Is Wayne Rooney making the case to be called the best player in the world? Quite possibly yes.
He has been on a tear this Premier League season, scoring 21 goals in 29 matches and leading Manchester United to 2nd place in the EPL and just 1 point behind league leaders Chelsea, despite the high profile exit of Cristiano Ronaldo. But what makes the strongest case, is just how important are the goals that Rooney is netting. Many coming late in the game or in stoppage time where his strikes turn out to be game winners, such as his game winner against Manchester City yesterday in the Carling Cup semifinals.
Landon Donovan has scored his first Premier League goal notching in the 2nd in a 2-0 victory for Everton over Sunderland.
Donovan coolly controlled the ball with his chest and struck it home with his left foot. Not only was this his first goal for Everton in the EPL it is also the first time in his career that he has found the back of the net with a European club. Earlier attempts have come at Bayer Leverkusen and Bayern Munich, both of the German Bundesliga.
Donovan seems to be settling in quite nicely at Everton. He found a starting spot immediately upon joining and has since gathered an assist and a goal in four games with his new club.
Here’s to continued success for Landon in England!
There have been multiple reports surfacing that Stuart Holden has signed a contract with Bolton Wanderers of the English Premier League for the remainder of the season.
Holden has been on trial at Bolton for the past few weeks. He picked up a thigh injury in training, but is expected to fight for playing time starting immediately. Bolton manager Owen Coyle had some kind words about Holden, “There is an incentive for Stuart to try to get himself in the team, [but] he’s had a little thigh knock for the last three or four days which has curtailed his training a little bit, but he did ever so well in the first week and he comes looking to push his career on. He has done very well in the MLS and he wants to continue that development.”
Holden played 88 games with Houston Dynamo in Major League Soccer and has 12 caps with the US Men’s National Team, earning his first in 2009.

Clint Dempsey suffered “moderate ligament damage” to his knee according to Fulham’s website.
Demspey injured the knee during a January 17 match vs Blackburn. He should return to action in the Premier League prior to season’s end.
This is a huge relief for American soccer fans, as Dempsey consistently proves to be one of the more dangerous attacking players in Bob Bradley’s arsenal. Considering the significant injuries to Oguchi Oneywu and Charlie Davies, the US National team could hardly afford to see another one of their starting 11 go down.
Here’s hoping for a quick recovery.
This news is a real bummer to US national team fans. Jonathan Spector will undergo surgery to repair his hip. He will be out for 3-6 months, and will certainly miss the Olympics.
Spector is one of the best young American players. At 22 he has already become a mainstay in the English Premier League where he currently plays for West Ham United.
He was expected to be a rock in the back line for the US in the Olympics. Perhaps even to captain the Olympic team. Now, coach Peter Nowak must look for a central back to fill this gap with one of his overage players. The first choice would obviously be Carlos Bocanegra, as he was currently just released by Fulham and could use the Olympic stage to find another buyer.
Other ideas would be Oguchi Onyewu or even Jimmy Conrad. Currently the U-23’s has Michael Orozco, who had a good showing during Olympic qualification. Patrick Ianni and Nathan Sturgis are also potential candidates to fill the void.
We shall see how this all plays out. Hopes for a quick recovery for Spector, hope he gets back to the field soon.
Jose Mourinho has signed a three-year deal to be manager of Inter Milan in Italy’s Serie A.
What does this mean? It means that the self proclaimed “special one” has finally landed at a club after his September 2007 exit from Chelsea. It means that Roman Abramovich and the Chelsea front office needs to worry about some player poaching. It’s no secret that the Chelsea players loved and respected Mourinho, they would have bled for him. Will they still is the question.
I have some ideas of what will happen: Didier Drogba will be the new starting striker for Inter, Ricardo Carvalho will most likely find his way to Jose. Frank Lampard? I wouldn’t count on Lampard staying at Chelsea if Mourinho really wants him; perhaps Chelsea should have started working out a deal before the end of the season to keep Lampard around?
Interesting transfers are sure to happen. Keep checking back for all the latest news!
Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson has revealed his intent to retire from the club within 3 years. His reasons: time for himself, and time for his wife.
