Review of United, Chelsea and Arsenal Games

The past two days have been testament to how unpredictable and exciting the Barclays premier league is with the stand out match being Stoke vs Chelsea despite it ending in a stalemate.
The past two days have been testament to how unpredictable and exciting the Barclays premier league is with the stand out match being Stoke vs Chelsea despite it ending in a stalemate.
Most people will be thinking of bright lights of the premier league upon reading that title, and quite rightly so to be fair. Will it be Manchester United’s second half destruction of West Ham United, or Roy Hodgson getting one over on his old club and guiding his West Brom team to a victory over Liverpool, Newcastle hammering Wolves or even in the championship with Norwich battering Scunthorpe?
The final article in the Financial Fair Play series, looking at how the future of internet streaming will affect clubs
Wenger is enraged, stating that as brilliant as it may be, Escape is a one person song and would be too difficult to attempt as a duo. Rice disagrees and asks for the opinion of all five members of the crowd, who remain disinterested.
At the end of the 2009-2010 season most football scribes and fans of Manchester United foresaw an overhaul of the united squad in the summer.
International friendlies are often regarded as dull and meaningless interruptions to the domestic season. However, England wouldn’t have learned these five things, without last night’s thrilling friendly at Wembley
Wake me up when it’s all over.
The FA's decision to allow the players participating in the Champions League to return to their clubs is very disrespectful to the clubs fighting relegation.
I sit on the fence when it comes to diving/cheating/simulation - whatever you want to call it. Nobody likes to see a player in trouble for nothing, and games decided by cheating, but I know that when I play that if there is a minute to go and the only way I was guaranteed a goal was to roll over a loose leg, I’m taking it. Having said this, I don’t think you can justify what you’re about to see:
Why the Financial Fair Play regulations could cause as many problems as they solve. The second in the FFP series
How many times do you hear the argument, ‘we’re a bigger club that you are?’ Well, after a row in the local boozer last night, I thought I would stir it up even more by putting the Premiership in order of big to little. There is no logic in the order, crowd size, trophies, history – nothing weighs more than anything else, this is just a general opinion supported by my argument as to why I place the club where I do. Feel free to slate my table, but support your argument with a reason as to what make a big club, a big club…
Here we go again: The manager’s lost the plot, the players aren’t happy, another PR disaster; the list of familiar cries continues.
These younger fans voting, haven’t seen George Best at the peak of his powers, or even clips of video footage, and haven’t seen midfield masters such as Bryan Robson, and the legendary Bobby Charlton. It was those players that bought about United’s first success in Europe, then against the mighty Benfica.
Since the debacle of South Africa, the youth of England are being looked at in a different light, the golden generation is over and the new boys need to be blooded in and tried out. Here is a rundown of who I think could make the grade at each position: