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Thu

21

Jan

2010

FCBarcelona the world's best soccer club

Source: IFFHS

 

All-Time Club World Ranking (1.1.1991-31.12.2009)

 An All-time Club World Ranking can only be meaningful and useful if it can be determined by taking account all the results of the national championships, the national cup competitions, the club competitions of the six continental confederations and the FIFA. It is therefore only possible to determine an All-time Club World Ranking from January 1st, 1991 – when the Club World Ranking began taking all these details into consideration.

 The period from 1872 to 1990 can only be asssessed subjectively, mostly by using national and international champions as a guide. It follows that teams placed in the individual competitions cannot be taken into consideration, even if their titles were won easily or in spite of many defeats. It is simply not possible to establish a basis for giving all participating clubs an equal opportunity for the period 1872 to 1990.

 The IFFHS has therefore has decided, logically, that the All-time Club World Ranking should be determined from January 1st, 1991 using the annual Club World Ranking (the situation at 31st December annually). For this it will take into consideration the "Top 50" Clubs, annually and award them points from 50 points for the top club down to 1 point for the club in 50th place. Adding the points from the individual years for each club will provide the All-time Club World Ranking.

 

Situation:  31st December 2009

 

club country points




1. FC Barcelona España 807
2. Manchester United FC England 726
3. Real Madrid CF España

633

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Mon

30

Nov

2009

Ballon d'Or shortlist down to 10 men

PARIS (Reuters) - The list of candidates to win the 2009 Ballon d'Or award was reduced to 10 men on Sunday, with Barcelona and Argentina forward Lionel Messi the overwhelming favorite. A list of 30 players released last month is now down to 10, with Messi and last year's winner Cristiano Ronaldo featuring prominently, award organizers France Football magazine said on their website (www.francefootball.fr).

 

Didier Drogba, Samuel Eto'o, Steven Gerrard, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Andres Iniesta, Kaka, Wayne Rooney and Xavi are the other players still in contention.

 

There were no Italian or German players on the original 30-man list. Now there is no French player either with Karim Benzema, Yoann Gourcuff and Franck Ribery all dropped.

 

Fernando Torres, Frank Lampard and Cesc Fabregas are among the other high-profile casualties.

 

The result of the vote by soccer journalists to name the winner of the award formerly known as the European Footballer of the Year will be announced on Tuesday.

 

Source: Reuters.com

 

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Mon

30

Nov

2009

The marketing of fanaticism

By Paul Gardner

 

Not that you needed a reminder, but this weekend's big games were a glaring example of just how international pro soccer has become -- at the club level.

Three super-games were rolled out for us this weekend -- two in England -- the Everton-Liverpool Merseyside derby, the top-of-the-standings London derby between Arsenal and Chelsea -- and in Spain El Clasico in the Camp Nou, Barcelona vs. Real Madrid.

So: in the two English Premier League games, of the 44 starting players, only nine were English -- fewer than 25 percent. In Spain, 10 of the 22 starters were Spanish -- nearly 50 percent.

Nineteen different countries were represented, from five continents -- only Asia was absent. The largest contingent of players - 13 -- came from Spain, with 10 of then playing in El Clasico. Then came France with 12 players -- at least one on all six teams.

And the coaches: two Spanish, one Chilean, a Frenchman, an Italian, and a Scot. Which underlines the stark fact that there is not much that's English about the Premier League these days.

Does all the talk about how important soccer is as a community activity make any sense at all? The city of Liverpool has long bred the most fanatical fans in England and -- one has been persuaded to believe -- the most zealously turf-minded.

It was, after all, the Liverpool coach Bill Shankly, who uttered the notorious -- and highly mischievous -- blather about soccer being more important than a mere matter of life or death.

Just this past week, we've had a glimpse of the deep-rooted antagonisms that haunt the city. When Everton's plan for a new stadium in nearby Kirby was turned down by the British government, Robert Elston, the Everton CEO, made a series of low-key statements to the effect that it now made sense to talk -- again -- with Liverpool about the building of a new stadium that the two clubs would share.

The reasoning has always been that if AC Milan and Inter Milan can share the San Siro without the world coming to an end, why should Everton and Liverpool not work out a similar logical -- and highly money-saving -- agreement? And cost is a hugely important factor, as Elston stressed. Liverpool, also seeking to build a new stadium, is finding it difficult in the current recession, to find the necessary capital.

But barely were the words out of Elston's mouth when "a senior source" at Liverpool told England's Sunday Mirror: "There is absolutely no chance that Liverpool will be sharing a stadium with Everton. It will never happen."

Something deep inside my soccer soul tells me that is the right attitude. What is a soccer club if it doesn't have a home to call its own? Who wants the fans of a hated rival club sitting in his season-ticket seat every other week? But something else, something less visceral and closer perhaps to the reality of modern sport, tells me that a shared stadium ought to happen.

Not only in Liverpool, but in other cities too. I'm looking again at those remarkable figures that I cited above. How does one reconcile those with the parochial history of soccer clubs in England and most other countries? Does it make any sense at all for Liverpool and Everton fans to be so fervid about teams most of whose players have no link whatever to the city itself?

