⛔️ {Thread is NOW CLOSED. New Football Thread, Link on Last Page.}⛔️

Should we start a new football thread?

  • Yes... - Lets Start Fresh

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Nah... - Lets Just Keep This Going

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0
Wow, blatant hand ball not called on Atleti... These Barca players are hot with this ref...

10 mins of regulation 0-0...
 
Last edited:
I love Cholo's expression when Messi scored... :lol:

C'mon, gotta play good defense now...

Edit - good ish... Beat one of the best teams in all of Europe, twice...

Atleti have 2 solid keepers in Miguel Moya & Jan Oblak...
 
Last edited:
Don't worry,I'm dfinitely not getting my hopes up. That ship seems to have already sailed long ago.

If it were up to the Daily Mail they'd already have Hummels/Varane/Strootman/Modric and be on the way to spending £112m on Marquinhos :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:
 
Last edited:
I am really excited about Cuadrado. I hope we really get him. He's definitely a big upgrade for us. I think Chelsea will sell Schurrle and keep Salah. Salah on loan. Mourinho is high on Salah. It sucks that FFP is Chelsea's most weakness. It forces us to sell players to make spend money. Like Mourinho said, we are a selling club. Hopefully that changes.

has Salah even played this season :lol:
 
I don't think Fiorentina will let Cuadrado go for anything but what they value him at...

Edit - The UK Times reports Chelsea's £20.6 million bid for Cuadrado was rejected.

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/sport/football/clubs/chelsea/article4330092.ece

And now Pogba to Chelsea gaining steam? That makes more sense then him going to United. Can't see him agreeing to go there when he basically has his pick to go anywhere.

In other transfer news, it looks like Madrid will send Illarramendi to Athletic Bilbo & in turn bring in Lucas Silva (Cruzeiro - Brasileiro Serie A) to take his place as the defensive mid. I guess Silva is finally ready to make the jump from Brazil to Europe.

Also, the UK Metro is reporting United will sign Falcao only to turn around & swap him for PSG's Edinson Cavani... :rolleyes :tongue:

http://metro.co.uk/2015/01/21/manch...falcao-as-bait-to-bag-edinson-cavani-5030397/
 
Last edited:
For those of us that don't know too much about Madrid's new signing Martin Odegaard. Looks like Madrid got him to sign by promising first team action. This was a very good read. I put it in spoiler mode because it was a large article.


[COLOR=#red]Martin Odegaard: All about Real Madrid's Norwegian wonderkid[/COLOR]
BY LEE RODEN

To fully grasp Martin Odegaard's age, consider the fact that he wasn't alive the last time Norway featured in a World Cup. Born little more than 16 years ago in Drammen, a small city southwest of Oslo, he was five months too late to be alive for his nation's run to the last 16 of France 98, though father Hans Erik certainly was. A midfielder for Stromsgodset between 1993 and 2003, Hans Erik is now better known as the man who took young Martin on a very public road show of Europe's top clubs throughout 2014, finally settling on the biggest of them all -- Real Madrid.

Martin's own career started at the same club where dad made his name, and the story reads more like fantasy than reality. His unofficial senior debut for Stromsgodset came when he was 13 years old. Just as any child would be, he was nervous, struggling to sleep the night before when Ronny Deila told him he would play. Stromsgodset lost 5-2 to Mjondalen, though one of Martin's through-balls led to a penalty for his side. Dad Hans Erik had a ringside view: he was Mjondalen's assistant coach.

Martin became the youngest-ever player to participate in a senior game for Stromsgodset, and the records began to tumble thereafter. In April 2014 he made his official debut, coming on for the last 20 minutes in a Tippeligaen match with Aalesund and setting a new age record for the league at 15 years and 118 days old. Dribbling through the Aalesund defence, he assisted Thomas Sorum for the second goal of a 2-0 win. Unsurprisingly, team members and coaches began to speak of him as a unique talent in Norwegian football.

He was still on an amateur contract at that time. The professional deal followed in May, with offers from agents to take him abroad rejected. That same month he scored his first Tippeligaen goal, as 6,427 spectators watched him tuck away the fourth in a 4-1 win over Sarpsborg. Three months later he travelled with the senior Norway national team, gaining a first cap in a 0-0 draw with the United Arab Emirates before he had even made his under-21 debut (that followed in September). In October, he was back with the seniors for an official fixture, turning out in a 2-1 Euro 2016 qualifying win over Bulgaria. Another age record: at 15 years and 300 days old, he is the youngest footballer to participate in a European Championship qualifier.

The end of the year was marked by a tour of Europe's elite. Real Madrid were on the itinerary but in the month of December he also trained with Liverpool and Bayern Munich. Old manager Deila had initially hoped to tempt him with a more sober move to Celtic, where he now manages, but the gleam of 10 Champions League trophies is a difficult one to ignore. In the early hours of Jan. 22, Madrid confirmed they had signed the 16-year-old, a private jet flying him to the Spanish capital from Rygge for his presentation later that day. His time in the Norwegian league lasted an astoundingly short 23 games.

