Wednesday, October 13, 2010

World Cup 2010 Blog: “Euro 2012 Qualifying Standings” plus 2 more

World Cup 2010 Blog: “Euro 2012 Qualifying Standings” plus 2 more

Link to World Cup Soccer - South Africa 2010

Euro 2012 Qualifying Standings

Posted: 12 Oct 2010 03:09 PM PDT

335-euro-2012-map-poland-ukraine

The final day of Euro 2012 qualifying was loaded with drama, from canceled games to 4-4 injury time thrillers to upsets to the near upsets.

The results are below, with group standings which will largely stay unchanged between now and late March – lots of time with which to bemoan lost chances.

Results

Belgium 4 – Austria 4
Kazakhstan 0 – Germany 3
Azerbaijan 1 – Turkey 0
Armenia 4 – Andorra 0
Slovakia 1 – Ireland 1
Macedonia 0 – Russia 1
Italy v Serbia Canceled
Estonia 0 – Slovenia 1
Faroe Islands 1 – Northern Ireland 1
Belarus 2 – Albania 0
France 2 – Luxembourg 0
Finland 1 – Hungary 2
San Marino 0 – Moldova 2
Netherlands 4 – Sweden 1
Latvia 1 – Georgia 1
Greece 2 – Israel 1
England 0 – Montenegro 0
Switzerland 4 – Wales 1
Iceland 1 – Portugal 3
Denmark 2 – Cyprus 0
Liechtenstein 0 – Czech Republic 2
Scotland 2 – Spain 3

Group A: One of the more exciting games that actually took place was Belgium versus Austria – and controversial, too. To be honest, it’s happening this very moment and I may need some time to come down to earth. Arguably one of the best Euro qualifiers in years. (So best of the last six weeks, in other words.)

Not to be outdone by a 4-4 thriller, Azerbaijan pulled off what may be the upset of the day by beating Turkey 1-0 and ratcheting Guus Hiddink’s aura down a further few notches.

Germany, meanwhile, thumped Kazakhstan. (You saw that coming.)

groupa

Group B: A 1-0 over Macedonia probably isn’t the scoreline for which they hoped, but with two straight wins Russia appears to be back on track – and very thankful for Ireland and Slovakia sister-kissing their way to a draw.

But the surprise is Armenia, who were probably expected to beat Andorra, but did so convincingly after the win over Slovakia.

groupb

Group C: Group A & C need to be played weekly as far as I’m concerned. Earlier in the day the Faroes nabbed a shocking draw (any points are termed “shocking” for the tiny island nation) against Northern Island, fresh off a draw with Italy.

Never one to allow others the drama spotlight drift to others, Italy v Serbia was called due to general Serbian hooliganism with a decision from UEFA to come later. Should Italy be awarded the victory, Serbia’s in deep shit.

Slovenia’s 1-0 against Estonia was left in the dust, obviously.

groupc

Group D: Is France back? Victories over Luxembourg aren’t exactly definitive evidence on anything, but they’ll certainly take top spot after every single thing that’s happened since Euro 2008.

groupd

Group E: If getting to the World Cup final wasn’t enough for your lofty standards, this win over Sweden is just further reminder: this Dutch team is really a cut above their recent predecessors.

Hungary is also enjoying a mini renaissance of its own.

groupe

Group F: Greece and Croatia are going to finish 1 & 2 – not necessarily in that order – come the end of qualifying.

But you knew that already.

groupf

Group G: Tiny, plucky little Montenegro continue their astonishing run, even without the scratched Mirko Vucinic, with a nil-nil at Wembley, easily the most difficult fixture of their qualifying run.

Anyone who bet on this table after the fall qualifiers is a mighty rich person.

groupg

Group H: The post-Queiroz era appears off to a flying, not quite nostalgic start.

grouph

Group I: Scotland had fleeting dreams for roughly ten minutes after Gerard Pique put an own goal into the Spanish net, making it 2-2. However, they charitably returned the favor by missing a header in the box, leaving Fernando Llorente for the easy tap. Being good hosts will get you brownie points, not three points.

