Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Europhiles Notebook - Europa League Report Card




The 2011 Europa League is off and set to complete its round robin group stage games in December.  In its second edition, revamped and rebranded, the tournament is thriving with bigger crowds, more prize money and the presence of several of Europe’s biggest clubs.  Although still early, the group stages are turning out to be anything but a procession for the bigger teams, as some of the smaller clubs have already pulled off surprise results.  With predictability often the bane of continental tournaments, the 2011 Europa League is serving up its fair share of parity.

Stale Champions
The biggest emerging storyline has to be defending Champions’ Atletico Madrid’s woeful form.  The Rojiblancos are slumping, with just one point and no goals in Group B.  Last year’s fairytale win seems a distant memory as an opening day defeat to Greek side Aris was followed up by a tame draw to Bayer Leverkusen.  Diego Forlan and co. are too good not to progress but need goals and wins fast to put them back into contention.


Mixed English and Italian starts
Both English clubs are still unbeaten and in the running, but the mood could not be more different.  Manchester City, despite a draw with Italian giants Juventus, are well placed and have played some composed football without ever getting out of second gear, while Liverpool have flattered to deceive.  The latter’s 0-0 stalemate with Hungarian minnows Debrecen was one of many low points this season for the Anfield side.  As for the rest of Serie A, results have been mixed; with Sampdoria on top of Group I, but Napoli and Palermo, like Juve, trailing in their groups.

German, Portuguese and Russian Domination
Bundesliga teams are doing particularly well, with Stuttgart and Bayer Leverkusen both leading their groups, the former with a perfect record.  Borussia Dortmund may not be leading their group, but sit only a win behind the leaders in essentially the hardest group, Group J.  Also on a quest to improve their league’s coefficient, while notching another European trophy along the way, are the two Portuguese sides; Porto, in a rare season out of the Champions’ League and Sporting, who are enduring a tepid league campaign.  Both sides lead their respective groups with perfect records and healthy goal differences.  Finally, keeping their momentum going from their domestic season are the two Russian clubs, Zenit St. Petersburg and CSKA Moscow, both leading their groups with maximum points.

On Track:
Sporting – Two wins, six points, seven goals at the summit of Group C.  Can you say smooth?
CSKA Moscow – the 2005 Winners boast two wins out of two to lead Group F.
Zenit – Underscoring their status as dark horses with maximum points atop Group G.
Porto – leading Group L with two wins, four goals and none conceded.  Porto are still unbeaten this season.
Stuttgart – the German side are effervescent in Europe.
PSG – Excellent defensively, the French side have yet to concede in two winning games.

Wobble Nation:
Juventus – two weak draws, defender Giorgio Chiellini is their leading scorer.
Palermo – Squad is too thin to compete well on two fronts.
Dynamo Kiev – Ukrainian giants are bottom of Group E with just one point
Lille – A bit inconsistent as the French side are trying to balance a good domestic season as well.
Anderlecht – Terrible, with both Jonathan Legear and Romelu Lukaku failing to fire.

Seasonal Surprises:
Lech Poznan – little known Polish Club leading Group A.
Aris, PAOK – Thessalonika has two Greek sides with good starts, PAOK is proudly sitting atop Group D.
BATE – Keeping up a great season for Belarussian football with top spot in Group E.
Liverpool – Their tepid form extends to Europe as they were unable to score against Debrecen.

5 Players on fire:
Alexander Kerzhakov, Patrick Helmes, Artjoms Rudnevs, Helder Postiga, Seydou Doumbia


European Dispatches



Around the Continent

Portugal
Normal service has resumed in the Portuguese Liga as perennial champions Porto have stormed into an early lead.  Six consecutive wins to start the season, have seen the giants open up a big lead, as they try to atone for a disappointing season last year.  Having failed to make the Champions’ League, on the back of a rare third place finish, the Dragons look to cement their lead in the league as they quietly build momentum in the Europa League.  Someway behind, barely in touch, are all time leading domestic champions Benfica, who hope to make up ground in their bid to retain the title they won last year.  At the moment the league looks like Porto’s to lose.

