for anyone who's ever been frustrated by the lack of serie-a coverage in the english-speaking media, or wondered why Roma refuses to make an english
website that works ...

23 November 2011

Good article, great video


There's a good article about Osvaldo's disallowed piece of genius here, on Four Four Two by James Horncastle.

Nuff said.

21 November 2011

Four thoughts on Roma-Lecce


Distribution of play
Direction of attacks



Luis Enrique has weathered the storm 

After a summer of speculation and an underwhelming start to the season, Luis Enrique – and his ideas – have finally seemed to have taken hold at Roma. The performance against Lecce was wasteful and frustrating, but it showed progress. The players now seem to be on the same wavelength as their boss, and the positive to be taken from the fact that they only managed to scrape a 2-1 win against the third-from-bottom Salentini despite dominating is that they, well, dominated. 10 of the Giallorossi shots were wasted, but good things can only come of a team that can string together almost 700 successful passes and control 68% of the possession and 64% of the territory, regardless of the opposition. Enrique's style is different from that of Barcelona, and commentators who suggest otherwise are either lazy or just stupid, but the Spaniard has brought something of his previous employers with him, and if that Cruyffian magic can be imported to Rome from the Amsterdam of yesteryear via Catalonia and fused with the tactical astuteness and steely physicality embodied by local players like Daniele De Rossi, than Roma could really become a beautiful – and terrifying – thing.

“I am satisfied with both the performance and the result," the Spaniard said afterwards. "You have to put the ball in the net for it to count, but I saw the team is improving. Knowing how to suffer under pressure is also an important quality.

Disappointment should be tempered with optimism 

That fans and media alike could be a little underwhelmed about a 2-1 win in which Roma had a (gorgeous) goal incorrectly disallowed for off-side shows how high expectations are in the capital, and while it would be easy to lament the wasted chances or lambast those who wasted them, it should be noted that Roma won the game with only two recognised defenders (two and a half, if you give Rosi that much). The two centre backs were third and fourth choice, and the left-back was a converted winger.

Then there was that goal. "It’s a terrible shame for Osvaldo," said Luis Enrique of the forward's disallowed goal, "as he played a very complete game today and I am told the goal was valid. It was an incredible finish." In fact, it was a terrible shame for the whole side, as a 3-1 scoreline looks much more certain and would have done much to impress fans, media and perhaps even some future opposition.

Bojan needs to grow up – fast 

The comment about not lambasting those who wasted the chances being said, Bojan needs to impress quickly if he's to keep his place. Though his loan deal is quite convoluted, the value Barcelona have put on Krkic is a simple, round and rather large figure: €40 million. So far, he's done little to prove he's worth it. Setting club records – even at a powerhouse like Barca – will only get a player so far; eventually, he'll have to prove that he's able to adapt to Serie A, ready to be the sort of leading figure a €40 million price tag would suggest – and show all and sundry that he's capable of finishing. His squandered chances against Lecce drew derision from the Roma faithful on Sunday night and if he continues to squander goals it won't be too long before they're calling for him to be shown the door.

Julio Sergio is a liability that Lecce can ill-afford

One good season – even if it did include a key penalty save against fierce rivals Lazio – does not a good keeper make, and Roma fans were undoubtedly delighted that the Brazilian liability is no longer on their books. Gago's goal was an impressive piece of opportunism, but any keeper with a serious claim to being of top-flight quality should have done better. The former Roma stopper made a couple of good saves too, and that's part of his problem – you just don't know what Julio Sergio you're going to get. Lecce no doubt thought that taking a gamble on a player that had a lot of experience at European football's highest levels would be a boon in their battle at the bottom of the table, but now, in 18th position, they can ill-afford to ship the silly goals that he'll be responsible for. Little wonder that Lecce are the 33-year-old's 11th club.



19 November 2011

WARNING: Serie A is full of job-stealing foreigners



Classic stuff from the Gazzetta dello Sport, which laments the death of Italian culture AND dramatically quotes Nietzsche – all because, for the first time in its history, Serie A now has more foreign players than Italian ones.

A little over 51% of the players who've started this season in Italian top flight were born outside of the peninsula, a dramatic increase from 30% in 2004.

Italians don't get a look in anymore, moans the paper, unlike the days when Serie A was the best league in the world and foreign numbers were limited.

This is in contrast to the Premier League, says la Gazzetta, where the "foreign stars are added to a robust British chassis". Well that's all well-and-good, except for the fact that it's complete bullshit. In 2010-2011, only 35% of the players who started in Premier League games were English. And while 223 shameless, money-grabbing, job-stealing millionaires have started in Serie A's first 10 games this season, according to the its official website "There are currently over 337 foreign players registered and eligible to play in the Barclays Premier League." How many over 337, it doesn't say – but you get the drift.

