Monthly Archives: July 2010

I’m taking an extended break

Personal and work commitments have to take priority at the moment. Unable to blog at present. I’ll definitely be back soon.

World Cup: Spain nicks it

Spain became the eighth national team to win the World Cup, beating Holland 1-0 in what was, in my opinion, a very poor final.

Both teams came into the game playing some great football, but much of it was missing tonight, understandably due to nerves on both sides. Andres Iniesta’s goal, four minutes from the end of second half extra time, gave them victory. Holland had Johnny Heitinga sent off for a second bookable offence, and there were a total of thirteen yellow cards in total handed out by referee Howard Webb to both teams. Many who thought this final was going to be a classic were left disappointed. Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised by this.

Oh, well, it’s over… after sixty four games, it’s goodbye South Africa, and looking forward to Brazil in four years’ time. The withdrawal symptoms seem to be kicking in already.

500+ posts, and counting….

I can hardly believe it. After nearly three years, and over five hundred posts later, I’m still blogging (This is really post number 501).

Ever since the first post, I often wondered how many (or how few) people actually read this blog. Judging by the huge amount of spam I get, probably not a lot. I’ll still give my tuppence worth of opinions on any subject under the sun…. and nobody will ever read it.

That’s it. Here’s to another 500 posts…. if I can get there….

7/7/2005, five years on

Lest we forget….

Quarter-final feast, and Capello stays on as England boss

Just when many of us thought that the World Cup couldn’t get any better, it did. Excitement, goals, shocks and a dramatic penalty shoot-out has ignited the tournament after a slow start.

South America’s big two went out with a whimper. Brazil, one of the pre-tournament favourites, were beaten 1-2 by Holland. Argentina were thrashed 4-0 by England’s conquerors, Germany. Uruguay are now the Americas’ last hope after beating Japan 4-2 on penalties after both sides levelled 1-1 after extra time. European champions Spain beat Paraguay 1-0, but it wasn’t the one-sided match many people had predicted.

Ten goals were scored over the weekend’s quarter finals. Let’s keep that going. It’s very open from now heading towards the semi-finals this week… and one cannot predict an outright winning team from either of them.

Meanwhile, our own Football Association has done the right thing and decided to keep faith with keeping Fabio Capello as manager, despite England’s dismal showing in South Africa. There will be (media) pressure on him to get rid of some of his senior players and start bring in new and younger players, but at least in the short term, he cannot do that, because there has been very few decent English players coming through the ranks at clubs, particularly of those in the Premier League, and the ones who have been given that chance have simply failed to make the grade. My fear is that within ten years, if this trend continues, the national team will continue to suffer, and in the worst-case scenario, fail to qualify for major tournaments.