Ferguson has had 22 majestic years at the legendary club, and while Ferguson leaves the door open to leave before he reaches the 25 year milestone, I fully believe that Ferguson will see his career out with 25 years in charge.
it’s no secret Ferguson wanted another Champions League victory after winning it in 1999. Now he has that victory, and I am sure that he feels as though he can finally consider himself a true success. How can he only now feel that way? 10 premier league titles, 5 FA Cup Titles, 2 League Titles. All those are great, and to anyone other than Alex Ferguson those titles would signify nothing short of greatness. But only 1 Champions League title was a blemish to the great manager. How easy would it be to say Ferguson was a great domestic coach, but not that great in Europe. People would say to that, what about the Champions League title? And the easy answer would be, “oh, that one time he got lucky?” Well, now no one can say he lucked out in 1999 (Of course only habitual nay-sayers and Man United haters would say such a thing). Now, Fergie has 2 Champions League titles, and what else? Fergie knows he can get one more.
3 years. That’s the length of time he has given himself, and this current Man United team he has built can do it, and he knows that. If United can keep the core of the team intact, this team has an excellent shot to repeat. But 3 years into the future? Who is the goalkeeper, surely not aging Edwin Van der sar. Paul Scholes, Gary Neville, or Ryan Giggs? Retired. Reo Ferdinand? Aging, and losing a step on strikers who are getting faster ad faster. Cristiano Ronaldo? I don’t expect he will stay at united for his entire career, but I do believe he will stay until Fergie goes.
So Fergie is giving it 3 years, and if I really was a betting man. I’d bet on Ferguson and United getting another Champions League title (to go along with a couple of EPL titles and an FA Cup or two).
It’s been a whole 3 days since Chelsea lost the Champions League final to Manchester United, but that’s all the time it took for owner Roman Abramovich to part ways with coach Avram Grant.
In a way, I feel bad for Grant. Ever since he took over the role from the mercurial Jose Mourinho in September, Grant’s days had been numbered. The club parts ways with one of the most well known and respected coaches, the self appointed “special one” (Mourinho) and hires in his place Avram Grant. Avram who? Fans didn’t like this switch one bit, players didn’t like this switch, and throughout the season it seemed as if even Chelsea’s top brass didn’t like this switch.
But Grant didn’t exactly get crushed by the pressure of instantly becoming the most scrutinized coach in the Premier League. The team did falter a bit after the exit of Mourinho, but that’s only to be expected. Grant helped orchestrate a turn around. He led Chelsea to the final of the League Cup, only to lose out to a fiery and well prepared Tottenham. He push Chelsea up the league table, and even after weeks of hearing that Manchester United had already won the league, Grant had Chelsea poised to take over top position on the very last day of the season, but United held on to win the league. Grant even managed to do something his predecessor could not, get Chelsea to the Champions League Final. Unfortunately, he lost that one too.
Maybe Avram Grant just doesn’t have that little extra magic it takes to be a coach that wins the big titles. Then again, maybe any old regular Joe could have done just as good as Grant; considering Chelsea has, by far, the best group of top class soccer players in the world at its disposal.
2nd in the league, 2nd in the league cup tournament, 2nd in Champions League. The message is clear, 2nd is not good enough.
So step up managers of the world, do you have what it takes to coach the mighty Chelsea FC?
Thoughts?
A Game for the Ages!
I figured it was about time that I write about the UEFA Champions League Final. Manchester United vs Chelsea. An all English Final. The Drama. The Pageantry. The Game.
1-1 after 90 minutes. 1-1 after 120 minutes. 6-5 on penalty kicks to Manchester United!
I start by thanking all the players and both managers, for putting on a game worthy of being talking about for generations. United and Chelsea played their guts out, either team could have come away with a victory and it would have been well deserved.
The rain poured down on the players all night, and the field was soggy. For those who watched and saw the stats when Joe Cole came off the field that he had traveled over 13000 meters. Think about this: on a soggy field like the one in Russia on Wednesday, running feels like you are running on sand. The extra effort to move is great, to move with such a speed a precision is near impossible. So 13000 meters, or over 8 miles in just less than 100 minutes (Cole was subbed off in the 99th minute) on such soft ground. For those that have never run on a sandy beach or on a soggy soccer field, I can say with sincerity that it is brutal.
