ich denke die trainieren für die wm. deshalb meine frage: kaiser franz, wie sicher sind unsere stadien wirklich?
Premier League 2005/2006
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Platzsturm? Ich dachte, das wäre verboten?
@ schneppe: Genau wegen solcher Bilder sind die tiefen Gräben in Berlin eben nicht gefährlich, wie die böse Stiftung Warentest meint, sondern total gut!
Witzig ist die Durchsage: "Would all the fans please leave the pitch now" im schönen Englisch.
Interessant dann auch die nette Sprecherin nach dem Clip.
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Zwar FA Cup, aber...
Birmingham C. [0 - 7] Liverpool
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Zitat
Original von ForzaRoma
Der gute alte Platzsturm (Fulham - Chelsea):
wie sich der kleine zwerg bei sekunde 25 freut.... ich dachte mit jogginghosen kommt man in england gar nicht erst rein, wegen duisburg-faktor³. -
Jogginghose ist in England total angesagt.
Dazu noch reebok Schuhe, ein Fred Perry Polo, und ne Cap von der selben Marke -
Zitat
Original von Fucking old man
Zwar FA Cup, aber...Birmingham C. [0 - 7] Liverpool
Das 7:0 ist schon ein Hammer.
Am kommenden WE muß City bei ManU antreten. Den alten Club von Trainer Steve Bruce. Ob er da dann noch Trainer ist ? -
FA-Cup Viertelfinale:
Man City-West Ham 1:2 -
Zitat
Original von Fucking old man
Zwar FA Cup, aber...Birmingham C. [0 - 7] Liverpool
Fan predicts 7-0 win on BBC site
Alles hervorragend vorhergesagt von einem User im BBC-Board.
Nicht nur das Resultat, sondern auch folgende Matchfacts:
- Ein Tor fällt in der ersten Minute.
- Drei Tore fallen in der ersten Halbzeit, vier in der zweiten.
- Das sechste Tor ist ein Eigentor.
- Cissé schiesst ein sehr spätes Tor.[Blockierte Grafik: http://fussballblog.espace.ch/files/images/2006/3/460/mob5877_1143055996.jpg]
Siehe auch http://fussballblog.espace.ch/…en-auf-einen-streich.html
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ob der das auch mit lottozahlen kann? weiss man die e-mail-adresse?
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Für Big Al ist die letzte Saison wohl verletzungsbedingt zu Ende:
ZitatOriginal von http://www.nufc.com
Big Al bows out with derby delight
Alan Shearer looks set to have kicked his last ball for Newcastle after suffering a serious knee injury that is likely to be confirmed by a scan on Thursday.
Shearer said after his penalty helped to us to a fabulous 4-1 victory:
"It doesn't look good. They think there might be a tear in the medial ligament, and if that is the case then that'll be it for me I'm afraid."
"But I'll have a scan on Thursday and see how bad it is."
"I wanted to go the full distance, yes, but if I have to finish, then it's not a bad way to finish, coming to your local enemies and scoring a goal that's helped us get a 4-1 win."
Perhaps it's the fitting end to a tremendous career - with no chance of silverware, what better way to finish?
Ergebnisse vom Sonnabend/Sonntag:
Manchester United - FC Sunderland 0:0 (0:0)
Bolton Wanderers - FC Chelsea 0:2 (0:1)
FC Arsenal - West Bromwich Albion 3:1 (1:0)
FC Everton - Tottenham Hotspur 0:1 (0:1)
FC Fulham - Charlton Athletic 2:1 (2:1)
Newcastle United - Wigan Athletic 3:1 (2:1)
FC Portsmouth - FC Middlesbrough 1:0 (0:0)
West Ham United - Manchester City 1:0 (1:0)
Aston Villa - Birmingham City 3:1 (1:1)
Blackburn Rovers - FC Liverpool 0:1 (0:1)...und vom Montag:
FC Liverpool - FC Fulham 5:1 (2:1)
Tottenham Hotspur - Manchester United 1:2 (0:2)
Charlton Athletic - FC Portsmouth 2:1 (0:1)
FC Chelsea - FC Everton 3:0 (1:0)
FC Middlesbrough - West Ham United 2:0 (1:0)
FC Sunderland - Newcastle United 1:4 (1:0)
West Bromwich Albion - Bolton Wanderers (läuft noch) -
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Neben Reading FC, stehen jetzt auch die Blades als Aufsteiger fest.
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let's start a caravan of love!
http://rhein-zeitung.de/on/99/…ful-south-paul-heaton.jpg -
[Blockierte Grafik: http://img.aftonbladet.se/spor…ORT-26s69-shearer-793.jpg]
Big Al's Karriere ist endgültig zu Ende. Aber sein letztes Tor fiel am vergangenen Montag im Stadium of Plight gegen die mackems per Strafstoß. Ein Traum!
Einige Presseauszüge, zusammengestellt von http://www.nufc.com:
ZitatFrom Reuters, Saturday:
Former England captain Alan Shearer has played his last professional game for Newcastle United after announcing he will miss the rest of the season.
"I'm finished now and I have great memories. The fact I won't be able to play the last three games is disappointing but I'm not complaining. How could I?" he was quoted as saying in Saturday's Sun newspaper.
The 35-year-old was due to retire at the end of the season but injured knee ligaments in Monday's 4-1 Premier League win over local rivals Sunderland at the Stadium of Light.
