Tuesday, 12 May 2015

UEFA come back dreams for best four.

by Josphat M.C
Uefa semi final grabbed by Bayern Munich, Barcelona, Real Madrid and Juventus are to face their second leg come back on the 12th and 13th of May with dreams of returning for the best Bayern and Madrid who lost on their first appearence on their away grounds.

Semi final was matched, Barca vs Bayern and Juventus with Madrid and they appeared first as Barca stumboled Bayern 3-0 and Juve lightened it with a 2-1 in expense of Madrid.

The come back return with thousands of hopes for those disadvantaged on their first leg is about to be witnessed tonight and tommorow.

Bayern should return with a four nill in their home ground for Gadioler to be seen on the Berlin for final whilst the rivals leaded by Luise and the best three attakers that is MNS are in their best form which might be the best barrier for Munich's servival.

Madrid is very fortune as they need one goal for them to root their feets on Berlin whilst CR7 can lift them from that hole, since the rival side is not that strong.


Thursday, 7 May 2015

Various expressions from different journalists about the humiliation of Jerome Boateng by Leonel Messi in recent UEFA match.


 (Messi gathered the ball and turned on the after-burners to leave Jerome Boateng for dead before dinking a precise shot nonchalantly over Neuer, his record 77th goal in Europe's premier club competition)

(Leonel Messi left Jerome Boateng eating grass before nonchalantly dinking the ball beyond Neuer on his weaker right foot.)



(Three minutes later he produced an even more sublime finish as the Argentine received Alves's pass and left Jerome Boateng stumbling to the ground before dinking the ball over the advancing Neuer on his weaker right foot.)

Wednesday, 29 April 2015

                  Bayern face Barca exposure without Dutchman

It was the night Bayern Munich’s treble dream died, but the sight of Arjen Robben limping from the field 16 minutes into his comeback may well be the longest-lasting legacy from Tuesday's penalty loss to Borussia Dortmund.
While Barcelona were busy banging half-a-dozen goals past Getafe, Bayern’s DFB-Pokal run was ended at the semi-final stage after a comically poor showing in the shoot-out. More crucially, they have lost their Dutch star until next season just a week before facing the Catalans in the last four of the Champions League.
It really couldn’t have gone any worse for Pep Guardiola.
“We are a different team without Robben and Franck Ribery fit, but we have to adapt to the current circumstances,” said Guardiola recently as his two wide men stepped up their recoveries from respective abdominal and ankle problems.
Following the controversial recent exit of club doctor Hans-Wilhelm Muller-Wohlfahrt, the last thing the Spaniard needed was another notable injury. And especially not now.
Robben’s return was meant to be a step forward. It was supposed to be a turning point for the better as Bayern looked to peak at the business end of the season having clinched the Bundesliga title at the weekend.


But their campaign could crumble in no time at all. A league title is all well and good, but realistically speaking it is the minimum requirement given their resources in comparison to the rest of Germany. They must also throw their weight around in Europe to placate the critics. So it was no surprise that there was a collective groan of despondency at the sight of Robben sitting disconsolately on the turf clutching at his calf. The home fans could barely bring themselves to clap as the Dutchman left the field soon after.
Despite their precarious treble hopes being on a knife-edge with the score tied at 1-1, the result was no longer the most important part of the night. Robben’s exit and the inevitable spell on the sidelines to follow were all that mattered, and the supporters had every right to think beyond the match still unfolding in front of them.
Because while the DFB-Pokal is always a target – Bayern had won the last two editions –the Champions League crown will always be a bigger goal, and the outcome of next week’s clash with Barcelona will command far more column inches than this setback when the reviews of their 2014-15 season come to be written.
It was perhaps fitting that the final images of the evening were of Philipp Lahm and Xabi Alonso prone on the turf, mimicking the fate of Robben earlier in proceedings.