Behind them, the middle of the table has a glut of teams scrapping for the Europa League positions, as minnows Olhanense and Vitoria Guimares try to break free from the pack.  Champions’ League debutantes and 2010 runners-up Sporting Braga are in 6th while the other domestic giant, Sporting, props up the top half of the table.  Promoted sides Portimonense and Beira Mar are dangerously close to the bottom two relegation spots. 

Impressively nicknamed, Porto striker, Hulk leads all scorers with six league goals followed by Academica’s Senegalese marksman Modou Sogou, who has four.

France
A trio of middleweights are taking turns atop the Ligue 1 summit as French football is fully in role reversal.  First Toulouse, then St. Etienne and now Stade Rennes have all made it to the top, while the traditional giants recover from a slow start.  Lille, recently in the Champions’ League is nominally the best placed of the recent top guns, sitting a few points off the top.  

PSG, forever stuttering, and defending champions, Marseille, are both in mid-table, the latter still paying for a dreadful start.  Further down Bordeaux, now coached by Jean Tigana, are in 10th while the class of the last decade, Lyon, are just outside the relegation spots.  Having bought playmaker Yoann Gourcouff from Bordeaux a couple of games in, Lyon were expected to carry all before them but coach Claude Puel is under pressure to return silverware to France’s most successful club in recent history.

Amongst the promoted teams, Brest are just outside the top four and Caen are in the top half, but Arles Avignon sit rock bottom.  Pitch pioneers Nancy and Lorient, who switched their pitches from grass to artificial turf, the first time in French football history that this has been done, don’t look so smart now as they both reside in the bottom five.  And in keeping with the theme of inversion, Champions’ League participant Auxerre and former champions Monaco are both in the bottom half.

Recently capped French forward, Dimitri Payet, of St Etienne is in the scoring lead with 7 tallies while Caen’s Moroccan, Youssef El-Arabi follows him with five.

Scotland

The annual Scottish race for the title between Rangers and Celtic, otherwise known as the Scottish Premier League, is off to a flyer as both Glasgow giants had perfect records after seven rounds.  Celtic sits on top, only by goal difference, as a single strike separates them from Rangers.  The last team to win the title other than the Old Firm, Aberdeen, are in mid-table while Dundee and Motherwell are the best placed amongst the also-rans, which is, quite literally, the rest of the 12 team division.

Rangers are proving quite handy in the Champions’ League as they try and make it out of the group stages for the first time.  Celtic on the other hand, can concentrate on regaining the league crown after having crashed out of both Champions’ and Europa League qualifying in August.  Plucky promoted side Inverness are sitting pretty in the top five.

Rangers striker Kenny Miller has 10 goals to his name, having hit a hat trick against Hamilton on the opening day of the season.

Holland

The Dutch Eredivisie makes for compelling viewing as only three points separated the top five teams after eight rounds.  PSV sit atop the table, closely followed by giants Ajax, while defending champions FC Twente (in the Champions’ League for the first time), Groningen and Roda are all too close for comfort. Ajax have not won the title since 2004, but are currently in the Champions’ League.  Meanwhile, PSV seek to regain the crown they last won in 2008, as they embark on a second successive journey in the Europa League, ostensibly as one of the favourites.

Amongst the other continental participants, Utrecht are finding competing on multiple fronts somewhat challenging as they cling on to the top half of the table.  2009 Champions AZ Alkmaar, currently just outside the European places, are similarly tied up but should improve as the season goes on.  Former champions and domestic heavyweights Feyenoord are languishing just above the relegation scrap with promoted side De Graafschaap.  Fellow promoted club Excelsior, are doing somewhat better, sitting in mid-table.

Creatively named Utrecht forward Ricky van Wolfswinkel leads all scorers with nine goals.

Focus: To Russia with Love

With two-thirds of the 2010 Russian Premier League season completed, Zenit St. Petersburg sit atop the standings and look good value to regain the title.  Defending Champions Rubin Kazan are six points behind, having played two games more.  Although Rubin look to close the gap on the leaders, they must look over their shoulders at CSKA Moscow, currently in third but just a couple of points behind Rubin, with games in hand.

