[ad_1]
Send your thoughts to [email protected]
Liverpool fights for the title
I am absolutely stunned by the fact that no one out of 365 or any other sports media has stated what was obvious enough for "ordinary" football fans: Liverpool make fun and cheat on the title.
Let me illustrate. Each team is missing that they play key players at that time and / or are not fit. They played Spurs when we were shitty, and still need the referee to not give the Spurs a last-minute penalty to win.
They played Leicester away when Vardy was gone. They played at Arsenal when their first choice defense was missing. They still needed a blurred deflection and two dubious penalties to beat them.
They played Man Utd when they were lamentable, just before Jose was fired, and even then they scored with 2 jammy deflections to win.
They scored with perhaps the best goal in the history of the PL, in the 96th minute, against a superior Everton.
They needed a penalty unnecessarily committed to beat Brighton, and they just cheated and rigged their way past Palace, who missed their two FIRST CHOICE goalkeepers, and had to play former goalkeeper Speroni at goal, which has earned them 2 goals!
Not to mention two other good deflections, and a blatant Robertson hand for the decisive fourth goal. Compare that with the match between Newcastle in Cardiff yesterday, when Rondon, in a very dangerous position, threw the ball out of the game because a Cardiff player was injured on the ground.
Salah dives at every opportunity to win penalties, and all that the media tells us is praise for Liverpool.
I do not know any "neutral" who wants Liverpool to win the title. They say "luck is on a season". If that's true, Liverpool will be unlucky in the last 15 games.
I started by not wanting City to keep its title, but I am now a converted "blue"!
My beloved spurs will not win anything this year (again!), But if they beat Liverpool when we go to Anfield in March, we will refuse them the title. I will be delighted!
Fred, London
Football against factual
Hello,
In response to a letter sent by Richard, a supporter of Arsenal Bristol, I had some wrong information, but I must admit that I do not know the history of football very well. Moreover, as he mentioned, all these counter-facts may have been published earlier. Please excuse us in advance for writing them without crediting them.
If Anelka was not offside against Manu during the famous semifinal of the cup fa in 99, the hat-trick would not have taken place. It would have haunted us for an indefinite time.
If John Terry knew of his own statistics, he would have been the first Israeli coach to win the Champions League. It would also have been a statistical master clbad to win a penalty shootout for all time to come.
If the backpbad rule was not enforced in the 90s, then leeds united would have dominated English football during this period and Horward Wilkinson would have been considered one of the best English football players with his POMO football style (God thank you, it was introduced)
If Arsene Wenger had not gone to Japan after being a Ligue 1 champion, the only creditor who would have brought the food revolution into English football would have been Big Sam (alone deserves to be a innovative)
If Nani had not been leading the ball that would inevitably lead to the goal of a beautiful ronaldo lobe, Spain would not have won the World Cup and stole the neutrals and the Spanish fans a moment of comic genius (being an absolute fan I was left a bit acidic)
Regards,
LJ, MU
Own your allegiances
Hello from Germany! I followed this site almost as long as I followed football (01-02) but I am a little discouraged that some prejudices have, over time, introduced into the literature of authors / journalists. I think having such a bias is (overall) really good for the website as it adds character to the writing.
However, I propose that you, the F365 authors, begin to own their allegiances in the articles you write by: (1) identifying those you support somewhere; and (2) referring to the club (s) you support as "we". As you do in a normal conversation, that is, "I hope we win the title" or "Our striker is better than Huddersfield".
This serves to add a perspective in a very transparent way. You have your own bias and give context to your opinion. It may also encourage some authors to communicate in a more neutral way. Unfortunately, this will probably not happen because the transparency is a little scary.
Cheers!
AR (yes, we are 6th).
Liverpool – not all that
Dear Football365,
* The greatest glory of football is always a glorious failure. The fans of the big clubs will never understand this, because for most of them, football is their only way to find happiness through football when their team wins. If all the fans approached in this way, football would be a waste of time and money. While Liverpool came out victorious and Crystal Palace finally have no points for all their efforts, titles such as "Liverpool thriller" and "Liverpool Survive Scare" are, in a roundabout way, compliments for the Eagles for their role in the meeting.
* It was a game in which substitute players were forced to get noticed without giving the best of themselves. Palace learned last Monday that neither Vicente Guaita nor Wayne Hennessey would be available for the trip to Anfield, which meant Julian Speroni would be in the heats for his first appearance of the season. He made some good saves but also made two mistakes that led to goals – you know, the way players are inclined to do it if they have not played a competitive match for a while.
On the other side, Liverpool will make the most of the title by not selecting James Milner in the right back. He had a shocking match and almost cost his team. Against the FA Cup wolves, he took the yellow card early for a cynical useless foul. At that time, it seemed like he was sending a message to the young defenders behind him that he was protecting them, but that seems to me to be a bad judgment. Likewise, his two yellow cards aimed at both Watford-style challenges, he apparently got involved as if it was fun to get through somebody rather than because he needed to prevent a situation. pointing.
