Football News: Weekly Football News Roundup
4/11/08
Liverpool after "Croatian Cruyff", Luka Modric
Dinamo Zagreb have received the first formal offer for their star
midfielder Luka Modric. The offer came from five time European champions,
Liverpool, according to leading Croatian daily, Vecernji list.
The Croatian press recently published reports that Newcastle,
Tottenham, Chelsea and Arsenal all expressed interest in the 22-year-old
midfield schemer, but Liverpool seems to have made the first concrete
move to seize Modric. The player carries a 23 million euros price
tag, but Dinamo may be willing to offload him for a mere 20 million.
Should the prospective buyers wait until the end of the European
Championship, the price could rise in accordance to Modric's performance.
The youngster, who bears an uncanny physical resemblance to Johan
Cruyff is a creative, goal-scoring midfielder who has won so far
two League titles, one FA Cup and one Croatian supercup, and a third
consecutive league championship is virtually secure, as well as
a second successive place in the FA Cup finals.
"I am truly honoured if it is true that Liverpool want me.
I watched them break Arsenal. That was a magnificent game. Only
the biggest teams can play so well against an opponent as strong
as Arsenal," said Modric.
Porto celebrate title, but is it too early?
FC Porto have become the first team from a major European soccer
league to have secured this season's title...unless the Portuguese
FA strip them of six points as punishment for attempted corruption.
Porto have already celebrated their third consecutive title after
beating Estrela Amadora 6-0 last Sunday, but the celebrations could
prove premature if the disciplinary procedure within the FA is finalized
during the next couple of weeks. It seems that during the 2003/04
season Porto arranged for certain referees to direct two of their
League games, which in the eyes of the FA constitutes an attempt
at corruption.
Maximum punishment for this is the subtraction of six points,
but Porto are certain to clinch the title even without these points
seeing that their advantage over Benfica and Sporting is so huge.
The club's chairman Pinto da Costa on the other hand faces a two
year suspension.
Playing at high altitude could be fatal, say doctors
The Brazilian side Flamengo of Rio de Janeiro claim to have collected
evidence of the dangers of playing at high altitude. The red and
blacks received a facsimile from a group of Bolivian and Mexican
doctors who had concluded that playing high above sea level could
prove fatal. The doctors reached this conclusion after studying
the death of a 23-year-old soccer player last year during a game
in the Bolivian mountain city of Potosí.
The physicians performed all sorts of heart and blood tests on
various players who had played at altitudes of above 2500 meters
and determined that athletes indeed can die in such conditions.
The Brazilian media claim the Bolivian authorities tried to prevent
the publication of the said report since their country's FA is struggling
to persuade FIFA to withdraw the ban on playing international matches
above 2700 meters. Other countries involved in the struggle against
FIFA are Ecuador, Peru and Colombia, while Brazil and Argentina
largely support the ruling.
According to the medical science, athletes should have to spend
two weeks adapting to high altitude before playing a soccer match,
which is impracticable due to the condensed playing schedule.
Mijatovic tries to lure Cristiano Ronaldo to Madrid
Real Madrid's sports director Predrag Mijatovic travelled to Manchester
last week to discuss a possible transfer with Cristiano Ronaldo's
agent Jorge Mendes. According to Spanish tv station Sexta, Real
Madrid are prepared to play no less than 125 million euros for the
magnificent Portuguese player, which is five million more than the
Spaniards had previously offered. Last summer Manchester United
were unwilling to accept 120 million euros, so it is unclear how
five million more could make a difference.
Still, Real Madrid hope Cristiano could be theirs for much less
in two years time, when he would be able to invoke UEFA's controversial
Webster ruling, allowing players over 23 to buy off their contract
by simply paying the club their remaining wages.
Getafe protests over favouritism towards Valencia
Angel Torres, chairman of Madrid giant killers Getafe, is furious
over the Spanish League's treatment of his team in view of the forthcoming
Cup finals to be held on April 16th.
What angers Torres is the fact that the League allowed Valencia
to bring forward their League game against Rácing from next
Sunday to Saturday.
Curiously, the League also said it would allow Getafe to play
against Zaragoza on Saturday, but that change of date would not
mean anything to the Madrid team. In fact, it would complicate their
life rather than make it easier.
The reason is Getafe played their UEFA Cup quarterfinals second
leg against Bayern on Thursday, so meeting Zaragoza on Saturday
would be a terrible ordeal for them.
"A solution would be fielding juniors against Zaragoza, but
we are not going to do that in order not to hurt other clubs. Therefore
we shall ask for the resignation of the League chairman José
Luis Astiazaran," said Torres.
Since Zaragoza is a relegation threatened team, Getafe vows to
field a full team to guarantee the regularity of the competition.
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