Odds and Sods

Refined Ruminations on the World of Sport, Or Something Like That

Odds and Sods

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Here are a couple quick thoughts about various sporting issues.

ESPN is reporting that a Dallas auction house is willing to offer a $1 million bounty for Barry Bonds’ 756th home run ball.  Considering that idiot fans already trample small children and the elderly to get a foul ball, can you imagine what kind of panedmonium is going to happen if that ball gets hit into a crowded bleacher section?  We here at Odds and Sods will be setting the over/under for serious injuries at four and lawsuits at six.

A Fox Sports Report claimed that Brett Favre requested a trade away from the Green Bay Packers in the days following the NFL draft, due to his frustration about the team failing to land Randy Moss.  Honestly, one can’t blame him.  More than any other player in the NFL, with the exception of Peyton Manning, Favre is the franchise in Green Bay.  He has brought them a Super Bowl and has won Three MVP awards.  He’s still capable of carrying a team on a playoff run.  Get the man some weapons!

The Red Sox mounted a 6 run comeback in the Bottom of the 9th to defeat the Orioles 6-5.  The Yankees lost to the Mariners again, placing them 8 games behind Boston after only 36 games played.  The scary thing is, the Red Sox haven’t played that well.  Manny and Ortiz have yet to truly get hot and take off.  A message to the Red Sox nation, don’t say anything don’t.  Don’t make any bold predictions.  Just sit tight and pretend it isn’t happening.  We don’t want to jinx it.

Sheffield United were relegated from the English Premier League on the final day of the season.  Feeling rather safe on 38 pts, the Blades could only have gone down if they lost to Wigan and West Ham was able to get a result against Man Utd.  Both Wigan and West Ham won, and Sheffield United will be competing in the Championship next season.  On behalf of all those who love entertaining and/or aesthetically pleasing football, good riddance!

13 May 2007 Posted by tyduffy | Uncategorized | , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Sexy Striker Sagas II: Thierry Henry

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Thierry Henry is another big named striker who has seen his name popping up in transfer rumors.  Since joining Arsenal in 1999, Henry has arguably been the best player to ply his trade in England in the Premiership era.  He has amassed 226 goals, enough to make him Arsenal’s all time leading score, a run that included 5 straight 30 goal campaigns (only broken by this year’s injury plagued season).  He has led Arsenal to 2 league titles, 3 FA Cup wins, and a Champions League final appearance.  For France, he has 39 goals in 91 caps and was a member of the World Cup Winning squad in 1998 and the Euro 2000 champions.

His individual honors include two Player’s Player of the Year Awards, three Football Writer’s Player of the Year awards, two Onze d’Ors, and two European Golden Boot’s.  He has also lead the Premier League in goals on four separate occasions.  He has also been noted for his work in the Stand Up Speak Up campaign to combat racism in European football.

Despite rampant speculation about him va va vooming to Barcelona after the 2006 season, TH14 signed a four year contract with the Gunners, which he stated would be his last professional contract.

There has been speculation during the 2006-7 that Henry would like to leave Arsenal, or that Arsenal wished to rid themselves of Henry.  There have been concerns that the 29 year-old may have sciatica, which is manageable but not treatable.  This, as well as groin and stomach muscle problems, limited him to just 17 domestic appearances, in which he scored 10 goals.  There has also been reported tension between him and manager Arsene Wenger over the lack of player signings to help strengthen the squad and between him and the board over the sacking of David Dein.
Inter-Milan and Barcelona have reported interest, with estimated 15mGBP offers on the table.  However, all the interest has been largely one-sided, leaked through club officials or their newspaper mouthpieces.  Henry has repeatedly stated that he has no desire to leave Arsenal, as long as Wenger remains at the club.  Wenger guranteed today that Henry would not be sold in the summer.  Sans a massive falling out between the two, it appears that Thierry Henry will remain at the Emirates for at least one more year.

11 May 2007 Posted by tyduffy | Uncategorized | , , , | 3 Comments

Sexy Striker Sagas Part I: Michael Owen

As Arsenal found out so painfully this season, scoring goals is rather important in football.  Largely because of that, strikers are often the most prized, the most overvalued, the biggest names, and the biggest divas.  With nearly every big club in England, Spain, Italy, and Germany in the market, and with a plethora of prominent names circulating the rumor mills and back pages, many of these fabulous forwards appear to be on the move.  The Sexy Striker Sagas will be a series of articles seeking to decipher which of these debutantes will be the belle of the ball for your club in August.  The first part of the series begins now with Newcastle’s Michael Owen

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Michael Owen has a list of accomplishments to match nearly anyone in football.  He won the PFA Young Player of the Year award in 1998.  He was joint top-scorer in the Premier league twice.  He won European Football of the Year ward in 2001 at the wee age of 22.  He was a member of Liverpool sides that won the FA Cup, 2 League Cups, and the UEFA Cup.  The Anfield legend scored 158 goals in 7 full seasons for the Reds.

Unlike many of his English counterparts, he also has made a name for himself representing his country.  Owen is the 4th leading all-time scorer for the England National Team, with 36 goals in 80 caps.  The most famous being his hat-trick in the famous 5-1 victory over Germany in Munich during the 2002 WC Qualifiers.  He is also the only England player to have scored in four major tournaments.

However, the last three seasons have seen Owen tumble into the abyss.  The Reds sold him to Real Madrid in 2004 for 8m GBP, but he failed to impress, managing a mere 16 goals in 45 appearances.  He returned to England in 2005 when Newcastle bought him for 16m GBP, but he has been plagued by injury since.  Michael managed just 11 appearances in 2005-6 (though he scored 7 goals), before a broken metatarsal in his foot prematurely ended the season.  He then suffered a torn ACL in the 2006 World Cup, and has only just come back to make one appearance for Newcastle this season.

We covered Michael’s already tenuous situation in the Northeast in a previous post.  However, Newcastle chariman Fat Freddy Sheppard (aka FFS or The Fat Controller) added fuel to the fire with recent comments to the English media.  Sheppard asked for a display of loyalty to the club from Owen, stating the following.

“I’m telling Michael he has two choices: he either comes out and tells our fans, who have taken him to their hearts, that he is happy here - or I tell him that not one of the big four clubs, Manchester United, Chelsea, Arsenal or Liverpool are interested in him. Because that’s the case…The loyalty this club has shown him over the last two years, when he had injury problems in his first season and had missed virtually all of this season, deserves something in return.”

From these comments, one can divine a number of things.  One, FFS has absolutely no idea what he is doing.  If Owen is considering a move, threatening him, giving him an ultimatum, and then insulting him is not necessarily a delicate or prudent way of diffusing the situation.  Two, Sheppard is very, very, very worried about him leaving.  The Black and White invested heavily in Owen, ponying up a 16m GBP transfer bid as well as Owen’s hefty salary with little to show for it the last two seasons.  Owen leaving this summer might be the straw that breaks the camel’s back and finally gets him deposed.

An interview on the Game Podcast with Times Online proved informative as well, with Owen discussing his England teammates and former Liverpool colleagues at length, but only discussing Newcastle when specifically prodded.  He cited recently resigned Glenn Roeder as a “great” manager, but made no reference to possible replacements or what shirt he would be wearing next season.

Despite Sheppard’s steadfastness, Owen reportedly does have an escape clause in his contract, which makes him available to any club wishing to pay 9m GBP.  With elite strikers running near the 30mGBP range and beyond, Owen has to be an intriguing prospect at such a cut rate.  He is only 27 years old, and has the potential, if healthy, to be one of the best strikers in the world, let alone England, in the prime of his career.  However, one must weigh that potential against both the risk that he will get injured and the distinct possibility that the knee injury will plunder him of his pace and make him a shell of the player he once was.

After his experience in the White Shirt, Owen will most likely not be willing to make another venture overseas.  That leaves the possibility of him moving to one of the Big Four English clubs.  Chelsea are looking for a striker after the Shevchenko disaster.  However, one sees them having the financial clout to break the bank for a bigger target, like Valencia’s David Villa.

Manchester United, despite winning the Premiership, lacked a potent traditional striker and are in the market.  But, they may have the targets set higher as well, with rich Uncle Glazer looking at the likes of Samuel Eto’o.  With the likes of Giggs, Scholes, and Neville not getting any younger, Sir Alex will probably want to inject the team with younger blood, rather than an aging and injury prone striker.  If they fail to land one of the bigger named strikers, they may be tempted to swoop in to nab Owen.

A goal poacher like Owen would seem a perfect fit for Arsene Wenger’s team that was notably anemic in the penalty area.  However, financial constraints will most likely prevent them from taking a chance on Owen.  Look for them to go younger, cheaper, more obscure, and more international.

Though Rafa Benitez  doesn’t appear particularly interested, the logical destination for Owen would appear to be Liverpool.  He would undoubtedly be interested in returning to the club where he last had success.  The fans would undoubtedly welcome him back.  Liverpool have depth at striker, but lack the top-flight international class scorer required to win the elusive Premiership and to be considered as the self-proclaimed greatest, best, and most traditional club in the entire known universe.  They have the money and tradition but Liverpool isn’t exactly an attractive target for elite caliber players, unless they happen to have been born there.  They may have trouble bringing in the likes of a Samuel Eto’o, causing them to pull the trigger on Owen to appease the fans and Steven Gerrard (who is currently negotiating a long-term deal).

Unless Newcastle plan on bringing in a certain smooth Swede and Owen admirer as manager, it appears that Owen’s time at the Toon will be brief.  The only clubs who would both tempt him and have the cash would be the Big Four.  The only one of them who would appear a likely destination would be Liverpool.

