[ESP] Primera Liga 2006/2007 (9 Viewers)

Byrone

Peen Meister
Dec 19, 2005
30,778
#41
vlatko said:
:agree: and this silva guy is damn good as well, played like hell for celta last season. 20 years old and he has drove aimar away, he's played the friendlies excellent as well. plus villa in attack, these four will give the primera a run for their money. hala los ches!!

True but i was shocked at the aimar tranfer! I suppose his constant niggling injuries were his downfall.Hopefully Villa will continue his amazing form & they can capture the liga title again.
 

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V

Senior Member
Jun 8, 2005
20,110
#42
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Byrone said:
True but i was shocked at the aimar tranfer! I suppose his constant niggling injuries were his downfall.Hopefully Villa will continue his amazing form & they can capture the liga title again.
yeah i was shocked too, especially when i saw it was zaragoza. he's a great player imo, i would have loved him at juve, but when ranieri he came he fucked everything up. he played fiore instead of aimar!! then the injuries came and well i guess it couldn't have ended any different. hopefully he's back to his best soon.

don't know if they could get the title but they could mess up a few plans. especially if joaquin comes, that will be a great team. la liga will be really competitive this term. real and barca, plus valencia as well as villareal, sevilla and zaragoza as well.
 
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ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #44
    Rich Liga a powerful force


    ON PAPER, IT IS A STRAIGHT CASE OF the rich getting richer. La Liga, which already boasted the Champions League and Uefa Cup winners, added a raft of top international talent in the summer, while managing to hang on to its established stars, with the exception of those who bowed to old age, Henrik Larsson and Zinédine Zidane.

    The competition kicks off on Saturday and, after doing the league and Champions League double last year, Barcelona are firm favourites. Frank Rijkaard, their coach, has epitomised the concept of adding to the squad slowly, acquiring a couple of key men year on year, while building on a stable base. He has signed three players this summer, compared with two the summer before: Eidur Gudjohnsen, the former Chelsea striker, plus the Juventus refugees, Gianluca Zambrotta and Lilian Thuram. And, indeed, one gets the sense that the pair from Italy were signed only because they became available after the relegation of Juventus to Serie B as a result of the match-fixing scandal.

    Then again, the last thing Barcelona needed was tinkering with. Zambrotta and Thuram add depth and versatility to a back line who, at times, appeared stretched last year. The midfield is also likely to be stronger, with an injury-free Xavi pulling the strings, while the front line of Ronaldinho, Samuel Eto’o and Lionel Messi is as good as they come. Indeed, the failure to lure Thierry Henry from Arsenal may be a blessing in disguise because there would not have been a way to accommodate four superstars of that calibre up front.

    If one were to nitpick, perhaps the lone question mark is over Gudjohnsen. He was signed as the main reserve striker — a role Larsson filled so well last year — although at Chelsea in the past two seasons he was used primarily in midfield, and even when playing up front he never quite looked a natural goalscorer.

    Barcelona’s fiercest rivals, Real Madrid, have placed their trust in Fabio Capello, the new coach, who has returned to the Bernabéu nine years after leading Real to the Spanish title. Capello’s track record — eight league titles in 14 seasons — is impressive, but he will have his work cut out this time.

    Real’s squad is bloated with players — the result of a rapid succession of coaches intent on bringing in their guys — and if they do not find a way to thin the ranks they will have a lot of highly paid, unhappy would-be stars.

    Capello’s priority has been adding defensive stability (Fabio Cannavaro and the midfield duo of Emerson and Mahamadou Diarra) and a genuine finisher (Ruud van Nistelrooy). Yet the starting line-up remains difficult to decipher, particularly up front, where Van Nistelrooy, Ronaldo, Raúl, Robinho, Antonio Cassano and Julio Baptista will all be vying for a place in the team.

    What is more, it remains to be seen how the likes of Raúl and Roberto Carlos will handle his disciplinarian ways. Nine years ago, when they were young, up-and-coming players, they seemed to hang on Capello’s every word. Now that they are veterans with declining skills and plenty of influence with the powers that be, it may well be a different story.

