The Spanish Super Cup isn't really the most important piece of silverware in the world, however, the phrase "If you build it, they will come" certainly applies to any Barca-Real clash as 92,000 packed Camp Nou. The coaches may say the game doesn't matter, and that they're more worried about winning La Liga, however, you never see the "B" squad in a clasico.
Last year's Supercopa won by Barcelona became marred by an on-field brawl that may have sparked the fire to some of the most competitive Spanish football ever played between the two sides.
The first half: absolute snoozer. These 45 minutes would have been better spent cleaning my room, taking a nap, or better yet, watching a Europa League playoff mtach. Not so much dazzle, Messi missed a couple chances he normally converts. Other than that, not much action.
Nobody expected a five goal second half however. The focus was all bestowed on the fancy runs of Iniesta, who caused all sorts of trouble for Real.
Goal #1 came on the head of who else? Cristiano Ronaldo, becoming the first Real player to score in four consecutive visits to Barcelona.
Before you could blink, it was all square, and the "Real has the lead... ANDDDDD it's gone" memes were viral. Real didn't get a touch before Mascherano found Pedro, who showed great composure to level.
Shortly after, Iniesta was brought down after Sergio Ramos brought him down after his fancy footwork drew an obvious penalty, which Messi converted.
The 78th minute saw Iniesta do it all himself, beating Khedira, drawing two defenders before laying it off for Xavi who found the ol' onion bag to make it 3-1, and the 2nd leg seemingly wouldn't matter.
AND THEN... A WILD VALDES APPEARS.
Whether Valdes thought he was going to emulate Messi, or just forgot he was in a soccer match, we will never know... but you simply cannot play with the ball inside your box with Di Maria charging. Plenty of time to clear with either foot, and he simply made a fool of himself. Tackle, boom. Goal. 3-2.
NOW, the Supercopa is up for grabs.
Now Real simply needs to win to win the Super Cup. (as long as they don't allow 2+ goals)
Why will they win it? While they're at home, and will have their back, I really don't think they will.
Barcelona looked awfully strong, and with Alex Song and/or David Villa in the lineup next week, they'll be even stronger.
Pepe was missing, however, I don't believe that'll be enough. I see a draw, and Barca retains the trophy.
PREDICTION: Real Madrid 1:1 Barcelona (3:4 agg)
The Tight Angle.
A daily soccer blog dedicated to covering all of world football from a player's point of view. I have an addiction to the game, but I am not in the mood to recover. Covering the English Premier League, Italian Serie A, Spanish La Liga, German Bundesliga, French Ligue 1, MLS and World Football (Champions League, International, other leagues, etc.) Video clips of amazing goals, saves, and anything humorous. @TheTightAngle
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Monday, August 20, 2012
Premier League Roundup: The Best and Worst of Week 1
After an exciting and ultra-dramatic season last year, the 2012-13 version of the EPL has a lot to live up to. With transfers galore over the offseason, many questions have been asked from each squad... with the most obvious of course: How will Van Persie perform at United? Can the title be won outside Manchester? Who will be the most influential transfer?
Well, after the first week of action, I believe there are even more questions that are in need of answering.
Best showing by a transfer: Eden Hazard
He absolutely made the most of his Chelsea debut by making an immediate impact. An assist after two minutes on a lovely turn through to Ivanovic started his Premier League career. In the seventh he made a lovely move to draw a penalty after he got pulled down (subsequently netted by Lampard.) This plus a solid performance from there on before being substituted for fellow debutante Oscar earned Hazard "Man of the Match."
Most exciting game: Manchester City 3:2 Southampton
My word. What more can you ask for from a game? Goals, crucial injury, drama, comebacks. This match had it all. The opening quarter-of-an-hour gave City a big scare, as last season's hero Sergio Aguero had to be stretchered off with an apparent knee injury, although it doesn't seem to be as serious as once thought. I predict he'll be out 4-6 weeks.
Carlos Tevez performed up to par after an attitude change over an offseason that he got himself into significantly better shape. The leaner and more focused Tevez netted the only tally of the opening stanza to the near post, after a beautiful run (with perhaps a whisper of offside) sent him free.
The visitors looked all but dead, as 4-0 or 5-0 looked possible. Richie Lambert, who surprisingly started the match on the bench after winning his respective league's Golden Boot in 3 of his last 4 campaigns with Southampton, came on and scored a beauty within three minutes of coming on, sending the visiting supporters into a frenzy.
