[FML] Serie A 2009/2010 (21 Viewers)

Naggar

Bianconero
Sep 4, 2007
3,494
Fuck Inter failing, I'm first and foremost a Juve fan and I want us to finish as high as possible.

If we finish 3rd we don't have to play in the qualification for the Champions League so can avoid teams like Sevilla, Valencia, Liverpool, Manchester City etc.
we HAVE to finish at least 3rd, If Neither one of the 3 Italians makes it to the next round in CL, and german improve, they might get our 4th seat, so..
 

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Naggar

Bianconero
Sep 4, 2007
3,494
That's not for this season, it will happen next season (or the one after).

Someone should sticky the coefficient situation.
Oh thank god, I heard it was this season but thanks for the correction
either way we don't want to play qualifications, let's get 2nd or 3rd in league for the last time

:juventus:
 
OP
Azzurri7

Azzurri7

Pinturicchio
Moderator
Dec 16, 2003
72,692
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #13,025
    Eℓvin;2365127 said:
    Forza de mothafuckin Roma!

    PS I too prefer Printer over Meelan. Imagine Milan would end up winning it this year, they wouldn't shut up about it for the next 10 years, I'm not even exaggerating,
    Fuck no. After what Mourinho had to say about us this season, after what happened in Turin, like Esteban called them street thugs did with us in the 1st leg I don't want them to win. I would pay anything to see them loosing the title.

    I fucking hate Inter with passion, fucking fake pathetic shitty players and coach should be screwed up. Roma or Milan, doesn't matter I just want them fucked up.
     
    Dec 31, 2008
    22,910
    [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]Top 10:[/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular] Players of the Decade[/FONT] [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]With the end of the decade near, Football Italia takes on the extremely difficult task of picking Serie A’s Top 10 players from the last 10 years [/FONT]
    [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]10. Lillian Thuram
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]The most capped Frenchman in history left Monaco for Parma in 1996, helping them win undreamt honours, including the UEFA Cup and two domestic Cups. Snapped up by Juve in 2002, his classy contributions saw them win four titles and several Italian and international Super Cups. A tough uncompromising guardian who excelled at both centre-back and right-back.

    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]9. Alessandro Nesta
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]An intelligent, elegant defender, who graduated through the Lazio academy to captain the club through its most successful era, winning a Scudetto and a Cup-Winners Cup along the way. Admired worldwide he moved to Milan for £25m in 2002 and proceeded to add to his long list of honours and trophies, including two Champions League wins, another Scudetto plus of course the World Cup.

    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]8. Paolo Maldini
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]One of the world’s best full-backs and a true Milan legend. Over his 25 seasons he helped his beloved Rossoneri win seven Scudetti, five European Cups and 12 other international trophies. He made his Serie A debut in 1984 and retired last season with over 900 appearances to his name. In his honour Milan retired his No 3 shirt.

    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]7. Zlatan Ibrahimovic
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]The enigmatic Swedish striker cost Juventus almost £13m from Ajax in 2004 and scored 23 goals over two seasons. However, with Juve’s relegation Ibracadabra angled for a move and Inter paid out almost £17m for him in 2006. Not only a scorer of great goals but a great goal scorer, Ibra’s amazing skills rocketed him to superstardom with Inter Coach Jose Mourinho calling him the best player in the world. Over the last summer he moved on once again, this time to Barcelona for a reported £69m fee.
    [/FONT]
    [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]6. Pavel Nedved
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]After almost 20 years at the top, the Czech left-sided midfielder retired last season. He left Sparta Prague in 1996 for Lazio and scored the Cup-Winners Cup’s last goal as Lazio beat Mallorca 2-1. In 2001 he moved to Juventus to replace the almost irreplaceable Zidane. However, the stylish midfielder proved up to the task and helped Juve to a run of four Serie A titles over the next five years.
    [/FONT]
    [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]5. Francesco Totti
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]Dripping pure class the Giallorossi talisman has it all, technical ability, skill and a vision to die for. Never actually won much with his hometown club, apart from a Scudetto of course, he is nonetheless absolutely worshipped by the red half of Rome. Can play anywhere up front, on his own, as part of an attacking trio or as a playmaker, where he excels and stands out head and shoulders above many of his contemporaries. The ultimate one club player.
    [/FONT]
    [FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]4. Alessandro Del Piero
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]Probably one of Juve’s most successful players and certainly the most loved, the skillful forward arrived from Padova in 1993 and has been truly outstanding since day one. He is Juve’s all time top scorer and holder of the record amount of appearances. Under Coach Marcello Lippi, his magic inspired one of the club’s most successful spells, winning five Serie A titles between 1995 and 2003 along with the Champions League in 1996.

