Austria - Netherlands (12 Viewers)

nina

Senior Member
Feb 18, 2001
3,717
I can't believe that Makaay will actually start the game! :eek: :cheesy: :cool: :extatic: A national holiday! :D It was about time. He's probably the most underrated player in the history of dutch football :stuckup:

Boy now I really have a problem which game to watch :undecide: Italy vs Netherlands! :D
 
OP
Slagathor

Slagathor

Bedpan racing champion
Jul 25, 2001
22,708
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #123
    :D I haven't got a real choice - it's either Holland, Belgium, Germany or England...

    Difficult who to root for, eh? :D
     
    OP
    Slagathor

    Slagathor

    Bedpan racing champion
    Jul 25, 2001
    22,708
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #126
    OLD HEADS MEET AGAIN
    [size=0,5]Monday 14 October 2002[/size]

    A decade after they first crossed swords in an international match, Andreas Herzog and Frank de Boer will meet once more on Wednesday as Austria aim to assert their Group 3 authority against the Netherlands in Vienna.

    Star attraction
    The last two fixtures between the two countries have both ended 3-2 - Austria winning the first in 1990, the Dutch exacting revenge in 1992. The latter match saw two promising youngsters make their mark: the 23-year-old Herzog, then with SK Rapid Wien, was the star attraction in the Austrian midfield, while De Boer, 22, was carving out a fine reputation at AFC Ajax and internationally.

    Weekend victory
    In the ten years since that match Herzog has taken a circuitous route back to Rapid. He left the club after six seasons in 1992 to join SV Werder Bremen, remaining loyal to the German club until January of this year when Rapid called again. Throughout that period he remained one of the finest Austrian players of his generation, clocking up his 98th cap in the 2-0 EURO 2004™ qualifying victory in Belarus on Saturday.

    Sparked success
    Herzog, 34, started the game on the bench, but came on to spark a fine second-half display which saw Markus Schopp and Mohammed Akagündüz find decisive goals. The Netherlands also beat Belarus in their only group outing, 3-0, and will pose a threat to Austria's 100 per cent record. "The Dutch are individually and collectively a completely different opponent to the Belarussians," said Herzog. "It is a small country which plays great football. It is something special to play against Holland."

    Steely determination
    Flattery indeed but behind that praise lies a steely determination to claim one of the top two group places at the expense of the Dutch and the Czech Republic. The Austrians have benefited from adopting a flexible defence, placing more emphasis on a midfield once again containing Herzog after he was dropped for a recent friendly. "I can just say that my performance on the pitch will be the proof of my readiness," Herzog said.

    Raking passes
    Like Herzog, De Boer is approaching a century of caps; the captain will make his 97th appearance in Vienna. Both are elegant ball players with the ability to spray raking passes with either foot, though each is more comfortable on his left, most critically from set-pieces. De Boer has also been loyal to two clubs. He lifted the UEFA Cup and Champions League trophies in Amsterdam as well as five league titles and two Dutch Cups during a glittering decade with Ajax prior to a €12.5m move to FC Barcelona.

    Van Nistelrooy missing
    Austria have the traditional edge in this fixture, having won six and lost four of the 14 matches played since 1912. De Boer, though, knows what it takes to beat the Austrians, even if his Dutch side will be missing striker Ruud van Nistelrooij with a hamstring strain.

    'Take a miracle'
    A Dutch success coupled with a Czech triumph at home to Belarus would see the three challengers tied on six points at the top of Group 6. Despite scoring none and conceding five goals in two outings so far, Belarus coach Eduard Malafeev is refusing to betray his principles in Teplice. "There will be no defensive football," he said. "If it will take a miracle for us to get back into contention we will have to perform a miracle." For the other three teams in action, points, not miracles, are the order of the day.

    Taken from www.uefa.com
     

    Tom

    The DJ
    Oct 30, 2001
    11,726
    Nina, please watch netherlands, as Italy's chances of winning are not good :down:

    plus they play the most boring football.....:frown:
     

    nina

    Senior Member
    Feb 18, 2001
    3,717
    Yes they are not good, but that's why they need more support ;)

    I'm probably going to watch just the second half, cause I remembered that I have a dinner date with a friend :)
     

    Bongiovi

    Senior Member
    Jul 12, 2002
    587
    Erik, he didn't train yesterday with the squad but Advocaat said he didn't think there would be a problem with him....just wondered if he was slightly injured.....
     

    maxmc

    Junior Member
    Jul 27, 2002
    347

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