Doubly bad news, since the Czech Republic is now in the midst what most like to call a “winning streak”. Two in a row.

groupi

[Tables via Soccerway]


Italy v Serbia Delayed Due To Rocks, Fire Hoses & Good Old Fashioned Hooliganism

Posted: 12 Oct 2010 12:11 PM PDT

Flag-Pins-Italy-SerbiaThings are not completely kosher inside the Serbian camp. A number of issues, starting at the top with the coaching position, have contributed to a less-than-ideal start to Euro 2012 qualifying. Serbian fans would probably use stronger words to describe the 3-1 loss to Estonia in Belgrade on Friday, and it’s tough to disagree.

So they’ve resorted to taking it out on the team themselves.


At the moment Italy v Serbia is delayed, the riot police is four deep in front of the Serbian section of the stadium, a fire hose has been hauled out to the pitch (no, not Makelele) and Serbia are looking at the backup keeper because Vladimir Stojkovic was injured by his own fans on the way to the stadium. (Other reports say he asked not to play out of fear of the ultras.)


It is reported the fans threw rocks and fireworks at the team bus, hitting goalkeeper Stojkovic. He was injured and therefore not even on the bench for the game.

Inside the stadium the problems deteriorated, as hooligans in ski masks climbed on top of the plexiglass walls and clinically cut the protective net with pliers.

They also threw flares and objects across to the Italian area of the stadium and on to the pitch.

It took a good 20 minutes before the referee, who had come out to begin the match, walked back into the tunnel with the teams.

Riot police were called, but the Serbian fans had no intention of pulling back and set fire to flags.

I can’t imagine any of that is going to help matters.

This is very much live at the time, so here’s a link if you’d like to eschew football for some good old fashioned hooliganism.

Never much doubt this was going to be one of the most exciting dates on the Euro 2012 qualifying calendar.

Update: The game has begun, nearly 45 minutes later.

Update: After all of 7 minutes, the game is delayed again due to a multitude of flairs on the pitch.

Holding this at an “English-style” stadium wasn’t brilliant.

Update:
Game canceled.

“Highlights”:


Qatar’s Proposed Lusail Iconic Stadium

Posted: 12 Oct 2010 08:29 AM PDT

The 2022 World Cup bid process is turning into an arms race between two parties with deep pockets and deeper ambitions, so clearly the winner of that World Cup will be anyone who attends. Anything done on the pitch is just a bonus.

Japan wants holograms, Qatar has now countered with the rather stunning Lusail Iconic Stadium complex. One which can’t really be fully appreciated without the help of a helicopter. Or 3D modeling and the slight detail that it’s not real yet.

lusail-iconic-stadium

Just adding to Qatar’s astonishing array of proposed stadiums which will look fantabulous in a museum when the World Cup is awarded elsewhere. (Sad but true.)

[Model jpg's]


Tuesday, October 12, 2010

World Cup 2010 Blog: “Euro 2012 Qualifying Matchday Preview” plus 1 more

World Cup 2010 Blog: “Euro 2012 Qualifying Matchday Preview” plus 1 more

Link to World Cup Soccer - South Africa 2010

Euro 2012 Qualifying Matchday Preview

Posted: 11 Oct 2010 03:31 PM PDT

euro

Euro 2012 qualifiers are back one last time, and with Friday serving as the hors d’ourvres to Tuesday’s meaty entree. There were a few delectable delights pre-weekend – and a couple during – but this lineup feels real, as though a number of these games could be dropped into the Euro 2012 knockouts without skipping a beat. Italy v Serbia? Ireland v Slovakia? Netherlands v Sweden? England v a pants-less Montenegro?

Sumptuous. Save for the last part.

