P
|
W
|
D
|
L
|
GF
|
GA
|
GD
|
Pts
|
||
1
|
Lioli
|
11
|
7
|
2
|
2
|
15
|
5
|
10
|
23
|
2
|
Bantu
|
10
|
7
|
1
|
2
|
20
|
11
|
9
|
22
|
3
|
LCS
|
10
|
6
|
1
|
3
|
12
|
9
|
3
|
19
|
4
|
LDF
|
10
|
4
|
4
|
2
|
14
|
8
|
6
|
16
|
5
|
LMPS
|
11
|
5
|
1
|
5
|
9
|
8
|
1
|
16
|
6
|
Linare
|
10
|
3
|
3
|
4
|
10
|
9
|
-1
|
12
|
7
|
Likhopo
|
11
|
4
|
0
|
7
|
8
|
11
|
-3
|
12
|
8
|
Joy
|
10
|
3
|
3
|
4
|
15
|
19
|
-4
|
12
|
9
|
Mpharane Celtic
|
11
|
3
|
3
|
5
|
17
|
26
|
-9
|
12
|
10
|
Qoaling Highlanders
|
11
|
3
|
2
|
6
|
8
|
14
|
-6
|
11
|
11
|
Matlama
|
9
|
3
|
1
|
5
|
11
|
12
|
-2
|
10
|
12
|
Nyenye Rovers
|
11
|
1
|
5
|
6
|
8
|
16
|
-8
|
8
|
Quote of the week
“To be a great champion you must believe you are the best. If you're not, pretend you are.” – Muhammad Ali
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Lesotho Premier League: Standings
Vodacom Premier League
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Ruthless Barca
We might not get the same romantic Barcelona, but we will get a more
ruthless one. Those were my sentiments at the beginning of the season and that’s
what we are seeing now. 55 points at the halfway stage is a La Liga record and in all probability
the championship will be wrapped up in record time.
As things stand, Barca are 10 points ahead of second-placed
Atletico Madrid and 18 better off than reigning champions and eternal rivals
Real Madrid.
So have Barcelona improved under Tito Vilanova? Statistics
would certainly seem to support this point of view.
Leading the way... Lionel Messi |
On the whole, the core philosophy remains the same;
possession is king. This season Barca have averaged 69% possession in the
league, similar numbers to the three previous seasons under Pep Guardiola (69.7
last season, 72.1 in 2010/11 and 68.1 in 2009/10). Opponents are starved of the
ball, passed into submission and then ruthlessly disposed of.
It is in the side’s essence where subtle differences
are noticeable – a change in mentality.
Under Guardiola Barcelona were the romantic’s dream. Guardiola’s
religious advocating of pass-and-move football became both a wonder
and a reference.
Vilanova’s Barca is not the same. It’s not the dreamy
Barca we’ve seen in the past, but rather a more machine-like outfit, one primarily
driven to win.
It’s probably a reflection of Barcelona’s frame of
mind since June – a need to prove themselves. Given their success in recent
years, it may sound ludicrous to suggest Barca had any need to prove themselves.
However, after Real Madrid’s rise and accolades last season, beating Barca at
the Nou Camp and breaking records along the way, there were whispers of a changing
reality, perhaps a new-world order.
When Guardiola left there was uncertainty, with some even
going as far as to question Barcelona’s might.
Vilanova, therefore, has had has plenty to prove since
taking over from Guardiola, wanting to show he’s a top-class coach in his own
right. The players too are hungry after a relatively disappointing season (by
Barca’s recent standards) in which they only won the Copa del Rey, and back-alley
questions over their longevity and productivity.
The upshot has been Barca making the best start ever
to a La Liga season.
One thing Vilanova has done well is not to tinker with the
team. He has found his best line-up, something that wasn’t always clear with Guardiola
during his final season.