Style

There is one kind of player Madrid love more than any other, and Odegaard fits the bill. A footballer made for the YouTube generation, capable of producing feints, nutmegs, flicks and eye-catching passes in abundance. In Norway he is already widely considered the best footballer to watch in the league, someone whose style is atypical of the nation and whose inventiveness is more fitting of South America than Scandinavia.

Given he's still a schoolkid, the natural course of events would be for superiors to muscle him out of games, but Odegaard's brain quite often overcomes brawn. Players twice his age have been made to look foolish by the way he uses his body to suggest one kind of movement before delivering the exact opposite. His reputation for being a focused young man with exceptionally lofty ambitions suggest he has the right mental assets to make the grade at the elite, though time will tell.

Major strengths

- Dribbling
- Decision-making
- Acceleration
- Mental strength

Major weaknesses

- Requires physical development
- Questions over defensive responsibility

Assessment breakdown

Dribbling: Aside from the records, this is the main reason the youngster is already a household name in Norway. Shields the ball well and moves it quickly in tight spaces. Has a varied arsenal of resources to call upon in order to wriggle out of pressure. Hard to predict.

Finishing: Has the technical ability and intelligence to become a regular scorer, but unsurprisingly for a 15-year-old, there is room for improvement. Most encouragingly, has a habit of recovering quickly when he misses big chances.

Passing: Has a natural ability to spot a killer ball and doesn't appear to suffer from the selfishness that can hinder other exceptionally talented youngsters. Just how effective he really is in this area will become clearer in the more tactically disciplined world of Spanish football.

Defending: At Stromsgodset, Odegaard was largely freed of defensive responsibility in order to focus his energy on the attack. A harsh learning curve awaits in Madrid.

First touch: Exceptional. Already tried to play one-touch football in Norway. Should have a ball taking part in rondo training with his new teammates.

Application: There is more than luck behind his rapid rise. Beyond obligatory training has put in countless hours of extra work in order to improve his game.

What the experts say

ESPN FC's Rory Smith: "Odegaard may seem an overnight sensation, but there has been hype around him -- in Drammen, anyway -- since he was six, some nine years ago. Those who have watched him say that he is already his team's creative hub; everything Stromsgodset do flows through him."

View media item 1364703
Conclusion

Until now Odegaard has batted away challenges with apparent effortlessness, but at the root of the records and exponentially growing fame lies hard work and sacrifice. More than his natural ability, that work ethic will be crucial now as he strives to adapt to the tactical demands of a new footballing culture.

If he plays with Real Madrid Castilla in the Segunda B as expected, then it could be something of an eye-opener. Far from glamorous, the Spanish third division is an often-miserable league with plenty of bitter players who won't take kindly to being outdone by a 16-year-old. Though he will already have had something of a target on his head in Norway, the famous white shirt has a habit of bringing out the worst in opponents.

What happens in the summer will be huge. Many have scoffed at Odegaard's decision to join Madrid, but if Castilla get promoted back to the Liga Adelante, then a year or two in the second tier could be the ideal preparation for the first team. Dani Carvajal, Alvaro Morata and Denis Cheryshev are all playing regularly in some of the best leagues in the world after graduating from Castilla in recent years, so Madrid may not have been as risky a pick as some suggest. The ball is in Odegaard's court.

http://www.espnfc.us/blog/scouts-no...rd-all-about-real-madrids-norwegian-wonderkid
 
Last edited:
I don't know much about Martin Odegaard but his wage bill seems ridiculous. Seems like that is the real reason he went to Real
 
If I was Pogba the only way I would be back at United is if I had to play them during Champions League. Should've gave the man a chance.
 
I don't know much about Martin Odegaard but his wage bill seems ridiculous. Seems like that is the real reason he went to Real

Well, I think he was always going to command high wages cause of his demand.

And can you really blame him for chasing the money? Personally I want to see young players goto a club with a great academy and space to grow, and if they're a real special talent, maybe goto a club where they know the team can be built around them. But the truth is, it's a bunch of "if's", that I'm talking about. IF he stays fit, IF he doesn't flop etc, so from his boots, I can't blame him for going for those high wages now, you never know what tomorrow brings...
 
Spanish paper AS is reporting Lucas Silva has left his Cruzeiro squad to get a medical... He's supposed to be signing a 6 year deal & the transfer fee is said to be in the neighborhood of €13-15 million.
 
Well, I think he was always going to command high wages cause of his demand.

And can you really blame him for chasing the money? Personally I want to see young players goto a club with a great academy and space to grow, and if they're a real special talent, maybe goto a club where they know the team can be built around them. But the truth is, it's a bunch of "if's", that I'm talking about. IF he stays fit, IF he doesn't flop etc, so from his boots, I can't blame him for going for those high wages now, you never know what tomorrow brings...

Oh I don't blame him at all for taking those wages. His dad did a hell of a job negotiating his contract, he even got himself hired as one of the coach's on Real b team. I just find it crazy that a kid who just turned 16 is getting paid more then Isco, Jese, and Marcelo
 
Back
Top Bottom