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After draws by Manchester United (2-2 against Porto) and Arsenal (1-1 against Villareal), fans were treated to more goals on Wednesday as Barcelona easily took care of Bayern at the Camp Nou while Chelsea silenced the Anfield crowd with a 3-1 victory over Liverpool.

After Bayern's impressive performance in the round of 16, everyone expected an entertaining game against the blaugrana. Sadly, the Germans' porous defense were no match for Thierry Henry, Samuel Eto'o and Lionel Messi as Barcelona found themselves up 3-0 (Messi at the 8th minute and 37th, and Eto'o in the 12th) before Bayern had even registered a shot on Victor Valdes. The reason for that total dominance was pretty simple. From the opening whistle, Barcelona put pressure on the German defense who had no support from their midfielder, leading to several giveaways and panicky clearances which resulted in the home side having the ball most of the time. Bayern's defense also couldn't deal with their opponents' movements. All four Barcelona goals came from great passing around the edge of the box as the ball was perfectly distributed from side to side.




The Bavarians, on the other hand, had only one avenue of attack and that was through Franck Ribery. Their right wing was completely non-existent as they focused on getting the ball to Ribery. The strategy made Barcelona defenders' job a lot easier as they only had one wing to shut down. So, Barcelona ended the half with a 4-0 lead (Henry scored a couple of minutes before half-time), and since the first fifteen minutes of the second half looked more of the same – Barca attacking, Bayern defending – my TV station decided to switch over to the Liverpool-Chelsea game right after Ivanovic had put Chelsea in front with his second of the game.


Five minutes later, Drogba made it 3-1 (that goal was offside by the way, but I'm not going to complain) and Liverpool had no choice but to attack, and that's where Rafael Benitez's system started to fail. With Essien firmly planted in front of Chelsea's back-four, Steven Gerrard didn't have the same freedom of movement as usual and had to stay back to build the Reds' attack. Despite the changes brought by Benitez in the final minutes, Liverpool couldn't breach an hermetic and aggressive Chelsea side. Fernando Torres was firmly marked by both Alex and John Terry, and the flanks were shut down by having the wingers backing up the fullbacks.



In the end, Liverpool were probably a bit too overconfident heading into this game and it cost them dearly. Not only did they lose on home field, but Chelsea's three away goals will surely hurt their chances of going through. Next week should be a cracker.


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Wow. What a mess. In what was supposed to be THE game of the season, penalties, cards and shoddy play stole the show as Liverpool stunned the Old Trafford faithful by crushing their (and my) beloved team.

The game started with the home side taking the game to Liverpool. Wave after wave of United's attack build up only to crash against Liverpool's solid back-four. Throughout those early stages (and the rest of the game for that matter), United's weakest link was probably midfielder Anderson who really showed his inexperience that day with bad turns, poor ball-control, poor passing, and poor movement off the ball.

Despite their early pressure, Manchester United had no concrete scoring opportunity until the 21st minute. With a beautiful through ball from Tevez to Park, Reina made the wrong decision to leave his net. The ball was already gone when he clipped Park's leg inside the box, consequently giving a penalty to United. The spot-kick was easily converted by Cristiano Ronaldo (to my surprise) one minute later to put the Red Devils in front.

Five minutes later, a bad decision from Vidic sent Fernando Torres home free against Van der Sar. The Spaniard didn't miss his chance to equalize the mark. The play was eerily similar to Torres' goal against Real Madrid on Wednesday (Cannavaro missing his overhead kick), and his goal in the Euro cup final (when Lahm decided to slow down while Torres continued full speed ahead). Instead of keeping pace with Torres, Vidic decided to anticipate the bounce, slowing down in the process. When he missed the ball, it was obvious Torres would go on to score. Then, two minutes before half-time, Evra's sliding tackle caught Gerrard's leg just inside the box which led to the second penalty of the match. Gerrard easily scored from the point and both teams retreated to the locker room with Liverpool in front by a goal. The saddest part of it was that at the 41st minute, Carrick had missed a golden opportunity to make it 2-1 United when his long-range shot went inches wide of the mark.

The Red Devils spent most of the second half trying to find a way through Liverpool's defense. Although they made some nice plays, they always fell short of making that final header or shot that would put them level. They also lacked creativity in midfield, making their plays pretty predictable. Pitted against Gerrard and Mascherano, Anderson and Carrick couldn't really distribute the ball properly and missed the veteran poise of Giggs/Scholes. Ferguson finally reacted by introducing his two veterans along with Berbatov, but the substitutes didn't have time to make an impact when the worst happened.