Shortly thereafter, Rangers-casualty Steven Davis made em pay on a counter attack. City were slow to get back after their corner was cleared, leading to a 5-on-3, in which Davis slotted the ball into the lower-right corner from the left side at the top of the 18, silencing all City supporters, and the small sea of red went mad with jubilation shockingly up 2-1.
After that, City turned up the heat, owning the possession for the rest of the fixture. Three minutes after the goal, Dzeko put home the equalizer after a scrum in the box.
Southampton tried to hold on, but an unfortunate error by Fox landed the ball at Samir Nasri's feet, all by himself from 12 yards out, giving the home side three points with 10 minutes remaining.
Least surprising "upset": Everton 1:0 Manchester United
Manchester United were the talk of the world after signing Robin Van Persie midweek. All this talk has deflected attention away from their devastated back line. Today they opened the season with two midfielders playing in the back four, as Michael Carrick played alongside Vidic in the middle, while Antonio Valencia manned the right side. Patrice Evra has shown weakness last year on the left side, which needs revamping as well.
Fellain absolutely owned Carrick inside, and finally made him pay for it on the only goal, out-muscling him, rising up and slotting a scorching header past a helpless De Gea, who played brilliantly otherwise.
Most surprising result: West Brom 3:0 Liverpool
While I am not surprised with WBA earning the three points, it's the manner that they did so. They easily were the better side in this fixture, and had the two teams swapped shirts, it would have made sense. Liverpool looked flat and inexperienced, as they still need to adjust to coach Brendan Rodger's style of play. It's only the first match, and they shouldn't worry. Liverpool usually struggle against mid-table clubs and perform well against the big boys. They have City, Arsenal, Sunderland and United their next four matches
Don't expect them to win next week however if they struggle against Hearts mid-week in their Europa play-off.
Biggest head scratcher: QPR 0:5 Swansea
A slew of new players into QPR, a home fixture, and a Swansea side who lost their best player and their manager to Liverpool looked to be an equation for week one success.
They outshot the Swans 21-14, however, they couldn't get anything on target, as Swansea led that department 6-4.
Unfortunately for QPR, 5 of those 6 got past Robert Green. To his credit however, QPR's defense looked all over the place, and they need to regroup and get their acts together.
Best goal: Zoltan Gera, West Brom
Well, after the first week of action, I believe there are even more questions that are in need of answering.
Best showing by a transfer: Eden Hazard
He absolutely made the most of his Chelsea debut by making an immediate impact. An assist after two minutes on a lovely turn through to Ivanovic started his Premier League career. In the seventh he made a lovely move to draw a penalty after he got pulled down (subsequently netted by Lampard.) This plus a solid performance from there on before being substituted for fellow debutante Oscar earned Hazard "Man of the Match."
Most exciting game: Manchester City 3:2 Southampton
My word. What more can you ask for from a game? Goals, crucial injury, drama, comebacks. This match had it all. The opening quarter-of-an-hour gave City a big scare, as last season's hero Sergio Aguero had to be stretchered off with an apparent knee injury, although it doesn't seem to be as serious as once thought. I predict he'll be out 4-6 weeks.
Carlos Tevez performed up to par after an attitude change over an offseason that he got himself into significantly better shape. The leaner and more focused Tevez netted the only tally of the opening stanza to the near post, after a beautiful run (with perhaps a whisper of offside) sent him free.
The visitors looked all but dead, as 4-0 or 5-0 looked possible. Richie Lambert, who surprisingly started the match on the bench after winning his respective league's Golden Boot in 3 of his last 4 campaigns with Southampton, came on and scored a beauty within three minutes of coming on, sending the visiting supporters into a frenzy.
Shortly thereafter, Rangers-casualty Steven Davis made em pay on a counter attack. City were slow to get back after their corner was cleared, leading to a 5-on-3, in which Davis slotted the ball into the lower-right corner from the left side at the top of the 18, silencing all City supporters, and the small sea of red went mad with jubilation shockingly up 2-1.
After that, City turned up the heat, owning the possession for the rest of the fixture. Three minutes after the goal, Dzeko put home the equalizer after a scrum in the box.
Southampton tried to hold on, but an unfortunate error by Fox landed the ball at Samir Nasri's feet, all by himself from 12 yards out, giving the home side three points with 10 minutes remaining.
