Showing posts with label English Premier League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label English Premier League. Show all posts

Friday, January 1, 2010

Carlos Tevez proved him again that he is the best










Whatever the rights and wrongs of Manchester City's decision to sack Mark Hughes, Roberto Mancini has managed to win as many Premier League games in three days as his predecessor did in his final 12 weeks. This victory was not quite as routine as the scoreline suggests, with Wolves proving awkward opponents until the final 20 minutes, but Mancini was entitled to cherish a second successive clean sheet and City's first away win in four months.

The Italian's decision to drop Robinho and replace him with Craig Bellamy was totally vindicated, with the Welshman an effervescent presence. He created the first goal and made life uncomfortable for the Wolves defence throughout with his searing pace, although it was Carlos Tevez who exuded a ruthless touch in front of goal. The City forward scored twice to take his tally to eight in seven matches.

Between those two strikes the substitute Javier Garrido, who was making only his second appearance of the season, curled a wonderful free-kick from 25 yards around the outside of the wall and inside the near post of the embarrassed Marcus Hahnemann. It was a sublime piece of skill and effectively killed the game, although Wolves were furious Bellamy had not been ruled offside before the free-kick was awarded.

Bellamy, who had started wide on the left but was pushed alongside Tevez in an early tactical change, was in an offside position when the ball was pumped towards Jody Craddock. However, rather than let the ball run through, which would have prompted the assistant referee to raise his flag, the Wolves central defender opted to head, enabling Bellamy to come back onside and join the attack again when City seized possession.

McCarthy was apoplectic at the time but refused to elaborate afterwards, perhaps mindful that the officials had interpreted the rules correctly. "If I talk, it might lose me a few quid," said the Wolves manager. "I've put in my report what I thought. It will be up to the powers that be to say what they think of my words. But I thought we played well tonight. Up until the second goal we were causing them problems."

While the Wolves manager's disappointment was understandable, City ultimately highlighted the chasm between the two sides in the closing stages. Some of their attacking football in that period was breathtaking, in particular when the impressive Martin Petrov and Bellamy combined in the 82nd minute, their first-time passes across the width of the pitch releasing Tevez. This time, however, the striker was unable to find his range, dinking wide of Hahnemann and denying City a champagne moment.

His first goal had arrived following a bright Wolves opening, when the home side's high-tempo approach allied to the aerial threat posed by Chris Iwelumo threatened to make life difficult for City. There was, however, always a danger that City would inflict damage on the counter-attack with their pace going forward and, moments before Tevez struck, Bellamy should have opened the scoring when he volleyed over from inside the six-yard box. He wasted no time in atoning for this profligacy.

Little more than 60 seconds later Bellamy escaped on the left, racing on to Petrov's slide-rule pass before eluding Craddock by letting the ball run through his legs. Cutting in from the left he looked up before pulling the ball back into the path of Tevez, whose shot from 12 yards would surely have been saved by Hahnemann but for Berra's deflection which took the ball on a different course and into the back of the Wolves net.

Tevez was his usual ubiquitous self and even turned up on his own goalline to head George Elokobi's far-post effort off the line moments before the interval. That reprieve should have been followed with a second City goal shortly after the restart but Bellamy, following more superb interplay between the rejuvenated Petrov and Tevez, flicked the ball wide with the outside of his right boot as Hahnemann narrowed the angle.

Doyle squandered Wolves' best opening, when Shay Given saved at his feet, six minutes before Garrido's brilliant strike. Thereafter it was left to Tevez to seal another productive day's work for Mancini, the forward drilling home from the edge of the penalty area after Robinho, a late replacement for Petrov, sliced a crossfield pass to his feet.

"They put on a sub that cost more than the club," said McCarthy. "That kind of puts life in perspective for me."


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Robinho given rest for a short time Roberto Mancini era











Robinho was not in the team tonight, relegated to the bench and sat huddled against the cold before coming on as a substitute for the last five minutes. Within a minute the most expensive player in English football had supplied the pass for Carlos Tevez to score the third goal but, even so, there was the overwhelming sense that Mancini was being benevolent when he said he had left out the Brazilian simply to spare him from the threat of fatigue as City played their second game in three days. It had felt more like a demonstration of strength from the new manager.

Mancini had talked of Robinho "making the history of this club" when he held his introductory press conference just before Christmas but the Brazilian was disappointing, to say the least, when the new era got underway with a 2-0 defeat of Stoke City last weekend. Robinho's desire is to leave and Craig Bellamy, his replacement for this match, flourished even if he did miss two great chances.

