Steve
MemberEverything posted by Steve
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DECO BACK IN TRAINING Posted on: Tue 12 Jan 2010There was a full session for Deco on Wednesday as training returned to the outdoors of Cobham for the first time in over a week. The snow and cold weather have meant disruption to Carlo Ancelotti's training plan, with two days off granted after the postponement of our game at Hull on Saturday. The lads were back in this morning despite the snow still covering much of the Surrey ground, and a first involvement for Deco after a hamstring injury had kept him out of action since facing Portsmouth on December 16. The ground staff have worked hard over the last couple of days to make the training surface playable, meaning the squad could head outside rather than train indoors on the all-weather surface of the dome. The youth team also used the pitches yesterday to prepare for their FA Youth Cup game at Nottingham Forest tonight. Chelsea FC Lets hope he comes back on on form and plays well because we could really use some creativity at the moment.
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Beat me too it I was just about to say we dont need him at all. I dont think he would suit our team at all.
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JOHN TERRY STATEMENT John Terry has today moved to distance himself from reports in the media. His statement reads: 'I was surprised and disappointed to see that some of the newspaper reports of my interview I gave to Chelsea TV have been taken completely out of context. 'The suggestion that mine or my team-mates' influence is the only reason for the club's success in recent years could not be further from the truth, and if you refer to my actual quotes, you will see that I said nobody will ever be bigger than this club, players or managers. 'I have always had the utmost respect for each of my managers, and am grateful for what each of them has done both for me personally and for Chelsea Football Club.' Chelsea FC Good to see he cleared that up. I didnt think he said those things, newspapers trying to make him sound like the bad guy again. Fuck off you twats.
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I was talking to my cousin about that problem as well, but i guess we will have 4 players back from the acon. But its still going to be alot more busy later in the season.
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1. Drogba 2. Essien 3. Cech 4. Carvalho 5. A.Cole 6. Makelele 7. Anelka 8. J.Cole 9. Robben 10. Ivanovic
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Hmm i guess i can understand why they dont want to offer him the amount of money, considering the amout of injuries he has had in recent years. 100,000 a week is stil alot of money.
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Lampard and J.Cole in the West Ham team of the decade
Steve replied to Milan's topic in Matthew Harding Stand
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lol oh ok
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Arsenal 2 - 2 Everton Birmingham 1 - 1 Man Utd
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Cant believe that, 4-4 crazy.
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Quality Response......
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Imagine if this did happen.
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Didier Drogba and Michael Essien must stand up and save African football - and this summer's World Cup finals. Chelsea's two superstars will be the figures around which a whole continent will have to rally after the horror of Friday's machine gun attack on the Togo team. Former Sierra Leone manager Leroy Rosenior believes their bravery to stay in Angola and play in the African Nations Cup can lead the way in recovering the way the world views Africa's football future. Rosenior said: "I would never say they would be running away if they came home. We heard Emmanuel Adebayor on the radio describe the horror of what happened so you can understand the fears. "But the tournament must go ahead, because otherwise terrorists will feel that they can disrupt not only this but the World Cup as well."People will look to the big players, the likes of Drogba and Essien, and it's good that they take their responsibilities so well and understand what this means to Africa as a whole. "It would be easy for them to stay in the Premier League and play in lovely grounds and lead their wealthy lives, but they are not doing that and it's important now for them to lead by example and to do the right thing for themselves and the players. "It's not my place to say what that is, but they do need to take the lead and not just deal with things on the pitch but also impress the politicians in their countries to start focusing on what needs to be done. "Pressure from them will make an impact because they are like gods and I am sure if they say things need to be done quicker then it will happen." Manchester City's Emmanuel Adebayor and his team-mates are contemplating coming home after their bus driver was killed and two players seriously injured in the attack by Angolan rebels. Rosenior said: "When I was manager of Sierra Leone one of the games was against Togo, and on their way home one of the helicopters which was taking all the dignitaries crashed. "People lost their lives on that, so there's a history related to this tournament with Togo where people have died and you can understand them wanting to pull out of the tournament. "I heard people asking, 'Why did they go by coach?' but I think that helicopter accident might have had something to do with it. "But now it's a time to bounce back, to go and play the game in the right spirit and make it an even better tournament than we thought it might be." Mirror Yes, they should lead my example but at the end of the day, there safety comes first.
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Need to take advantage of this game in hand now.
