[CL] Champions League 2014/15 (8 Viewers)

Who do you want us to face in 1/2?

  • Barcelona

  • Real Madrid

  • Bayern


Results are only viewable after voting.

Fred

Senior Member
Oct 2, 2003
41,113
Will you two please stop this nonsense and sign up for mafia instead? Thank you.
Im in

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Fred is only rooting for Barca because if they win the CL, they owe Barca 3m in bonuses from Vermaelan's transfer


Tryna help you out man. Gotta stop taking selfies in the Nou Camp though
Was a wonderful experience that. Even though there was no real loud atmosphere or anything, it was like people came to get entertained and enjoy football like you would enjoy a good movie. You don't have to support Barca to appreciate beautiful football.
 

Osman

Koul Khara!
Aug 30, 2002
59,299
Lol don't listen to these bozos when it comes to seeing a great team play live. Saw Real Madrid - Atletico Madrid last month, and it was one of the coolest experiences I ever had despite not being my favourite teams. Dope atmosphere in Vincente Calderón.
 

Gerd

Senior Member
Dec 25, 2011
5,955

lgorTudor

Senior Member
Jan 15, 2015
32,949
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015_Copa_América
FIFA international rules require clubs to release players 14 days prior to the start of an international tournament, which may mean those players selected cannot be called by their club side. If the players are allowed to play in the final, that will leave them as few as five days to acclimate
toppest of keks

No Messi, Suarez, Neymar
No Vidal, Tevez

Llorente to score CL winner :mut:
 

zizinho

Senior Member
Apr 14, 2013
51,815
So... I was just looking at something.

Everyone hates on Madrid for all their spending. But Madrid has actually sold quite a bit over the last 3 years, and done quite well with those sales....

Barca on the other hand has sold almost no one, and made peanuts on the sales they have made all while buying almost excessively as Madrid.

Real Madrid Last 3 years... 262 mil in sales --- 335.5 mil in purchases ---- Net Spend ----> 73.5 million Euros

Barcelona Last 3 years... 109.5 mil in sales --- 286 mil in purchases ----- Net Spend -----> 176.5 million Euros

Is our ridicule of expenditures misplaced? At least over the past few years? Barcelona is operating on an almost 60 mil yearly deficit in transfers over the past few years, as opposed to Madrid at about 25 mil yearly deficit.

So... $#@! Madrid... But $#@! Barca too.
Barca :inter: they are far more disgusting than Real with their ubergay "more than a club" attitude when theyre the worst out there. stealing kids from other teams and filling them up with drugs, and all that while having fucking unicef on their match kits. and they still spend that much. they should have been disbanded as a club long ago anyway. fucking midgets

this doesent mean Real is good, they are not. but not nearly as much as fuckcelona :yuck:
 

Ocelot

Midnight Marauder
Jul 13, 2013
18,943
It's surprising that Atletico or Dortnund aren't better than us coefficient wise. They've been pretty consistent in Europe.
They are if we're talking about the last 5 years (though Dortmund not by much).

But in the past three, we've been pretty great actually. 25,8 two times (CL QF & EL SF count basically the same), and now 32.9.
 

ALC

Ohaulick
Oct 28, 2010
46,022
They are if we're talking about the last 5 years (though Dortmund not by much).

But in the past three, we've been pretty great actually. 25,8 two times (CL QF & EL SF count basically the same), and now 32.9.
Oh yeah, Europa league haha. Forgot about that
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
83,483
Nice article from a big paper here...

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/15/s...e-for-success-could-derail-barcelona-too.html
Juventus’s Recipe for Success Could Derail Barcelona, Too
By ROB HUGHES MAY 14, 2015

LONDON — Beware the old Italian who speaks with pessimism about facing a team like Barcelona but whose eyes burn with a piercing intensity.

“This is a step we wanted to take with all our hearts,” said Gianluigi Buffon, the captain, goalkeeper and elder statesman of Juventus, after his team knocked out last year’s winner, Real Madrid, from the Champions League in the Santiago Bernabéu on Wednesday night.

