Friday, 22 February 2013



Leighton Baines
Everton v Newcastle United - Premier League
The English defender is one of the best left backs in Premier League. Baines, who previously made 145 appearances for Wigan Athletic moved to the Merseysiders Everton for 5 million euros in the year 2007. The left back is often involved in Everton goals and is in great demand. The Red Devils were also interested in the English defender but Everton reportedly rejected Man United’s offer in the summer transfer window.
Rafael Da Silva
Manchester United v Liverpool - Premier League
The Brazilian international moved to Manchester United F.C in 2007 along with his twin brother Fabio Da Silva from the Brazilian club, Fluminense Football Club. He has been Alex Ferguson’s go-to guy for the rightback position in the recent years. The Brazilian international has scored few goals for Manchester United squad and has also assisted many. He is one of the best right backs in the Premier League.
Ashley Williams
Swansea City v Stoke City - Premier League
The Welsh defender moved from Stockport County to Swansea City and has successfully made 203 appearances for the Premier League club, netting 11 times. He was previously loaned to Swansea City but he later made his move permanent. He has played every minute of Swansea matches for the past 3 seasons. Due to his consistent good performances at the Welsh club he was subject to a bid from Queens Park Rangers, but it was rejected by Swansea.
Steven Caulker
Tottenham Hotspur v Manchester United - Premier League
The 21-year-old English footballer who was  loaned to Swansea City from Tottenham Hotspur has made impressive number of clearances in the past few seasons. He was previously loaned to Bristol City and Yeovil Town F.C. The Spurs defender has been on loan spells for the past few seasons. He has now returned to the Spurs side and has successfully made 14 appearances for the Whites and is one of the key defenders in the Spurs squad.
Ashley Cole
FBL-ENG-PR-CHELSEA-ARSENAL
The English international who moved from Arsenal to Chelsea Football club in the year 2006 is one of the best defenders in the Chelsea squad. The ex gunner has won a Premier League, 4 FA Cups and a UEFA Champions League with Chelsea. He was a very important part of the Chelsea team that won their first-ever Champions League trophy. He has been a consistent player throughout his career.
Thomas Vermaelen
Arsenal v Blackburn Rovers - FA Cup Fifth Round
The Belgian footballer and captain of Arsene Wenger’s side Arsenal is one of the top rated defenders in English Premier League. He has made 89 appearances for the Gunners and has netted 13 goals. He has kept the opponents from scoring goals against the Gunners. Vermaelen has been very consistent for Arsenal.
Vincent Kompany
Manchester City v Fulham - Premier League
The Belgian footballer who captains the English defending champions Manchester City has been a wonderful player for the Citizens. He has been consistent and scored a winner against their rivals Manchester United in the derby match last season, which paved the path to their first Premier League win after 44 years. The Belgian defender made a move from the German team Hamburg to Manchester City in 2008.
Gareth McAuley
Liverpool v West Bromwich Albion - Premier League
Gareth Gerrard McAuley is an the Irish footballer who previously played for Ipswich Town F.C and made a move to the Premier League club West Bromwich Albion in the year 2011. He signed a three year contract with the Baggies. His consistent attacking prowess and remarkable defensive records have lifted West Brom to one of the top positions in the Premier League table. His remarkable defending skills have made him one of the key players in the West Brom squad this season.