I find it difficult to understand - not the support that the clubs get, but the fanaticism that goes along with it. More -- I am decidedly suspicious of the fanaticism. For this reason: because it is something that is featured in great heavy, mind-numbing doses in so much of the marketing that now envelopes the sport.

In short, the extremes of fanaticism are being encouraged by the salesmen in their attempts to get you to spend more and more of your money on club shirts and other regalia. Read the ads, listen to them on TV, and wait -- it won't be long -- for the word "passion" to appear; then will come other emotive keywords like "love" and "heart" and "life." Oh yes, make no mistake, you are being invited to take your club and its results very, very seriously -- more seriously, perhaps, than ... well, ask Bill Shankly.

And when an activity becomes that important, how can you not spend your money to support it, or to support your children who support it? I cannot see the cynical commercialism that lies behind the blatant invitations to fans to be as "ultra" as possible as a healthy component of soccer.

What started as praiseworthy local pride has become something much less dignified. At its worst, soccer fandom now borders on mindless zealotry. Is it to be wondered at, then, that the sport attracts a whole variety of unsavory nationalistic groups? That it has yet to quell the constant menace of hooliganism? What a sad reflection that one of the biggest -- if not the biggest -- financial items in the organizing of any major soccer tournament is now the cost of security arrangements.

The sport, very obviously, has lost its vital local roots -- indeed has been losing them steadily for decades. I lament their disappearance -- but I regret even more the blind fanaticism that has entered the game in a vain attempt to make out that they still exist, or that they still retain their former importance.

 

Source: SoccerAmerica.com

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Mon

02

Nov

2009

FIFA World Player 2009

Leo Messi

Who will be honoured with the title of FIFA World Player and FIFA Women's World Player for 2009? FIFA has today announced the names of the players on the short lists (see below) and the final decision will be made by the captains and head coaches of the men's and women's national teams.

 

At the beginning of December, FIFA will announce the names of the five men and five women who have received the most votes and the winners will be revealed at the 19th FIFA World Player Gala at the Zurich Kongresshaus on 21 December 2009.

 

It should be noted that coaches and captains may not vote for players from the national team they coach or play for.

The lists of 23 male and ten female candidates for these prestigious awards have been drawn up by football experts from the Football Committee and the Committee for Women's Football and the FIFA Women's World Cup.

 

The following 23 men (in alphabetical order) are in contention for the title of FIFA World Player 2009;

 

Among this list of outstanding players, 4 of them have been created by the FC Barcelona academy:

 

Michael Ballack (Germany), Gianluigi Buffon (Italy), Iker Casillas (Spain), Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal), Diego (Brazil), Didier Drogba (Côte d'Ivoire), Michael Essien (Ghana), Samuel Eto'o (Cameroon), Steven Gerrard (England), Thierry Henry (France), Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Sweden), Andrés Iniesta (Spain), Kaká (Brazil), Frank Lampard (England), Luis Fabiano (Brazil), Lionel Messi (Argentina), Carles Puyol (Spain), Franck Ribéry (France), Wayne Rooney (England), John Terry (England), Fernando Torres (Spain), David Villa (Spain) and Xavi (Spain).

 

Source: Fifa.com October 30th 2009

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Sun

18

Oct

2009

Ballon d'Or!

Who will be thes best football player 2009?

 

4 out of 30 nominees come from the FCBarcelona Academy!

 

Andreï Archavine (Russie, Arsenal)
Karim Benzema (France, Lyon puis Real Madrid)
Iker Casillas (Espagne, Real Madrid)
Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal, Manchester United puis Real Madrid)
Diego (Brésil, Werder Brême puis Juventus Turin)
Didier Drogba (Côte d'Ivoire, Chelsea)
Edin Dzeko (Bosnie, Wolfsburg)
Samuel Eto'o (Cameroun, FC Barcelone puis Inter Milan)
Cesc Fabregas (Espagne, Arsenal)
Fernando Torres (Espagne, Liverpool)
Diego Forlan (Uruguay, Atletico Madrid)
Steven Gerrard (Angleterre, Liverpool)
Ryan Giggs (Pays de Galles, Manchester United)
Yoann Gourcuff (France, Bordeaux)
Thierry Henry (France, FC Barcelone)
Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Suède, Inter Milan puis FC Barcelone)
Iniesta (Espagne, FC Barcelone)
Julio Cesar (Brésil, Inter Milan)
Kakà (Brésil, Milan AC puis Real Madrid)
Frank Lampard (Angleterre, Chelsea)
Maicon (Brésil, Inter Milan)
Lionel Messi (Argentine, FC Barcelone)
Luis Fabiano (Brésil, FC Séville)
Franck Ribéry (France, Bayern Munich)
Wayne Rooney (Angleterre, Manchester United)
John Terry (Angleterre, Chelsea)
Nemanja Vidic (Serbie, Manchester United)
David Villa (Espagne, Valence)
Xavi (Espagne, FC Barcelone)
Yaya Touré (Côte d'Ivoire, FC Barcelone)

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