No Euro 2016 excuses for Wales

23 02 2014

Wales manager Chris Coleman has to be happy with the outcome for his side of the Euro 2016 qualifying groups draw, made in Nice this morning. But the pressure will be ramped up for Wales to earn a place in a major tournament for first time since the 1958 World Cup (and only the second time ever).

Belgium are the Group B name which sticks out most obviously, even if it was Bosnia and Herzegovina which emerged from Pot 1. But Wales can surely pick up results against any of our five opponents, and with the top two in each group automatically qualifying for the tournament in France, that should be a realistic target. A third-place finish, and a guaranteed play-off spot, should be the minimum target.faw

Wales

World ranking: 51st
Highest/lowest ranking since February 2012: 37th/82nd

Bosnia and Herzegovina

World ranking: 17th
Highest/lowest ranking since February 2012: 13th/31st
Last match: Wales 0-2 Bosnia and Herzegovina, Friendly, 15 August 2012
Last competitive match: none

Belgium

World ranking: 11th
Highest/lowest ranking since February 2012: 5th/54th
Last match: Belgium 1-1 Wales, World Cup qualifier, 15 October 2013

Israel

World ranking: 56th
Highest/lowest ranking since February 2012: 35th/82nd
Last match: Israel 3-3 Wales, Friendly, 8 February 1989
Last competitive match: none

Cyprus

World ranking: 122nd
Highest/lowest ranking since February 2012: 107th/135th
Last match: Cyprus 3-1 Wales, Euro 2008 qualifier, 13 October 2007

Andorra

World ranking: 198th
Highest/lowest ranking since February 2012: 198th/205th
Last match: none





Things that were bad today

8 02 2014

Not necessarily in order…

1. Wales

Well, I said Ireland would win and would score 26 points. But I didn’t expect this sort of humiliation – we were thoroughly beaten in every aspect of the game (except perhaps goalkicking – 1/1 for Leigh Halfpenny. Hooray). As far as I can tell, it was Wales’s biggest Six Nations defeat since 2006, and we’ve won three championships since then. This was the same sort of defeat we used to suffer in the final days at the old Lansdowne Road in the early 2000s, and if last week was a bit disappointing, today was a total shocker. We’d need to win at Twickenham to have a chance of winning the championship, but that hardly looks likely after such a rudderless performance.

 

You have to credit Ireland as well, though. Worryingly, they’re looking formidable under the stewardship of Joe Schmidt. Read the rest of this entry »





My highlights of 2013

30 12 2013

Judging by my 2013 ticket collection (below), I possibly wasted a bit too much time watching sport this year. Anyway, I thought I might as well pick out a couple of highlights and try to relive the glory… In chronological order:

January 20: Leicester 9-5 Toulouse, Heineken Cup

Because who doesn’t love watching sport in the snow?

Tigers officials clear snow from the Welford Road pitch before Leicester's 9-5 Heineken Cup win over Toulouse

Tigers officials clear snow from the Welford Road pitch

February 9: France 6-16 Wales, Six Nations

A terrible game, but it got Wales’s victorious Six Nations campaign off and running.

france v wales, paris, 2013 six nations championship

France 6-16 Wales, Stade de France

March 16: Wales 30-3 England, Six Nations

Goes without saying. What a performance!

wales 30-3 england, millennium stadium, 16 march 2013, six nations

Wales lift the Six Nations trophy after successfully defending their title

June 22: Royal Ascot

My first time at the races, and all three of us who went finished up. Nice.

royal ascot 2013

Royal Ascot 2013

August 16: Mo Farah wins the 5,000m, World Athletics Championships, Moscow

A stunning “double double” for Mo. Made all the sweeter by the disappointment of a Frenchman sitting behind us who had spent the whole race telling us how badly Farah had misjudged the race.

Mo farah moscow 2013 5000m

Mo Farah wins his second gold of the 2013 World Athletics Championships in Moscow

September 29: Pittsburgh Steelers 27-34 Minnesota Vikings, NFL, Wembley

One of the best NFL International Series matches there’s been.

