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Fernando

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Everything posted by Fernando

  1. I hope they give us like 2 to 3 weeks of prea season type before restarting the season in July. I think finishing the season in July-August is doable. Giving that the virus started in Wuhan and they are already reopening their city, we can assume that it last anywhere between 2 to 3 months. We already been in lock down since March and will be all of April. This is good, hopefully by mid May we can slowly start to open things up again. And then let clubs get back into training and pre season in June.
  2. Very good, even the articles that come the athletic are the best. In fact years ago journalism was like that, methodical, a lot of analysis and what not. Nowadays the journalism like skysport, the guardian and what not is so sub standard of what it used to be. But the athletic is like the elite of sports journalism.
  3. So theoretically by June all of our players should be able to start for the club? Kante, Tammy, Pulisic and even RLC?
  4. If you do the season in July and August then I think that's doable. But you have to let the clubs have a pre season in June, you can't put them to restart the season right away.
  5. Does anyone has any info into how some of our players that was injured are doing now? I remember Tammy, kante and such was injured before the season stop. I would like to know where they stand at this moment.
  6. I don't see Pulisic as being that great. To me he will be more like Schurrle quality. I don't have much faith in him. Coutinho? Men I really don't want him. I don't know about this.
  7. That should be the norm. Just finished the season as is and award the title to the first place.
  8. How do you manage as well players needing a pre season? After this long break players will be neading that, so it's best to start a new season when ever possible with a pre season.
  9. Jadon Sancho: Dortmund will not stand in the way of potential summer exit Man United and Chelsea linked with Sancho, but SSN has been told there are no favourites to sign forward https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11095/11965351/jadon-sancho-dortmund-will-not-stand-in-the-way-of-potential-summer-exit
  10. It's dumb Just cancel the season and start the new season as normal. July should be for pre season which the players are going to need after being quarantine.
  11. It's much easier to cancel this season and start the new season fresh in August.
  12. My favourite game: Chelsea v Napoli, Champions League last 16, 2012 (Left to right) Didier Drogba, John Terry and Frank Lampard celebrate Terry’s goal against Napoli in 2012. There was plenty more drama to come on an emotional night. Photograph: Glyn Kirk/AFP/Getty Images As this unforgettable night wore on, the teams abandoned their tactical systems and went for the jugular Eamon Dunphy once described a hectic, high-scoring Premier League encounter as “like watching two drunks fighting in an alley”. He wasn’t being wholly complimentary about that spectacle, but still acknowledged the thrill of seeing two sides cast off any pretence of tactical discipline and go for broke. Dunphy’s phrase came back to me at Stamford Bridge in March 2012. Trailing 3-1 from the first leg in Naples, a 2-0 victory would have sent Chelsea into the Champions League last eight. Walter Mazzarri’s Napoli, playing 3-4-3, arrived aiming to hit on the break. The context was fascinating. Chelsea’s first-leg defeat hastened the dismissal of André Villa-Boas, lured from Porto less than a year earlier. Roberto Di Matteo took caretaker charge of a battle-hardened team who had hated Villas-Boas’s methods: John Terry, Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba among them. They had an unhappy recent history in the competition, often crashing out in controversial circumstances, complaining bitterly over perceived refereeing injustices. The first thing I remember is the Napoli fans. Bunched in the opposite corner from where I sat, they were like nothing I’d ever seen or heard. As they sang, chanted and gesticulated in perfect unison, the noise filled the arena. Forced to respond, Chelsea’s fans lifted the energy further, creating an electrifying cacophony that was football’s tribalism at its most thrilling. Napoli began in the ascendancy. Ezequiel Lavezzi and Marek Hamsik operated in a front three alongside the all-action Edinson Cavani, who should have ended Chelsea’s hopes inside 25 minutes. The Uruguayan hit the side netting after Chelsea were cut open with a lightning counterattack, and wasted a three-on-two soon after. Danger was everywhere for Chelsea but they did not lack determination. Against the run of play, Drogba glanced in Ramires’s whipped cross to send Stamford Bridge into delirium. The Blues believed, even more so after half-time when Terry’s header made it 2-0: 3-3 on aggregate. Advantage Chelsea. Napoli’s midfield schemer Gökhan Inler soon hit back with a masterpiece of a goal, silkily controlling Terry’s half-clearance on his chest, before drilling a measured half-volley beyond the motionless Petr Cech. The volume emanating from those Napoli ultras rocketed off the charts as the hosts, now needing two, contemplated another painful European departure. Of course there was more. Andrea Dossena’s handball 15 minutes from time gave Lampard the chance to thump in a penalty, locking the tie at 4-4 overall. Things became increasingly ragged as the players battled to full time in what now resembled a school-playground epic: win possession, attack in numbers, rinse and repeat. Skill levels were high, while defending had become a distant memory as extra time beckoned. An insanely sharp piece of work by Drogba set up the winner, the Ivorian’s quicksilver turn and cut-back finding the iron-buttocked Branislav Ivanovic – nominally a defender – to deliver the knockout blow. Fittingly, Ivanovic’s shot was all power and little precision, crashing centrally into the roof of the net, leaving Napoli flat on the canvas. “Get in!” yelled Andy Townsend in the commentary box. It was that kind of night. On several subsequent visits to Naples I’ve come to believe the warmth of the people, the history, and the food and wine combine to create Europe’s greatest city. On their way to the trophy, meanwhile, Chelsea somehow billed themselves as plucky have-a-go heroes rather than the lavishly-funded plaything of a Russian oligarch. They saw off Benfica before Terry’s kick at Alexis Sánchez left them with 10 men at Camp Nou in the semi-finals. They still won. In the final they trailed Bayern Munich, in Munich, before that monstrous Drogba header. The same man slotted the spot-kick that clinched their first European Cup. But none of it would have been possible without that mad, attritional, punch-drunk night in London. As an elderly Italian fan remarked to me on the walk to the tube station, it had been “molto emozionante”. https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2020/mar/27/my-favourite-game-chelsea-v-napoli-champions-league-2012
  13. I would not mind if the season is null and void. I find it hard to believe that will happen but it will be great to see, just for the fact that Liverpool will not get the title. 😀
  14. At leasat he should be in shape...sort of, when the season restart.
  15. Yeah that is expected. But I'm mostly curious about the contract situation. What FIFA and FA will do....
  16. I guess they will award the title to Liverpool. As far as for top 4 unless they also live it as that or do a playoff.
  17. Just suspend the dang season. Watching games behind close door is dull. Might as well just suspend the whole season.
  18. It's better they just cancel the season. Because games behind close door is no fun. Not worth watching. So might as well just suspend the season.
  19. And now they have Mourinho a coach that cannot do much without spending. If they continue with Mourinho they are screw.
  20. To think all this talent would have gone to waste with Mourinho, Conte, Sarri and who knows what else manager. That's why the work that Lampard is doing is the dream that I always had. Keep up the good work, and hope that also Lampard improves as a manager in the next season or two. Because this season he has also made some rookie mistakes which was expected.
  21. It felt like a training match. Yeah fans make the game what it is.
  22. I agree with the first statement, not relegation. Lol. Anyhow it's what I said my expectations for this season was 7 to 10th. So far Lampard has gone way beyond my expectations. Especially with the youth which is what I wanted since the first time Carlo was here. We wasted so much money to get a coach for that, that in the end it was one of our own ex players that did that. In the end Lampard has done an excellent job.
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