Further down the table, traditional heavyweights from the capital Moscow, Spartak and Lokomotiv, can hope for European qualification at best, as they sit outside the top places, out of contention.  Promoted sides Sibir Novosibirisk and Anzi Makhachkala have had similar campaigns so far.  The former are stuck at the foot of the table, six points from safety while Anzi are just a point clear of the drop zone.

Zenit’s campaign, has been both assured and predicted, as they currently occupy the position of primus inter pares in Russian football.  Their ascent and consolidation is in marked contrast to the decline of the Moscow trio, traditional giants of the local scene.  Zenit’s rise is also mirrored by the increasing profile and money currently associated with the sport in Russia.  Whereas Russian teams in the recent past, post Soviet collapse, have relied on local talent backed by a domestic support structures, Zenit has bucked the trend to improve its own status.  The presence of foreign talent, formerly a sprinkling, has been increased in doses to a generous helping; while higher profile coaches, notably Dick Advocaat, have arrived to infuse ideas, concepts and training, as Zenit aspires to be more continental in both philosophy and delivery.

With an excellent UEFA cup win in 2008, outclassing Rangers 2-0, in the final, Zenit secured their first continental trophy.  The campaign was especially memorable for Zenit, who crushed Bayern Munich 5-1 in the semi-finals, Bayer Leverkusen 4-2 in the quarterfinals and edged past Marseille and Villareal in earlier rounds.  Moreover, Europe was treated to a new brand of flowing football served up by a fresh generation of Russian players such as Andrei Arshavin and Pavel Pogrebnyak, who became household names, while compatriots Roman Shirokov and Igor Denisov elevated themselves to becoming regulars for the Russian national team.  Following this win, in 2009, Arshavin transferred to the most marketed league of all, the Premiership, as he moved to Arsenal, while Pogrebnyak moved to Stuttgart.

Furthermore, Zenit has cemented its place in the upper echelons of the continental football scene, by showing that its performance was not just a one off.  While the European Super Cup, picked up at the expense of Manchester United in 2008, was little more than a curtain raiser; Zenit performed well in an initial foray in the Champions’ League in 2008-09, finishing behind giants Real Madrid and Juventus in their group.

Signing coach Luciano Spaletti in December 2009, was a masterstroke.  It signalled the start of a new era, as Dick Advocaat’s hard work in creating a competitive base was not to be squandered.  The popular and highly sought after Italian coach, who had a good spell with Roma in Serie A, arrived with much fanfare and brought Italian coaches in tow.  Following this, Zenit reversed the flow of talent by signing players from around Europe, including from bigger clubs in the top leagues.  In the past year alone, Bruno Alves, Danko Lazovic and Aleksander Lukovic, World Cup participants, were signed from Portuguese giants Porto, Udinese and PSV respectively.  This is on top of Portuguese striker Danny, on the roster since 2008 and Alessandro Rosina, the former Torino captain.  Since when did Italian players play anywhere but Serie A and occasionally Spain and England?

However, this is a sign of things to come as the Russian league is now a destination for players of a higher standard and not just a source for players to be exported.  Of course, being sponsored by Gazprom, Europe’s largest energy company, helps matters but money alone without clever investment does little.  As of now, Zenit is unbeaten in the league and is one of the dark horses for the Europa League, as an outside favourite.  Proof enough that its pedigree is respected and its potential, very real.

The brass at Zenit is creating a winning style and culture that is both attractive and uniquely theirs.  Czar Peter the Great (after whom the city is named) strove to change Russia’s image, culture and technology, 300 years ago, as he established this Eastern capital in an effort to keep in touch with Europe.  In an eerie postscript, it appears the leaders at Zenit aim to do the same.  An excellent city with a deep cultural legacy and plenty of entertainment, St Petersburg itself is quickly becoming the destination football in Eastern Europe.






European Club Power Rankings


Upto the International Break

1 – Chelsea
A defeat to bogey team Manchester City aside, Roman Abramovich’s plaything is an unbeatable steamroller atop the Premiership and perfect in the Champions’ League.