    Then there are the other fading galácticos, David Beckham and Ronaldo. The first is beset by contract issues (not to mention losing his international place), the second harassed by a media obsessed with his weight. How does Capello handle them, bearing in mind that both remain commercial juggernauts? Further bad news for Capello is that the Real faithful’s honeymoon with Ramón Calderón, the club president, whom they elected in the summer, is truly over — some are even calling for his resignation:oops: . Calderón had promised a slew of signings who never materialised — among them Kaká, Cristiano Ronaldo and Arjen Robben — and he is already under pressure as the club fail to trim the playing squad.

    At Valencia, Quique Flores has quietly built a team who could mount a serious challenge. Asier Del Horno bolsters a solid defence and there is plenty of goalscoring punch, with the prolific Francesco Tavano joining David Villa, last season’s revelation. If Vicente, the talented but perpetually injured winger, regains his form, they could be Barcelona’s biggest threat.

    Last season, Javier Aguirre performed miracles at Osasuna, employing constant squad rotation to take a team filled with unknowns to fifth place in the league. Now, he is taking on Spanish football’s biggest basket case, Atlético Madrid. On paper, Atlético look great, but then they usually do. Giourkas Seitaridis and Mariano Pernía, the new full backs, join Pablo and Luis Perea in what could be one of the best defences in Europe. And, up front, provided that they hang on to Fernando Torres, Atlético could have one of the most exciting partnerships in Europe, thanks to the acquisition of Sergio Aguero, the Argentine starlet.

    Elsewhere, Seville are building on their Uefa Cup success with the addition of Christian Poulsen, the midfield player, and Ernesto Chevantón, the elegant striker, while Villarreal, the surprise package of 2004-05 and Champions League semi-finalists last season, were dealt an early blow when they were knocked out of the Intertoto Cup by Maribor, from Slovenia, last month. Still, with the arrival of Robert Pires and Nihat Kahveci, Villarreal have more attacking options — although, as always, Juan Román Riquelme will be first option in everything.

    The debate over which is the best league in the world is an endless one, but there is little question that, in terms of European results and sheer numbers of world-class players, it does not get much better than La Liga. Which should make this season all the more interesting.

    THERE ARE TEN DAYS LEFT IN THE transfer window, but for now it appears that La Liga is ahead of the Barclays Premiership in terms of the quality of signings

    LA LIGA

    SIGNIFICANT INS: Gianluca Zambrotta (Barcelona), Robert Pires (Villarreal), Sergio Aguero (Atlético Madrid), Francesco Tavano (Valencia), Fabio Cannavaro (Real Madrid), Emerson (Real Madrid), Ruud van Nistelrooy (Real Madrid), Lilian Thuram (Barcelona), Giourkas Seitaridis (Atlético Madrid), Christian Poulsen (Seville)

    SIGNIFICANT OUTS: Henrik Larsson (Barcelona), Fabio Aurelio (Valencia), Victor (Deportivo La Coruña), Zinédine Zidane (Real Madrid)

    By Gabriele Marcotti
     

    V

    Senior Member
    Jun 8, 2005
    20,110
    #45
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      V

    interesting read, as always, Abed. It sure will be interesting to see how the situation in Real unrevels. it will either turn out to be a complete circus, yet again, or cap will discipline even this side into a competitive title challengers again.
     
    OP

    ReBeL

    The Jackal
    Jan 14, 2005
    22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #46
    vlatko said:
    interesting read, as always, Abed. It sure will be interesting to see how the situation in Real unrevels. it will either turn out to be a complete circus, yet again, or cap will discipline even this side into a competitive title challengers again.
    I hope the first scenario will be in Real...

    I like to see all of them in tears again and again...
     

    V

    Senior Member
    Jun 8, 2005
    20,110
    #47
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    ReBeL said:
    I hope the first scenario will be in Real...