Cristiano Ronaldo put United ahead in the 26th minute with a beautiful header past the out reached hands of Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech. Credit to Wes Brown for delivering a pin point cross to Ronaldo, who did very well to get separation from the defense to get a quality header on goal. Chelsea would equalize in the 45th minute from brilliant build up play followed up by Frank Lampard who calmly slotted it home.
The game would be furious in the second half with Didier Drogba hitting the post with a rifle of a shot from some 20+ yards. Frank Lampard would also be centimeters close to getting a second goal with a shot off the crossbar. Substitute Ryan Giggs nearly sealed the win for United when he hit a shot towards a wide open Chelsea net; only a miraculous stretch of his neck was John Terry – running past the ball – able to bend back just enough to glance the ball off his head and over the goal.
Catastrophe struck for Chelsea in the 116th minute when Drogba, in a complete loss of mental focus, slapped United’s Nemanja Vidic in the face during a scuffle after a hard challenge. The slap was right in front of the referee and the dreaded Red Card was shown, leaving Chelsea to finish the last 4 minutes of overtime with 10 men, and without their best goalscorer for the impending penalty kicks.
Before everyone loses their heads about Drogba’s sending off, let me say this, I do not fully fault Didier Drogba for this. Should he have done it? Absolutely not. Did he deserve the red card? Absolutely. But Drogba was provoked into an attack, this is professional soccer and players will do whatever it takes to get any kind of edge (case in point the infamous Zinedine Zidane headbut in the final of the 2006 World Cup). This incident occurred very late into over time, and I have already stated how difficult it must have been to find energy after running on that soggy field. I can only imagine that Drogba was so fatigued, so tired both physically and mentally, that he let the moment get the best of him. In the end; however, Drogba is a professional and should have been able to control himself despite whatever situation he was in. He committed a monumental error, and hurt his team for it.
In to PK’s we go. Chelsea and United traded goals until up stepped Cristiano Ronaldo. Now, I will be the first to argue that Ronaldo is the best player in the world, and for 120 minutes of soccer, he showed that by being an absolute menace to the Chelsea midfield and defense, especially the world class Michael Essien. But he is arrogance and need for showmanship hurts him. He started about 10 feet behind the ball, ran up to strike it, stopped for a good 2 seconds about 4 feet behind the ball, then struck it – and deservedly, Petr Cech made the save. Why couldn’t he just go to the ball and hit it with the confidence everyone knows he has? Because Cristiano Ronaldo likes the attention and he wants everyone to know that he always has tricks up his sleeve. Well, it cost him. Even if he scored, it would have cost him as stopping the motion to strike a PK is illegal and surely he would have been forced to retake the kick. Regardless of Ronaldo’s antics, it came down to John Terry, if he scores Chelsea wins. Well the field had different ideas for the man who had saved Chelsea time and again during the course of 120 minutes. As Terry planted his foot, the turf slipped out from under him right as he struck the ball. He had United keeper Edwin Van der sar beaten, but not the post. My heart goes out to John Terry on this one. His of the highest class as a player, and from what I hear about him as a person, he is of the highest class in that regard as well.
Fate was not with Chelsea as two kickers later, Nicolas Anelka’s shot was saved by Van der sar and United found themselves victorious.
This was a game for the ages. A Champions League Final worthy of remembrance, and congratulations to the deserving champions Manchester United!!!
Who saw the game? I definitely want your thoughts!
No real surprise here. American international went from starter to captain to on the bench over the course of the 2007-2008 EPL season.
I wouldn’t feel bad about this though. Bocanegra has proven himself to be a solid center back and many teams in Europe know this. I fully expect Bocanegra to get picked up by another team in Europe. England would be the first possibility, but certainly other European leagues will be in the running.
I can’t blame Fulham for this, changes are needed at Craven Cottage, and Bocanegra joins a long list of players who are on their way out. This could be the first of a mass exodus of American players though; Kasey Keller, Brian McBride, and Clint Dempsey could all be on their way out as well. The only player I can see 100% sure of staying is Eddie Johnson.
Any thoughts on this? Where do you think Bocanegra might end up?








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