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Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2013 21:47:27 GMT
Chiles "If it would have been 5 seconds earlier it might have been easier for all of us to take"
Fuck know, when it happened was good enough, I love every minute of it thankyou.
BREAKING NEWS: IF CHELSEA FANS SWITCH OVER TO ITV+1 THEY STILL HAVE A CHANCE TO WIN THE SUPERCUP.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2013 21:51:51 GMT
LMAO @ Maureen. "The best team lost, we scored 2 goals, they scored 2 goals, they scored 1 more penalty than us, but the best team lost"
^^^^^^
That is fucking comedy gold at it's best. This shit should be framed.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2013 21:53:26 GMT
He's lost it. I fucking wish I could get this interview in text.
Was the Ramires foul a red? "I prefer to say not, even if its yes".
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Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2013 22:56:14 GMT
Boom 1-1 now for Bayern to make Chelsea look like the bitches they are. Said it on Sunday and I'll say it again. Chelsea are fuck all without Mata. Something has gone on there, best player in the squad yet he hasn't played this season other than a cameo against Hull. Espn pundits called it months ago saying Mata doesn't track back do Mourinho won't play him. Good for us.
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Post by Bestie on Aug 30, 2013 23:23:45 GMT
Boom 1-1 now for Bayern to make Chelsea look like the bitches they are. Said it on Sunday and I'll say it again. Chelsea are fuck all without Mata. Something has gone on there, best player in the squad yet he hasn't played this season other than a cameo against Hull. Espn pundits called it months ago saying Mata doesn't track back do Mourinho won't play him. Good for us.How? Isn't like we're ganna fackin' sign the mug. (Thanks traff, now I just want to swear 'in Terry-talk' all the time.)
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Post by Deleted on Aug 30, 2013 23:54:48 GMT
Espn pundits called it months ago saying Mata doesn't track back do Mourinho won't play him. Good for us.How? Isn't like we're ganna fackin' sign the mug. (Thanks traff, now I just want to swear 'in Terry-talk' all the time.) Good for us because he's their best player. They are currently playing with about 8 attacking midfielders all the time and looking shite.
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Post by Stew on Aug 31, 2013 8:30:25 GMT
LMAO @ Maureen. "The best team lost, we scored 2 goals, they scored 2 goals, they scored 1 more penalty than us, but the best team lost" ^^^^^^ That is fucking comedy gold at it's best. This shit should be framed. Just saw this. The scary thing is, he probably believes it. He was also banging on about a UEFA conspiracy against him as well.
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Post by karthy on Aug 31, 2013 8:40:59 GMT
Not sure if I should Be Happy that Mourinho lost the game ( his marbles too) or that Pep has Bitch Fucked a good Bayern Team ? It was an entertaining Game but i couldn't help but think that with the players Chelsea have , they won't suit Mou's style and while they will go on this season , i have a feeling that more players will get burnt then play to their potential. +Schurrle had a good game but the hype around him by most is something i don't get, he still flatters to deceive IMO , Oscar i get him not so much What's the logic in that if its a final , then a second warranted Yellow should not be given cos it screws the game ,seriously
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Post by Stew on Aug 31, 2013 8:46:37 GMT
He's saying that shite about the second yellow because it deflects how awful the challenge was. It was a 100% straight red. He comes out with all this nonsense and people focus in on that rather than the challenge and the fact Bayern murdered them all night.
I've now seen 3 Chelsea games this season and they honestly played better football under the Waiter
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Post by tommyred on Aug 31, 2013 8:48:58 GMT
I was just about to come here to comment on the interview. You forget what a twat Mourinho is till you hear him every week. The idea that Ramires should have been let off with a straight red tackle just because "it's a final" is ridiculous. Then he brings up the red cards against Barca AGAIN.
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Post by Stew on Aug 31, 2013 8:56:08 GMT
I was just about to come here to comment on the interview. You forget what a twat Mourinho is till you hear him every week. The idea that Ramires should have been let off with a straight red tackle just because "it's a final" is ridiculous. Then he brings up the red cards against Barca AGAIN. I'll hold my hands up, I wanted him here. The last week proves how wrong I was.