Even the paper points to flaws in its own logic, making the obvious statement that these imports mostly compete with Italians for their positions, saying: "Se Pazzini gioca, va in panchina Milito. Se Cassano gioca, va in panchina Pato. Se Matri gioca, va in panchina Vucinic" – "if Pazzini plays, Milito's on the bench. If Cassano plays, Pato's on the bench. If Matri plays ... blah blah".

It is true that, if left unchecked, this situation may hamper the development of Italian players in the future, but a higher proportion of foreign talent may be what's needed to drive Serie A back to the very highest standard. Who would say, for example, that La Liga in Spain is a better quality league than the English Premier? Sure, it has two dazzling super-teams, but even the third-wheel Valencia are nowhere near Barca or Real, and after the third placed Los Che, the league's quality takes a nose dive. In Spain, they claim 70% of the players are Spanish, compared to the English 35% in the Premier League.

Some would say that this stat proves that more foreign players hurts national teams, but that arguement is extremely syllogistic; for example, will Cesare Prandelli's current crop do any worse at the Euros than Giovanni Trapattoni's Italy's squad (when only 30% of Serie A's players were foreign)? And has a rise in foreign registrations in the Bundesliga done any harm to the German national side?

Obviously, no article on the state of a football league would be complete without a quote from a 19th century philosopher, and the pink paper finishes with this: "L’unica risposta possibile costringe alla classica citazione da Nietzsche, ciò che non ti uccide ti rende più forte"/"the only response to this problem is the classic quote from Nietzsche: what doesn't kill you makes you stronger."

So be warned. A new crop of nihilistic, superhuman Italians are coming. Maybe.

14 November 2011

Serie A's potential freebies



With only weeks to go before the winter transfer window opens, there's interesting list from Goal.com, which shows the number of Serie A players who could be available on a free.

Top of all shopping lists must be Italy duo Daniele De Rossi, who Roma are desperately trying to tie down, and Riccardo Montolivo, who seems to find minute silences pretty funny. The Fiorentina midfielder is surely a more likely mover than De Rossi, but the Roman's precarious situation is attracting a lot of attention none the less, with no shortage of wealthy suitors willing to offer Capitan Futuro "mad stacks".

There's some high-profile names on the list – especially at Inter – and no doubt there's a few of the smaller outfits on the peninsula who'll be only too happy to offer them a retirement home.

Speaking of retirement, Francesco Antonioli is on the list, who of course won the scudetto with Roma way back when. He's currently the oldest active player in Serie A, being born as he was way WAY back in 1969. Most of the current Roma squad weren't even alive when he made his debut for Monza in 1986 (the year Pablo Osvaldo was born). Here's hoping he can plug away for another little bit.



 ATALANTA  
Giorgio Frezzolini21 Jan 1976Goalkeeper
Ciro Polito12 Apr 1979Goalkeeper
Daniele Capelli20 Jun 1986Defender
Michele Ferri29 May 1981Defender
Federico Peluso20 Jan 1984Defender
Fabio Caserta24 Sep 1978Midfielder
Ezequiel Schelotto23 May 1989Midfielder
Simone Tiribocchi31 Jan 1978Attacker


 BOLOGNA  
Simone Loria28 Oct 1976Defender
Gaby Mudingayi01 Oct 1981Midfielder
Massimo Coda10 Nov 1988Attacker
Daniele Paponi16 Apr 1988Attacker


 CAGLIARI  
Vlada Avramov05 Apr 1979Goalkeeper
Mauro Vigorito22 May 1990Goalkeeper
Alessandro Agostini23 Jul 1979Defender
Davide Astori07 Jan 1987Defender
Michele Canini05 Jun 1985Defender
Francesco Pisano29 Apr 1986Defender
Davide Biondini24 Jan 1983Midfielder
Andrea Cossu03 May 1980Midfielder
Joaquin Larrivey20 Aug 1984Attacker


 CATANIA  
Andrea Campagnolo17 Jun 1978Goalkeeper
Ciro Capuano10 Jul 1981Defender
Gennaro Delvecchio25 Mar 1978Midfielder
Pablo Ledesma04 Feb 1984Midfielder
Adrian Ricchiuti30 Jun 1978Midfielder
David Suazo05 Nov 1979Attacker


 CESENA  
Francesco Antonioli14 Sep 1969Goalkeeper
Alex Calderoni31 May 1976Goalkeeper
Aldo Simoncini30 Aug 1986Goalkeeper
Luca Ceccarelli24 Mar 1983Defender
Steve von Bergen10 Jun 1983Defender
Erjon Bogdani14 Apr 1977Attacker


