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General Football 23/24

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    Holy **** I read that Michu is now playing in the 4th tier of Spain ?

    How the **** did that happen when he played at Swansea that year and scored a **** load of goals he looked like some player.

    Really surprised we didn't spend 30 million on him , oh well another one that got away.

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      Originally posted by gratziani View Post
      Holy **** I read that Michu is now playing in the 4th tier of Spain ?

      How the **** did that happen when he played at Swansea that year and scored a **** load of goals he looked like some player.

      Really surprised we didn't spend 30 million on him , oh well another one that got away.


      “I lasted 60 minutes and then my ankle said: ‘Enough.’” Michu walked off the pitch that night in Bern and did not walk back on again until last Thursday night in Langreo, 441 days later and a long way away. The Premier League’s top scorer at Christmas 2012, an international with the world champions Spain in 2013, he started 2014 in the Champions League with Napoli; now, aged 29, after a series of operations on his right ankle, he hopes to restart his career from the bottom with Unión Popular de Langreo in Spain’s regionalised fourth tier.

      Michu’s last game was at the Wankdorf stadium in the Europa League. More than a year later he finally played again, at Ganzábal alongside the river Nalón in the wet, green hills of Asturias, surrounded by mines and foundries; an artificial pitch with a municipal swimming pool at one end of the ground and a block of flats at the other. His return came in a 3-0 win over Club Deportivo Covadonga in Spain’s Tercera, a league with 17 divisions, down below Primera, Segunda and the 80-team Segunda B, itself split between four regionalised groups.

      Langreo’s manager calls them “amateur”, although some players are paid fees of up to €500 a month. Michu is not one of them. The captain of Covadonga is Negredo; not Álvaro but his brother César. When Michu came off in Bern, he was replaced by Marek Hamsik; when he goes on here, wearing 16, he replaces Carlos Viesca, a 23-year-old striker. Seven hundred and 16 people are there to see it.

      At one end, someone has hung six Michu shirts over a barrier: Oviedo, Rayo Vallecano, Napoli, Swansea City home and away and Spain. Diego Cervero is here – the captain of second division Real Oviedo is among Michu’s closest friends, with whom he began his career 20km away at the Carlos Tartiere stadium. Michu’s father is here, too, and so is the player’s brother, Hernán Pérez Cuesta. He really could not miss this: Hernán Pérez is Langreo’s coach.


      Michu began training with Langreo in the summer. He was still owned by Swansea and there were offers to go to first division clubs in Spain and interest from England, too, but Michu knew that he was not right and that joining them would not be right either. “You have to be honourable in life,” he says. Instead, he began a process of rehabilitation that he knew might fail following another operation. There is little cartilage left in his right ankle, leaving bone against bone. “I don’t remember what it is like to be pain-free,” he says.


      Hernán Pérez, his brother and coach, says: “He has suffered terribly: many people would have thrown in the towel already.” Langreo offered Michu a place to train and, eventually, to play. So, too, did Covadonga. Their manager, Fermín Álvarez, knows Michu from Oviedo, where Michu made his debut aged 17, in the same Tercera to which he has returned 12 years later.

      Covadonga also agreed to move the game from 3 January to Thursday night, so Michu could play. Although he rescinded his contract with Swansea, he had to wait until the transfer window opened to be able to formally register with the Royal Asturias Football Federation. He had hoped to play in November; now, at last, he could. On the way on to the pitch, a slogan is painted above the door: “We’re in this together.” Michu says later: “There are no words to express how grateful I am to everyone.”

      Michu turns up a little before 6pm, an hour and a half before kick-off, a bag slung over his shoulder. He is nervous; more nervous, he later admits, than when he visited Old Trafford or Anfield. “I couldn’t sleep last night; I couldn’t even take a siesta this afternoon, and I always have,” he says. “It seems strange that I couldn’t control my emotions but that’s the way it is.”

      He starts on the bench, photographers gathering to take pictures. But at half-time he is out there warming up with Álvaro Vázquez, the physical coach. In the 48th minute, at 8.39pm, with the score at 1-0, he comes on. Slowly, he eases his way into the game. Playing just behind the forwards, he has a couple of chances, one that he hits over, another that he passes instead of taking on. A volley flies past the post. He provides two assists that are ruled out by the linesman and starts the moves that lead to the second and third goals.

      At the full-time whistle, he heads straight to the dressing room, the first off. He is not comfortable with the attention but things have gone well.


      “It was a special day,” his brother and coach says. “Even if you have played in huge stadiums, that feeling you get as a footballer is the same everywhere and you need it. He had not played for a long time. Above all, we have to recover him emotionally. Hopefully he will be better with every game and we’ll see how far he can go. The president said he can stay here for as long as he wants and go when he wants. Let’s see how his ankle responds, let’s see if we can lift him emotionally – and then whatever will be, will be.”

      For now, what Michu wants to be is happy, a footballer. His ankle does not feel entirely comfortable but he does not expect it to. “There’s always some pain. I hardly know what it is like to play without pain but I felt good,” he says. “It’s been so long. I remember my last game … it was an artificial pitch and I lasted 60 minutes and then my ankle said: ‘Enough.’ Now I hope to rise again. I’m not really planning anything: enjoy the next session, then play a bit longer in the next game. Then we’ll see if I can compete at a higher level or not.”

      There are still doubts, then? “Yes.”

      He adds: “I can play. The problem is: what level? I would love to reach the level I was at again, or who knows if even higher, but it will be difficult, I know that. I came here to be happy. It’s football, whatever level you’re at. I’m playing, competing. Long-term plans? None. Tomorrow I train and on Sunday we play Lugones.”
      That rug really tied the room together.

      Comment


        Very honest of the chap not to take a huge wage off Swansea due to fitness issues & rip up his contract.... very few would do that
        What do you mean it could've been anyone? Name me one person who's got a grudge against penguins

        Batman

        F*** off!!!

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          Comment


            "very unsportsmanlike conduct"

            ****ing hell. Quite dark that.
            Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

            Comment


              Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
              "very unsportsmanlike conduct"

              ****ing hell. Quite dark that.
              Yeah, when the goalie kicked him I thought the rest of the video was just going to be replays of that but obviously not!!

              Comment


                there must be a bit of back story there. That's some top Level dodging by the no9 though. He should consider American Football.
                Modifying post.

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                  Worst thing you can do in a situation like that is run, they all just get fixated on catching you.

                  Comment


                    Bolton have escaped an immediate winding up order but are struggling to pay the staff this month.

                    Currently 7 points from safety at the bottom of the championship.

                    Back in court on the 22nd of Feb and they need to sell some land or players to secure their future.

                    2004-5 season they finished 6th in the league.

                    Show's when you fall out of the top division you need to get back in quick.

                    Comment


                      Bolton are the new Portsmouth. They'll be wound up soon and a 'new' club will take its place.

                      Any football club owner needs to ensure that all contracts they hand out take into account relegation - god knows how Bolton has managed to rack up £172.9m of debt. A mental amount for such a small club.
                      James Philip Milner Fanclub #1

                      Curtis Julian Jones Fanclub #1

                      Comment


                        Originally posted by Rich View Post
                        Bolton are the new Portsmouth. They'll be wound up soon and a 'new' club will take its place.

                        Any football club owner needs to ensure that all contracts they hand out take into account relegation - god knows how Bolton has managed to rack up £172.9m of debt. A mental amount for such a small club.
                        Bankrolled by a wealthy owner and then the money dried up.

                        Potentially a story for a load of clubs in the future I would guess.

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by Rich View Post
                          god knows how Bolton has managed to rack up £172.9m of debt. A mental amount for such a small club.
                          Remarkable isn't it? All the more so when one remembers they held their own in the Prem for several years, its as if the income from that spell never existed. They obviously spent it badly....*cough*

                          Comment


                            Isn't something like 95% of their debt actually owed to Gartside?
                            Football without Origi is nothing

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by ChesterDave View Post
                              Isn't something like 95% of their debt actually owed to Gartside?
                              Eddie Davies.

                              It costs £30million-a-year to run Bolton and lifelong supporter Davies wants to guarantee the club has enough funds to run until the end of the season – hence the demand for £15million (half-a-season) up front before he gives up control.

                              Beyond that, Isle of Man-based businessman Davies doesn't want any more money and is prepared to walk away having written off £185million of his personal fortune.

                              Comment


                                Fellow West Brom striker Salomon Rondon, 26, says he is feeling the pressure of having cost £12m. (Birmingham Mail)
                                How the **** do you think Benteke feels

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