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Showing content with the highest reputation on 6.06.2023 in all areas

  1. Олеква ми от такива новини. Щяхме да си вземем поредния хрантутник и вечен високоплатен, нищо особено проспект.
    2 points
  2. FAB: I want to explain what it’s really like to play for Liverpool. But I have to confess something. On my first experience of a Premier League game, I barely saw any of the actual match. We beat West Ham 4–0 at Anfield in August of the 2018-19 season. I was on the bench and it felt like I spent the entire 90 minutes just watching the fans. Before I came to England, I used to watch the Premier League on TV and I thought I knew a bit about those special atmospheres — especially at Anfield. When I arrived, I expected to hear “You’ll Never Walk Alone” and for the fans to sing songs and insult the ref. I loved all that. But nothing prepares you for what it’s like live. How every single action on the pitch gets a reaction in the stands. So, after every tackle, every pressure, every possible foul, I was turning around and paying attention as the fans were going crazy. Man, I was fascinated. I was just admiring them. That noise, that passion. I’d never seen anything like it. The fans are part of the team. They inform how we play. “Heavy metal football” doesn’t work without them. They are the ones pushing us into every move. They never let us stop. Even in those moments when the ball is stuck in midfield and it seems like nothing is going right, when we hear them … it’s like someone is shouting “Go, go, go!!!” in your ear. And for me, in my position, it’s great because when we win a challenge, they celebrate like it’s a goal! The fans are a big part of why I love Liverpool, and we’ve achieved incredible things together. Coming here was the best thing that could have happened to my career. There was a time when I never could have imagined I would get here. Liverpool weren’t the only club that made an offer that summer. There was another team in England I could’ve chosen, but it’s simple really: after you speak to Jurgen Klopp, you don’t want to hear anything from anyone else. It’s like, “OK, thank you, I’m coming to Liverpool!” We met in England and he explained his vision, how the team played and how important I would be. I didn’t even understand what he was saying. I didn’t really speak English back then, but it didn’t matter! Fortunately, they brought someone along to translate. But even without a translator, you just understand his positivity. I was nodding my head, “Yes, boss!” before they even told me what he was saying. He’s done amazing things for this club, but honestly it’s hard to talk about how good he is because for us as players it’s normal. His methods, preparation, team talks, decision making … he does everything with excellence and we just expect that from him every day. There is no other Klopp. When I arrived I could sense that Liverpool were at the start of something really special. The club had waited for this moment and now was the time for harvest. As a new player you are welcomed to the club like family. The way we are with each other, the way we treat each other, the way we embrace — it’s so special. It has that close, small feeling. But this is a massive club. You see every day what it means for the people in this city and beyond. Everywhere we go there are full stadiums, people waiting for us, and fans who have travelled around the world to see us play. That love and support is incredible. And then there is Anfield. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve always loved the fans. But honestly, before Liverpool if you’d have asked me if they make much of a difference on the pitch, I would’ve said no. Now, after what I’ve lived here? Playing at Anfield, you see the difference. You feel it. The ultimate example is the Champions League semifinal second leg against Barcelona in 2019. I don’t think one person in the stadium sat down for a second of that match. My family told me the stewards just stopped asking after a while. They said they’d never experienced an atmosphere like it. Oh man … that game. The feeling after the first leg was so strange, because even though we lost 3–0, we didn’t feel like we played badly. We created good chances but we just didn’t score. I remember Messi wasn’t that active, and then all of a sudden he’d scored twice. For the third goal, the free kick, it was my foul. At the time, I actually thought I’d done the right thing because it was so far out. In my head I was like, No way. You’re not scoring from here. But it’s Messi. He’s absurd. He puts it right in the top corner. Unstoppable. In the changing room after the game, of course we were down, but we still had this optimism. At one point it was just Klopp, Mané and me left in the room. We were all saying, “How did we lose this 3–0?” And then Klopp asks us, “But do you still believe we can win the second leg and make it to the final?” I went first: “Yes, I think so.” And then Sadio said, “Yeah, so do I.” And Klopp was like, “Good. Because I think so too.” Our confidence built ahead of the second leg. We even “forgot’”that Salah and Bobby were injured. We all just knew how it had to be. But the way it happened … man, there are some nights you can’t explain. Divock’s performance, Wijnaldum coming off the bench to score twice, Trent’s corner…. It’s fate. There is no other way to say it. I remember after we scored the first goal in the first 10 minutes, I did this crazy slide tackle on Suarez. The referee gave me a yellow but I didn’t care because the adrenaline was so high. I was reacting to the energy from the crowd and they were responding to us. Everyone was on fire. Every player and every fan. After the second goal, you could tell Barcelona really felt it. And the third came less than two minutes after. I looked at the clock like, Oh, we’ve done it too early. Now, they’re going to attack us.