Manchester United v Queens Park Rangers - Premier League
When Sir Alex called Evans “a real top defender” last week, praising his development into a cornerstone of United’s defense, it got me thinking about how topsy-turvy Evans’ relatively young career at Old Trafford has been. In fact, it wasn’t that long ago that the mere mention of his name in the starting XI made most United fans jittery.
During this period, most considered Evans a lost cause, and fans wanted him out of the club. He is yet to win over everyone and most of his brilliant performances continue to go unnoticed, as the memory of how bad he was still remains.
But the funny thing is, if one were to go back a year further; the very same fans would have been raving about Evans and his immense talent. His fall from the pedestal that the United fans had placed him on was almost as meteoric as his rise to the top. Within a period of 4-5 months, Evans was the scapegoat for everything that went wrong in a game. He could do nothing right and his performances seemed to get worse with each game. Unwanted by the fans, clearly lacking confidence, Evans was at a tipping point in his career, a precarious stage where one wrong step and we’d have seen him join the ranks of the ever burgeoning list of those who couldn’t live up to their talent.
Evans’ rise began right from his league debut against Chelsea, as he stepped in for a suspended Vidic and put in a solid performance against a formidable Chelsea team that was our main title challenger at the time. Following the game, he just improved with every game and with Rio Ferdinand struggling with back injuries, Evans stepped in and filled the void. His stock was rising fast, and by next season, he was being hailed as the “next big star” to emerge from the academy. Sir Alex had found a player who was showing that he was ready to step up when needed.
What could have taken a player from being the trusted deputy and future star of the team to the lowest point of his career?
For me, it all began almost exactly 3 years ago, when during a Champions League knockout round match at the San Siro against AC Milan, Sir Alex gave Jonny Evans a full blown hair dryer on the pitch after some disastrous defending  from the entire back four. Unluckily for Evans, as Sir Alex later revealed, he happened to be the closest to the gaffer at the time and Sir Alex let rip from the sidelines as Mike Phelan had intervene and hold back Sir Alex.
Here’s a clip of the incident:
And not surprisingly Evans’s confidence took a blow, and he was not the same player after that.
Evans ended that season with more indifferent performances and this poor run of form continued into the next season, as Rio Ferdinand continued to struggle with injuries and Evans was the cynosure of attention from the fans and the media. Unfortunately the lack of confidence was obvious to see as he made careless mistakes and looked a shadow of the talented youngster who was predicted to be United’s rock at the back.
His disastrous season reached a low point in our 4-0 defeat against West Ham in the Carling Cup where his performance was so bad that he had to be taken off after 70 minutes following a calamitous display at the back. From then on, it was damage control as Sir Alex took Evans away from the spotlight and Chris Smalling stepped in at the back.
It wasn’t almost till the end of that season that Evans returned to action, as Sir Alex eased him back into the 1st team. But the damage had been done, Evans was now labelled a one-hit wonder, and a flash in the pan. Many had already written him off, and he was a player who had failed to live up to his potential. Fans wanted him out, while the media had forgotten about his existence as they were busy writing about the next Manchester United ‘”legend-in-the-making”, Chris Smalling.
Manchester United v Liverpool - FA Cup 3rd Round
But Sir Alex kept his faith in Evans, and he, slowly but steadily, went about rebuilding his reputation and resurrecting a career that many believed was no longer destined for greatness. He returned a mentally stronger and vastly superior defender. I don’t think anyone will deny the fact that Evans has now become an integral part of our defense and is hardly the player who got pushed around by the likes of Samba, Cahill, Zat Knight and Hangeland. Evans still has a long way to go before he can be mentioned in the same breath as the likes of Vidic and Ferdinand but if his present performances are anything to go by, it’s all just a matter of time.
I think what happened with Evans is a perfect example of why you should not write anyone off, just because they made a few errors, especially when it’s a young player still learning his trade. Be it David de Gea, Alex Buttner or Anderson, a little patience and faith in the players and the manager from us can go a long way.
So the next time you see any young player make a mistake or have a poor game, I think it would be wiser to give them the benefit of doubt and trust Sir Alex’s judgement of the player.

Thursday, 21 February 2013

Old Trafford players were split with Evans and Cleverley choosing their former player and Wazza going for the Argentine
Chasing shadows: Ronaldo struggles to catch Messi
Chasing shadows: Ronaldo struggles to catch Messi

Manchester United's players cannot decide whether Cristiano Ronaldo or Lionel Messi is the best player on the planet.

The Red Devils came face-to-face with their former star Ronaldo during last week's 1-1 Champions League draw away to Real Madrid.

But Wayne Rooney, Jonny Evans and Tom Cleverley are split when it comes to deciding who deserves to be labelled the world's best.

Ronaldo has scored 183 goals in 181 appearances for Real, while Messi has an equally astonishing record of 301 goals in 366 games for Barcelona.

But asked to choose between Ronaldo and Messi, the United trio, speaking in a webchat organised by Google+ and DHL, were split.

Midfielder Cleverley said: "I never played with Ronaldo. They're two different players, but at the minute I'd probably take Ronaldo."
Wayne Rooney
Team spirit: Rooney wouldn't choose his former teammate

Rooney, who played alongside Ronaldo for five years at United, said: "As Tom said, they're two different players. But I think Messi's incredible. I think he's the best ever, so I'd have to say Messi.

"But Ronaldo has been a bit unlucky because, in any other time, he'd be winning all the awards Messi has. But they're two of the best players of all-time."

Evans said: "It's hard to compare them because we haven't had the chance to see Messi up close every day, but we've had that with Ronaldo.

"I was in the first-team for one season when Ronaldo was here and you sort of take it for granted, the quality he had, but I really don't think I could choose between them.

"But just for the fact I've seen Ronaldo day-in, day-out, and the dedication he has, I'd probably have to say Ronaldo."



abidal okAfter the dreadful result last night it is great to receive the fantastic news today that Eric Abidal has been given the green light to return to action. The French defender last played for the first team in the 1-2 away win at Atlético Madrid on February 26, 2012. He underwent a liver transplant on April 10, 2012 and since then he has had a long hard road to get back to full fitness. His recovery is a marvellous feat both of medical science and of the player’s will. Welcome back Abi!