Bellamy is in the form of his life and the manner in which he set up the first goal, accelerating away from Jody Craddock on the left wing before crossing for Tevez to score with a deflection off the luckless Christophe Berra, was particularly impressive and it was no surprise that Mancini identified him for special acclaim after what has been a difficult period for the Wales international.

Bellamy was so upset about the sacking of Hughes that he considered his own position at the club but that now seems to be behind him judging by his words after collecting the man-of-the-match champagne. "On a personal level I have great affection for Mark Hughes but at the end of the day that's the nature of the game and nothing surprises me in football," he said of the change of manager. "This is a club that is definitely going places. With this group of players and the management staff, it's going to happen. So I want to be a part of it for as long as I can."

Mancini was equally effusive about a player he joked was "not my friend" but who seems to have adapted seamlessly to the Italian's new tactics. "I think Craig is a strong character, a good player and a good man and, for me, it's good that he stays with us," Mancini said. "I'm happy to have difficult players. I played for 20 years and I know very well the way big players work. I don't have a problem with that. If the player has technical quality, is strong and a good character, these are the most important things."

The new manager will be glad that talk of dressing-room mutiny has been exaggerated and that his team, on the whole, seem to have taken on board his instructions. City have now kept successive clean sheets, having previously managed only one in the league since August. The team had conceded three goals in each of Hughes's last three league matches and Mancini quickly identified it as a weakness.

"We have to concentrate for 95 minutes in every match. If you don't concede a goal, it's important. We've worked with the defence for only four days in training because in the last three days we have not had time but it is already much better."




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Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Steven Gerrard personal life and more...









Steven Gerrard

Steven George Gerrard, (born 30 May 1980), is an English footballer who plays for English Premier League club Liverpool and the England national team. He played much of his career in a central midfield role, however since the arrival of Fernando Torres he has been used mainly as a second striker for Liverpool and as a winger for England since 2006.

Gerrard, who has spent his entire career at Anfield, made his debut in 1998 and cemented his place in the first team in the 2000-01 season, succeeding Sami Hyypiä as Liverpool team captain in 2003. His honours include two FA Cup wins, two League Cup wins, a UEFA Cup win and a UEFA Champions League win in 2005. As of 13 May 2009, Gerrard is also the current holder of the Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year award.

Gerrard made his international debut in 2000, and represented England in the UEFA European Championships in 2000 and 2004 as well as the 2006 FIFA World Cup, where he was the team's top goalscorer with two goals.

Personal life


Gerrard and his wife, fashion journalist Alex Curran, married at the Cliveden mansion in Buckinghamshire on 16 June 2007. He has an older brother, Paul (not to be confused with former Everton goalkeeper Paul Gerrard), and his cousin Anthony plays for Cardiff City F.C.

In September 2006, Gerrard published his autobiography, Gerrard: My Autobiography, which went on to win the Sports Book of the Year honour at the British Book Awards.

The autobiography ends with "I play for Jon-Paul." Gerrard's ten-year-old cousin, Jon-Paul Gilhooley, was killed in the 1989 Hillsborough Tragedy, when Gerrard was almost 9. "It was difficult knowing one of your cousins had lost his life," Gerrard said. "Seeing his family's reaction drove me on to become the player I am today."

On 1 October 2007, Gerrard was involved in a low-speed accident in Southport when the car he was driving hit a ten-year-old bicyclist, who had shot into the street and inadvertently cut off Gerrard's path. He later visited the boy in the hospital and presented him with a pair of boots signed by the boy's favourite player, Wayne Rooney, after which he stayed to sign autographs for other young patients.

Councillors of Knowsley voted to make Gerrard a Freeman of the Borough on 13 December 2007, and two weeks later, he was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire by The Queen in The Queen's New Year Honours List, for services to sport. He received an honorary fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University on 26 July 2008 as recognition for his contribution to sport.

On 29 December 2008, Gerrard was taken into custody outside the Lounge Inn in Southport on suspicion of a section 20 assault. He and two others were later charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm and affray, relating to an incident which left the bar's disc jockey with a broken tooth and cuts to his forehead. The three men were given police to court bail and were required to appear at North Sefton Magistrates' Court on 23 January 2009, where they all pleaded not guilty. The case was adjourned until 20 March when the assault charge was dropped but Gerrard was required to attend Liverpool Crown Court to face trial for affray. On 3 April, Gerrard pleaded not guilty.

The case went to trial in Liverpool Crown Court. Gerrard's co-defendants pleaded guilty before the trial but Gerrard maintained his innocence. Gerrard admitted hitting Marcus McGee but claimed it was in self defence and on July 24, Gerrard was found not guilty by the jury. Following the verdict, Gerrard said he was looking forward to getting back to playing football and putting the experience behind him.



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