2013/14 BPL, Gold Cup, WC Qualifying...etc sponsored by nyjunc

Discussion in 'BS Forum' started by Barry the Baptist, Jul 16, 2013.

  1. Brook!

    Brook! Soft Admin...2018 Friendliest Member Award Winner

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    Hey Barry

    That was one awesome ass kicking. My Saturday was crazy good after the win. About our PM. He is a thief and an asshole. Just because of him, thinking of dumping my Turkish citizenship. Such a dictator yet Obama loves him. So sad.
     
  2. Barry the Baptist

    Barry the Baptist Hello son, would you like a lolly?
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    Yeah, not to get political but him leaving the Kurds out to dry and letting ISIS advance is horseshit, does he not realize the next stop after Kurdistan is Southern Turkey?
     
  3. Brook!

    Brook! Soft Admin...2018 Friendliest Member Award Winner

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    He does. But he is a fascist. I am also Kurdish by the way.
     
  4. Barry the Baptist

    Barry the Baptist Hello son, would you like a lolly?
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    They are about the only people in that entire fucked up region we should be training and giving weapons to. They actually get it.
     
  5. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    http://bhn.rr.com/articles/2014/11/12/g/gibraltar-s-amateurs-will-try-to-stop-world-champs

    GIBRALTAR (AP) — With a firefighter in goal, a customs agent anchoring the defense, a police officer and store worker roaming the midfield and a gym teacher on the attack, the best players from this rocky, 2.6-square mile territory will take on the world champions from Germany.

    European soccer qualifiers often feature mammoth mismatches, as "minnows" such as San Marino and Malta take on world powers including England, Spain and Italy. But Friday's match might be one of the biggest underdog stories ever, with UEFA's newest and smallest member trying to avoid humiliation against the team that won the World Cup just four months ago.

    "They are 10 worlds apart from us," Gibraltar captain and customs officer Roy Chipolina said. "But it's something I'll be able to tell my grandchildren."

    Germany embarrassed World Cup host Brazil, full of some of the top players in the world, with a 7-1 victory in the World Cup semifinals. And the Germans say they won't take it easy on Gibraltar in Nuremberg, wanting to stay on track to qualify for the European championship. Goal differential can sometimes come in to play as a tiebreaker, so even if the outcome is decided, the wave of German attacks on goal will continue.

    "It is important to concentrate on the game against Gibraltar," said Germany defender Jerome Boateng. "We want to make a point but we have respect for every opponent."

    Chipolina, 31, spends much of his time patrolling the borders of the sunny British outpost at the entrance of the Mediterranean Sea, where he's tasked with stopping drug smugglers. On Friday, he'll need to stop Thomas Mueller and Toni Kroos currently ranked as the No. 1 and No. 6 players in the AP's Global Football 10.

    "Keeping them to single figures would be great," bar manager Richard Mew said as he poured a pint of beer in the Cannon pub, located just off the main street running through Gibraltar.

    Gibraltar has three unheralded professionals in its roster of 23 players. Compare that to the world-famous millionaires on the German team.

    "Germany could put their under 15s out and still win," Mew said.

    Soccer has become huge in Gibraltar ever since its national team was accepted as the 54th and smallest member in Europe following a 16-year fight for recognition. The move had previously been resisted by neighbouring Spain, which disputes the sovereignty of the territory it ceded to Britain in 1713.

    Acceptance by UEFA meant that the territory — only about twice the size of Central Park in New York with a population of less than 30,000 — was thrown in with the big boys of European soccer.

    Players picked for the national team are drawn from amateur clubs that play in the Gibraltar Premier League. When they can't get access to the one and only full-sized soccer field on the territory for training sessions, they have to improvise.

    "We just go running around the streets," midfielder Jeremy Lopez said. "We go to a car park and do some sprints, fitness. It's ridiculous, old school."

    Old men walking their dogs sometimes stop and watch.

    Like Chipolina, Lopez combines playing the sport he loves with a full-time job, as a researcher for the Ministry of Sports in Gibraltar. He works 9-5 and goes training with his local team three of four times a week. Then there are games on weekends and Lopez also finds time to hit the gym.

    He is supposed to be getting married soon but some weeks, his fiancee barely sees him.

    "I have three different lives," Lopez said. "Family, football and work."

    Representing Gibraltar involves taking a week off work and is especially tough for those in the private sector. Playing in 10 European qualifiers a year requires 50 days off work and most Gibraltar players have 25 days of annual vacation. They must rely on the goodwill of their employers to accept a request from the Gibraltar Football Association to take leave — usually unpaid.

    "It's hard enough balancing football, work and family," Chipolina said. "Then you've got to use your annual leave for football, so you have to tell your wife we aren't going on holiday this year."

    Chipolina has gone from playing in front of 10 spectators a few years ago to playing in front of crowds of 35,000 in European Championship qualifiers.

    "You find yourself switching off in games because you are just not used to it," said striker Kyle Casciaro, an operations manager for a shipping firm. "Ireland scored seven goals in the first 63 minutes against us. I looked around and people were chanting, 'We want 10, we want 10.'"

    So far in qualifying, Gibraltar has lost 7-0 to Ireland and Poland, and 3-0 to Georgia.

    Oh, for a similar score against Germany.

    "Everyone's been telling us, 'If they don't score more than seven, we are better than Brazil,'" Gibraltar defender Jack Sargent said. "That's our target."
     
  6. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    Tottenham at Besiktas in Europa action today

    lights went out during the match, causing a 10 minute or so delay.

    They got them back, they played until the 90 minutes of regulation passed, and just then, the lights went out again. Rigged by the home side? lol

    1-0 Besiktas, still a few minutes of added time supposed to be played.
     
  7. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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    they finally resumed and finished. Took about 135 minutes for the match, from start to finish. Besiktas held on 1-0, and won the group.
     
  8. Brook!

    Brook! Soft Admin...2018 Friendliest Member Award Winner

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    I hate Besiktas as they are arch rivals of my team Galatasaray. But this wasn't rigged. The stadium the game is being played is in a remote area in Istanbul. Middle of nowhere. Besiktas plays in that stadium this year because their original stadium is being rebuilt from scratch. This thing happened in a Turkish league match at the same stadium a few years ago as well. Crappy stadium in the end with bad infrastructure. Fuck Besiktas. I hope they lose in the next round.
     
  9. Barry the Baptist

    Barry the Baptist Hello son, would you like a lolly?
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    Well you have a reason to root for Liverpool as we drew them in Europa League.
     
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  10. Yisman

    Yisman Newbie
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