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    I read somewhere that Pele had tried to score from the halfway line throughout his career and never managed it, then you have Xabi Alonso scores 2 - one with his right and one with his left. Absolutely incredible really.

    I wouldn't be surprised if that feat was never repeated in top flight football.
    K ris90210

    Comment


      Originally posted by Mattshark View Post
      Alonso's first was without a keeper.
      Alonso's second was with the keeper slipping.

      Suarez's was with the keeper in goal, just superbly hit.
      Ruddy was on the edge of his box when Suarez takes aim, he was struggling to get back. It was still an astonishingly good goal though, I'm taking nothing away from it.

      But Alonso's against Newcastle was a bit better

      Comment


        Originally posted by Norbert Dentressangle View Post
        Ruddy was on the edge of his box when Suarez takes aim, he was struggling to get back. It was still an astonishingly good goal though, I'm taking nothing away from it.

        But Alonso's against Newcastle was a bit better
        But the keeper was at the edge of his box for Alonso's goal against Newcastle too though. Are you trying to make out he was stood inside the 6 yard box or something?

        Comment


          Originally posted by Pablo1981 View Post
          But the keeper was at the edge of his box for Alonso's goal against Newcastle too though. Are you trying to make out he was stood inside the 6 yard box or something?
          No! Matt said Ruddy was in his goal, I was just correcting him

          ****ing hell, they were both great. That'll do

          Comment


            Cretins already out in force on the latest Vickery blog on BBC.
            Football without Origi is nothing

            Comment


              Support still swells for Suarez



              Gus Poyet was recently remembering the advice he received when he joined Chelsea 15 years ago.

              "I had a team-mate at Zaragoza who had spent four or five years in England and he told me all the things that I shouldn't do," he said to the Uruguayan press.

              "'Don't dive in the area, trying to get a penalty, don't score a goal with your hand, don't try to cheat the ref, don't try to pressure him to give a yellow card to an opponent'. At that moment I wondered where I was going. I thought I was on my way to another planet! But I adapted."

              Football might be a universal language, but we speak it with different accents - one of the reasons that bringing in a player from a different culture always contains elements of a gamble. Not only is he a human being who has to adapt to life in a new country, he may also have to change some aspects of his behaviour on the field - or face the consequences.

              All of this has since been discovered by one of Poyet's compatriots. When Luis Suarez joined Liverpool I imagined that his attacking thrust and the range of his talent would make him a firm favourite with the club's fans.

              I also suspected that his competitive nature and temperamental streak would mark him out as the type of player whom opposing supporters love to hate. I did not bargain on an international incident.

              Suarez, of course, served an eight- game suspension for racially abusing Patrice Evra of Manchester United, and attempted to defend himself by pointing out that such behaviour was not considered unacceptable in Uruguayan football.

              Whatever the rights and wrongs of the case, it does not seem to have harmed the player's prestige at home.

              Soon after February's infamous 'non-handshake' at Old Trafford, Nacional supporters turned their team's Copa Libertadores tie at home to Libertad of Paraguay into a pro-Luis Suarez rally. There were banners aplenty in praise of their old hero.

              Nacional, of course, are the club where Suarez came through the youth ranks and made his name. It is only to be expected, then, that a bond will continue to exist between the player and the fans.

              But the backing for Suarez has gone well beyond his old haunts. Uruguayan politicians queued up to express their indignation at his punishment. Even President Jose Mujica got in the act, the veteran left winger declaring his full support for Suarez and commenting that some people did not seem to realise that the young man at the centre of the scandal was a poor kid who had not studied to be a diplomat.

              Back home, the hero status of Suarez is safe. To many of them the Evra incident is of little importance when weighed against the service the player has already given in the sky blue shirt of his nation. "Other countries have their history," goes the expression "while Uruguay has its football."

              In South Africa two years ago Uruguay reached their first World Cup semi-final since 1970 - and only their second since going down in extra-time to the great Hungary side of 1954.

              In Uruguay successive generations had only been able to hear tales of their country's footballing prowess from their grandparents - until South Africa when they could climb on the roller-coaster and enjoy it for themselves.

              Since then Suarez has gone from strength to strength. In terms of national team football, no-one on earth was better than him in 2011.

              He made an inspired start to the 2014 World Cup qualifiers, scoring five times in three games. And before that he was the outstanding player last July as Uruguay won the Copa America for a record 15th time, putting them ahead of hosts Argentina in the all-time winners list.

              As they celebrated on the field, the Uruguayan players sang about being champions again, just as they were the first time - a reference to the triumph of their predecessors in the inaugural Copa, held in 1916.

              It is this respect for footballing tradition that gives Saturday's FA Cup Final a certain allure in Uruguay. The idea of a domestic cup competition is not a strong one in South America; Brazil has had such a trophy for the last 20 years, Colombia started recently and Argentina's is in its debut campaign.

              But well entrenched is the practice of a big game to decide the destiny of a title - many league championships end this way. Throw in the historical importance of the competition and the presence on the Wembley pitch of Suarez, fresh from a hat-trick against Norwich, and it is clear the FA Cup final will be closely followed in Uruguay.

              Part of this is down to Poyet, now the Brighton manager. His time at Chelsea did much to raise awareness of English football in Uruguay and also important were his exploits on the road to the 2000 FA Cup win.

              At a time when the Premier League was starting to build a global audience, Poyet made it clear to his compatriots that the English game also contained a historic cup competition with a tradition going all the way back to 1872.

              And so well has Poyet adapted that 12 years later he is still giving the English game the benefit of his international experience. It is hard to imagine Suarez still being in the country 12 years from now - there has even been speculation that he could be on his way out in the near future.

              But however long he stays, his time in England will certainly be remembered - for reasons both positive and negative. He will hope that his contribution to the 131st FA Cup final will be recalled with pride by fans on both sides of the Atlantic.
              What do you mean it could've been anyone? Name me one person who's got a grudge against penguins

              Batman

              F*** off!!!

              Comment


                Stuart MCFC in the comments section, well looking at his previous he seems a little obsessed.
                Football without Origi is nothing

                Comment


                  Suarez shows disrespect for the game and fair play by constantly diving, he has won more penalties than any other player in the league (statistical fact) and that is no coincidence.
                  ??? Surely not?
                  Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
                    ??? Surely not?
                    I can think of 4 he won. Sunderland - Clear cut, Everton - Clear cut, WBA - Clear cut and Arsenal - not clear cut.
                    www.Liverpoolbaymlt.org

                    www.twitter.com/lbmlt

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                    Comment


                      Maybe the coincidence is that he likes to run into the box. If he is always in there with the ball, hes going to get fouled.
                      *Except Michael, who died.

                      Comment


                        Ooo lots of new comments since I read last night, good to see the one suggesting Suarez is the enemy of the black race and likely to start WW3 has ben referred to moderation. As has the lunatic who claims video evidence proving he was guilty.
                        Football without Origi is nothing

                        Comment


                          Anyone want a new avatar?

                          (preference as always to those slackers without one already)





                          I could not dig, I dared not rob:
                          Therefore I lied to please the mob.
                          Now all my lies are proved untrue
                          And I must face the men I slew.
                          What tale shall serve me here among
                          Mine angry and defrauded young?

                          Comment


                            I'll take the bottom one if thats ok.
                            "Its not about the long ball or the short ball, its about the right ball." Bob Paisley

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
                              ??? Surely not?
                              I thought Young had won like 7 pens this season, Suarez is second I think with 4 or 5.
                              * The above is posted in my opinion. Feel free to disagree.

                              Comment


                                And two of Young's have been clear dives.
                                Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                                Comment

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