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Post by karthy on Aug 31, 2013 9:01:28 GMT
He's saying that shite about the second yellow because it deflects how awful the challenge was. It was a 100% straight red. He comes out with all this nonsense and people focus in on that rather than the challenge and the fact Bayern murdered them all night. I've now seen 3 Chelsea games this season and they honestly played better football under the WaiterUnfortunately , have to agree, Waiter atleast seemed to know how to use certain players. But like i said Mou's style of play does not suit the current team squad, what's with Mata and MOu is anyone's guess but i am gutted that we can't get him. Him and Oscar(probably) are the only two i'd take from rens. Hazard is nothing more than a wimp who becomes like a Hulk against low end teams at the most. Schurrle ?? ,Ramirez typcial Mou player all over the pitch and running and breaking play and that comment for the yellow card was a joke , must have got a Red , pity got only a yellow. Chelsea playing the same way could only be good for us.( and i am sure i shall be shot down sooner about how they will be the best soon)
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Post by karthy on Aug 31, 2013 9:17:09 GMT
Interesting Article this talksport.com/football/chelsea-v-bayern-why-guardiola-gets-under-mourinhos-skin-no-other-13083057883chelsea v bayern why guardiola gets under mourinhos skin no otherIf there is one person in football that gets under Jose Mourinho's skin like no other, it's Pep Guardiola. Much has been written about how the Portuguese coach chipped away at the Barcelona manager in recent years, but it works in reverse, too. We only had to wait minutes into Mourinho's pre-Super Cup press conference yesterday for evidence, with the Chelsea manager berating a journalist for daring to suggest that he struggles to beat Guardiola's teams. The journalist was wrong, he insisted. In reality, he was right. Seven wins, five draws and three losses. There stands Guardiola's record against Mourinho. He knows that, of course. A coach as meticulous as Mourinho will not be unaware of his record against a major rival, especially if that rival is Guardiola. Because Guardiola is a rival like no other. Their relationship is one that spans decades, and has twisted and turned in different directions as the years roll on. A timely dip back into history by Twitter user Futbolero a few months ago revealed just how highly Mou rated Pep as a player when they worked together at Barcelona: “With the ball, Guardiola is incredible, one of the best in the world. There is something fundamental: Pep always wants, and always knows what he wants”. So said Mourinho to Mundo Deportivo in 1996. The unnamed 'thing' that Pep wants is presumed to be the ball, an obsession that has continued long into Guardiola's coaching career. But that's not all. In the same piece, Mourinho goes on to make a revelation that is striking in hindsight: “I'm an admirer of [Johan] Cruyff”. These days it's hard to see how Jose Mourinho, the man (rightly or wrongly) said to define 'anti-football', could be a self-confessed admirer of Johan Cruyff. But there it is, straight from the horse's mouth. That, in itself, further explains why Guardiola has proven to be such an irritant for Mourinho in recent years. Because Pep took the job Mourinho wanted more than any other. The job at the club that Cruyff built. Thanks to Graham Hunter's exceptional book, Barça, it is now well documented that Jose Mourinho was being interviewed for the Barcelona position in early 2008. While, in the end, he didn't get the gig, the stumbling block was never his style of football. Then director of football Txiki Begiristain was more than convinced that Mourinho could adapt his football to Barcelona. Considering he was an admirer of Cruyff's philosophy in his early days as a coach, that's no surprise. Our formative years shape our later thinking, after all. But of course, Mourinho didn't pass the final test. Guardiola did. Dreams of returning as Barcelona's triumphant 'home-grown' coach were dashed for the Portuguese. Any opportunity to show the world that he could play possession-based football just as well as anybody else was denied, too. Instead, Mourinho was forced to stand back and watch as the club where he had learned his trade flourished under one of the players he had been dealing out orders to only a decade earlier. That must have hurt. 'Today, tomorrow, and forever, with Barcelona in my heart', Mourinho told onlookers gathered at Plaça Sant Jaume in 1997. Forever lasted until 2008, when Barcelona broke his heart and ensured that Guardiola stayed at the forefront of his mind. The fallout that ensued, first between Pep's Barcelona and Mourinho's Inter, then his Madrid, is common knowledge. Mourinho won his second Champions League at Barcelona's expense, but that pleasure didn't last long, with Guardiola adding his own second European Cup as a coach only a year later, eliminating Mou's Madrid in the process. Even when Guardiola left Barcelona in 2012, Mourinho couldn't escape his shadow. As some of football's biggest jobs became available, Pep's name was omnipresent at the top of the list, with Mourinho lagging behind. In a way it was understandable; Mou's Madrid were beginning to fall apart, with internal turmoil caused by his 'with me or against me' mentality seeping into their performances. It was a reminder of his scorched earth policy that is believed to have proven dissuasive for some of the clubs considering him as their next manager. Some clubs didn't even consider him at all, if you believe Uli Hoeness. "Guardiola and Mourinho had an interesting battle in Spain over some seasons," he recently noted, "but our coach left his adversary miles behind." Hoeness would say that, of course, but in terms of not only the trophies won, but the image he left behind to his potential employers, Guardiola did come off the better of the two. And so, sooner than we may have expected, here we are. Chelsea against Bayern. The teams have changed, but it's still Mourinho against Guardiola, a one-off opportunity to remind the world of just who the special one really is, and at the expense of the man that has stolen much of his thunder. Mourinho may be keen to play down the importance of his rivalry with the Catalan, but make no mistake about it, this
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Post by Stew on Aug 31, 2013 9:27:42 GMT
Great article, good find.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2013 10:17:22 GMT
I was just about to come here to comment on the interview. You forget what a twat Mourinho is till you hear him every week. The idea that Ramires should have been let off with a straight red tackle just because "it's a final" is ridiculous. Then he brings up the red cards against Barca AGAIN. I'll hold my hands up, I wanted him here. The last week proves how wrong I was. Me too, think I prefer watching him from a distance now though, great entertainment, classless cunt. Glad we looked elsewhere. He will be gone within 2 years.
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