The experts say the same thing about a top sportsperson’s background. They’ll have started young. You don’t often come across someone at the top level who took up their sport later than age 12-14. They’ll have something called “natural talent.” This will make them stand out from their peers. They’ll work incredibly hard, or at…
British Movietone Archive Now Free Online
A sleepless night, not helped at all by the discovery that the entire British Movietone film archive is available to view free online. British Movietone were/are a newsreel company, competitors to Pathe News whose archive is already online. Naturally this means that the amount of historical football clips available on the net has pretty much…
What Where the Worst Years in Football History?
No trouble naming the great years: 1946 (England’s greatest ever national side), 1953 (Puskas and co.), 1962 (Garrincha and Pele), 1966, 1970 (Pele and co again, this time in glorious technicolor), 1972 (Netzer’s West Germany), 1974 (total football) and 1982 (Brazil once again), 2006 for the Argentines. You’ll have your own candidates in spades. It’s…
More on that word “Soccerâ€
In pursuit of something quite different, I came across the following. In New Zealand and Australia, “soccer” has been the most common usage since the early part of the twentieth century. In 2005, the game was relaunched in Australia as “football” and the nickname for the national side, the “Socceroos” was expected (by the relevant…
The Special K Revolution Thus Far
Newcastle United are going to owe Premiership survival to one thing come May. Their good start under Sam Allardyce. Indeed, that might look all very pollyannaish come the end of the season, because not a few of the clubs beneath them are better run and are capable of overtaking Toon with a little luck. As…
The Ten Greatest Mistakes in British Football History
Most of you will have read the contributions to Danny Finkelstein’s Ten Greatest Mistakes in British History question in The Times. I found most of them dubious – the Chartists not arming the London masses? But it led me to think about what the top ten mistakes in British football history might be. In the…
Why British Football Needs To Become More British To Succeed
This man went to the same state school as David Beckham: [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bOONhFutsrg&rel=1] Twenty years earlier, and in the north, these men were also products of ordinary backgrounds: ..whereas the man you see here was an autodidact: I was on my uppers during the last recession, and took comfort in the humble location of this man’s…
England 2 Switzerland 1
I came in just at the end of the first half: Jenas had given England a lead. Jenas? And, later in the second half, Gareth Barry came off. Barry? Match of the Day was refusing to tell johnny-come-latelies like myself who was playing, so it took some time to dawn on me that Capello had…
What We Learn From Capello’s “First Elevenâ€
This is more like it – a team so utterly unlike the one I’d hazarded as to make the Switzerland game the most interesting and exciting since Sven’s debut against Spain. That is, of course, if the Beeb have read the runes correctly. David James; Wes Brown, Rio Ferdinand, Matthew Upson, Ashley Cole; David Bentley,…
Capello Kremlinology
UPDATE: Gerrard is captain, and the team will know who they are at some time tomorrow. I could have done without this particular choice of words from Capello: Gerrard is important because he can pass on things, transmit things and inspire the players. A kind of dread takes hold… ORIGINAL ARTICLE With England due to…