the local football at our stadium in Malta. I especially like the guy shouting over the wall to the outside of the stadium, "Brignoli scored!"

Of course after this I had to check the standings in more detail to see how desperate Benevento's plight already is. They are only 10 points away from safety. I think the comeback is on.

Sunday, 3 December 2017

A rant from a football fan

Day -193 WorldCup2018

On the 16th of June, next year, at 9am, Toronto time, I hope to be watching what I think will be one of the most fascinating matches at the World Cup, Argentina vs Iceland.

I've come back to this match, with a mention for a 3rd consecutive day, after reading Cathal Kelly's column in yesterday's Globe and Mail. Mr. Kelly covers a wide range of sports, from baseball to ice hockey, but is the Globe's voice of football and is always an entertaining, interesting read. But then he throws in a few head shaking sentences, as he did yesterday, and it gets my Euro snobbishness tail up. Unashamedly.

After a quick read through the often-mentioned potential issues with Russia hosting the World Cup, from the incredible expenditure, to mounting accusations and proven cases of doping to racism; and the predictable description of the laughable glitz and glamour of the draw and the collection of ex-footballers and bad jokes.

Then he switches his argument to the lack of any 'Groups of Death' emerging from the draw. And this is a bad thing, presumably because for part-time football fans there is a need for the likes of Germany, Brazil, France and Spain to be all drawn in the same group to ensure titanic clashes right from the get go. Mr. Kelly also mourned the missing "behemoths" Italy, Netherlands and the USA, and how their spots have been taken by lesser teams, resulting in less "pizzazz" in the first round.
According to him the first round has the feel of "filler until the knockout rounds." And this from somebody who writes about Olympic ice hockey where nobody is eliminated after the first round group phase. As we say in Maltese-English, "I'll give you filler."

Substitute groups of death with groups of so much equality that if I was in a fantasy pool it would be very, very hard to pick the top two teams in each group. (I went through a lot of them on Friday). Yes, Peru vs Denmark may not sound very interesting but it could determine who finishes second in that group. And when else would you see these two teams play, other then in some meaningless friendly.
Mr. Kelly then really got me going with this:

"Group D, featuring Argentina, Croatia, Iceland and Nigeria, looks the most challenging on paper. Does that excite you? Probably not."

Who are you asking, Mr Kelly. Hopefully, not me. What a group. Apart from Argentina-Iceland, have you ever watched Nigeria play? Have you ever noticed how terribly, frustratingly exciting they can be to watch. For your homework: Argentina-Nigeria, World Cup 2014. And Croatia? What a joy to watch when they are in full flow. Croatia-Nigeria could be a roller-coaster classic. And then there's Argentina-Iceland.

Say it again, as I have many times since Friday. Argentina, Iceland. Argentina play Iceland in the World Cup. Yes, Iceland may be the hipster's dream team but consider the football and where they've come from.

(On reflection, Argentina are also one of those retro-hipster favourites so that adds another dimension to this clash. Hipster heaven).

In 1982, the World Cup Champions, Argentina, were defending their title at the World Cup in Spain. Football fans were looking forward to seeing the much-hyped, new star of world football, Diego Maradona. Ultimately, it all ended with a red card and a defeat by Brazil.

A week before Argentina, World Champions, begun the defence of their crown, Iceland played a match against Malta. It was not a friendly. It was the first qualifying match for the European Championships of 1984. It was a match between two teams who would battle to not finish bottom of their qualifying group, again. Malta won 2-1 and nobody outside of Malta or Iceland really noticed. A meaningless match between minnows.

Iceland's status as minnows did not change for many years. In 1986 as Maradona led Argentina to their second World Cup. Iceland were still not a country of any football significance. Netherlands, the behemoth, were also not at that World Cup, just as they had not qualified in 1982.

Iceland got a few mentions when Eidur Gudjohnsen was banging in the goals for Chelsea and Barcelona from 2000-2009. Iceland were making progress now but they weren't really on anybody's radar until they made it the 2014 World Cup qualifying play-offs. That amazing progression from minnow to second place in a qualifying group could have been luck. But what happened after that, Euro 2016 and making it to Russia, is not only, of course, history but maybe the start of something bigger.

So consider that Mr Kelly, the story behind how Argentina and Iceland came to be playing each other at a World Cup when you are watching on June 16th. And add this to it as well: on one side Messi, Aguero, Higuain, Di Maria against Sigurdsson (famous only because he is their current biggest name) and ten other players who's names most of us will never remember. One of them, Birkir Bjarnason, can't even get into Aston Villa's team in the English second division. You have to be a football fan to get excited by the prospect of what could happen when these two, so very different, teams meet.

More homework for you, Mr Kelly. Or do you remember the famous Norwegian commentary after Norway beat England in 1981? "Margaret Thatcher, your boys have taken one hell of a beating", and all that. Aren't you excited by the possibility of an Icelandic version of it. "Diego, God will not lend you his hand anymore. Now it is ours!"

Roll on June 16th. Where will you be, Mr Kelly?

(I have to save Benevento and Alberto Brignoli for tomorrow. They deserve their own day).

Saturday, 2 December 2017

In between day

Day -194 WorldCup2018

Further reflections on the World Cup draw......will have to wait until tomorrow.
I am really looking forward to Argentina vs Iceland.

Friday, 1 December 2017

The draw

Day -195 WorldCup2018

I can start looking for a good World Cup wall chart for my bedroom. The draw is made the fixtures are out and I can look forward to matches which we would never see if it wasn't for a World Cup. Argentina-Iceland jumped out at me first. Argentina and Iceland at a World Cup. And how about Saudi Arabia-Egypt. It sounds fascinating. Portugal-Spain, of course. Morocco-Iran or Costa Rica-Serbia could be candidates for the most turgid matches of the first round, or they might turn out to be the most enthralling.

Group of death? They said, with the new draw format, that there probably wouldn't be one. And it's sort of true. It's more that there's such a spread of evenness in some groups that it's hard to predict who might qualify.

Group A: Russia, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Uruguay it's the group of possible infinite life for all four teams. Who do you leave out if you are betting on it? They could all win the group, they could all finish last.

Group C: France, Australia, Peru, Denmark. Favourites France, and then who? What an opportunity for Australia. Or Peru, who haven't been here since 1982.

Group D: Argentina, Iceland, Croatia, Nigeria. Argentina, yes, if Messi shows up but who else?

Group F: Germany, Sweden, Mexico, South Korea. Germany will probably sleep walk through this and pretend that it's hard but what a battle for second place.

Group H: Poland, Senegal, Colombia, Japan. The group of "Oh it's group H matches today, I think I have to do my laundry". Not me. I watch all the World Cup matches that I possibly can but this is hardly the group that will have the bandwagon World Cup fans very excited.

England? They will probably have an epic battle with Belgium and manage to make a real meal out of getting something out of their matches against Tunisia and Panama. I can never take Tunisia seriously at a World Cup when it doesn’t seen that long ago that I watched Malta beat them, and that was one of 5 wins, with only three defeats. But we also beat Belgium in 1994. Malta have a 100% winning record against Belgium. Hey, Malta would have a chance in this group.

The excitement is up to another level today. Tomorrow morning Chelsea-Newcastle might kill it.