Least surprising "upset": Everton 1:0 Manchester United
Manchester United were the talk of the world after signing Robin Van Persie midweek. All this talk has deflected attention away from their devastated back line. Today they opened the season with two midfielders playing in the back four, as Michael Carrick played alongside Vidic in the middle, while Antonio Valencia manned the right side. Patrice Evra has shown weakness last year on the left side, which needs revamping as well.
Fellain absolutely owned Carrick inside, and finally made him pay for it on the only goal, out-muscling him, rising up and slotting a scorching header past a helpless De Gea, who played brilliantly otherwise.
Most surprising result: West Brom 3:0 Liverpool
While I am not surprised with WBA earning the three points, it's the manner that they did so. They easily were the better side in this fixture, and had the two teams swapped shirts, it would have made sense. Liverpool looked flat and inexperienced, as they still need to adjust to coach Brendan Rodger's style of play. It's only the first match, and they shouldn't worry. Liverpool usually struggle against mid-table clubs and perform well against the big boys. They have City, Arsenal, Sunderland and United their next four matches
Don't expect them to win next week however if they struggle against Hearts mid-week in their Europa play-off.
Biggest head scratcher: QPR 0:5 Swansea
A slew of new players into QPR, a home fixture, and a Swansea side who lost their best player and their manager to Liverpool looked to be an equation for week one success.
They outshot the Swans 21-14, however, they couldn't get anything on target, as Swansea led that department 6-4.
Unfortunately for QPR, 5 of those 6 got past Robert Green. To his credit however, QPR's defense looked all over the place, and they need to regroup and get their acts together.
Best goal: Zoltan Gera, West Brom
Just remember, you cannot judge a season by the first week of play. Things usually pan out around ten weeks.
Friday, August 17, 2012
La Liga: 3rd and 4th place candidates
I don't even have to ask about who's finishing 1-2, as the gap Barcelona & Real Madrid have established in Spain has just continued to grow.
In reality, the other 18 teams are competing for the third and fourth spots. As many of you know, third place qualifies for the Champions League, while fourth place qualifies for the Champions League playoff.
Valencia - Valencia has finished third the last three years, but has never been close to the top two (25, 21, and 30 ponts behind, respectively.) They showed mixed results in the Champions League, as they made a round of 16 appearance and got sent down to Europa last year (in which they reached the semifinals.) They have brought up superstars in their system such as David Silva, David Villa, Jordi Alba and Juan Mata, and have had to get rid of to balance their checkbooks.
However, they still have a strong nucleus in Andres Guardado, Jonas, Roberto Soldado, Ever Banega, Fernando Gago, Alberto Costa, Aldi Ramo, Pable Piatti, Pablo Hernandez, and many others.
Chance of Qualifying : 85%
Malaga - Last year, this team somehow finished fourth, well above expectations. In 2010, Sheikh Al Thani became the new owner, and spent, spent, spent. However, there have been rumors stating that they may be pulling the plug on this project only two years in.
They have to make up for the loss of Santi Corzola, sold to Arsenal, and Isco will be the guy that will have to step up. They still have a strong core that may help them do it again, but it'll take a lot.
Chance of Qualifying: 10%
Athletic Bilbao - This team underperformed heavily (10th place) last year, but still finished only 9 points out of fourth. They proved what they are capable of, with a Copa del Rey final, and more importantly, a Europa final, beating the likes of Lokomotiv Moscow, Manchester United, Schalke, and Sporting Lisbon en route to a 3-0 defeat at the hands of fellow countrymen Athletico Madrid. Although Fernando Llorente is determined to leave, they still look to be in good standing for the upcoming season, and will fight for fourth.
Chance of qualifying: 40%
Sevilla - Another team that didn't do as well as they should have last year. However, they have two Spanish-internationals (Jesus Navas, Alvardo Negredo) that have stayed for another year. After their Euro 2012 experience, they should be coming back smarter, and more determined to have success in Spain.
Chance of qualifying: 50%
Atletico Madrid - Victim to the overchievers (Malaga), the Europa Cup champions come back very strong, and will attack behind the likes of Falcao. Third place is very possible, especially with a strong midfield core.
Chance of qualifying: 65%
Predictions (Top 10):
1. Real Madrid
2. Barcelona
3. Atletico Madrid
4. Valencia
5. Sevilla
6. Atletic Bilbao
7. Levante
8. Malaga
9. Real Betis
10. Osasuna
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
How the US shocked Mexico
Michael Orozco Fiscal's freak goal with 10 minutes remaining was enough for the United State's to come out of Mexico victorious for the first time in the 75-year history of the rivalry by the score of 1-0.