    I like to see all of them in tears again and again...
    i just hope valencia snatches it away from both of them. hala los ches! :toast:
     

    Byrone

    Peen Meister
    Dec 19, 2005
    30,778
    #48
    vlatko said:
    interesting read, as always, Abed. It sure will be interesting to see how the situation in Real unrevels. it will either turn out to be a complete circus, yet again, or cap will discipline even this side into a competitive title challengers again.
    You can count on Real getting the results in the league but i cant wait to see how frustrated the Real fans will get when their beloved team playing some boring & uninspired football.:D
     

    Bisco

    Senior Member
    Nov 21, 2005
    14,418
    #49
    Byrone said:
    You can count on Real getting the results in the league but i cant wait to see how frustrated the Real fans will get when their beloved team playing some boring & uninspired football.:D

    look to be honest byron, i think real madrid can win games in the league but i cant wait to see how they do in the champions league ( it will be fun to watch capello choke in the later stages of the competition :D ). not to mention so far barca looks very solid. now that they fixed there defense and there attack is just amazing. the other day i met a die hard barca fan and he pointed out dos santos and told me to watch out for him. so i guess we will be seeing barca harassing crapello and his team!!!!!! which i cant wait to see.:agree:
     

    sateeh

    Day Walker
    Jul 28, 2003
    8,020
    #50
    barca snatch first blood and win the super cup..pretty easily imo.

    This would be an interesting season imo.If the likes of sevilla,zaragoza, and athletico madrid do well then this season could be one of the best.And if Valencia could step up a notch this season would be more interesting.

    For me i just want to watch real madrid lose as much games as it could happen.
     

    Bisco

    Senior Member
    Nov 21, 2005
    14,418
    #51
    sateeh said:
    barca snatch first blood and win the super cup..pretty easily imo.

    This would be an interesting season imo.If the likes of sevilla,zaragoza, and athletico madrid do well then this season could be one of the best.And if Valencia could step up a notch this season would be more interesting.

    For me i just want to watch real madrid lose as much games as it could happen.

    specially if the manage to get joaquin it would be superb to see what happens next, but on paper i guess barca has an upperhand to all the teams in the league, but as u said sateeh there is nothing much better than watching madrid lose. i wonder how will casano play now that capello is in charge.
     

    Maher

    Juventuz addict
    Dec 16, 2002
    13,521
    #52
    After watching real with capello i feel that this season will be easy for barca to win the liga again ( real finished fourth in a 4 team cup after loosing to betis and vilarrial)heheeeee
    Forza barca , the won the super cup after beating espaniol 3-0
     

    sateeh

    Day Walker
    Jul 28, 2003
    8,020
    #54
    You can count on Real getting the results in the league but i cant wait to see how frustrated the Real fans will get when their beloved team playing some boring & uninspired football.
    they wont care, trust me.Unless they lose ofcourse
     

    V

    Senior Member
    Jun 8, 2005
    20,110
    #55
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    Joaquin on way to Valencia

    Real Betis and Spain international winger Joaquin is on his way to Valencia on a bumper six-year contract after a deal was agreed on Thursday.

    The exciting wide man has long been targeted by Premiership clubs, mainly Chelsea, but will be parading his skills in La Liga once again next year.

    The fee is believed to be in the region of 25 million euros (almost 17 million pounds) and Valencia are flexing their muscles after qualifying for the group stages of the UEFA Champions League, where they are one of the top seeds.

    Aurelio Sanchez, Joaquin's father, has revealed his son is due to travel to Valencia to finalise personal terms and sign the contract, worth a reputed 1.5 million euros (1 million pounds) per year.

    The transfer is expected to be announced at a media conference on Thursday once the 25-year-old player has put the finishing touches to the big-money move.

    Eurosport

    :weee:
     

    Ramin

    vBookie Champion
    Nov 18, 2003
    4,728
    #56
    ..

    Just watched the first half of Real Madrid--Villareal 0-0. Typical garbage football by Cappello's team. I dont recall Real having a shot on target so far. :howler: Hope to see some cracker shots by Riquelme to seal the game. Go Villa!

    Its such a relief knowing he's not on the Juve bench anymore.
     

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