 CHIEVO  
Lorenzo Squizzi20 Jun 1974 Goalkeeper
Nicholas Frey06 Mar 1984 Defender
Davide Mandelli28 Jun 1977Defender
Luciano03 Dec 1975Midfielder


 FIORENTINA  
Nikola Gulan24 Aug 1989Defender
Per Kroldrup31 Jul 1979 Defender
Cesare Natali05 Apr 1979Defender
Riccardo Montolivo18 Jan 1985Midfielder


 GENOA  
Cristian Lupatelli21 Jun 1978Goalkeeper
Alessio Scarpi19 Apr 1973Goalkeeper
Giandomenico Mesto25 May 1982Defender
Marco Rossi01 Apr 1978Midfielder
Bosko Jankovic01 Mar 1984Attacker


 INTER  
Luca Castellazzi19 Jul 1975Goalkeeper
Paolo Orlandoni12 Aug 1972Goalkeeper
Cristian Chivu26 Oct 1980Defender
Ivan Cordoba11 Aug 1976Defender
Walter Samuel22 Mar 1978Defender
Sulley Muntari27 Aug 1984Midfielder


 JUVENTUS  
Alex Manninger04 Jun 1977Goalkeeper
Fabio Grosso28 Nov 1977Defender
Amauri03 Jun 1980Attacker
Alessandro Del Piero09 Nov 1974Attacker
Luca Toni26 May 1977Attacker


 LAZIO  
Albano Bizzarri09 Nov 1977Goalkeeper
Giuseppe Biava08 May 1977Defender
Lionel Scaloni16 May 1978Defender
Luciano Zauri20 Jan 1978Defender
Cristian Brocchi30 Jan 1976Midfielder
Simone Del Nero04 Aug 1981 Midfielder


 LECCE  
Massimiliano Benassi11 Nov 1981Goalkeeper
Davide Petrachi14 Aug 1986Goalkeeper
Moris Carrozzieri16 Nov 1980Defender
Massimo Oddo14 Jun 1976Defender
Djamel Mesbah09 Oct 1984Midfielder
David Di Michele06 Jan 1976Attacker


 MILAN  
Flavio Roma21 Jun 1974Goalkeeper
Alessandro Nesta19 Mar 1976Defender
Gianluca Zambrotta19 Feb 1977 Defender
Massimo Ambrosini29 May 1977Midfielder
Mathieu Flamini07 Mar 1984Midfielder
Gennaro Gattuso09 Jan 1978Midfielder
Clarence Seedorf01 Apr 1976 Midfielder
Mark van Bommel22 Apr 1977Midfielder
Filippo Inzaghi09 Aug 1973Attacker


 NAPOLI  
Roberto Colombo24 Aug 1975Goalkeeper
Salvatore Aronica20 Jan 1978Defender
Gianluca Grava07 Mar 1977Defender
Cristiano Lucarelli04 Oct 1975Attacker


 NOVARA  
Matteo Centurioni08 May 1974Defender
Massimo Paci11 Jun 1979Defender
Marco Rigoni05 Jan 1980Midfielder


 PALERMO  
Luca Di Matteo25 Feb 1988Midfielder
Fabrizio Miccoli27 Jun 1979Attacker


 PARMA  
Nicola Pavarini24 Feb 1974Goalkeeper
Alessandro Lucarelli22 Jul 1977 Defender
Manuele Blasi17 Aug 1980Midfielder
Abderazak Jadid01 Jun 1983Midfielder
Stefano Morrone26 Oct 1978Midfielder
Francesco Valiani29 Oct 1980Midfielder
Hernan Crespo05 Jul 1975Attacker


 ROMA  
Marco Cassetti29 May 1977Defender
Cicinho24 Jun 1980Defender
Gabriel Heinze19 Apr 1978Defender
Ahmed Barusso26 Oct 1984Midfielder
Daniele De Rossi24 Jul 1983Midfielder
Leandro Greco19 Jul 1986Midfielder
Simone Perrotta17 Sep 1977Midfielder
Stefano Okaka09 Aug 1989Attacker


 SIENA  
Simone Farelli19 Feb 1983Goalkeeper
Luca Rossettini09 May 1985Defender
Andrea Rossi07 Nov 1986Defender
Paul Codrea04 Apr 1981Midfielder


 UDINESE  
Emanuele Belardi09 Oct 1977Goalkeeper
Andrea Coda25 Apr 1985Defender
Damiano Ferronetti01 Nov 1984Defender
Giampiero Pinzi11 May 1981Midfielder
Paulo Barreto12 May 1985Attacker