Friday, 16 October 2009

BAFFLED BRUCE DEFENDS BECKHAM DECISION

Sunderland manager Steve Bruce has today defended his decision to name former England captain David Beckham as his man of the match in his country's 3-0 World Cup qualifying victory over Belarus.


Viewers and pundits alike were astonished by his decision to hand the accolade to the LA Galaxy star, who had only played 35 minutes of the match. It seems even Fabio Capello was a little taken aback by the award, likening it to Barack Obama's winning of the Nobel Peace price just months after he was sworn in as US President.

However, former Manchester United captian Bruce, who was working for ITV as a pundit for the game, has claimed he chose the right man and is shocked by the "carry-on" that has followed the game.

He said: "It's incredible. When I was in the stadium, he came on to the pitch and let's be fair, for 50 minutes, it was dull, boring, uninteresting. That's the way I looked at it.

"David Beckham comes on to the scene, the whole stadium in unison rises to him and I thought, 'Blooming heck! Wow! Fantastic! Now Dave, what have you got?'.

"For me, for the 35, 40 minutes, he lit up Wembley, the way his attitude was, and I suppose that's why Mr Capello keeps picking him to go into the squad, to do something like that for him.

"Maybe he can't do it for 90 minutes. However, for me, he had an impact. That's the way I saw it, that's the way I called it."

Nothing to do with the United connection then Steve? It would seem that two goals is no longer enough to get you the man of the match award. Peter Crouch will have to buy his own bubbly this weekend.

Wednesday, 14 October 2009

SUPER SUMMER SIGNINGS


It would appear that Arsene Wenger has done it again. Recently named Arsenal.com player of the month for the second time in a row - Thomas Vermaelen is quickly proving himself a world class player and almost undoubtedly the signing of the summer.

You can throw the who's who of footballing talent into the mix and suggest that the signing of the summer is Cristiano Ronaldo, or Kaka or Xabi Alonso. At £80million, £55million, and £30million respectively it is hard to see how an overall bargain has been achieved there. At a mere £10million and a goal return of 5 from defence already this season, Vermaelen has shown that the megabucks are not always needed.

Elsewhere in the Premier League, Darren Bent, who i believe has always been a quality player, is proving a snip at £16.5million. With a return of 7 goals in the league already this season, Bent is starting to show some of the form he once had with Charlton. At Tottenham, he had found his chances in the first team extremely limited, largely spent warming the bench for Robbie Keane or Dimitar Berbatov.

Steve Bruce has done some excellent summer business at the Stadium of Light, not only has he secured a guaranteed goal scorer and almost perfect strike partner for Kenwyne Jones, he has also grabbed one of the most promising English central midfielders in the country in Lee Cattermole, and Lorik Cana, one of the most solid midfield rocks in the French league last season for a combined £11million. With finds such as Wilson Palacios (albeit with a little help from Arsene Wenger), Maynor Figueroa and Hugo Rodallega, Bruce has already built a reputation for finding hidden gems.

Players like Sebastien Bassong and Alberto Aquilani may prove in time to be huge signings for Tottenham and Liverpool respectively provided they can stay injury free, but until now Thomas Vermaelen has certainly been this summer's "Super Signing".

Tuesday, 13 October 2009

EXPERIMENTATION TIME FOR PROFESSOR CAPELLO


The luxury of qualifying early for South Africa next summer gives Fabio Capello a chance to experiment and sift out some of the squad's aging deadwood. The next qualifier against Belarus will give younger players the opportunity to experience the competitive edge which a friendly can't provide.

With up and coming players like Ashley Young and Gabriel Agbonlahor of Aston Villa and Jack Wilshere and Kieron Gibbs of Arsenal, Capello can now experiment with different strike partnerships, which up until now have failed to shine.

Against Ukraine, players like Rio Ferdinand and Emile Heskey once again showed that they have perhaps been handed one too many opportunities to prove their worth. Now it is time to try something new. Heskey looked hopeless on the ball, hardly winning anything in the air, and running into trouble on the ground. Even against Croatia, he made a strong case against himself, missing two clear cut openings. The huge problem with Emile Heskey that many people have is his lack of goals. The last two games have only moved to strengthen that view.

Rio Ferdinand, this season, has almost looked like fish out of water. Early signs were there to be seen - agaisnt Manchester City - giving the ball away, and failing to prevent Craig Bellamy from scoring from a tight angle. In Dnipropetrovsk, Ferdinand once again showed that he was not at his best, he almost looked clueless as the ball came over the top. He looked like a Sunday league player caught short because he had stitch from the beer he drank the night before.

If Capello thinks we can win the World Cup with Rio in defence and Heskey up top, he is very much mistaken. Time for a change, only two small changes, but he needs to start the experimentation now...before it's too late.

A few pieces of my mind - basically just stuff I either feel like writing down or think that others should indulge in.