I, and the general population thought Klinnsman lead Team USA into the Azteca for a certain loss, crossing fingers that it would not be humiliating. Turns out, that never became the case.
How exactly did that happen?
1. Geoff Cameron - The new Stoke City man (on loan from Houston) had a lot to prove, not only to his country, but his new club that he deserves a shot to start at center back. He passed with flying colors. He absolutely shut down Chicharito, 1-on-1 and with help from Maurice Edu. His diving deflection on a cross towards the Manchester United forward only four yards from goal turned to be one of the most crucial points of the match.
2. Tim Howard - While the first hour or so of this match was mainly uneventful, Captain America absolutely delivered when he had to, saving a deflected shot off the line, even though he already had committed himself to the other side, showing unbelievable athleticism and awareness. His save on Chicharito's near-post header in the final minutes blew my mind. *An "ARE YOU SERIOUS!?!?!" moment*
3. Chicharito - Although Chicharito provided Mexico's sole attacking option, on another day he may have had a hat-trick. Ever since he suffered his concussion, he has been less confident heading the ball and being the firecracker he used to be. I don't see this being an issue to worry about long-term from the Mexican stance, as he still has the knack to get behind defenders and be dangerous. To be fair, he deserved the goal Howard stole from him.
4. Brek Shea - When Shea came on the field in the 78th minute, the heat turned up immediately. Jurgen Klinnsman had a lot of brass to but him in, and Shea displayed total confidence. His first touches definitely made me watch him closely, and 2 minutes after his entrance, he set up the lone goal. He attacked his defender, megged and passed him cleanly, and put in across the six-yard box into a sea of bodies, where (sub) Terrance Boyd backheeled the ball to the far post, where (ANOTHER sub) Orozco Fiscal applied the finishing touch.
5. Jurgen Klinnsman - While I ripped on him all week after the 22-man roster became available for public debate, he made all the right moves. Putting Edu alongside Cameron in the back proved to be a great move, that could possibly be something we see a lot more of. Subbing Donovan out at halftime after he struggled (although claims of a tight hamstring were made) proved a good move. Finally, allowing Brek Shea a chance to prove himself surprised me a lot, and paid off.
6. Mexico's Poor Shooting - El Tri dominated possession, and rightfully deserved a better result. They outshot the US 19-6, mainly a result of their constant crossing (28 crosses to USA's 5) however, shots on target were tied 3-3. Can't score if you don't test the keeper.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Five Reasons to Love and Hate Robin Van Persie at Old Trafford
Early reports from The Sun and Caught Offside have indicated that Manchester United have finalized talks on a 22-22.5 million pound contract to land RVP. He comes off a league-best 30 goal season (38 in all competitions), and has obviously been the biggest the subject of world-wide transfer news for months. However, with the good comes the bad. Is he worth it?
PROS
1. He Scores Goals - Without a doubt, he has proven that he is successful in ripping apart the premier league. In his last 95 matches (domestic and international), he has scored a blistering 69 goals, nearly a 3:4 ratio.
2. Experience - He's been playing in the Premiership at Arsenal since 2004, and has a firm grasp of what nearly every opponent brings to the table. He knows how to play in an environment where domestic titles and Champions League success is expected.
3. Wayne Rooney - Rooney is one of the best strikers in the world, and is still only 26 years old. His presence allows RVP to not have to deal with the enormous pressure of the whole team on his shoulders. He has also matured wonderfully, only receiving one yellow card the entire EPL season last year.
4. Versatility - RVP has proven that he can lead a team up top all by himself, or share the forward role. Fergie won't have to worry about him stuck in one spot as he can play either side with Rooney, or even drop back to attacking midfielder if need be, as he is ridiculously good at making key passes. HE EVEN LED THE PREMIER LEAGUE IN ASSISTS IN 2008/09. (11)
5. Big Game Player - In games against United, Man City, Liverpool, Chelsea and Tottenham last season (10), he scored eight goals and added two assists. The only team he didn't score against were the champions Manchester City.
CONS
1. Injury Prone - RVP is truly made out of glass. The Dutch even call him "Glass Ankles." However, he's been fit since his last groin strain in February.
04/05: Three ankle injuries
05/06: Knee injury, two ankle injuries
06/07: Hip injury, metatarsal fracture, knee injury, thigh strain
07/08: Three thigh muscles strains
08/09: Ankle injury, hamstring injury, two groin strains
09/10: Knee injury, severe ankle sprain (missed over five months)
10/11: Offseason ankle injury, preseason ankle injury, flu, pulled hamstring, knee injury
11/12: August ankle injury, groin strain
2. Reduces Player Development - Signing RVP limits the opportunities of Bebe, Welbeck, and Chicharito to get time. In addition, experimentation with Kagawa and Ashley Young up top would just about cease to exist.