"I had focused on going all the way to the last game of the season against Chelsea and then my testimonial," he said. "But we don't live in an ideal world.
"Hopefully, I'll be able to kick off the testimonial but there's lots of people worse off than me."
Saturday's Sun also carried the following quotes in Al's column:
"That’s it, it’s all over, There’s a tear in the medial ligament which, although it does not require an operation, means I will be in a knee brace for a few weeks. It’s disappointing but I’ve got no regrets, I’ve had a great career.
“Deep down I knew when I limped out of the Stadium of Light that it was probably the end and I think the fans knew it as well. They know I don’t stay down unless I’m badly hurt.
"My dream as a kid was to play for Newcastle United and to score goals at St James’ Park.
“It doesn’t matter that I didn’t win a trophy because I did it my way and I lived the dream. Unless you come from the area you wouldn’t understand that mentality. Playing for the club is everything.
“I broke Jackie’s record and no one can take that away from me. I’ve never had any regrets.
“Some people think it was a fantastic way to go out anyway by scoring in our 4-1 win at Sunderland last week. I think they might be right.”
We'll be paying our own tributes to the maestro over the next few days but meanwhile, in case you missed it, few have summed it up better than The Telegraph's Henry Winter:
The DJ at St James' Park must find another stadium-shaking, pulse-racing anthem. Local Hero must return to its case as Alan Shearer sheds himself of his second skin, that black-and-white No 9 shirt he wore with such distinction. As the Toon contemplate life after Shearer, the only lyrics that fully capture the Gallowgate's emotions are "God only knows what I'd be without you."
Just as critics sniped that Shearer had stayed on a season too long, he responded to the brickbats and the falling curtain with a fusillade of goals: clinical penalties, cool one-on-one finishes and regrets, if but a few, about the ones that got away.
Monday's ligament trouble at Sunderland has not simply precipitated Shearer's retirement date by three games, but deprived Newcastle United of the services of their most in-form forward. How typical of the man: he went out striking fear in a rivals' goalkeeper, Kelvin Davis, who had just thwarted England's present No 9, Wayne Rooney, in his previous outing against Manchester United. The verdict on Shearer's career is simple and uplifting: he remained a goal threat until the end.
At the final reckoning, the stats scream Shearer's class: 409 goals, including 30 for England, spread over 18 years, yet it is the words, not the impressive numbers, that truly define this special individual. Words like loyalty. In the Bosman world of constant movement, where devotion can be a dirty word, Shearer fought against the take-the-money creed.
His career began at Southampton, but the Geordie nation's No 1 ambassador worked his way home, via title-winning Blackburn Rovers, where he was loved like a son by Kenny Dalglish and the late, much-missed Jack Walker. Manchester United fans derided Shearer for snubbing them twice, decisions he knew would cost him a cabinet full of medals, but the call of the Gallowgate meant more. Much more. You cannot put a price on being a local hero.
Newcastle United are his club, his passion. When the wonderful Angel of the North was erected overlooking the A1, enterprising Newcastle fans quickly clad it with a massive Toon shirt bearing Shearer's name. Because Shearer is the greatest advertisement for Newcastle: hard-working, down to earth and with a real twinkle in his eye.
So respect the phenomenal goal return, but warm to the words that describe Shearer. Words like commitment. In the age of millionaires in the comfort zone, Shearer constantly put his body on the line. Twice, he fought back from knee injuries that would have defeated lesser mortals. Amid all the understandable wailing from Wallsend to Washington over Monday's injury, it was fitting that what appears Shearer's final act in a Newcastle strip should be an attempted tackle on a Sunderland player despite being on one leg. Competing to the last.
This is a warrior who never surrendered for Southampton, Blackburn or Newcastle, and never, ever for his country. In the nervous minutes before kick-off, England players would glance round the dressing-room, see Shearer with his eyes ablaze with determination, and belief would fill them.
Other words. Like integrity. In a profession tarnished by unpleasant creatures like Lee Bowyer, Shearer represents a breed for whom principles count. Some of his distracted peers become stars of CCTV. Not Shearer, now a BBC favourite. Value-giving and clean-living, Shearer is a model person as well as a model pro.
He has his golf, his family, his friends and the respect of everyone.
People say Shearer should focus on the Beeb, gradually articulating his interesting thoughts on the game as his distance from the dressing-room grows. Yet the former England captain has still so much to offer football. He could make a good manager, although the modest dedication levels of certain younger pros would frustrate a competitor who gave his all in every game, in every training session.
Even as the sands of time ran out on his career, Shearer gave his beloved Newcastle continued bragging rights over Sunderland. For that alone, he will always be the local hero. God only knows when Newcastle will see Shearer's like again.
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[url=http://www.spiegel.de/sport/fussball/0,1518,415099,00.html]Tottenham-K.o am Hotel-Buffet[/url]
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Watford hat Leeds mit 3-0 regelrecht an die Wand gespielt. Damit steht Watford als Aufsteiger in die Premier League fest. Wundert mich, daß es noch niemand gepostet hat. Naja...
In einem packendem Spiel hat Barnsley übrigens Swansea im Elfmeterschießen besiegt und kehrt in die First Division zurück. Nach regulärer Spielzeit stand es 2-2. Wie sich Swansea in Cardiff benommen hat, ist mir nicht bekannt...
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noch geht die neue saison ja nicht los, also nochmal hier..
[Blockierte Grafik: http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media…/_41429291_shield2203.jpg]