Wembley NFL Steelers at Vikings

Wembley for Steelers @ Vikings

October 5: Cardiff City 1-2 Newcastle United, Premier League

Exciting game – my first football match for ages – and great seats. Thanks Chris!

cardiff city stadium

Newcastle win at Cardiff City Stadium

December 28: Ebbw Vale 45-0 RGC 1404, Championship

Sport-wise, where it all started for me. Good to finish the year watching the Steelmen dominate yet again.

eugene cross park ebbw vale

Ebbw Vale v RGC 1404

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Some others:

Oxford-20130217-01510

London Welsh v Sale

The Stoop before kick off

Harlequins v Munster

o2 basketball

Euroleague basketball, O2 Arena

Leicester Tigers defeated Harlequins 33-16 at Welford Road in the Premiership semi-final

Leicester Tigers v Harlequins

twickenham tigers 37-17 saints

Northampton v Leicester

cardiff arms park

Cardiff Blues v Edinburgh

Franklin's Gardens

Northampton v Ospreys

 

…and here are those tickets. I love sport.

2013 sports tickets

My collection of tickets from 2013 sports events





Gibraltar enter world football stage with stunning goalless draw

19 11 2013

England v Germany? World Cup qualifier play-offs? Zlatan v Cristiano?

No, the eyes of anyone with an ounce of sense this evening were on the Algarve Stadium in Portugal as Gibraltar played its first ever official international football match – coming away with a goalless draw against Slovakia, which, in context, was pretty sensational.

Football Stadium

Gibraltar’s old ground, the Victoria Stadium. Picture: Flickr, Malcolm Tredinnick

Earlier this year the British Overseas Territory, famous for its Rock, for its monkeys and for the fact it intensely annoys Spaniards, was admitted to UEFA.

There have been fears for the ability of the scoreboard to cope when Gibraltar lines up in the qualifiers for Euro 2016, with potential match-ups against Germany or the Netherlands (a potentially epic fixture against Spain will be purposely avoided by UEFA) predicted to be just a little bit tricky for the team representing a population of just 30,000, slightly less than each of traditional whipping boys San Marino and Liechtenstein.

In many ways it would make sense for those and other minnows to hold a separate competition, pre-qualifiers to avoid the kind of mismatches which saw San Marino finish the most recent qualifiers having conceded 54 goals (scoring one) in their 10 games.

On the other hand, we’d all be the poorer if we missed out on gems like this, featuring Martin Tyler’s “humiliation here” commentary:

Anyway, Gibraltar held its own tonight against a Slovakia team – admittedly weakened – ranked 65th in the world: hardly one of world football’s great sides, but they did qualify for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, beating defending champions Italy 3-2 in the process as they unexpectedly reached the weirdly-named Round of 16.

The game at the Algarve Stadium, where Gibraltar are playing while their new ground is built ahead of the Euro 2016 qualifying campaign, was goalless, something the 500 fans who had made the trek across the Iberian peninsula would surely have taken prior to kick off. A 91st-minute Slovakian header which struck the crossbar would have been a cruel blow, especially for keeper Jordan Perez, who had an excellent game.

“It feels like a victory!” exclaimed the Gibraltar Broadcasting Corporation commentators at the final whistle. It did.

Aside from the fact this was a UK territory’s first official international, British interest in the match was predominantly focused on former Premier League player Danny Higginbotham, who qualifies via his mother. His uncle Allen Bula ia the Gibraltar coach, and he has promised to quit if he can’t take his side to 43rd in Europe over the next couple of years, a place currently occupied by Georgia. **

 

Deluded? Perhaps. But if they approach games differently to San Marino, Andorra and the like – whose sole ambition often appears to be to hack their opponents off the field – that would be a positive move.

Tonight’s goalless draw was a good start for football’s newest nation.