Thinking to cheat AdSense?
Stop that. It will never bring you anywhere. You might pull it off with smaller ads network, but definitely not with Google. Here are some detection methods they might use. At the very least, they have the resources to do so.

IP Address
If the AdSense click is originated from the same IP Address as the one used for accessing your AdSense account, your account is flagged.
Cookies
Most home users do not use static IP Address for Internet connection. In most cases just disconnect and reconnect will give you a new IP Address. But don’t forget, Google has set cookies on your computer.

Other Google Services
Thinking that you are safe just because you do not access your AdSense account? Think again. This time, consider these: GMail, Google Earth, Google Calendar, Google Search, Google Toolbar, Google Talk, Google Sitemap, Google Desktop, Blogger, and so on, and so on. With the wide range of services they provide, Google can trace the originator of most (or probably almost all) clicks.

Click Pattern 1
Oh, why this computer / IP address / person is so trigger-click-happy on this particular website but never click on the ads on other sites?

Click Pattern 2
And why is it that people accessing these sites direct (type-in URL or from bookmark) tend to be very active ad-clickers compared with those referred from search engine or other sites?

Click Pattern 3
And why the ad-clickers like to hit and run, compared with non ad-clickers that surf a few pages before leaving?

Click-Through-Rate (CTR)
Your CTR may range from 0.5% to 10%, but if it exceeds a certain point (probably around 10%), you are flagged.

Geo-Location
Used Urchin (Google Analytics) before? Then you should know that Google can trace traffics origin down to the small town. Different IP doesn’t mean much. Unless you site is really targeted to one small geo-point, a high number of clicks from nearby location will get you banned quickly.

Hardware address
MAC address of the LAN card, modem, and router works almost like a fingerprint. I’m not sure if Google can track this, but probably they do. They have rocket scientist, remember?

Advertiser’s conversion rate
Ad click is one thing. But does it bring value to the advertisers? If none of the clicks on your site translate to conversion to the advertiser, you are in trouble. First the Smart-Pricing hits, then your AdSense account disabled.
Search Engine Ranking
Your website is not indexed on any search engine, not linked by any prominent website, but get consistently high traffic? That sounds like something is in play. Regardless of whether it is an adware-embedded software, spam, trojan clickbot, or intentionally installed click-exchange network, it doesn’t sound right.

Combo
Each of these detection methods might seem rather weak. But combine them together, and not many click-frauds can pass-through these filters. Even the smartest clickbot will have a hard time. In short, it is almost impossible to cheat AdSense in the long term. Instead of spending time, money, and effort trying to outsmart Google, try these tips to improve your AdSense earning.

Disclaimer: I’m not working for Google nor in anyway know anyone inside Google. Google might or might not use these methods to detect click-fraud. I’d believe that they have much better detection mechanism.
AC Milan recorded a memorable 2 – 0 win over Barcelona at the San Siro in the first leg of the round-of-16 fixture between the two sides. It was a tactical masterpiece by Massimiliano Allegri which was perfectly executed on the pitch by a bunch of young, energetic and talented players which led to Barcelona’s demise, particularly with forgettable games for all their stars including Messi. Here are five things that were noticeable in the game, and had a major influence on its proceedings.

The counter attack from Milan

 
 AC Milan v Barcelona - UEFA Champions League Round of 16
AC Milan took what Chelsea did against Barcelona in this tournament last season, and took it a step further with some well taken goals to boot. Where Chelsea were content to park the bus and lob the ball up the field whenever possible, Milan played actual football with the ball at their feet, after soaking up pressure from Barca. They were set up perfectly with pace down the wings, and took full advantage when provided the chance by releasing the ball down the wing, and creating all sorts of trouble for the Catalans’ full backs, who are the only source of width to Barca’s attack. Thus, a stroke of genius from Allegri, perfectly tailored to the squad at his disposal, and the main cause for their win yesterday night.

The offside trap by Barcelona

 
 AC Milan v Barcelona - UEFA Champions League Round of 16
Barcelona’s plan, at least over the first half, seemed to be to try and catch Milan out by playing a high line and springing the offside trap to good effect. It was a bad idea overall, especially with the pace of Boateng and Shaarawy taken into consideration, and was proven to be so when the latter beat the trap and nearly created something for his side in the first half. Additionally, with the full backs joining in attack often to provide width to their play, Barca’s dependency on the offside trap was always meant for doom against a club with the quality of Milan.
 