3. Age - He is 29 years old now, so he may have already peaked, or he may have only a few years left of solid football. The older he gets, the more likely he is to fall off, and more likely to suffer serious injury.
4. Expensive Wages - With a big move, comes a big price. In addition to the 22.5 million pound ($34.5 million) transfer fee, Manchester United will certainly have to more than double what he currently makes at Arsenal, which is 90,000 pounds (over $141,000) a week. Early reports suggest he will make 220,000 pounds (over $345,000) a week.
5. No Resale Value - Robin Van Persie must deliver silverware for his investment to be worth it. No matter what happens, he'll never be worth this much again, as the combination of age and injury history won't allow a high transfer fee.
FIFA 13 TRAILER
The trailer for FIFA 13 came out today. With new skill games, trophys, and first touch control, this is the most realistic looking game yet.
Monday, August 13, 2012
English Premier League: Team-by-team Preview and Matchday 1 Predictions
For many years, the English Premier League has undoubtedly been the fan favorite around the world. While not always being the best, the endless drama of the EPL and passion of the English supporters have always captured the public eye. Transfer rumors are always abuzz twelve months of the year, and this year has proved no different.
Last year is being hailed as the greatest season ever, and the expectations couldn't be higher. After United seemed to have won the title on QPR's shock 2-1 lead over City, the blue side of Manchester pulled out two goals in stoppage time from Dzeko and Aguero to shock the world. As a United fan, I still got tears in my eyes not from disappointment, but from the pure ecstasy of the moment. That QPR-City match had all the elements of what sports are truly all about.
We welcome back Reading, Southampton and West Ham back to the party this year, as we bid farewell to Bolton, Blackburn and Wolves. Who will stay up, who will be champions, and who is going back to the Championship?
1st
MANCHESTER UNITED - The Reds lost on goal differential last year, and much had to do with the lack of creativity in the midfield. Paul Scholes came out of retirement last year to help, but in the end it proved not enough. Enter Shinji Kagawa, who not only is a beast in the midfield, but a constant goal-scoring threat as well. He is a perfect fit, not only on the field, but in cornering the Asian market, as they have let Park Ji-Sung move to QPR. We'll see if Nick Powell can make a difference as well.
Their defense looks to be boosted, as Vidic comes back for the first time in eight months, and Jonny Evans may be ready for opening day. They will be without Chris Smalling for ten weeks due to a metatarsal injury.
Attacking options are many, as Chicharito, Bebe, Mecheda and Berbatov are all fantastic options behind Welbeck and Rooney, and will all see playing time. They will be strong in attack, whether they get Van Persie/Llorente or not.
Lindegaard looks to jump De Gea for their starter, although I could see them splitting lots of time.
They have to make up a lot to the fans, as last year they crashed out of the CL and Europa play. I can see them lifting the trophy this year, and earning a double/treble.
2011: 2nd, 28-5-5, 89 points
Key Additions: Powell (Crewe), Kagawa (Borussia Dortmund)
Key Departures: Michael Owen (released), Park, Fabio (QPR, loan)
2nd
MANCHESTER CITY - It doesn't get much better than what they did last year, amid much off-field drama in Tevez. A 6-1 drubbing of their long-heralded rivals and a 2-goal comeback in stoppage time to win the title. They will look to repeat history, and have a great chance at doing so. They have kept nearly all their players and are bringing in more firepower.
They have stuck to their guns in keeping Euro 2012 star Mario Balotelli, despite P$G's expensive bids. I believe that experience will humble the young phenom, and his off-field issues will deminish, while his on-field play will just get better.
I believe success depends on the health of their players. If Kompany can stay healthy, I can see themselves duplicating last year's heroics.
They have just signed Jack Rodwell from Everton to bolster their midfield even more. The rumor mill suggests Mancini is looking at adding Daniel Agger, Scott Sinclair and South Korean left back Yun Suk-Young. Even without these lads, they can push their point total near/above 90, and have some business to take care of in the Champions League. I predict either a quarterfinal or semifinal appearance.
