Football News: Weekly Football News Roundup
1/31/07
Serie A Inter already champs for the bookies!?
Last time around, Inter Milan were declared champions two months
after the end of the season. This season, they have been sort of
awarded the honour with four months to go.
The Italian bookmakers
Snai started to pay winnings to those who bet on Inter to win the
2006/07 championship...on January 30th.
The bookies took the decision after Inter scored their 14th consecutive
win at Sampdoria and kept their 11 point advantage over Roma.
It is the first time a bookie has "declared" an Italian
team champions just into the second part of the season. Inter's
chairman Massimo Moratti has warned his players and coaches that
the bookies' decision is totally irrelevant as to who will really
win the championship.
"Let Snai believe we are the champions, while we must not
forget that the competition is far from over."
Diego Simeone "I could never do as Ronaldo"
Former Inter player, today a successful coach, the Argentinean
Diego Simeone condemned his ex-teammate Ronaldo for his transfer
to Milan.
"People are free to take the decisions as they see fit, but
I could not have worn Milan's shirt," says Simeone, who won
the UEFA's Cup and a second place in the League alongside Ronaldo
in 1998.
The current Estudiantes' coach remembers another instance of Ronaldo's
"treason".
"He already did something similar when he signed for Real
Madrid after playing for Barcelona. I could never have been Milan's,
Real's or Roma's player, since I played for Inter, Atlético
and Lazio. That's the way I think," claims the feisty Argentinean,
who puts loyalty ahead of everything else.
"If supported" Mourinho to stay until 2010
Although he reportedly does not enjoy Roman Abramovich's full
confidence anymore, José Mourinho will not be easy to displace
from Chelsea's bench except with a hefty severance payment that
may come his way in case of dismissal.
"If the club supports me, I don't see any reason not to be
here," Mourinho told reporters at a launch of Chelsea's corporate
responsibility report at the House of Commons in Westminster.“Support
is not about money, support is not about new players, you can feel
support and have no players," the former Porto manager explained.
Mourinho indeed enjoys support, at least from the bulk of the
team, including the skipper John Terry and the keeper Petr Cech,
recently recovered from a serious head injury.
"We'll help Mourinho to stay by winning trophies. Since he
is such a classy coach, his staying on would be the best thing for
the team and the club."
"No murderer" Ricard refuses to go to jail
The Colombian player Hamilton Ricard is no fool. When he learned
he had been sentenced in his homeland to three years in jail for
causing a fatal traffic accident, he informed the authorities he
would not return to Colombia but would stay in Uruguay, where he
plays for Danubio.
"I am not a murderer. On that rainy day my van overturned
and one person unfortunately got killed," said the former Middlesbrough
player, announcing his lawyers would appeal the conviction.
Champion for gender equality Drogba, UN ambassador
Chelsea forward Didier Drogba has been appointed a new UN ambassador
of good will. The Ivorian will participate in campaigns to end poverty,
reduce infant mortality and combat gender prejudices.
"It is necessary to promote equality of sexes and change
men's attitude towards women," announced Drogba ambitiously,
the third soccer player to carry UN credentials, alongside Ronaldo
and Zinedine Zidane.
Victim of a prank A false call-up upsets Kezman
The former Chelsea striker, Mateja Kezman, has not been called
up to the Serbian
national team since the Spaniard Javier Clemente took over last
summer. He was thus doubtlessly delighted when a Serb daily printed
the news that Kezman had been called up for the national team practice
to start in Belgrade on February 5th.
It took the 27-year-old one day to realize that no call-up had
been sent to him by Clemente or the Serb FA, but that a prankster
must have spread the "good news" through his current club,
Fenerbahce. The information apparently spread through the club to
the Turkish and Serb press, until the FA issued a denial.
A Fenerbahce board member told the Belgrade daily Kurir
that in fact no message concerning Kezman had ever reached the Turkish
club from the FA or the coach. In the meantime, the Serb FA spokesman
Aleksandar Boskovic refused to comment on the "misinformation
that does harm to Serbian soccer and Mateja Kezman himself."
Replacing Smith no easy task Alex McLeish to lead Scotland
The Scottish Football Association named Alex McLeish as the new
Scotland coach replacing Walter Smith, who on January 10th announced
he was leaving the post to take over his old club, Glasgow Rangers.
Smith left McLeish a team poised to qualify for the 2008
European Championship, a competition in which Scotland has never
excelled. The 48-year-old McLeish appeared in three World Cups between
1982 and 1990 before coaching Motherwell, Hibernian and Rangers.
Under Smith, Scotland achieved the feat of beating France at home.
If the team manage to emulate that exploit in the McLeish era, the
Tartan Army will have cause to celebrate a first qualification for
a European Championship final phase.
In spite of transplant failure Klasnic does not give up hope
Ivan Klasnic of Werder Bremen is bracing himself for an indefinite
period of hemodialysis after his body rejected his mother's kidney
he had implanted last Thursday.
The Croat, suffering from renal insufficiency, had hoped to return
to action in six to eight weeks in his first transplant had succeeded.
Still, the kidney donated by his mother Sima failed to assume the
original organ's functions.
At the moment, the 27-year-old striker is recovering from the
surgery while his brother Josip claims to be willing to offer his
kidney for a second try, provided the analysis shows tissue compatibility.
"My brother still believes he can return to soccer," said
Josip to the Croatian press.
The doctors say they do not know why Klasnic's body rejected the
organ, since it is highly uncommon for the rejection to occur so
soon.
In the meantime, Werder have renewed Klasnic for another season
to enable him to face treatment and recovery with as much security
as possible.
New UEFA Boss A King that wants to be a revolutionary
Michel Platini was Le Roi, the King of soccer. In his prime, he
was better than Maradona. Comparing their fair-play records, he
was also a much greater sportsman than the Argentinean. He was,
and is, far more intelligent and educated than the diminutive South-American
with whom he shared the spotlight for ten years or so. He was also
a more decisive player than Zinedine Zidane.
Platini is probably the best soccer player ever to have been appointed
president of a major soccer organization. No-one like him won three
consecutive France Football's Golden Balls (1983-85). No other midfielder
topped the Italian scoring charts three times in a row. He scored
nine goals in five games to almost single-handedly lead France to
its first European Championship in 1984. He won considerable amounts
of silverware with Saint-Etienne and Juventus and, yes, he even
gave the modest Nancy, his first squad, a French Cup in 1978. Thierry
Henry might topple him as the all-time top international goal scorer
for France, but for now Platini is the best scorer in French history
with 41 goals.
At 33 he became France's coach, taking the Tricolors to Euro'1992
with eight wins out of eight games, but after failing to go beyond
the first round, he moved upstairs, serving as a co-chairman of
the 1998 World Cup Organizing Committee. Later he was made a member
of the UEFA Executive Committee and the chairman of FIFA's Development
Committee, before announcing his bid for UEFA president.
On January 26th he defeated the incumbent Lennart Johansson by
27 votes to 23, largely thanks to the votes cast by smaller nations,
with whom he had lobbied extensively in the months leading up to
the elections. In the years to come, the big soccer nations are
destined to become his enemies, if he is indeed to antagonize their
leading clubs over such issues as team quotas in the Champions
League and the obligation to release players for international
duty without exceptions and financial compensations.
Platini's revolutionary plans
* Reduce to a maximum of three the number of teams per country
in the Champions League to boost representation of lesser federations.
* Introduce two extra linesmen behind the goal-lines.
* Attempt to increase the soccer's haves' solidarity towards the
have-nots.
* Reduce the influence of G-14, soccer agents and civil courts interfering
with soccer issues.
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