A mature role for El Shaarawy

 
 AC Milan v Barcelona - UEFA Champions League Round of 16
Stephan El Shaarawy, in spite of all the praise that Boateng will garner for his performance, was the key to Milan’s victory. Running tirelessly all game, the young starlet made excellent forward runs, and kept track of Alves’ runs at the same time, only being beaten once or twice by the full back. Some vital interceptions of balls which were meant for Alves allowed Shaarawy to not only help out his defenders, but also set Milan on their way for counter attacks, making him deserving of plenty of credit for sticking to the plan put in place by Allegri.
 

Lack of width for Barcelona

 
 AC Milan v Barcelona - UEFA Champions League Round of 16
As already mentioned twice above, the only width that was provided to Barcelona’s play was when Dani Alves and Jordi Alba surged forward from the back, making it nigh impossible to find them with the excellent tracking back from Milan. In addition, the risk of letting Milan into the gap left behind shackled the full backs, and reduced their forays to a great extent. This was quite obvious when comparing the number of times Alba got forward in the first twenty minutes or so to the number of times in the rest of the game. The introduction of Sanchez did little to change this either, with the Chilean also trying to work a more central role, and looking slightly lost overall.
 
 

A one-dimensional approach

 
AC Milan v Barcelona - UEFA Champions League Round of 16
Barcelona, as one person put it, were very much like a battering ram, trying to repeatedly attack through the middle, and failed miserably with every attempt. In fact, a shot from Iniesta which was from about 30 yards out and curled just wide of the far post was as close as Barca got to scoring all game. There were no other efforts from range either, and the lack of width to their play has already been highlighted above. In spite of the fact that many of their players were performing much below expected standards, the fact that Barca lacked an alternative approach either from the players on the pitch or off the bench is something that other big clubs all across Europe would have taken note of.