2011: 1st, 28-5-5, 89 points
Key Additions: Rodwell, Emmanuel Adebayor (Tottenham)
Key Departures: Owen Hargreaves (released), Wayne Bridge (loan, Brighton)
3rd
ARSENAL - The Gunners have been much of the talk in the offseason, with an unsettled Robin Van Persie, and a trio of star signings in Podolski, Santi Corzola and Olivier Giroud. With or without RVP, this team will avoid the early season struggles of last year. They finished very strong to sneak into the Champions League ahead of Tottenham. Oxlade-Chamberlain has now had time to develop and combined with Walcott will make this team the fastest in the Premiership. This team has top two ability, I just don't see them threatening for the title this year, but they will keep it interesting, and could do some damage in the Champions League. A quarterfinal would seem just.
2011: 3rd, 21-7-10, 70 points
Key Additions: Podolski (Koln), Giroud (Montpelier), Corzola (Malaga)
Key Departures: Denilson (loan, Sao Paulo)
4th
TOTTENHAM - While the Spurs finally got themselves into the top four last year, a shock Champions League title by Chelsea knocked them out of their CL berth, which they rightfully deserved, and will be in a dogfight for this year.
Adebayor had a part of 42% of all Tottenham's goals last year, and the Spurs have help this year that will make up for his and Luka Modric's imminent departure. I'm very high on Glyfi Sigurdsson, as he showed what he is capable of at Swansea and in preseason (notably against the Red Bulls.)
Jan Vertonghen is a proven winner at Ajax, and will hold it down in the back.
AVB looks keen to add more firepower in either Guiseppe Rossi, Fernando Llorente, or Yann M'Vila, though M'Vila seeks the CL this year.
Look for the Spurs to challenge for the Europa trophy, and could reach the semis or better.
2011: 4th, 20-9-9. 69 points
Key Additions: Vertonghen, Sigurdsson (Hoffenheim)
Key Departures: Steven Pienaar (Everton), Niko Krancjar (Dynamo Kiev), Vedran Corluka (Lokomotiv Moscow), Emmanuel Adebayor (Man City)
5th
CHELSEA - After an unexpected Champions League/FA Cup double, despite struggling all year, Eden Hazard has been much of the talk of the offseason. While the Lille man along with Marko Marin and Oscar will undoubtedly strengthen their midfield, questions arise up top. Will their 50-million-pound investment finally pay off (Torres)? Will either Juan Mata or Daniel Sturridge be consistently reliable up top for them this season? Only time will tell, as for now Chelsea have more questions than answers post-Drogba. They can either battle for the title, or battle for a CL spot. Truly unpredictable at this point.
I see them escaping the group stage of Champions League, only to be knocked out in the Round of 16.
2011: 6th, 18-10-10, 64 points
Key Additions: Marin, Oscar, Hazard
Key Departures: Kalou, Drogba, Jose Bosingwa
6th
NEWCASTLE - Quite possibly the shock of the Premiership last year, only having been in the Championship two years before. They started the season on a tear, going the first eleven games unbeaten, and they can be a forced to be reckoned with again this season.
They are 99% locks on signing Lille defender Matthieu Debuchy and are finalizing paperwork to bring in defender Vurnon Anita from Dutch-champions Ajax.
Papiss Cisse and Demba Ba are absolute monsters in attack, Cisse with 13 goals in 13 matches and Ba with 16 in 29. Yohan Cabaye proved to be a genius signing, and they could be singing the Champions League anthem come May.
In the Europa Cup, they should be solid, a quarterfinal would be fair.
2011: 5th, 19-8-11, 65 points
Key Additions: Anita (Ajax, still to be officially announced)
Key Departures: Danny Guthrie (released), Leon Best (Blackburn)
7th
LIVERPOOL - Oh Reds. Kenny Daglish lead them to their worst finish in nearly 60 years, and they have tried to bring their fans joy in bringing in upbeat Swansea duo Joe Allen and manager Brendan Rodgers. With a 90% passing rate, there is a lot to be excited about. However, it may be their other new signing in Fabio Borini that may steal their headlines and be top scorer. Andy Carroll looks to be on his way out.
If Suarez stays and can play nice, Gerrard avoids the injury bug, and they make key signings (particularly Clint Dempsey), they can finish higher... especially if Rodgers instills a winning attitude. If things go wrong, they could be in the bottom half.
They get the chance to play in Europe, due to their League Cup triumph. They should be able to make the quarters there.