In his final season Guardiola was perhaps guilty of
experimenting a bit too much, regularly varying his systems, including a gung-ho
3-4-3 formation. This season there’s a more settled feel. There’s a clear
formation and a preferred first eleven: Victor Valdes in goals; Carles Puyol, Gerard
Pique, Dani Alves and Jordi Alba in defence; Sergio Busquets, Xavi and Cesc Fabregas
in midfield; and Andres Iniesta, Pedro and Lionel Messi upfront.
That’s the line-up Vilanova will pick more often than
not. As a result the Barcelona team is more settled and that’s what makes them stronger
as a unit.
Vilanova, of course, has the luxury of having the finest player of his
generation at his disposal. The star of Messi has shone through – 28 goals in
19 games is an insane number. Messi has, again, been by far and away the finest
player in the world this season.
However, it is the form of other players that has
Barca cruising to a fourth title in five years. The contributions of Adriano and
Alba to the goals tally, for example, have given the Catalans a new outlet.
It has also given them options. By regularly playing such
players as Adriano, thus giving them confidence, Vilanova has given himself viable
alternatives. Adriano is more than adequate cover on either flank and, on
current form, may be Barca’s best option at right-back. Martin Montoya has also done
well when called upon, a young player who’s excellent defensively and
offensively.
All for one, one for all... Barcelona celebrate another goal |
Fabregas, in his second season, has
finally become an important member of the team and his contribution has given
Barca a new
dimension.
Whereas Fabregas was used sparingly and in various positions last season, he’s
playing regularly in his preferred attacking midfield role. Barcelona’s increased
team speed and “direct” approach favours his style and enables Fabregas to
provide a genuine box-to-box threat.
This increased depth is maybe the major improvement from
last season under Guardiola.
Other areas also point to a greater ruthlessness. Only 9.7% of passes have been in Barcelona’s own defensive third this season, compared to 13% last season. Barca have also scored 12 goals from long range this season, doubling their effectiveness from 7.1% accuracy under Guardiola to 12.5% under Vilanova. Their efficiency record of 24.7% in front of goal, the best in Europe’s top five leagues, is also another pointer to their cutting edge.
At the momentBarcelona
show no signs of letting up. There’s a hunger best transmitted by Vilanova
himself: “We’re coming off of four successful years and it’s a good thing that
(the players) know the concepts of the system. Besides, the players are eager
to continue winning. We are not invincible. Everything we’ve achieved up
until now is thanks to the effort we’ve put in and our eagerness to win. The
day we don’t play at a high level is the day we lose.”
Barcelona ’s improvement is
not good news for rivals. That hallowed treble is a very real possibility.
Written before Barcelona’s 3-2 loss to Real Sociedad
Other areas also point to a greater ruthlessness. Only 9.7% of passes have been in Barcelona’s own defensive third this season, compared to 13% last season. Barca have also scored 12 goals from long range this season, doubling their effectiveness from 7.1% accuracy under Guardiola to 12.5% under Vilanova. Their efficiency record of 24.7% in front of goal, the best in Europe’s top five leagues, is also another pointer to their cutting edge.
At the moment
Written before Barcelona’s 3-2 loss to Real Sociedad
Saturday, January 19, 2013
Bafana’s Afcon date with destiny
Africa Cup of Nations 2013 Let the Games begin |
After months of anticipation the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations kicks off in
earnest this evening at Soccer City when hosts South
Africa face Cape Verde.
It’s a game of significance.
For Bafana Bafana
the encounter represents the first real test for newly-appointed coach Gordon
Igesund, as well as a gauge of how the tournament will unfold for the hosts.
Whereas as in 1996 a sense of excitement engulfed the country this time around there’s
a sense of foreboding, an unsure public and even indifference in certain
quarters.
The group draw and Bafana’s recent underachievement
have contributed to this state of affairs.
The general feeling since October’s draw has been South
Africa has an easy group. That,
though, couldn’t be further from the truth; Cape Verde, Morocco and Angola represent
a stern test for a Bafana team trying to avoid crashing out in the first round
of two consecutive tournaments, as hosts.