**The first version of the post stated erroneously Bula wanted Gibraltar to be 43rd in the world as opposed to among the 54 UEFA nations. Thanks to Sam Barnard for pointing out the mistake.

P.S.:





El Llasico: Cardiff v Swansea prediction

3 11 2013

It’s an hour until kick off in the first-ever Premier League El Llasico (© Huw Silk).

This probably won’t go down very well, but I’ve got to go for:

cardiff city stadium

The much-anticipated all-Welsh Premier League derby is at Cardiff City Stadium

 

 

Cardiff City 1-2 Swansea City





Rugby playoffs: are they fair?

23 05 2013

Thanks to sporting play-offs, it’s been an exciting couple of weeks in my adopted county of Northamptonshire.

Last Saturday, Northampton Town FC made their first trip to Wembley for 15 years for the League Two play-off final. Thousands of fans descended on the capital – although it’s probably best to gloss over the result.

This Saturday, it will be a similar story, as the Northampton Saints face East Midlands rivals the Leicester Tigers in the Premiership final at Twickenham. The match is a sell-out.

Both the football and rugby teams can be grateful the play-off systems in their respective leagues allowed them a day in the sun: Town finished sixth in League Two, while Saints ended the season fourth in the Aviva Premiership.

Leicester Tigers defeated Harlequins 33-16 at Welford Road in the Premiership semi-final

Leicester Tigers defeated Harlequins 33-16 at Welford Road in the Premiership semi-final

And let’s not forget London Welsh only earned their place at English rugby’s top table after taking advantage of last season’s Championship play-offs.

So I suppose I shouldn’t be complaining too much about the play-offs. I was at Welford Road for the Tigers’ victory over Harlequns and I’m off to Twickenham on Saturday, where I will be able to cheer on my local team.

But how can it be fair that Northampton, who finished three places and 12 points adrift of table-toppers Saracens, should be able to wipe out that advantage over the course of an 80-minute semi-final?

Six times since the introduction of the play-off system to choose the English champions was introduced in 2002-03 the table toppers have not lifted the Premiership trophy. Six times the team which proved to be consistently the best squad over the course of the best part of nine months had their glory snatched away over the course of a couple of late-season games. And six will become seven on Saturday as either Richard Cockerill or Jim Mallinder’s men are crowned “champions”.

Of course, supporters of the system would argue the mark of a true champion is one who can perform when the pressure is on. However, isn’t that the point of a cup competition, rather than a league? Does it sort the men from the boys? Does it weed out the chokers – Gloucester have topped the table three times without winning the league – and reward those, Wasps most prominently, who peak at the right time?

The play-offs certainly add extra interest to the final stages of the season in both football and rugby, and in football, it is surely more acceptable that the league winners should not have to face the play-offs.

You can see why the Premiership favours their system of bringing the curtain down on the season in front of a sell-out Twickenham, especially as the cup competition no longer runs. Arguably, it also helps even up the season for those teams which lose players during the Six Nations and the autumn internations (though shouldn’t the same arguments therefore apply to relegation?).

But a major part of the problem, too, is the fact that, unlike the equivalent top flight in football, there could otherwise be very little to play for at the top of the table by the end of the season. With half the league qualifying for the Heineken Cup, teams in third, fourth and fifth could have almost nothing to play for in the season’s final weeks without a knockout phase to come.

So are there any solutions? It’s difficult: teams which finished top used to get a bye straight to the final, but it often meant their momentum stalled and they suffered for that.

Could you give the higher-ranked teams a points advantage in the semi-finals? No, ridiculous idea – it would be both arbitrary and encourage negative, defensive play.

So maybe, to misquote Winston Churchill particularly badly: the play-offs are the worst form of deciding the champions except all the others – at least until we get some reform of European competitions (the subject of another future rant).

Still, if the Saints go marching into Twickenham on Saturday and defeat the Tigers, I doubt the merits of the play-off system will be at the forefront of my mind.

**Disclaimer: I realise the Premiership is not the only league which uses play-offs!