Just two minutes after Ferguson had proceeded to make all of his changes, Vidic was sent off for blatantly holding Gerrard who was on his way to the net. Still shellshocked from the expulsion, United players could only stare helplessly as Aurelio's free-kick went over the wall and beat Van der Sar just inside his left post. Finally at the 90th minute, Dossena plunged the knife even deeper by beating O'Shea on the bounce and chip the ball over the Dutch keeper. 4-1. Final.

Although Manchester United are still in the lead, there's no telling how this result will affect both teams' confidence. Knowing Sir Alex, he'll do everything in his power to prevent a mental breakdown but the Reds finally have something to build on after this terrific week. Maybe, just maybe Liverpool fans might get their wish at the end of the season – a Premiership trophy.



Manchester United's line-up: Edwin Van der Sar; John O'Shea, Rio Ferdinand, Nemanja Vidic, Patrice Evra; Cristiano Ronaldo, Michael Carrick (Ryan Giggs, 73rd), Anderson (Paul Scholes, 73rd), Park Ji-Sung (Dimitar Berbatov, 73rd); Carlos Tevez, Wayne Rooney.

Liverpool's line-up: Pepe Reina; Sami Hyypia, Jamie Carragher, Martin Skrtel, Fabio Aurelio; Dirk Kuyt, Steven Gerrard (Nabil El Zhar, 89th), Javier Mascherano, Lucas Leiva, Albert Riera (Andrea Dossena, 67th); Fernando Torres (Ryan Babel, 80th).
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If you follow the three “big” leagues in Europe like I do, you would know that Real Madrid have been simply stunning in La Liga as the Champions League's round of 16 drew closer. They had reduced the gap between them and Barcelona to four points (now six); an amazing feat considering the fact that Barça were 18 points ahead of the Meringues at some point. Now explain to me how the same team can get so thoroughly humiliated on the big stage against Liverpool?

Yes, Rafael Benitez seems to be a Champions League guru, always getting the Reds to the semifinals - at least - but a 4-0 beating? Were Madrid that bad or is the Premiership's “Big Four” too good for the rest of Europe? We can only speculate but unless Barcelona meets one of those teams and goes through, we must concede that “maybe” they're that good.

Madrid probably expected Liverpool to sit back and hold tight, protecting their away-goal while their opponents could try to break through. Instead, the Reds didn't give their visitors one inch of space until the score was 3-0 Liverpool. The Whites simply weren't prepared. By the third minute of play, Iker Casillas had to make two amazing saves almost back-to-back: one on Fernando Torres, the other on Javier Mascherano. Torres and Steven Gerrard were simply on fire toying with Madrid's defense as if it was child's play. And when Madrid tried to catch up to them, Ryan Babel was thrown into the mix with runs to the middle to confuse the defense even more. Torres opened the score at the 15th minute and five minutes later, Casillas was forced into another great save. As the Spaniard made save after save, Madrid had no control whatsoever on the game. Making two consecutive passes was a hassle and the pressure from Liverpool's forwards prevented them from building anything from the back.

Heinze's foul inside the penalty box at the 27th minute was the end of the game for me. The call was borderline at best. If it had happened in a Manchester United game, I'm pretty sure it wouldn't get called (the refs at Old Trafford missed much worse). But it did, and Gerrard put his team 2-0 up, 3-0 on aggregate.

Reina was finally tested at the 41st minute with surprise-shot by Sneijder but the goalkeeper reacted just in time to put the ball out for a corner. The half ended on that note, and Juande Ramos used the break to make some much needed changes.

Ramos replaced the shockingly invisible Arjen Robben by Marcelo on the left-wing, but the impact wasn't immediate as the Reds scored their third goal of the match via Gerrard one minute after the kick-off. The hosts cooled down after that, and Marcelo's presence proved to be a definite upgrade over Robben as the young Brazilian did exactly what Babel was doing on the other side of the pitch for Liverpool. Unfortunately for Madrid, Liverpool's back-four was solid and the visitors rarely ventured inside Reina's box. The introduction of Van der Vaart and Guti didn't influence the end result as Liverpool scored a fourth goal in the dying minutes of the game, twisting the knife in Real's gut.

In the end, Real Madrid were surprised by Liverpool's quick tempo and didn't react quick enough. Juande Ramos' inexperience on the European was probably a big factor in how Benitez created his gameplan, but there's no excuse for the disappearance of both Robben and Higuain who deserted their teammates when they needed them the most. Casillas has nothing to reproach himself of (why do I feel like I just murdered English grammar with that sentence?), but the rest of the team should take a long look at themselves in the mirror and figure out where it all went wrong.

Highlights video below...