2011: 8th, 14-10-14, 52 points
Key Additions: Allen, Borini
Key Departures: Dirk Kuyt (Fenerbahce, Fabio Aurielio, Alberto Aquilani (Fiorentina)
8th
QUEENS PARK RANGERS - Another year in the Premiership, another slew of signings. This time around however, they look deadly serious. Though barely surviving last year, they looked at times to be able to hang around with the big boys.
They have upgraded in every area of the field, and when you add players of Manchester United's caliber in Park Ji-Sung and Fabio (on loan), you're bound to improve.
Robert Green is certainly going to be better than Paddy Kenny was for them.
Adding Fulham's Andrew Johnson could give Cisse that bit reliability he's long been seeking beside him.
If they can field a healthy XI everytime, QPR is in for a great year.
2011: 17th, 10-7-21, 37 points
Key Additions: Park, Fabio, Johnson, Green, Samba Diakite (Nancy)
Key Departures: None
9th
EVERTON - David Moyes is one of the best coaches in the Prem. He never has much, but he always gets the best out of his players. This year will be no different.
Despite the losses of Jack Rodwell, Joseph Yobo, and Timmy Cahill, they will move forward still relatively strong in all areas of the field. Goalkeeper Tim Howard is still one of the best out there, and will always keep the Toffees in the match. Fellaini is always a threat in the air, and Jelavic proved himself last year.
Welcome back Steven Pienaar, a familiar face the fans will love. We shall see if former Rangers man Steven Naismith will do well up top. He'll get his chance.
2011: 7th, 15-11-12, 56 points
Key Additions: Naismith, Pienaar
Key Departures: Rodwell, Yobo, Cahill, James McFadden
10th
SUNDERLAND - Martin O'Neal led them back up from near the bottom to as high as 8th before a collapse at the end of the season, going winless in the final eight matches. The addition of Carlos Cuellar could provide some stability in the Stadium of Light, and Frazier Campbell needs to consistently prove that he is worthy of playing at this level.
If they score, they'll do well this season.
2011: 13th, 11-12-15, 45 points
Key Additions: Cuellar (Aston Villa)
Key Departures: Michael Turner (Norwich), Asamoah Gyan (Al Ain)
11th
READING - Man, I love that they're not only back in the Prem, but they bring a nice lookin squad in as well. Remember when Steve Sidwell was the heart and soul of the club?
They bring in plenty of EPL veterans to help them finish mid-table right out of the gate. Notably Pavel Pogbrenyak and Danny Guthrie.
They had the best defense in the Championship last season, and could give a bunch of the top-tier teams a lot of trouble. They are obviously a resilient bunch, going from relegation early in the season to on top of the second tier.
Can Adam Le Fondre produce at the highest level?
2011: Championship winners
Key Additions: Guthrie (Newcastle), Pogbrenyak (Fulham), Nickey Shorie (WBA)
Key Departures: None
12th
FULHAM - This team is a little bit of a mess at the moment. The Clint Dempsey war is sure to be a distraction, and they've lost some star power and familiar faces. If they are able to keep Dempsey, obviously this ranking will jump up.
However, Hugo Rodallega could make Fulham fans forget a little bit, as he is sure to be a star for the Cottagers.
2011: 14-10-14, 52 points
Key Additions: Rodallega (Wigan), Mladen Petric (Hamburg)
Key Departures: Pogrenyak (Reading), Andrew Johnson (QPR), Danny Murphy (Blackburn)
13th
WEST BROM - This team impressed enough to earn Roy Hodgson the England job, can they do it under new manager Steve Clark? He's never managed before, and a lot of pressure will be on him early.
Ben Foster should provide some stability between the sticks, and if Peter Odemwingie can be as successful as he was last year, they should stick around for another campaign.
They acquired Romelu Lukaku on loan, and subsequently put Chris Wood for sale. We'll see if his Chelsea experience has any major effects on their defense.
2011: 10th, 13-8-17, 47 points
Key Additions: Lukaku, Markus Rosenberg (Werder Bremen)
Key Departures: Wood (still for sale), Nickey Shorey, Keith Andrews (Bolton), Paul Sharner
14th
SWANSEA - The Swans impressed the entire league with their display of passing under manager Brendan Rodgers. Zyfli Sigurdsson and Joe Allen were the centerpieces that helped them to a near top-10 finish in their first season back in the Prem.
Well, this year, none of them will be back. Danny Graham has to keep up his workload and perhaps improve on his impressive 12 goals last year.
The only good news is that they can afford to spend now, whether they will or not we shall see.
Michel Vorm was a star with 14 clean sheets and will give them a chance to stay up.