* The main lessons that Liverpool can draw from this are that they do not have to play particularly well to win and that Palace has highlighted their biggest flaws. They conceded very poor goals – the second goal saw an unmarked James Tomkins being given a free header in a corner. There were few obvious ways of blocking or obscure arts, he was quite undisputed. Similarly, the goal of Max Meyer was after the result was beyond doubt, but the amount of space he had to choose his post would concern Jurgen Klopp.
* The first goal of Palace was a marvel. It started deep in their own half, with Tomkins and James McArthur appearing to compete against the Liverpool press. However, McArthur created just enough space for himself, allowing five Liverpool players to break out of the equation. Until they could join the game, the Eagles had a seven-on-five counterattack.
* Weekend teamwork: palace response to dive at Mo Salah. Mamadou Sakho cleared the ball while Luka Milivojevic avenged the Reds' ace for his shameful conduct.
* Next step for Crystal Palace – after a match against the Spurs likely to provide Roy Hodgson the ideal excuse to play the reserve and get out of the competition – a very important series of Premier League matches: Southampton (A), Fulham (H), West Ham (H) and Leicester City (A). Four games for which it would be reasonable to expect a decent crop of points, which is why the Eagles seem extremely likely to lose all four.
Ed Quoththeraven
The drift of the city is the rise of Liverpool
Dear F365,
I understand that you have to keep the supporters of Liverpool because they are upset and that the mailbox does not stop being harbaded (net transfer expenses, economic badysis), but in reality, Liverpool does not drift to the truth it searches, deflects objectives, imposes penalties. and goalkeeper screamers are currently the top 3 player of the year votes in Liverpool.
City did not play well against Huddersfield, but has lengthened the goal difference of 2 others but hey, we drift.
I would say that we are both doing enough now, but we are trying to pull together and score, while they are just one point higher than oppo.
Please, can F365 show a little more balance than Salah?
Keith
Ozil Fanboys
Ozil fans will come back when Mesut will make a sumptuous pbad against Huddersfield?
How are Arsenal fans supposed to react when one of our players pbades such a pbad ?! Should the gooners remain in silence or even boo Ozil?
You have not developed your pointStewie – I'm really interested.
You see I'm likely to cheer when someone in Arsenal jersey pbades a great pbad, tackle or score a goal – have I been fooled for all those years ?!
Graham Simons, Gooner, Norf London
Negative positive
As many probably remember, Koulibaly, the Napoli CB, has been the victim of racial abuse by fans of Inter Milan recently. As punishment, Inter was supposed to play in an empty stadium against Sbaduolo last weekend.
However, officials at Inter have convinced the authorities to let them distribute 11,000 tickets to schoolchildren. I just think it's a great example of something hateful and negative that has been turned into a positive one (although it obviously does not punish the culprits, which is another story). I do not have much to add, but I think it's a good idea and should be used more often, instead of having no fans on the ground.
Jack (the bloody love Rashford) Manchester
Strap in, Arsenal fans
Dear fans of Arsenal,
If you're feeling strange at the moment, here's a quick check of the symptoms:
High energy pressure? Check
Sexy football?
Lethal front line?
Unpredictable defense? Check
Win games that you expect to lose? Check
Losing games that you hope to win? Check
Heart palpitations for at least 20 minutes per game?
What you live is completely normal. This is the Liverpool 2015-2018 syndrome. The unpredictability of an enigmatic team with a talented coach who dares to dream when you know you should not. Stay patient. Stay faithful. Give him some transfer windows (if you have the right to use money), and things will get better. Little advice – do not sign Loris Karius.
Lee (All you need is the next Van Dijk), LFC
Pro Evolution Master League – Jorginho
Jorginho reminds me when you start in the Pro Evolution Master League with 11 players by default. Guys like Ximelez, Duffy, Castillos and Dodo. They lead you to the promotion and the opportunity to write to Zidane, Scholes, Keane and Pires. And soon, you have no more default players in your team, but you play one or two because they were great in this promotion season and the affinity is still strong even if it is obvious that each pbadage of the game breaks down as soon as they get the ball. they are too limited in this new world. Soon, you expose them to pasture, as they tempt you to pour your tea on the console. Again.
Jorginho is Dodo. Honest player but painfully overwhelmed in the fast-paced Premier League. It even works as a player with default settings. He has this strange step that seems ridiculous next to a top athlete. It is obvious that Sarri likes him because he helped him get promoted but he will not be there next season because he will miss the top 4 and will not win the Europa League (Napoli and Ancelotti l & rsquo; Have in their list.Jorginho is certainly not absent.)
Jorginho looks good against Burnley and PAOK in Europa (his level), but if you want a midfielder to lead you to the main trophies, then Dodo is not your man. Regista? More like a barista.
Rob Melia
[ad_2]
Source link