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bulldogmariner said:Do you remember 5-0?? When we destroyed you?
serious14 said:Tottenham 4, Boro 0 (okay Dru, seriously mate, what the f*ck)
dru said:serious14 said:Tottenham 4, Boro 0 (okay Dru, seriously mate, what the f*ck)
Okay I get that your a Merch utd fan so you just don't get what football to the rest of us is like.
at 1 nil a disallowed goal has taken away the belief of a team that is till very much in relegation trouble. Even if the same 11 beat Liverpool 2-0 when a second goal goes in it is going to be very hard to come back on the road. the last spurs goals came late in the game (last 15 or so) and the third killed off any confidence in the defence. Given that it is an away trip (home teams are more likely to win) and not every team will be close to winning every game they play
Added to that is the fact that I believed we had half a chance. blind pessimism returns now and we will be similarly murdered by Everton on Saturday in the FA cup.
March should have been the month the title race had us on the edge of our seats, but instead we are stumbling through the most disappointing season in 12 years
Three teams, three wins; too little, too late. This was supposed to be the month the Premier League started hotting up, as Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal attempted to wrest the prize that matters the most from the reigning champions' grasp. And look what's happened. Tonight's results change nothing.
In terms of quality, from top to bottom, this is worst English top-flight season since 1996/97. That was, coincidentally, another in which a table-topping Liverpool side flattered to deceive at the turn of the year, before capitulating weakly the minute the only half-decent side in the top division finally got their chops up.
Liverpool's current woes, already comprehensively debated on this site since their weekend capitulation at Middlesbrough, were again illustrated tonight as a Torres-lite side huffed and puffed for the best part of an hour before eventually nicking past Sunderland thanks to a misdirected Steven Gerrard header and a goalkeeping mistake.
Chelsea meanwhile made it three 90-minute toils in a row at Portsmouth, Guus Hiddink's touch not so much magic as blessed, while Arsenal kept their hopes of fourth spot (fourth!) alive with an easy win at bottom club West Brom by scoring their first league goals since January. Well done everyone, but it's not particularly impressive stuff from the three clubs expected to challenge United for the title at the start of the year.
Even Manchester United, whose squad the pundits on Sky's Sunday Supplement were last weekend falling over each other to anoint the best ever... well, you can't knock their run of scrappy one-goal victories, especially as nobody else has been able to put together one of their own. But it's the least they could have done with all the much-heralded attacking talent at their disposal, and 46 goals in 26 games isn't such a grand return in such a non-descript league.
All of which would be perfectly tolerable had England still a title race to enjoy. The quality of football in the other big European leagues isn't great either, but at least there's some excitement on offer to the paying punters. Real Madrid may have been embarrassed by stuttering Liverpool last week, but at least they've been delivering week in, week out domestically, and are putting some serious pressure on Barcelona. Conversely, Bayern Munich are capable of winning by five goals at one of the top 16 teams in Europe, yet are the stragglers in a four-team pack chasing Hertha Berlin (who last won their national championship in 1931) at the head of the Bundesliga.
Lyon seven-in-a-row Lyon are four points clear in France, but Paul le Guen's resurgent PSG are closing, with Marseille and Bordeaux in hot pursuit. Even in Scotland where, interminably, it's the same top two yet again it'd take a brave man to decide which way the coin will land between Rangers and Celtic.
Of the big leagues, only in Italy is there currently a bigger gap between first and second. Juventus trail Inter by seven points, three more than Chelsea and Liverpool trundle along after United, but they have had the decency to only play the same number of games. Should or, maybe, when United win their two matches in hand, they'll be ten points ahead with ten still to play. Such an embarrassing gap hasn't been seen in England since 1999/2000, when United finished 18 points ahead of Arsenal, but at least they had rattled in a spectacular 97 goals along the way, which offered Arsenal, Leeds and Liverpool an excuse they could grab with both hands.
When United won their Treble in 1999, they had to hold off an excellent Arsenal side one that, had Dennis Bergkamp's penalty gone in at the end of that semi, would probably have won the Double themselves while eliminating better-than-decent Barcelona, Juventus and Bayern Munich teams in Europe. This season United are on for a Quintuple; the only thing is, unlike that Treble side, they've as yet had nobody to play. There's a very good chance Alex Ferguson's side could go into the record books this season but, in these barren times, going down in legend may prove harder altogether.
serious14 said:Actually CHIEF, I was just saying 'wtf' in reference to your current form......
Merch United?? Give me a break - the season I was introduced to them we came 11th and won f*ck all. Hardly a bandwagon.
i cant say i agee with this comment. It may not be exciting for the big 4...but for the rest of the league this is one of the most exciting/nerve racking in years as a shitload of teams are still in the run for a european spot but at the same time in danger of relegation.....outside the top 4 is the real competition.dibo said:
Paolo said:one of the most exciting/nerve racking in years
Bearinator said:West Ham in 7th place =
Paolo said:one of the most exciting/nerve racking in years
Something I do not expect James to understand