Real Madrid's line-up: Iker Casillas; Sergio Ramos, Pepe, Fabio Cannavaro (Rafael Van der Vaart, 63rd), Gabriel Heinze; Arjen Robben, Fernando Gago (Guti, 76th), Lassana Diarra, Wesley Sneijder; Gonzalo Higuain, Raul.
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Yossi Benayoun, Liverpool

Similarly to the game opposing Manchester United and Inter Milan, the match between Liverpool and Real Madrid was a story of halves with each team dominating a part of the game.

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The Champions League's first knock-out stage is upon us, and there are already several match-ups that can make any fan drool with anticipation. Here's how things look up this year.

On Wednesday, the two must-see games will probably be Chelsea against Juventus and Real Madrid against Liverpool


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First of all, I'd like to apologize for the lack of activity here for the past two weeks. I've been having trouble catching games online. I hope everything will be fixed this weekend. Meanwhile, there's been a lot of activity in Europe during the winter transfer period. So, here are my thoughts on some of them.

After failing to settle at Liverpool, Robbie Keane returned to Tottenham for a fee of £12 million and was immediately named captain of the Spurs.
Robbie Keane
Keane is back where he belongs
Keane's move to Liverpool didn't really help the Reds when you look at his performances with the club. Sure he scored some important goals including an important equalizer against Arsenal, but he quickly became the unwanted third wheel in the partnership of Fernando Torres and Steven Gerrard. When Benitez tried to turn him into a winger, things only got worse. I guess Liverpool benefited from having him around when Torres was injured, but in the long run, this union wasn't going to last


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2008-2009 EPL Wrap-Up (Week 11-20)

January 4th 2009 20:53
Liverpool is still in the lead as the Premiership heads into 2009. However, Chelsea and the Red Devils aren't far behind with Sir Alex Ferguson's troops holding two games in hand. Here are the standings after 20 games.

1. Liverpool (20-13-6-1 | 45pts) (Last 10: 5-4-1 | 19pts


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Arsenal – Liverpool: 1-1
When Robin Van Persie gave a 1-0 lead to Arsenal at the 23rd minute, things were decidedly looking bright for the Gunners. Although Liverpool tried to suffocate their midfielders, they were able to reach Adebayor and Van Persie with long balls over the top. The goal itself came from a superb Fabregas-like pass from Samir Nasri who sent the ball right between the Reds' center defenders for the Dutch striker to control with his chest and fire off a shot in the same manner as Arsenal legend Dennis Bergkamp.

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EPL Week 17: Big Four All Draw

December 16th 2008 06:10
Arsenal – Middlesbrough: 1-1
Although Arsenal are hanging on to the top five, their chances of grabbing the title are slowly diminishing. On Saturday, they couldn't get the winning goal against Middlesbrough who presented themselves as fierce competitors. Boro thoroughly dominated the first quarter of the first half. Unfortunately, it was Arsenal who opened at the 16th minute when Adebayor was left alone on the six-yard line and easily headed in Fabregas' corner. Around ten minutes later, Middlesbrough got their equalizer via Aliadere and the scoreline stayed the same until the final whistle.

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Group A

Chelsea – CFR Cluj: 2-1
The return of Joe Cole and Didier Drogba proved to be instrumental in Chelsea's qualification for the next round as Droga scored the winning goal after coming on as a substitute


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Group A
Bordeaux – Chelsea: 1-1
What is going with the Blues lately? Not only they are slowing down in the Premiership, their Champions League latest performances are leaving a lot to be desired. After convincingly defeating Bordeaux 4-0 in Matchday 1, they could only get a draw in the return match. Are they simply exhausted or are other teams figuring them out? Thanks to this draw, Bordeaux still have a chance to qualify. They'll have to defeat Roma on Matchday 6 to get through


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Group A
A win by both Bordeaux and Roma leave things wide open in Group A where any team can now go through.

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2008-2009 EPL Wrap-Up (Week 1-10)

November 7th 2008 01:05
*Warning, huge post follows*

Before the beginning of the season, many people predicted that Manchester United would easily dominate their Premiership rivals. After ten games played, here's how the teams stack up


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Manchester United – Everton: 1-1
When Darren Fletcher scored his third of the season at the 21st minute, it looked like the Red Devils would get an easy win. Unfortunately, their domination only lasted in the first 45 minutes. In the second half, Everton's pressure became almost unbearable for Sir Alex Ferguson's men. It didn't help that Ferdinand had a couple of brain farts that put his team and Van der Sar in serious trouble. Everton tied the game at the 62nd minute, but they could've had easily grabbed the lead if their strikers were more precise.

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