2011: 11th, 12-11-15
Key Additions: Johnathon de Guzman (Villareal, on loan)
Key Departures: Sigurdsson, Allen
15th
NORWICH CITY - Americans link Norwich to Zak Whitbread. He has since been released. However, they bring in stud defender Michael Turner to the squad. That alone can help em stay up in a gritty relegation fight.
Grant Holt is an absolute star, scoring 15 goals last season. He has 80 professional goals in 4 years and he has truly earned his stripes, starting in League 2 and working himself up the ladder every year. Unfortunately, he is quite reckless, as he has accumulated 34 cautions and 3 expulsions in that same time.
Steven Whittaker comes over in a free transfer not wanting to be a Rangers victim.
2011 12th, 12-11-15, 47 points
Key Additions: Turner, Whittaker
Key Departures: Whitbread
16th
SOUTHAMPTON - The newcomers are gonna have to grit it out to stay afloat in 2012/13. They have a plethora of goal scorers, including Rickie Lambert with 27, giving him 107 in 5 years. He's never had a season with less than 21, and he will be crucial to their success. They acquired Billy Sharp last year, and he had 19 as well. Their offensive firepower may be enough to earn a few shock results.
Former Ranger Steven Davis may provide composure in the middle third, as few guys have any top flight experience.
2011: 2nd in Championship
Key Additions: Davis
Key Losses: None
17th
ASTON VILLA - Their motto is "prepared", the Claret and Blue should be prepared to struggle mightily this season. They struggled to stay healthy, as many of their players went down to injury last season, including forwards Darren Bent and Gabby Agbonlahor.
However, if anyone knows how to have success, it's new manager Paul Lambert. With Norwich, he led them to consecutive promotions from League One to the EPL, the first time that had been done in 11 years (Manchester City.) When he was the manager at League Two Wycombe, he led them to the League Cup semifinals, defeating Prem sides Fulham and Charlton, and earning a draw against Chelsea in the first leg of the final four.
2011: 16th, 7-17-14, 35 points
Key Additions: Karim El Ahmadi (Feyenoord)
Key Departures: Carlos Cuellar, Emile Heskey
18th
WEST HAM - The Hammers being back in the top flight is definitely a welcome sight. They lost Robert Green to QPR, and there will be a keeper battle all season between former Bolton man Jussi Jaaskelainen or young Pompey netminder Steven Henderson.Modibo Maiga comes over from Ligue 1 Sochaux, where he tallied 24 goals in 58 matches.
Ricardo Vaz Te has struggled in the Prem before, but broke out last year for 22 goals. Carlton Cole is somewhat reliable with a couple 10 goal top-flight seasons in the past.
They will stay up only if they can score.
2011: 3rd in Championship (won playoff)
Key Additions: Jaaskilainen, Maiga, Henderson
Key Departures: John Carew, Green
19th
STOKE CITY - Besides Peter Crouch (10), the Potters struggled to score last year, being the lowest scoring them in the top flight.
A lack of attacking options could prove fatal. No spending has been made, as Tony Pulis has been told to sell before he buys.
Last year was their worst since they were promoted, and this year isn't looking promising. They released fan favorites Ricardo Fuller and Salif Diao.
Key Additions: Jamie Ness (Rangers)
Key Departures: Fuller, Diao, Johnathon Woodgate (Middlesborough)
20th
WIGAN - These guys won't be as bad as Derby was in 2007-08, but they won't have another Martinez miracle like last year where they won 7 of their last 9.
They've let Rodallega, Diame and Kirkland leave, and have done little to replace them. They are lucky to have one of the most underrated goalkeepers in the league in Ali Al-Habsi, cause he will likely get pelted this season.
Can Victor Moses step up and not be the off and on striker of last year?
EDIT: Arouna Kone signed today (August 14th), and could push their ranking slightly higher.
2011: 15th, 11-10-17, 43 points
Key Additions: Arouna Kone
Key Departures: Rodallega (Fulham), Kirkland (Sheffield Wednesday), Diame (West Ham)
WEEK 1 PREDICTIONS
Aresnal 2:0 Sunderland
Fulham 1:1 Norwich
QPR 2:0 Swansea
Reading 2:1 Stoke
West Brom 1:2 Liverpool
West Ham 3:1 Aston Villa
Newcastle 0:1 Tottenham
Wigan 0:4 Chelsea
Man City 3:1 Southampton
Everton 1:3 Man United
Man City 3:1 Southampton
Everton 1:3 Man United
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