ac milan 2-0 barcelona goal muntariBarça face an uphill struggle to stay in the 2012/13 Champions League after going down 2-0 to AC Milan at the San Siro tonight. Second half goals from Kevin-Prince Boateng and Sulley Muntari earned the Italians a deserved victory which leaves Barça needing to win by three goals in the second leg at Camp Nou on March 12.
As expected Barça fielded the strongest possible XI of Valdés, Alves, Piqué, Puyol, Alba, Xavi, Busquets, Fabregas, Pedro, Messi and Iniesta, while Milan’s coach Massimiliano Allegri opted for Abbiati, Abate, Zapata, Mexes, Constant, Muntari, Ambrosini, Montolivo, Boateng, Pazzini and El Shaarawy, but instead of playing Boateng behind the front two as he had in last season’s meetings between the clubs, Boateng was used on the right of a front three with Pazzini in the middle and El-Shaarawy on the left.
However, from the beginning there was little attacking from the Milan forwards who during the first half spent more time in their own half defending than threatening Valdes’s goal. Milan sat deep and compact, working very hard to close down space, but also looking to surprise Barça on the break. At times the first half was reminiscent of the first 45 minutes in the Champions League semi two seasons ago at the Bernabeu when Mourinho set out for a 0-0 from the start.
It made the game frustrating to watch with few chances at either end. Muntari had the games first effort, sending a hopeful 30-yard volley over the bar, and Barça responded with Messi brilliantly slipping one challenge before his shot was deflected out for a corner. Piqué then had a double effort at another corner but his header hit Pazzini and then as Piqué went in for the rebound Pazzini managed to clear the danger. The game might have turned out differently when Alves’s cross clearly caught Mexes on the hand, but unfortunately, instead of a penalty, the linesman had already flagged as Pedro had strayed offside.
Milan’s first decent counter attack came in the 15th minute with Boateng flicking the ball on for El-Shaarawy to speed away from Alves. Puyol had to be quick to get across and put the ball out for a corner. Barça’s zonal defence at the corner was shown up as Boateng stood completely free in a near post zone and when El-Shaarawy’s corner found him he hooked a shot just wide of the far post.
ac milan 2-0 barcelona messi mexesBarça were still finding little progress going forward. Milan’s discipline was demonstrated by El-Shaarawy chasing back to block Alves’s forward run. Xavi was back after injury but he was offering few ideas from midfield, a hopeful 25-yard shot gave Abbiati a first save but without worrying the Milan keeper. Messi was coming deeper and also going to the right touchline in order to find the ball, in the 25th minute he robbed Ambrosini but before he could go anywhere Mexes had clattered him and the game’s first yellow card was shown, soon after Messi brilliantly slipped Constant by the touchline but his run at goal was blocked on the edge of the area by Mexes standing firm.
The game was becoming more and more like a chess game with Barça showing enormous patience in possession with very little penetration, and Milan showing great discipline to maintain position and close space. Milan, however, were growing in confidence as Barça looked more and more frustrated. Milan’s hard work almost pàid off in the 36th minute when Muntari caught Busquets in possession, the ball came to Boateng who sent in a dangerous cross that just evaded El-Shaarawy at the far post.
In the second half Milan came out with the intention of playing higher than in the first 45 minutes. Barça continued to seem more concerned with keeping possession than in penetrating the Milan area though Milan were quickly all back again whenever we got into the last third of the field. Messi attempts to wriggle through the middle were all coming to nothing and in the 54th minute after the Argentinian lost the ball Busquets went for the loose ball and was unfairly booked after making contact with the ball and receiving Pazzini’s late follow-through.
ac milan 2-0 barcelona goal boateng piqué appealTwo minutes later another decision went against us that had a much bigger impact. First, a free kick was awarded 30 yards out on the left after Alves brought down El-Shaarawy. Constant played the free kick square inside to Montolivo who fired in a long shot that hit Alba on the edge of the area before flying up against Zapata’s raised arm and dropping nicely for Boateng who smashed in a low shot from 16 yards that gave Valdés no chance. Zapata’s handball was clearly unintentional as the ball was moving so quickly, but his arm was raised and the change of direction of the ball gave a perfect assist for Boateng. Piqué was booked for protesting the referee Craig Thompson’s decision.
Barça were shaken and the San Siro roared Milan on. Alves had to make an important clearance to prevent Boateng’s cross from reaching El-Shaarawy as the Italians now pushed for a second. Alexis was brought on for the ineffective Fabregas but there was little change to Barça’s lack of penetration as the Italians chased and harried. Barça’s only response was a poor free kick that Messi fired way over, and things got worse soon after when Puyol had to go off for treatment after a nasty clash of heads with Pazzini. The Italian forward recovered more quickly and for a short period Barça were a man down. Pazzini almost took advantage to turn and hook a volley but Valdés was well positioned.
With Puyol back on with what looked like a kleenex tissue stuck to his forehead Barça pushed for an equalizer. Iniesta now in midfield managed to find shooting space after combining with Alba and Alexis but he was still 25 yards out and the shot went narrowly wide of the far post. Xavi then sent a free kick which went about a foot over though Abbiati had it well covered. The lack of ideas was worrying.
ac milan 2-0 barcelona puyol head injuryThen things went from bad to worse in the 81st minute after Alba sent a poor ball to Iniesta who lost possession, the ball came to Montolivo who lobbed a ball into space over Puyol’s head, the 18-year-old substitute M’Baye Niang and Puyol chased after the ball with Puyol getting in a twist, Niang squared for El-Shaarawy who lobbed the ball on to the left where Muntari was totally free, having lost Xavi, to fire in the Italians’ second.
Xavi nearly made amends a couple of minutes later with one of our few decent vertical passes of the game, sending the hard-working Pedro scurrying towards the area but Constant stayed with him all the way to block his path. Time was running out quickly and the importance of an away goal was plainly evident, but Milan were still defending courageously. Alba got forward and won a corner but from Xavi’s cross Puyol at the near post headed well wide.
The header from Puyol led to his ‘kleenex’ slipping off and with a large bloody gash on his forehead he was forced to come off with Mascherano coming on quickly as there was not the time to treat Puyol. Five minutes injury time were signalled and Piqué moved into attack in a final push for a late goal. He got his head to one cross, sending the ball towards Pedro but Mexes jumped all over the Canarian to head the ball clear and there was no way the ref was going to blow a penalty at that point.
There may have been a couple of decisions against us but that in no way takes away the fact that Milan played their game superbly and thoroughly deserved the victory. Despite having a big chunk of the possession we rarely did anything very imaginative, preferring not to take risks when the score was 0-0. We moved the ball from side to side but without the necessary speed to stretch Milan’s supposed suspect defence, and there were few forward runs from Fabregas and Xavi to try and surprise. Even on the few occasions that Alves or Alba managed to get forward there never looked like being anybody in a good position to get on the end of a cross. When we finally decided to shoot our aim was rarely good: in fact I can only recall the one soft first half effort from Xavi that needed a save. To top it all we had the same individual errors that keep costing us goals at the back. The first goal was pretty unlucky but Boateng shouldn’t have had the freedom to shoot, but the second goal started with a throw in from Alba on the left and we should never lose the ball from these situations. After that I’m not sure whether Puyol was still groggy after his painful whack on the head but he should never have lost that ball to Niang.
There’s nothing for it now. It’s back to winning the league with the visit of Sevilla on Saturday and then we will want two good results in the games with Real Madrid to get the mood right again. The week after we visit the Bernabeu we play Deportivo at home when we should be able to rest everybody to be fully prepared for a classic “remuntada” on March 12. With our defence Milan will no doubt score an away goal so I’m going for a thrilling 4-1 second leg win to take us through to the quarter-finals.
Milan: Abbiati; Abate, Zapata, Mexes, Constant; Montolivo, Ambrosini, Muntari; Boateng, Pazzini (Niang m75), El Shaarawy (Traoré m88).
Barça; Valdés 6; Alves 6, Piqué 6.5, Puyol 5.5 (Mascherano m88, –), Alba 5.5; Xavi 5.5, Busquets 6, Fabregas 5 (Alexis m62, 5.5); Pedro 7, Messi 6, Iniesta 6.
Goals: m56 Boateng 1-0, m81 Muntari 2-0.
Yellow cards: m25 Mexes, m54 Busquets, m57 Piqué, m91 Traoré.
Attendance: 80,000

Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Place : Ali Sami Yen Spor Komleksi Türk Telekom Arena, Istanbul, Turkey
Time: Wednesday 19:45 GMT, 20:45 CET, Thursday 01:15 IST (will be telecast on Ten Sports in India)
Referee: William Collum (Scotland)
FBL-TUR-GALATASARAY-DROGBA
The tie between Galatasaray and Schalke may not have the charm as some of the other ties in the round of 16 of the Champions League, but it should still produce some brilliant footballing displays. Schalke, in recent years, have put together a formidable squad, while the much anticipated debuts of Didier Drogba and Wesley Sneijder in the Champions League for Galatasaray will provide the zing in the contest.
This will be the first time Drogba will take to the field in the Champions League after hitting the winning penalty in last season’s final. An unsuccessful spell with Chinese side Shanghai Shenhua was followed by the Ivorian hitman returning to European competition, and much of the attention would fall upon what he and Wesley Sneijder can conjure up for the Turkish giants.
Both Sneijder and Drogba have previously been on teams triumphing in this competition. Drogba won the trophy last season playing a vital role in the campaign for the Blues, while the Dutch midfielder lifted the trophy with Inter Milan in 2010.
Schalke will be up against it, with a number of players sidelined due to injuries and key midfielder Lewis Holtby now plying his trade at Tottenham. On top of the strengthened Galatasaray team, the Ali Sami Yen Spor Komleksi Türk Telekom Arena is one of the most hostile environments for any visiting teams. Unlike games like in which Celtic and Arsenal were involved, the home advantage may be vital in the two-legged tie.
Galatasaray Devil Field Against Manchester United
While Galatasaray will be favourites, Schalke’s record away to Turkish opposition (both 3-3 draws) should give them the confidence to pull off a result. Expect a tight game, even though the likes of Drogba, Yilmaz and Huntelaar should shine.
 
FORM
GALATASARAY: DLWDWW
Dec 23 FT Trabzonspor 0-0 Galatasaray Super Lig
Jan 18 FT Kasimpasa 2-1 Galatasaray Super Lig
Jan 27 FT Galatasaray 2-1 Besiktas Super Lig
Feb 2 FT Bursaspor 1-1 Galatasaray Super Lig
Feb 10 FT Galatasaray 2-0 Antalyaspor Super Lig
Feb 15 FT Akhisar Belediye 1-2 Galatasaray Super Lig
The recent win over Akhisar Belediye, which saw both Sneijder and Drogba come off the bench to score one goal a piece and lead them victory, will give them a lot of confidence. The victory meant that the red and gold extended their lead to six points at the top of the Turkish Super Lig over their fierce rivals Fenerbahce.
The Turkish Giants have lost only once in their last 10 games in the domestic league, but unlike their German opposition, booked their place in the knockout rounds on the last matchday of the group stage courtesy of a win over Manchester United, who had already qualified.
SCHALKE 04: LWDLLD 
Dec 18 FT Schalke 04 1-2 Mainz DFB Pokal (Round of 16)
Jan 18 FT Schalke 04 5-4 Hannover 96 Bundesliga
Jan 26 FT FC Augsburg 0-0 Schalke 04 Bundesliga
Feb 2 FT Schalke 04 1-2 SpVgg Greuther Furth Bundesliga
Feb 9 FT Bayern Munich 4-0 Schalke 04 Bundesliga
Feb 16 FT Mainz 2-2 Schalke 04 Bundesliga
The German side has been on a dismal run of late, which has seen them drop to ninth in the Bundesliga table. New manager Jens Keller, who took over from Huub Stevens in December, is yet to see much success. One win in their last 14 certainly does their confidence no good coming into the game.
Keller’s men will have to look at their early season Champions league performances to draw inspiration from. An unbeaten campaign in the group stages, which included a 2-0 victory at the Emirates over Arsenal, now seems a long time ago.
TEAM NEWS
GALATASARAY
As stated earlier, the game is likely to hand out European debuts to Galatasaray’s star duo of Wesley Sneijder and Didier Drogba. 
Tomas Ujfalusi and Johan Elmander are expected to miss the game due to injuries.
SCHALKE 04
Schalke would welcome the sight of their top-scorer Klaas-Jan Huntelaar back in the fold. The Dutchman is expected to return after having troubles with an eye injury in recent weeks.
However, they will be without the services of a large number of key men such as Kyriakos Papadopoulos, Atsuto Uchida, Ibrahim Afellay and Ciprian Marica, all of whom have been sidelined by injuries.
STATS AND FACTS
0 - Schalke are yet to lose against Turkish opposition in the Champions League (2 wins 2 draws).
- This will be the first ever competitive meeting between the sides.
3 – The Germans have reached the knockout stage for the competition for the third time, after 2007/08 and 2010/11.
4 – Klaas Jan-Huntelaar, who should be back for the Germans, has scored 4 in 5 starts in the group stage.
- Galatasaray have failed to win any of their last 5 home games against German opposition.
- The Turkish side only scored 7 goals in the 6 group stage matches. Joint lowest amongst the 16 teams that qualified. Six of them were from Burak Yilmaz.
12 - Its been 12 years since Galatasaray reached the last eight stage of the competition.
39 - Didier Drogba has found the back of the net on 39 occasions in the Champions League. Only Lionel Messi(56) and Cristiano Ronaldo(44) have scored more in the competition among active players.