    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]3. Andriy Shevchenko
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]During his first seven seasons with Milan, Sheva was the hottest hitman in the world. Leaving Dynamo Kiev in 1999 for a record fee of almost £20m, he became the first straniero to win the Capocannoniere crown in his debut season, with 24 goals in 32 games. He also scored the winning penalty as Milan won the Champions League in 2003 before leaving for Chelsea in 2006. The Ukrainian international scored a tremendous 127 goals in 208 games for the Italians.

    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]2. Kaka
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]Although principally a midfielder the Brazilian ace scored some 70 goals over his six seasons in Serie A. Arriving from Sao Paulo in 2003, he immediately settled into the first team, helping Milan win the title in his debut term. Adored for his fancy football that always had an end product, his amazing skills have been recognized with dozens of individual awards. He left for Real Madrid last summer for over £50m.

    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]1. Gianluigi Buffon
    [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]Easily the best 'keeper on the whole planet, he started with Parma netting the headlines with his bravo show against Milan at just 17. Moved to Juventus in 2001 for a world record fee and was one of the reasons Italy won the World Cup – [/FONT][FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]stupendous is not the word. Won Serie A’s best goalkeeper for seven seasons. Still on top of his game for both club and country and almost irreplaceable.
    [/FONT]
     

    cimenk

    Senior Member
    Jul 23, 2008
    3,139
    I saw a replay of the first half and highlights of the 2nd half, and I think I've seen most of what happened on this match. I can do nothing but fully agree with you. The referee was spot on with every big decision he made.

    Actually, one can argue if the referee could have given even more cards to Inter. The behavior Inter showed yesterday is so disgusting that I'm shocked how it can happen at this level. Every single decision that went in Samp's favor was accompanied by strong pressure, disrespect and ridiculing of the referee. Eto'o yelling at the ref and almost head butting him, Stankovic screaming Basta, Basta (Enough, enough) to the ref after he gave a perfectly valid free kick to Pozzi. Maicon destroying Poli and then, when the ref gave a foul to Sampdoria, holding his head and laughing hysterically as if the ref didn't give a perfectly valid penalty to Inter.

    Anyway, Inter players being disgusting is an established fact so I won't bother with it anymore. What I'd like to know is why is this happening right now.
    Lately Inter seem to have adopted the "We're victims, everyone's against us" mentality. Is this Mourinho's way to motivate his players before Chelsea? If it is, then someone should remind Mourinho that this mentality didn't work for full 17 years.
    Or does this mean that Inter can't take the pressure of another CL failure so they're already showing nervousness and fear?

    Whatever it is, tactics or consequence of the CL match, the nervousness and the pressure on Inter is obvious. You can see it on their faces and they're slowly starting to losing it on the pitch. I agree that it can make them stronger, unbeatable and it might be what they lacked in the past, but imo there is a bigger chance that this might reflect negatively on them.

    In any case, Roma's win today (bah, even Milan's) will make things even more interesting and nervous.
    How Inter players act towards the referee is just to make a pressure for the referee. When they keep moaning on the referee, act like they are the victim sometimes it can affect referee psychology in the match and then make the decision that later can give them advantage. Their post-match conference like after the Napoli game when they claim they should have a penalty and they try to compare with our penalty against Genoa, also when they complain about Sneijder red. They just want to play as victim and make a pressure for the referee for their next match, or they want to shift people attention from the other part of the game when they have controversy decision

    But the referee in the Inter - Samp match do it brilliantly i say, the rule is still the rule even when Inter already down to 10 men and if one player make a hard tackle that deserve red, the referee must go for it
     

    cimenk

    Senior Member
    Jul 23, 2008
    3,139
    And one thing, i hope Italian media don't give too much attention to Mou reaction, comment or anything come from his act. It become disturbing how he act a lot like a cry baby although i know that is just to protect his team

    It's very different when he with Chelsea and English media doesn't focus a lot about refereeing decision in one match and more focus on the game part of the match. So he doesn't have a chance to talk so much
     

    only-juve

    Senior Member
    Jan 5, 2008
    7,451
    Looking at the table, napoli-palermo-sampdoria look like the teams that are closer to us. Fiorentina are always a threat but they're 9 points behind so its still long way to catch us up.

    I'd say among those three teams, Napoli is the real threat. As for tonight's game, hope Bari with there sexy football would win the game :xfinger:
     

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