Fixtures

Belgium v Austria
Kazakhstan v Germany
Azerbaijan v Turkey
Armenia v Andorra
Slovakia v Ireland
Macedonia v Russia
Italy v Serbia
Estonia v Slovenia
Faroe Islands v Northern Ireland
Belarus v Albania
France v Luxembourg
Finland v Hungary
San Marino v Moldova
Netherlands v Sweden
Latvia v Georgia
Greece v Israel
England v Montenegro
Switzerland v Wales
Iceland v Portugal
Denmark v Cyprus
Liechtenstein v Czech Republic
Scotland v Spain


Groups/Games to Watch

Group A

Belgium v Austria
Kazakhstan v Germany
Azerbaijan v Turkey

Game to Watch: Belgium v Austria

Battle of the misleading early schedules: Austria is 2-0-0, 5, 0 while Belgium has lost two of three.

Austria’s played Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan while Belgium’s two losses have come against Germany and in Istanbul, leading to the age-old question:

Is it better to get the tough games done with early, or cushion the schedule and ego with some fish-in-a-barrel action? We shall find out.

Group B

Armenia v Andorra
Slovakia v Ireland
Macedonia v Russia

Game to Watch:
Slovakia v Ireland

It’s far too early for must-win games, but with Slovakia, Ireland and Russia all tied at the top at six points over three games – particularly with Russia regaining some footing with a win in Dublin on Friday – and a trio of beatable opponents at the bottom of the group, the games between these three may decide the group in the end, regardless of its date on the calendar.

Might be the closest thing we get to squeaky bum time for six months to a year.


Group C

Italy v Serbia
Estonia v Slovenia
Faroe Islands v Northern Ireland

Game to Watch:
Italy v Serbia

Neither team had particularly enjoyable Friday evenings – Italy drawing with Northern Ireland and Serbia on the wrong end of a 3-1 with Estonia in Belgrade – but they’re still the two “name” teams of the group and the favorites to assume spots 1 & 2 when qualification is at its end.

Plus they’re just “names”, and that’s part of the fun.

Group D

Belarus v Albania
France v Luxembourg


Group E

Finland v Hungary
San Marino v Moldova
Netherlands v Sweden

Games to Watch:
Netherlands v Sweden

Eighteen months ago this would’ve been an intriguing battle in which Sweden had a prayer; now it’ll require nothing short of an upset.

Still a good game, however – and safer, too, sans De Jong.

Group F

Latvia v Georgia
Greece v Israel


Group G

England v Montenegro
Switzerland v Wales

Game to Watch:
The surprise of qualifiers, surprise of the year even, has been Montenegro, now 3-0-0 and atop the group standings. Simple question: will Cinderella still have the glass slipper at Wembley?

But more importantly: will Mirko Vucinic keep his pants on?

You’d be amazed as to the genuineness of that question.

Group H

Iceland v Portugal
Denmark v Cyprus


Group I

Liechtenstein v Czech Republic
Scotland v Spain


Japan Wants 400 World Cups Simultaneously Via Hologram

Posted: 11 Oct 2010 09:49 AM PDT

yogs_first_adventure.finThe glitz and glamor of the upcoming World Cup bid process has centered around Qatar and their aesthetically jaw-dropping, sweat-nullifying futuristic stadiums.

But the rumblings surrounding Japan’s proposed bid were the real prize; a treasure chest of possibilities which would not only spur the World Cup forward, but the very state of sport.

The details of their technological revolution are leaking, and to put it bluntly: it’s just stupidly good.

CNet:

In its bid for the 2022 World Cup, Japan is proposing to shoot all of its games in 3D and then beaming them holographically onto 400 pitches around the world.

Each game will be filmed by 200 high-definition 3D cameras positioned around the stadium and sound would be recorded by mics under the pitch.

If Japan gets its way, each event will be powered by electricity generated by fans cheering and stamping their feet, and supplemented by solar panels on stadium roofs.

Whether or not it’s feasible in just over a decade, particularly when being run by an organization which won’t hit rewind on the VCR to determine a correct call, is up for debate.

Doesn’t really matter, though; time for all the other World Cup 2022 bids (that’s you, United States) to applaud, pack it up and saunter on home.

(Still holding out for Japan-Qatar 2022, however.)