Zenit St Petersburg Hulk (R) vies with Malaga’s Eliseu (L) during an UEFA Champions League group C football match in St. Petersburg on November 21, 2012.
A rather interesting study was conducted by GiveMeFootball.com which took a look at the top ten most expensive strikers in respect to their goals per game ratio for their respective clubs in relation to their transfer fee.
Note: The transfer amount used for calculation can be more or less than the actual amount.
Cristiano Ronaldo moved to Real Madrid for £80m, and has been scoring a humongous amount of goals since then. Although technically not a striker, Cristiano Ronaldo’s cost per goal is pretty low in comparison to the other players in the list.
Goals/Games: 165/164
Cost per Goal: £484,848 
Zlatan Ibrahimovic‘s move to Barcelona for £56m turned out to be a bad move for the Spanish giants, and costing more than £2.5m per goal, he stands out as one of the most expensive strikers on the list.
Goals/Games: 22/46
Cost per Goal: £2.57m 
Fernando Torres joined Chelsea for a hefty £50m from Liverpool, and his current ratio of 4.75 goals per Chelsea manager makes one wonder if the Spaniard will ever regain his long lost form.
Goals/Games: 19/67
Cost per Goal: £2.63m
Brazilian attacker Hulk had completed an eyewatering £48.5 million switch to Zenit St Petersburg from Porto this summer, and although it might be too early to compare his goal tally with the other players, he stands at £16.16m per goal. Expensive even by Russian standards!
Goals/Games: 3/13
Cost per Goal: £16.16m
Radamel Falcao joined Atletico Madrid for a staggering £41.5m from Porto, and the Colombian has not disappointed. He has already scored half a century of goals, and looks like he isn’t stopping by any means.
Goals/Games: 50/63
Cost per Goal: £830,000
Sergio Aguero turned out to be one of those few buys that were actually worth the money Manchester City paid. He joined the English Champions for £39.5m and costing almost a million per goal, the Argentine forward score the winner last season against QPR helping his club win the title.
Goals/Games: 37/63
Cost per Goal: £1.07m
Ex-Brazil striker Ronaldo, arguably the best striker in the past 30 years joined Real Madrid for £39.5m in the year 2002. Looking back now, the move looks like a steal for the Spanish capital.

Goals/Games: 83/127
Cost per Goal: £475,903
Andy Carroll  transfer to Liverpool for £35m failed to bear any fruit, and six goals in 42 first team appearances imply he’s felt the strain.
Goals/Games: 11/62
Cost per Goal: £3.18m
David Villa to Barcelona was a safe and successful deal the club had in the recent past in terms of buying strikers. His £35m transfer did nothing but help the club win more trophies, season after season.
Goals/Games: 37/91
Cost per Goal: £945,945
Christian Vieri has played for no fewer than 12 clubs throughout his career, but his move to Inter Milan for £33.5m turned out to be the best move for the player in his career.
Goals/Games: 103/143
Cost per Goal: £325,242