10 May 2007 Posted by tyduffy | Uncategorized | , , , , | 1 Comment

It’s Not Rocket Science

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The English Premier League has once again proven, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that it is completely out of touch with its audience, technology, and basic logic. They announced yesterday that they would be suing YouTube and its parent company Google for alleged copywright infringement, due to the fact that Premiership highlights have ended up on its website.

First of all, the Premiership is not losing any money from this. Yes, their “property” is being used in an unauthorized fashion. However, it isn’t lowering viewership of the actual product. Viacom has at least a point, that if all of the Daily Show clips are online people won’ t watch the actual show. But, no one can put an entire Premier League match on YouTube, nor would anyone want to watch it. If someone wants to watch the match, which is assuredly the preferred method, they will do so. Since, the Premiership just signed in total 2.7 billion GBP worth of deals for the next three seasons, there isn’t exactly a crisis here.

Second, the fact that so many people are going to YouTube for the highlights should have set off some alarm bells. There is a market for this! One that can be exploited for profit! They could do a number of things with this to make money.

They could charge a small subscription fee and post the videos on their own website. They could charge for advertising on the website and in the video highlights themselves and make a large amount of money.

Another route could be to make the week’s highlights available for download through the TV Shows format on iTunes for a small fee.

Or, if they were really feeling generous, they could follow the lead of other sports leagues and networks and simply have their own section on YouTube where one could view goals and highlights and give them to the fans for free, while still charging for advertising.

Taking one of these routes would make sense and make money. Instead, they are suing YouTube. This doesn’t keep the videos off the web, since there are numerous other sites where one could go to find the videos. It denies people who want it access to your product.  It prevents you from making money.  It bogs you down in years of nebulous legal disputes.  There is no reason to do this.  It is just plain stupid to not make these videos available online.  But then again what else would one expect from the Premier League?

5 May 2007 Posted by tyduffy | Uncategorized | , | 3 Comments

No Right to Complain

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The Premier League handed West Ham a record 5.5m GBP fine last Friday, for irregulations concerning the transfers of Argentinian duo Javier Mascherano and Carlos Tevez.  The pair were part owned by Iranian businessman Kia Joorabchian, which violated Premiership rules regarding third party ownership.  The club was found guilty of “acting improperly” and “witholding vital documentation.”

The controversy concerns what didn’t happen, a points deduction.  AFC Wimbeldon were docked 18 pts (reduced to 3 pts on appeal) for fielding an ineligible player.  Following precedent, West Ham should have faced a 3 pt deduction as well, which would have effectively ended their late season push to escape the relegation zone.  The fine was no trifle, but nothing compared to the tens of millions of GBP to be made by staying in the Premier League next season.

One of the reasons put forward was that it would be unfair to take away pts, since the violations occurred under the previous administration, prior to the Eggman’s purchase of the club.  However, fellow incompetents Wigan Athletic and Fulham suggest a more cynical explanation, the Premier League wants West Ham to stay up.

West Ham are a big London club.  They have a passionate fan base that fills Upton Park every week.  They have a new owner willing to pump money into the club.  Their presence fuels London derbys, stokes fan interest, and makes everyone a lot of sweet moolah.  Fulham are a small club with a lukewarm fan base, and Wigan are a small club that struggles to fill its stadium.  The dots aren’t hard to connect.  The Guardian’s David Conn suggests that Fulham or Wigan may consider legal action if they are relegated over West Ham.

Money conquers all in the world of football.  That is why the Premier League was created in the first place.  That is why Fulham and Wigan are so desperate to avoid the drop.  West Ham having a shot to stay up is great for business.  Immediately, it maintains interest in the last two weeks of the season, where Man U essentially has the title wrapped up and most clubs will be fielding reserves and packing it up for the year.  For next season, the league avoids losing both a big club with a large fan base, and a third London area club.  It is fairly clear that there was, at the very least, a strong incentive for the league to not drop points.

That said, Wigan and Fulham have zero right to complain.  Carlos Tevez and West Ham did not put Wigan and Fulham on the brink of relegation.  Their rubbish play did.

Paul Jewell was keen to blame the referees for costing the team 50mGBP with a questionable decision against Arsenal early in the year.  It was obviously the referees’ fault.  It surely had nothing to do with a stretch in the middle of the season when the club lost 9/10 matches.  Fulham’s situation is certainly due to Tevez as well, rather than say, going winless in their last 11 league matches.

The other clubs have every incentive to blame the Premier League and West Ham for their troubles.  It provides an easy target to deflect blame for their rubbish play and forgettable season.  However, the blame resides squarely with them.  Wigan had an opportunity to dock 3 pts from West Ham on the pitch last weekend and got spanked 3-0.  If Wigan and Fulham want to stay in the Premiership, they should shut up and start playing like it.

2 May 2007 Posted by tyduffy | Uncategorized | , , , , , | 6 Comments