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Premiership: Reigning Champ or On the Ropes?

Is the 09/10 season set to be the most exciting ever? Or is it merely the season the Premier League lost its new-found dominance in Europe? After a weekend wherein 2 of the “big four” have been battered by lesser opposition, it seems appropriate to question whether or not the league in general is getting stronger or whether the cream of the crop are just in decline…

The 07/08 season can be heralded as the year of English Football’s domination. Following stellar performances by all the English-based teams in the Champions League knock out stages, an all English Final beckoned – the flagship event to showcase our supremacy… But things have changed.

Last season saw a Barcelona team usher in a new era with the Catalan giants are now being viewed as the best side in the game. Considering they have collected a haul of 6 trophies this season; not only is it hard to argue otherwise, but it places a certain treble in ’99 into perspective too.

It’s not just Barcelona’s (short) climb to the pinnacle of the game which has taken the sheen off of our domestic game though. The return of a certain Mr. Perez has cast the spotlight once more on another Spanish powerhouse. Not long ago it would have been a well rounded statement that there was a distinct lack of appeal to the Spanish Capital’s Royal Club. A team struggling in both European and domestic competitions, with an ageing side and a new manager every 6 months… not top of the destination wish-list for an established star.

But with him Perez has brought back an air of greatness which has washed over the club, attracting the world’s greatest stars to the second coming of the “Galacticos”. The impact has been detrimental to every league other than the Spanish. The best players in the French, English and Italian leagues have all answered Madrid’s rallying cry and the Spanish fans can now claim to have all of the Top 5 players in FIFA World Player of the Year Awards.

It is easy to argue for how heavily this migration of talent has impacted the Premiership – Manchester United’s lack of quality this year is often cited as a direct result of losing Ronaldo, Liverpool’s fall from grace is blamed upon their inability to replace Alonso, Arsenal’s supposed pursuit of Benzema was ill-fated in the face of Real’s millions – as is the apparent case for Chelsea’s interest in Ribery. Not only have Madrid stripped the league of some of our biggest names, but they are hampering our ability to attract others. Everyone wants to play for the Spanish leaders – whether their preference is white and gold or blue and maroon, it’s just not London or the North West at the moment.

Coupled with the allure of Spain’s new dominance is the fact that in Spain; players get to keep a lot more of their wages. The UK’s new 50% high-earner tax is a daunting prospect for the next eligible starlet to hit the European football scene. A 25% foreign executive tax in Spain sounds much more appealing…

However, it is possible this doom and gloom may all just be misery brokering on my part and in fact the cause of so many unexpected results this year is simply that the clubs at the bottom of the premiership are getting better. Anyone who has watched Portsmouth’s recent matches will know that their performances on the pitch belie their table position and everyone now knows how hard a task it is to win at Burnley’s Turf Moor. On Sunday afternoon West Ham showed the bravery and guile Zola craved and they got their just rewards for such a resolute performance, with many commentators suggesting they deserved all the spoils.

Either way it is becoming harder than ever to predict the league table and with more upsets potentially in the pipeline – neutral fans are in for many more festive treats. Long live 4-3 Manchester-derbies, long live 1-0 Burnley upsets and long-live Liverpool going down 2-0 on the South Coast.

World Cup C*ck Up

Well, quite a few weeks for World Cup scandal. Not only does Costa Rica feel aggrieved regarding their World Cup failure (thanks to an “offside” goal) but Ireland go and get knocked out via the hand of a now chastised Frenchman. Then to top it all off we have the President of FIFA being referred to as “an embarrassment” over said incident. Fun. And. Games.

On the subject of Henry’s misdemeanours I think it is important to undermine the calls for the game to be replayed. Don’t get me wrong I felt as personally wronged as everyone watching Sky that night but replaying matches solely on the principal of a wrong decision (however heinous) is ludicrous. Entertaining such ideas would drag us into a Groundhog Day reality wherein we continuously replay every game until the officials call all decisions 100% correctly. Aside from the fact such controversy adds untold entertainment to the game, this reduction to endless repetition would come about because it is impossible to classify what events would constitute a replay. Now before you say “a wrong decision in the build up to a goal”, take a moment to think about the complexity of actions which prelude any event in the beautiful game. It is not a case of the final pass… its whether the last throw in / corner / goal kick / free kick / penalty / handball / etc. was the correct decision and on and on you can continue. The fact is that with any goal scored, it would be possible to rewind back n number of decisions until you find an erroneous one and then claim the goal should not have stood for that reason. It just isn’t feasible.

The idea of a video ref has the same issues; however these can be solved due to the close vicinity of the prospective “fifth official”. Rugby officials are lucky in that when a controversial try comes into question, play naturally stops and the players (rightly or wrongly) go off celebrating with perennial man-hugs and jeering. This gives the officials time to confer and come to a collective decision based on the video footage. Unfortunately unless such an incident occurs in the immediate overture to a football goal, the referee will not be afforded this discussion-time. Of course, the argument is that if a goal is the result of a wrong decision; then they do have this time. When this is not the case the video-ref can flag up the incident to the referee at the next break in play. Which seems sensible; to be honest.

FIFA’s proposition of extra officials at the edge of each penalty area appears to me to be shying away from the fact that technology is well… better. Extra referees standing at the side of the pitch not only have the potential to distract the eye but they also lack the ‘replay’ feature which can be so detrimental to the conventional official set-up. This is not to say that R2-D2 will be replacing Howard Webb anytime soon, but the array of high definition cameras at football games today could serve a purpose other than making all those tellies in Dixons look great.

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