2 – Valencia
A strong start to the season, sees the club sit atop La Liga.  Despite losing 2 key players, the team is vibrant and affective.

3 – Zenit St Petersburg
Very much Europe’s dark horse, Zenit are imperious in the Russian League and clinical in the Europa League.

4 – Mainz
Notched record equalling seven straight wins to lead Bundesliga, while beating several heavyweights in their own backyards.

5 – Real Madrid
Despite being a little slow out of the blocks, Real are still unbeaten and boast a heady goal difference.

6 – Manchester City
Slowly getting their act together, they now look much harder to beat while being more positive going forward.

7 – Barcelona
Not the imperious all conquering side of previous seasons, but menacing all the same, without hitting top gear.

8 – Borussia Dortmund
Excellent in the Bundesliga, reasonable in Europe, expect a long season from the ’97 Champions’ League Winners.

9 – Porto
Quietly going about business, already out of sight in Portugal and coasting in the Europa League.

10 – Arsenal
A promising start has been followed by some weak performances as old failings re-emerge and injuries take their toll.

11 – Villarreal
Quietly efficient but away form is a slight worry.  Santi Cazorla is a man reborn, after World Cup snub.

12 - Manchester United
Unbeaten but far from convincing, United look fragile away from home.

13 – Inter
Stuttering more than stumbling, getting results without being dominant, the Nerazzurri are well placed in both Europe and Serie A.

14 – PSV
Not as fluid as past editions, the Dutch giants are still unbeaten, leading the Eredivisie and comfortably placed in Europe.

15 - Stade Rennes
Atop Ligue 1 with an excellent away record, the team are yet to lose this season.

16 – Tottenham
Pacy, gung-ho and enjoying every bit of their elevation to the Champions’ League, although injuries are starting to hurt.

17 – Lazio
Steady in Serie A, leading the league after 6 rounds.

18 – Milan
Tentative and lacking consistency.  A subdued start has been improved on but Milan are still not firing on all cylinders.

19 – St. Etienne
Were early leaders in France before dropping to second and are riding high on Dimitri Payet’s goals.

20 – Napoli
Strong in Serie A once again, their foray into Europe has been reasonable but unspectacular.


Euro Stars of Tomorrow



Meet Europe’s budding talent.

The lineup is complete for the European U-21 Championships to be held in Denmark in the summer of 2011.  Seven countries joined hosts Denmark as they booked their places at next summer’s tournament with composed victories in the playoffs.  Iceland and Belarus were the surprise packages as they joined England, Spain, Czech Republic, Ukraine and Switzerland.

Playoff Aggregate Results:
England              2-1         Romania
Ukraine              3-3aet    Netherlands (Ukraine progress on away goals)
Spain                  5-1         Croatia
Switzerland        5-2         Sweden
Iceland               4-2         Scotland
Czech Republic   5-0         Greece
Belarus              3-2aet    Italy

History:
England and Spain has qualified for the finals the most often, with 10 appearances each.  This will be Iceland’s first appearance.

Italy dominates at this level and has won the tournament five times.

Predictions:
With the elimination of both the strong Dutch and Croat teams, Spain are the early favourites to triumph; especially since their squad is filled with players who boast a wealth of La Liga experience, some already being household names.  However with Ukraine and the unbeaten Czech Republic, still at large, Spain’s work is cut out for them.  In addition both England and Switzerland should provide some competition with some useful players on tap.  Expect a final four of Spain, England, Ukraine and Czech Republic.

Players to watch for:
Jack Wilshere, Mark Albrighton, Chris Smalling, Tomas Pekhart, Libor Kozak, David De Gea, Fran Merida, Bojan Krkic, Juan Mata, Sergio Canales, Volodymyr Lysenko.

Legacy:
Many of these players will hope to follow in the footsteps of 2009 Euro U-21 Champions Ozil, Khedira, Neuer and Jerome Boateng; who went on to help Germany dazzle while finishing third at the 2010 World Cup.  Often used a stage for clubs and national associations to showcase their upcoming talent; it also provides a canvas for coaches to try out various combinations and player formations, sometimes with a view of reusing them, on the big stage, for the senior national team.  Several youth teams from the past have been used to retool national teams, most notably the current German national team but also Ukraine, Czech Republic and the Netherlands.

