

Uilleam
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Everything posted by Uilleam
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Match Thread [FT] Aberdeen 2 - 2 Rangers (Igamane 49; Hagi 90+6)
Uilleam replied to der Berliner's topic in Rangers Chat
The U-18 goalkeeper, apparently. -
Match Thread [FT] Aberdeen 2 - 2 Rangers (Igamane 49; Hagi 90+6)
Uilleam replied to der Berliner's topic in Rangers Chat
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Match Thread [FT] Aberdeen 2 - 2 Rangers (Igamane 49; Hagi 90+6)
Uilleam replied to der Berliner's topic in Rangers Chat
I wonder if the manager, who selected it, will say that, in the first half, that was not a Rangers' team out there? I assume that he will make changes, wholesale, as they say, and have a X, nearer the XI which lost to the Hibs, which itself, per the manager, was not a Rangers' side. I am confused. -
Match Thread [FT] Aberdeen 2 - 2 Rangers (Igamane 49; Hagi 90+6)
Uilleam replied to der Berliner's topic in Rangers Chat
It was wrong once, but it covered it up. -
Match Thread [FT] Aberdeen 2 - 2 Rangers (Igamane 49; Hagi 90+6)
Uilleam replied to der Berliner's topic in Rangers Chat
As long as the sheepshaggers don't figure it out -
Match Thread [FT] Aberdeen 2 - 2 Rangers (Igamane 49; Hagi 90+6)
Uilleam replied to der Berliner's topic in Rangers Chat
Is it 3-5-2? Or just chaos theory? -
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Kelly. His penalty save, from a ridiculous award, and a couple of other stops, ensured the draw, which kept us in the tie, and which we would have accepted at 8pm last night.
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I'm not sure, to be honest. Looked pretty straightforward. We'll need to ask @Rousseau about the xG from his putative position when clear.
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You got that in one. The lino must be a graduate of Collum's school for scoundrels.
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Propper prevented a clear goal scoring opportunity as, without the 'tackle', Williams Major was through with only Kelly to beat. Is this not a standard red card? We'll soon see if 'taking one for the team' was worthwhile. The Basques have been less fearsome than I thought.
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It's hard to find reasons -or even a reason- to approach tonight's match with anything other than trepidation. After the performance against the Leith XI, I expect very little against the Basques, and that irrespective of selection, and shape. In particular, the Williams boys , on either flank give me cold sweats, and shivers. It's not the DTs, it's The Fear, as it's known by some, on here. Both lads are capable of tearing our backs a new one. The younger sibling, Nico, will probably be the next 100M+ player. We'll need to double or treble up on both flanks. The days of the early reducer are in the past, alas. We have had decent, some more than decent, performances in European competition - Govan glory nights against more fancied sides. I do not propose to take that history to the bank. Determination, perspiration, concentration, inspiration, and ambition, are all needed, all at the same time, all from the off, and all for the full 90. It would help if a leader with command on the pitch, somehow emerged, fully formed. It's a beautiful night for football. I hope, against hope, that it ends well.
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Oh, and that's not me saying so, it's Philipp Lahm. I wonder if there are lessons here......... Italian teams cannot cope with modern football’s intensity. They need a reboot | Serie A | The Guardian Italian teams cannot cope with modern football’s intensity. They need a reboot Philipp Lahm Fifteen years on from a Serie A side winning the Champions League, Atlético Madrid are the blueprint for return to the top Tue 8 Apr 2025 08.00 BST I am also a child of Italian football. My school was called AC Milan. The 4-0 win against Barcelona in the 1994 Champions League final was the benchmark in my training for how a team attack and defend together. What distances do we keep? Who is responsible for winning the ball? When are cross-field passes forbidden? No other game was shown more often by our Swedish chief instructor Björn Andersson; he must have seen it a hundred times. My other experience of Italy: I suffered heavy defeats during my career. In my youth, playing against Italian teams was a nightmare. At tournaments in Sicily, Viareggio or Sardinia, we got nothing for free and always took a beating. Later, we lost the semi-finals of the 2006 World Cup and the 2012 Euro with the national team. In my first European final with Bayern, in 2010, we were beaten 2-0 by Inter. Led by the defensive maestro José Mourinho, Inter scored two goals after long balls. We, only at the beginning of a development, were tactically immature and overwhelmed as a collective. So I know what makes Italian football strong. I should say: what made it strong. Because this Champions League title was the most recent. Once the world’s best league, Serie A could soon (as it was from 1969 to 1984) have been watching for 15 years as others win the big trophy. This season, Inter are Italy’s last team – and against Bayern in the quarter-finals, whose first leg takes place on Tuesday, they are not the favourites. You could see in 2010 that something was ending. Inter needed a huge amount of luck to survive the semi-final against a superior Barcelona. In the first leg, a volcano in Iceland helped, its eruption hampering the journey from Spain. In the second leg, Inter barricaded themselves in the box in a bizarre way. That rarely goes well. Mourinho probably sensed it, left as a triple winner and moved to Madrid. In the past, everyone wanted to go to Italy. Milan was the football capital of the world. Here in Germany, a sentence from Andreas Möller became a familiar saying: “Milan or Madrid, as long as it’s Italy!” (“Mailand oder Madrid – Hauptsache, Italien!”) Everyone still understands what he meant, not just Italy holidaymakers like me. The basis for the superiority was Arrigo Sacchi’s ball-oriented zonal marking, which is still the operating system of football. The whole of Italy adopted it, giving them a huge advantage. In the 90s, Milan reached the final three