South Africa, meanwhile, go into the tournament ranked 84th in the
world and under their seventh coach since 2006.
In the opposite corner the hosts face an opponent
primed to cause an upset.
Indeed, in many ways Cape
Verde are as tricky an opening opponent Bafana could have had. The small West
Africa island nation has been one of the continent’s recent success stories,
rising more than 40 places (111th to 70th) in Fifa’s world rankings over a
four-year period.
Calling Cape Verde minnows would be to disregard the
progress they’ve made over the past five years and the talent the Blue Sharks have assembled in that
time, spearheaded by 21-year-old striker Djaniny Semedo and 23 year-old Ryan
Mendes who plays for Lille in France. Underestimating Cape Verde would be to
forget their 7-1 hammering of Madagascar and 3-2 aggregate victory over
four-time champions Cameroon to get here.
Bafana’s next opponents, Morocco, aren’t any easier. The Atlas Lions have benefitted greatly from
Fifa’s revised naturalisation laws and boast a squad brim-full with Europe-groomed
players.
They have a talented, albeit volatile, team and were
one of the most enterprising teams at the last year’s Afcon. As it was Morocco
were unable to turn their play into wins, nevertheless the conditions in South
Africa are certainly going to be more conducive to their style.
Angola’s defensive approach probably makes them the
most manageable opponent in the group for South Africa. However, a Bafana team
chasing a result could easily get burned by a Palancas side efficient on the counterattack and led by Valladolid
hotshot striker Manucho.
It’s imperative, therefore, that Bafana get off a good
start this evening against Cape
Verde. Recent form under Igesund offers some
of hope. A narrow loss to Brazil in August marked the start of Igesund’s tenure
and Bafana showed the doggedness his teams have been famous for.
The hosts will need spades of that tenacity because this
will be a tough group, one South Africa will do well to get out of.
This, in all, is the most open Nations Cup in some time. African football
has in itself become less predictable and more of an open field over the years,
but the fact this tournament is in South Africa makes it even more
unpredictable.
Favourites? Yaya Toure leads the Ivory Coast charge |
If it’s in North Africa, for instance, you can generally
count out West African teams – and vice versa – as history has indeed proved.
However, conditions in South Africa are most similar to Europe where the majority
of the top players at this Nations Cup ply their trade. Good pitches, fair conditions
and great facilities, that’s South Africa.
Looking back at the 1996 Afcon (in South Africa) Zambia,
Tunisia, Ghana and South Africa were the semi-finalists, countries from
different regions of the continent. Compare and contrast to last year’s Afcon
in Equatorial Guinea and Gabon where three of the last four were from West
Africa, with Zambia the surprise outsider.
We are likely to see an Afcon tournament that will reward
technique and possession-based football more than most, and this could stand
the hosts in good stead. Ball-playing sides such as Tunisia, Morocco and
Algeria will benefit as well.
That said, the South Africa’s all-embracing conditions
make the tournament open to any type of well-executed plan. Physical ability,
as always at the Afcon, will also be rewarded. So in this sense Nigeria, for
example, also has good possibilities. This will be a very quick Nigeria team, exceptionally
physical and athletic – a seemingly deliberate throwback to Stephen Keshi’s
time as a player.
This is why when running the rule over this year’s
contenders it’s difficult to really pick a clear favourite. Ghana are coming off a good series of
preparatory games including a convincing win over Egypt and, as shown at the 2010
World Cup, they’ll enjoy local conditions. Similar can be said of Ivory Coast
who collapsed physically in defeats to Egypt and Algeria in Ghana (2008) and
Angola (2010).
Defending champions Zambia will be thereabouts as well
with their fluid football and champions’ confidence.
All said, this should be one of the best Nations Cups
because there are few excuses for the participants, wonderful weather, fantastic
facilities – super conditions. Let the Games begin.
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