“But,” Buffon added, “unfortunately at the end of it we face a really outstanding Barcelona, a team in my opinion that is physically and mentally stronger than ours.”

In victory, he managed to look doleful, almost fearful.

If I’m not mistaken, the Italians said something similar going into their 2006 World Cup final against France. It was in the same stadium in Berlin where the Champions League final will be held June 6.

Buffon, now 37, made an incredible save in that World Cup against Zinedine Zidane before the French player was goaded into the head butt that infamously got him red carded in the final, effectively handing the title to Italy.

Another Juventus veteran, Andrea Pirlo, took the first penalty kick in the shootout that won Italy that World Cup. Pirlo, who turns 36 next week, is expected to retire after the final in Berlin in June.

There is an obvious truth in the words of Buffon about facing Lionel Messi, Luis Suárez and Neymar. However, he faced down Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema and Gareth Bale on Wednesday, and while none of those three were in top form, it still took a penalty kick for them to score.

Wednesday showed that teamwork and a committed defense can defeat the world’s most celebrated individuals, and that will likely remain the key in the final against Barcelona, too. And Juventus, led by its keeper, has an exceptional team ethic.

It blends the veterans (not just the Italians, but others like Carlos Tevez and Patrice Evra) with hungry young talents like Álvaro Morata and Paul Pogba.

Never go back, they say. Well, Buffon and Pirlo will relish returning to the scene of their greatest triumph in Berlin. Pogba, who was colossal in midfield against Madrid even though he was just returning from a seven-week absence due to a thigh injury, set up the goal against Real when he outjumped Sergio Ramos and headed the ball down to Morata, who drove it down into the ground and beyond Iker Casillas.

Casillas, Real’s captain, aspired many years ago to be a goalkeeper like Buffon. The two have played a combined 280 games for their clubs in European competition, though it is quite possible that Casillas has now played his last for Real.

Morata grew up with Real Madrid before the club discarded him last year. So the almost apologetic look he gave on Wednesday, just as he did in Italy a week before, was somewhat like the appearance Buffon gave when he pleaded that Juventus was humble and just grateful to be part of the spectacle against a Spanish giant like Madrid.

It is a mask, hiding the true ambition to take down the opposition, one by one. Buffon is the goalkeeper who cost Juventus $50 million back in 2001 and remained faithful to the club after it was sent down to Serie B after a match-fixing scandal in 2006.

Buffon, still the captain of the Italian national team, comes from a town in northern Italy whose motto translates as “My strength is the wheel.“ And no matter what he says, he is intent on taking this unforeseen opportunity to win soccer’s most coveted prize in club play.

Can it happen? Not if Barcelona is firing on all cylinders. But Juventus, known as the Old Lady, has just shown that if every man on its team shows his best and their opponents do not, then anything can happen.

That is the attraction of sports: the beauty, sometimes laced by the beast. When a young Morata stepped back into the Bernabéu on Tuesday, he made his way across the tunnel before the game to hug old friends on the other side.

One of those, Ramos, understood the emotion but was wary of the outcome. “In the history of football,” Ramos later said, “you get cases like Morata coming back in the day. I was hoping he would not have his best game here, but football presents these opportunities. He is a young guy who grew up here, he is a Madrid fan, but he also wanted to be in Berlin.”

Morata tried not to say anything disrespectful or even faintly vengeful. But in dedicating his goal to his family, his girlfriend and the fans who applauded him, he added: “Also to my agent, who was tough last summer.”

The agent, who negotiated his move from Madrid to Juventus, stood firm against a clause that Real wanted in the contract — a line that would have barred Morata from playing against his former team in the Champions League.

That clause was deleted, and so is Real Madrid now. There remains, however, a line that says Madrid has first refusal if Juventus should agree to sell Morata at some time in the future.

In the history of soccer, these things happen.
 

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