times in a row, followed by Juventus three times. Clubs such as Sampdoria, Parma and Lazio won European trophies. In 2003, there was the final between Juventus and Milan. The downturn has various reasons. For example, many Italian clubs are no longer in the hands of patrons from their home country, but in those of investors from the US. In England, capital from abroad is accepted, but in Italy, identity and meaning have apparently been lost as a result of this sell-out. You can see that in the outdated stadiums. I’m surprised about this; after all, we are talking about the country where the Colosseum is located. Italy will modernise its arenas for the 2032 Euros. There are plans to rebuild San Siro, once the Scala of football. That’s good: a society needs sustainable and family-friendly places to meet to celebrate football as a cultural asset. But the crisis has one main sporting cause: on the pitch, there is a lack of initiative, commitment, athleticism. Italy spends a lot less than the four other top leagues in Spain, England, France and Germany. The players run less. I read a statistic a few years ago that said that the Bundesliga team with the lowest values ran more than the team with the highest values in the Serie A. Italy has not updated its operating system; it works too slowly. The problem is not new. I still remember how Mourinho substituted two strikers in the first leg against Barcelona in 2010 and three strikers in the second leg because they were getting cramp. In regulation time, not in extra time. This lack of dynamism has continued, and it leads to a quality problem. Where the opponent pressure is too low, no player develops his skills to world class. That’s why there is no Baggio, no Del Piero, Cannavaro, Maldini, Baresi, Gattuso or Pirlo. Today’s Italian teams remind me of a Ferrari that has been throttled back from 200 horsepower, with a half-full tank of fuel, and runs out of fuel 10 laps before the finish. Even the most beautiful design won’t help. Italy were better organised than Germany in the Nations League last month but they couldn’t handle the Germans’ intensity. To borrow from a famous Giovanni Trapattoni press conference with Bayern in 1998: Italy played like an empty tank. Tactically, Italy’s footballers are still good, especially in comparison with the Germans and the English. They’ve all got the ball-oriented defending, the details in one-on-one duels and risk management. The national team benefit from this time and again. In a tournament with seven games, this can work out really well, as it did for the 2021 Euro title. But resting on a 1-0 lead can go wrong. All men behind the ball – that’s something nations such as Georgia have also mastered by now: see Euro 2024. And so the four-time world champions recently missed out on the World Cup twice. Italy last won a World Cup knockout game in 2006. Italy’s tactical clarity helps its coaches to win major club titles. Carlo Ancelotti has been successful for more than two decades, but not in his home country for a very long time. We have to go back to the 90s for the time when Marcello Lippi, Trapattoni and Fabio Capello were the who’s who of the coaching ranks. How can this traditional football nation find its way back to its former glory? It doesn’t seem that complicated. Another heavy defeat brings me to this conclusion. We were knocked out in the 2016 Champions League semi-finals by Atlético Madrid. Our opponents gave 180 minutes of the highest intensity. We didn’t get anything for free at any point. Diego Simeone’s football still impresses me. The good news for Italy is that you can still win with defensive football. But slowing down is not the answer; grandezza alone is no longer enough. You need to add something: power when winning the ball, activity in possession, an unrelenting desire to conquer and attack, the Simeone style. You can learn a lot from the passion of this Argentinian coach. In fact, the whole of Italy should be playing like Atlético. Philipp Lahm’s column was produced in partnership with Oliver Fritsch at Zeit Online, the German online magazine.
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I was sent this horrorshow, and thought that y'all n eeded to see it, too. Why should I be the only one to suffer?
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I don't think that you should ask for consideration of 'man of the match', if you insist on running a poll, at all In the last few abject home defeats, and in more than a few other performances, I would be gey hard put to identify a man on the pitch, in Rangers' kit, at all, far less to nominate one for an award, even an entirely notional one. Today's 'Approximation of a Ranger Award' goes to...
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Words fail me. If they didn't fail, they would be futile, as futile as the team's efforts today, which set a new record in futility.
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And all bets are off: The SFA have named Don Robertson as the man in the middle for this game. He will be supported by his assistants David Roome and Ross Macleod with Kevin Clancy at the VAR controls alongside Alan Mulvanny from Clydesdale House.
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Yes, rather strange. Neoliberal (extreme capitalism) (sic) would, as far as I understand, abjure FIFA, UEFA, and controlling FAs.
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Celtic Boys Club manager 'stuffed banknotes in boy's mouth'
Uilleam replied to ian1964's topic in General Football Chat
Lossiemouth. And here was me thinking you would have plunged your worldly wealth and goods on Gallic Warrior in the 2.55. -
Celtic Boys Club manager 'stuffed banknotes in boy's mouth'
Uilleam replied to ian1964's topic in General Football Chat
Doesn't that mean that you can perform miracles? If so, why have you allowed The Rangers to languish in an under performing morass, for most of the last few years? -
Celtic Boys Club manager 'stuffed banknotes in boy's mouth'
Uilleam replied to ian1964's topic in General Football Chat
Innocence is restored with age, then? -
Basque coaches are enjoying more than a moment in the sun, so I would propose a Basque, non-staunch, and who embraces a philosophy of post-hipsterism. I can't spell these non Indo-European names, but you know who I mean