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Fuck off platini u fat french fuck
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Aston Villa midfielder Moustapha Salifou has revealed he feared for his life during Friday's 'horrific' terrorist attack on the Togo team bus. The national team were travelling to their African Cup of Nations training base in Cabinda, Angola when gunmen opened fire on their bus. Salifou and Manchester City striker Emmanuel Adebayor narrowly escaped injury in the half-hour ordeal but saw close friend Kodjovi Obilale shot in the chest. The goalkeeper is now fighting for his life in a South African hospital but the team's driver, first-team coach and press officer were all reportedly killed in the ordeal. Saifou told Villa's official website: "It was only 15 minutes after we crossed into Angola that the coach came under heavy fire from rebels. The driver of the coach was shot almost immediately and died instantly, so we were just stopped on the road with nowhere to go. "Our security people saved us. They were in two separate cars, about 10 of them in total and they returned fire. The shooting lasted for half an hour and I could hear the bullets whistling past me. It was like a movie. "I know I am really lucky. I was in the back of the coach with Emmanuel Adebayor and one of the goalkeepers. "A defender who was sat in front of me took two shots in the back. The goalkeeper, Obilale, one of my best friends, was shot in the chest and stomach area and he has been flown to South Africa to undergo an operation to save his life. "It was horrific. Everybody was crying. I couldn't stay in control myself and I cried when I saw the injuries to my friend."
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Not sure if thats true, according to Wikipedia his clubs website said hes having an operation hopefully all goes well.
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Africa Cup of Nations to go ahead despite Togo attack The organisers of the Africa Cup of Nations say it will take place despite the attack on the Togolese football team in the host country, Angola. "Our first priority is the safety of the players, but the tournament will go ahead," said a spokesman for the Confederation of African Football. The driver of the team's bus was killed and at least two players were wounded when it came under fire on Friday. Separatists in the enclave of Cabinda have said they carried out the attack. CAF said the Togolese Football Federation had failed to inform them that the team was travelling overland from its training camp in Congo-Brazzaville, through a dangerous area with no security. The body expressed surprise that the team had not travelled by air. The Togolese players will decide on Saturday whether to play in the tournament. 'Armed to the teeth' The team's captain, Emmanuel Adebayor, who plays for the English club Manchester City, told the BBC that Africa's image had suffered a big blow in a year when it will host the World Cup. "We keep repeating [that] Africa, we have to change our image if we want to be respected, and unfortunately that is not happening," he said. His fellow striker, Thomas Dossevi, said the team bus had been surrounded by police vehicles, five minutes after entering Cabinda, when it was attacked. "Everything looked fine and we came under heavy fire. Everyone scrambled under the seats trying to protect themselves," he said. "We were machine-gunned like dogs... They were armed to the teeth." Adebayor said the team was trapped on bus for about 30 minutes while the security forces fought off the attackers. The players and staff then had to flee the bus under fire to get into the vehicles sent to rescue them, he said. "I'm still under shock," Adebayor said. "I was one of those who carried the injured players into the hospital - that is when I realised what was really going on. All the players, everyone was crying, calling their mums, crying on the phone, saying their last words because they thought they'd be dead." The Manchester City striker also cast doubt on Togo's participation in the tournament next week, saying that if security was not improved the players would probably be leaving on Saturday. "It is a football game and one of the biggest tournaments in Africa, but I don't think people are ready to give their lives," he said. "A lot of players want to leave. They have seen death and want to go back to their families." A total of nine people, including defender Serge Akakpo and goalkeeper Kodjovi Obilale, were wounded in the attack. The other casualties were training, medical and administrative staff. 'Act of terrorism' The separatist rebel Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda (Flec), which has fought for independence for several decades but entered a ceasefire in 2006, later claimed responsibility for the attack. "This operation is only the start of a series of targeted actions that will continue in all the territory of Cabinda," Flec secretary-general Rodrigues Mingas said. The Angolan minister in charge of affairs in Cabinda, Antonio Bento Bembe, said the attack had been an "act of terrorism" and that the country would boost security for the Cup of Nations. Angola had hoped the tournament, which runs from 10 to 31 January, would show how well it had recovered from decades of civil war Football's world governing body, Fifa, said it had been deeply moved by the incident in Angola and offered its "utmost sympathy" to the Togo team. Caf officials said they had not known that the Togolose team had decided to drive directly to Cabinda. They said they had expected the squad first to fly to the Angolan capital, Luanda, and from there to Cabinda. BBC
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Badly injured: Romanian club FC Vaslui confirmed their defender Serge Akakpo was shot in the attack
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Welcome to TalkChelsea
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Stop the tournament asap. No one deserves to lose there lives....
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Was looking forward to watching the game but at the end of the day, everyones safety should come first.