For players who are on the cusp of the national side as well as on the fringes of their club first eleven, the opportunity presents itself for making history by winning something, as well as displaying their abilities to potential employers and current managers.  Many players have gone on to starring roles at some of the biggest clubs in the world.  Many more will hope to do so again.

Past Winners (with notable team members):
1992 – Italy (Demetrio Albertini, Roberto Muzzi, Dino Baggio)
1994 – Italy (Christian Panucci, Filippo Inzaghi, Francesco Toldo)
1996 – Italy (Gianluigi Buffon, Fabio Cannavaro, Francesco Totti)
1998 – Spain (Guti, Michel Salgado, Juan Carlos Valeron)
2000 – Italy (Andrea Pirlo, Nicola Ventola, Gianni Commandini)
2002 – Czech Republic (Milan Baros, Petr Cech, Zdenek Grygera)
2004 – Italy (Alberto Gilardino, Daniele De Rossi, Marco Borriello)
2006 – Netherlands (Stijn Schaars, Klaas Jan Huntelaar, Demy De Zeeuw)
2007 – Netherlands (Ryan Babel, Royston Drenthe, Hedwiges Maduro)
2009 – Germany (Mesut Ozil, Sami Khedira, Manuel Neuer)

Focus:
Spain is reaping the rewards of strong youth programme across all the clubs in La Liga with a seemingly limitless supply of youth talent.  With such riches in abundance, Spain’s chances of winning this tournament appear more than healthy as the youth team seems to be a smaller mirror image of the senior squad, who are currently World and European champions.  We look at the potential team in some depth.

Goal - Young Atletico Madrid ‘keeper David De Gea is already first choice at club level, having made 25 starts.  With his performances drawing rave reviews this season, along with transfer rumours, his ability to backstop Spain to the title is unquestioned.

Defence – A stalwart at La Liga side Osasuna since 2007, Cesar Azpilicueta earned a transfer to be starting right-back at 2010 Ligue 1 Champions Marseille.  With over 100 top flight appearances to his name, he is the unquestioned leader at the back.  Both the centre-halves Victor Ruiz and Mikel San Jose are established starters in La Liga, with the latter already having won the Euro U-19 championship with Spain in 2007.  Left back Alvaro Dominguez is one of those rare things, a Spanish left back from Atletico, and has made over 30 La Liga appearances to date.

Midfield – This is where Spain’s embarrassment of riches is almost an anomaly as all four starters are on the verge of being world class players, who will entertain for the decade to come.  Captain Juan Mata has come into his own with Valencia this season, being one of the bedrocks on which their charge up the La Liga table is built.  Strong, creative and direct, his class belies his young age.  Another Atletico player, via the famed Barcelona and Arsenal youth programme, Fran Merida, is the heartbeat of the current Rojiblancos who is a playmaker in the Fabregas mould welded with ferocious long range shooting.  Getafe midfielder Daniel Parejo, is very much the accomplished finished product, who has gone from strength to strength since his debut with Real in 2008.  Completing the quartet is the next big thing, Sergio Canales, whose sparkling displays for Real Sociedad over the past 2 seasons saw him snapped up by Real Madrid.

Attack – Spain’s forward line is led by Bojan Krkic, a standout from Barcelona’s youth academy. Krkic has already carved his niche with the Catalan giants, making over 80 appearances and scoring more than 20 goals since his debut in 2007, aged just 16.  Completing the team is Adrian Lopez, the pacy Deportivo striker with close to 100 starts in La Liga.

Obviously selection and fitness will play a big part but expect this Spanish U-21 team to go all the way.

Dates:
The tournament starts 11th June 2011 with the final being played on 25th June at Aarhus Stadion in Aarhus.


Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Europe awakens from it's summer slumber

So the new season of European football is upon us.