… When the fourth went in, I wasn’t really paying attention. I was back near the halfway line. Everything happened so fast. I just saw Divock celebrate and all the confusion. I was waiting for the referee and the linesman to do something but no one did. I remember everybody laughing and not even really celebrating — we couldn’t believe we scored that way. 4–0!!! After that, I looked at my teammates in midfield, and I said, “Now, nothing will pass.” As we say in Brazil, we close the house. In the last minute they got the ball to Messi in our half and in my head I’m thinking, no, please anyone but this guy again. But this time, I stuck out a leg, won the ball and broke away. I felt his foot trip me from behind and that was it. The referee blew for full time. We’d really done it. After the final, it took some time for me to process what we’d done. I took my medal back to Brazil to show to everyone that I was a Champions League winner but I still didn’t believe it was real. I’m still getting my head around it. That trophy was so important for everyone. Many of our players hadn’t won a big title before and the club had gone a long time without winning anything. After what happened the year before against Real Madrid it meant everything for the club and the fans. When I arrived here, the club had been 28 years without a Premier League title, 13 years without the Champions League, six years without any trophy at all. To be part of the team that changed that is so cool. And getting to party with the fans was one of the best experiences of my life. Those celebrations after we came back from Madrid, I remember people telling me, “This is nothing. When you win the Premier League, we will break the city!” Unfortunately because of COVID, we didn’t get to see that happen. But I have done two bus parades through the city … and, man, I don’t know how many people get to experience something like this. The way our fans love this club, what it means to them, it is so special and it makes you want to do better, to win more to make them happy and party together again. This season has been frustrating, but we have lived history in these last few years together. I’m so proud to be a part of this club. I am a father now. I have my own “little Scouser,” Israel. I can’t wait for the day I can take him to Anfield for the first time to watch the stands in amazement like I did. I am so grateful for the fans. Even in difficult moments you are there for us. We hear you. We feel you. We will keep going because you keep us going. And we will fight to see the day you break the city.
    1 point
  3. Маунт отива в Юнайтед според последното инфо от туитър.
    1 point
  4. Цената за придобиване на Холанд беше 75м + някакви други да кажем 20-25м + заплати и премии за две години по 50м = общо разходи към 200 мил. Насреща имаш вероятно две титли на Англия + може би поне една ШЛ + Суперкупа на УЕФА + Световна клубна купа (последна по стария формат) + други местни купи. След тези две години може да има желаещи да платят за него 150-200м. Е, питам аз, не си ли заслужава парите? Ако ни бяха предложили с още 200 мил, платими за 2 год и с много обещаваща възвръщаемост да спечелим поне една титла на Англия и ШЛ щяхте ли да приемете? Сигурно да! Дори и Бай Хенри би приел.
    1 point
  5. Абе виждаха го и заместник на Лева в Байерн, ама не стана. Може да седи в Сити и 10 години. Имат по-малка конкуренция за ВЛ и в същото време са фаворит всяка година в ШЛ. Винаги ще има добри съотборници, които да му изработват чисти голови положения. Ако няма детска мечта за Реал или Барса не виждам причина да се маха в близките 5-6 години. Освен, ако не му стане скучно да печели ВЛ и домашните купи и иска да се пробва и в друго първенство. Но пак това би станало след време. Ама нищо не се знае. Може да се контузи и след това да не е същия, както стана с Фалкао например. Или, ако Гуардиола се оттегли и дойде някой като Моуриньо, който изповядва по-защитен футбол, може да не му се седи повече и да се махне. Варианти много. Но при нормални обстоятелства, не виждам причина да сменя скоро отбора. Добра зпалта, добри шансове да чупи голови рекорди.
    1 point
  6. След дадените за Хааланд пари за трансфер 75м + заплати и бонуси <=100, за две години Сити ще са похарчили колко? Може би 160-180 м. И тогава - ХОП -> ако искат го продават на Реал / ПСЖ за 190-200 и се оказват на печалба. Отделно приноса му за трофеи. Ние купихме Нунес, даваме му по-малка заплата, но колко ли ще дават за него на пазара след 2-3 год? Едва ли повече от 100. Така, че ДА, Хааланд може да излезе по-евтин !
    1 point
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