Tuesday, 19 February 2013


ac milan 0-0 fc barcelona leo messi

Milan against Barça in the Champions League. With a total of eleven titles of Europe’s top trophy between them there can be few contests on the world stage that equal the historic rivalry of these two great clubs. Fabio Capello’s Milan famously defeated Johan Cruyff’s dream team 4-0 in the 1994 final and since then the sides have faced each other on no fewer than ten occasions with a balance of four wins for Barça and two for Milan and four draws.
Last season the teams met both in the group stage and again in quarter-finals. The first group stage match ended in a 2-2 draw at Camp Nou after Thiago Silva headed in a last minute equalizer for Milan and this was followed by Barça’s impressive 2-3 victory in the San Siro with Pep Guardiola bravely opting for a defence of three. The first leg of the quarter finals ended in an intense 0-0 draw in Italy and then Barça won the return 3-1 with two goals from Leo Messi and a third from Andrés Iniesta.
Milan have made massive changes since last season with a big clear out of the older players. Nesta, Seedorf, Inzaghi, Oddo, Zambrotta, Van Bommel, Maxi Lopez and Seedorf have either retired or moved on but the biggest loss for the Rossoneri is the sale of star players Ibrahimovic, Thiago Silva and Pato. Coach Massimiliano Allegri recognised the need for new and younger blood and brought in a number of signings including Cristian Zapata, Kevin Constant, Nigel de Jong, Riccardo Montolivo, Sulley Muntari, Bakaye Traoré, M’Baye Niang, Giampaolo Pazzini and our old friend Bojan Krkic.
With so many new faces perhaps it is normal that Milan struggled to adapt during the first months of the season. However, there has been a recent improvement and in their seven games so far in 2013 they have won five and drawn two, moving up to fourth place in Serie A although they are still 11 points behind leaders Juventus. The recent winter signing of Mario Balotelli from Manchester City has made a big impact with the flamboyant striker scoring four in his first three games.
ac milan 0-0 barcelona puyol ibrahimovic

Fortunately for Barça, Balotelli is ineligible to play for Milan in this season’s tournament though Allegri has plenty of options available in his oversized squad. It’s a tough job trying to anticipate Allegri’s team selection though I imagine he will play a 4-3-1-2, similar to that used last season, with Kevin-Prince Boateng playing behind two strikers. In goal there is still the Mussolini-loving Christian Abbiati while in defence it could Abate, Zapata, Mexes and Constant though there is a strong case for De Sciglio to take one of the full back positions. For the midfield three we could see Flamini, Ambrosini and Traoré though Montolivo and Nocerino are also in contentention, while in front of Boateng, star player Stephan El-Shaarawy seems to have overcome a knee injury and should lead the attack with either Pazzini, the impressive 18-year old Niang or Bojan as his partner.
Barça have named twenty players for the trip to Milan with the main absences being Adriano and David Villa who haven’t recovered in time. The good news is that Xavi is fit again and he should return to the midfield. At this point of the season, with a twelve-point lead in La Liga and a Copa del Rey semi-final next week, everything is still on for a possible treble. The main concerns are for a defence that has failed to keep a clean sheet in the last nine games. In the knock out competitions we could be made to pay very highly for any slip-up and our defenders will need to show maximum concentration to avoid any mistakes.
Tito Vilanova and Jordi Roura will again have to decide on where best to play Andrés Iniesta. While there seems little doubt that his best position is in midfield, by playing him on the left wing there is room for Fabregas who has been so important to this season’s team. The other available options for the left wing are Alexis and Tello, but Alexis’s poor finishing recently makes him a risky option in such an important game while Tello still seems a better option as a substitute.
Barça go into the tie as clear favourites though there is no room for complacency. We were expected to beat Chelsea in last season’s semi-final but a lot can go wrong in football over 180 minutes and despite doubts about the strength of the current Milan team there is certainly potential for the Italians to cause an upset. Their name and history command respect, we should not be taking this game lightly.
Barça’s 20-man squad: Valdés, Pinto, Oier, Alves, Montoya, Piqué, Bartrá, Puyol, Mascherano, Alba, Song, Busquets, Xavi, Thiago, Fabregas, Iniesta, Pedro, Messi, Alexis, Tello.
Possible teams:
Milan: Abbiati; Abate, Zapata, Mexes, Constant; Flamini, Ambrosini, Traoré; Boateng; El-Shaarawy, Piazzini.
Barça: Valdés; Alves, Piqué, Puyol, Alba; Xavi, Busquets, Fabregas; Pedro, Messi, Iniesta.
Prediction: Milan 2 Barça 2
Date: Wednesday 20 February 2013. Kick off 8.45 pm local time