Whereas the Dutch League (PSV lead with 6 points from 2 games) and the French League (PSG after 1 game) have already started, the rest of the nations are still to start.

Next up is the Premiership, arguably the most over exposed league in the whole world.  Things kick off this weekend - Saturday, August 14th - with 8 games on tap.


Having endured a terrible World Cup, in general, with most of its stars having a torrid time (not counting Cesc Fabregas but including Fernando Torres), all the top teams and marquee names will look to get busy with a new season and put the summer behind them.




And then there's England.


Their quadrennial campaign was predictably rubbish and both players and fans will look to forget things and go back supporting whatever bandwagon, foreign company or band of mercenaries their clubs represent.

To be honest, the English league looks like much of the same more or less.

Chelsea and Manchester United will square off for the title.  One of them will go far in the FA Cup and possibly win it; while the other will do similarly in the Champions' League.

Behind them Liverpool, Tottenham, Arsenal, Manchester City and Everton will make the chasing pack, in, I feel, that very order.  I was going to put Aston Villa in that group as well but with their manager, the brilliant Martin O'Neill suddenly gone, on the eve of their first game, and top players Ashley Young and James Milner both earmarked for big money transfers; Villa Park is going to take at least 10 games to recover.

By which time, the season and CL spots, will both have left them far behind.

Chelsea have more or less the same squad.  Trading Joe Cole for Liverpool's Yossi Benayoun, the former a better player, but only a fringe luxury, at Stamford Bridge, but the latter a more crucial player at the Kop; and acquiring Brazilian midfielder Ramires while losing defensive stalwart Ricardo Carvalho and old pro Michael Ballack, Chelsea should be just as strong as last year.



United on the other hand may have acquired the young player of the summer, picking up Mexico's Javi Hernandez.  Their midfield is still weak and their playing corps divides opinion, but having taken this set of players to multiple titles and a European crown already, Alex Ferguson will be confident of winning a 19th title.

It will be close, but I reckon United will win.

Behind them Liverpool will shake off last year's shambles to take third spot, just ahead of Tottenham.

The latter, with largely the same set of players, will build on their success last season in securing fourth spot.  Liverpool have the talent and corps to challenge, as they did a couple of years ago, but without the stifling touch of Rafa Benitez, will collect more wins to edge back in to the Champions' League automatic berths.


Unpredictable but talented, Spurs' defence is their Achilles heel, however with a crafty midfield and a local thoroughbred in Jermaine Defoe, Spurs have to simply be consistent against the dregs of the Premiership to repeat their fourth place finish.

Arsenal, despite their acquisition of Laurent Koscielny and retention of Cesc Fabregas, are still the same edition as last year.  Excellent going forward, inept at the back; rubbish at set pieces and unable to hold a lead.  This year, without even a goalkeeper (Shay Given's rumours notwithstanding) and unable to ever challenge Europe's top teams (including the duo in West London and Stretford), Arsenal will crash out of the top four, and Champions League for the first time in 12 years under Arsene Wenger.



With his contract expiring next summer, Wenger will join Fabregas, Robin Van Persie, Thomas Vermaelen and Andrei Arshavin in next summer's exodus.  Hopefully with the windfall, the new gaffer can build a new chapter at Ashburton Grove.

Manchester City, under second year manager Roberto Mancini, have added some quality but still lack the killer instinct, cutting edge and consistency to challenge.  Despite a few wins over the top four, they will finish in 6th.  Mancini will get the sack and ADUG will remain without a major title for another year..  In the wake of the top two concentrating on Europe, City will meet Spurs in the Carling Cup final, unless they draw each other earlier.

A Premiership and Champions' League are priceless, but for everything else there's MasterCard.

Everton excite me the most as their entire team is intact, healthy and with the same manager.  Although injuries will affect their campaign by taking a toll on their limited squad, the Toffees will remain a match for most and may even break the top six.  However seventh spot and a decent run in the FA Cup will be it for them.

So, in my opinion, the top of the table:

Manchester United
Chelsea
Liverpool
Tottenham Hotspur
Arsenal
Manchester City
Everton

Cue comments.