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Uilleam

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Everything posted by Uilleam

  1. The SFA, for once, has done the decent thing, and arranged to stick the matches on something obscure called Viaplay Sports, so we need not fear seeing them, even by accident. Of course, this is not purely altruistic; it also works for the SFA, as few will be able to observe how dismal the National XI actually is.
  2. .........And such would be easily proved. Barcelona could publish and be damned, or publish with suitable redactions, to protect the innocent. How many referees, etc were there working in La Liga over the 16 year period? There will have be a churn , but is that enough to justify 400K per annum for reports on them? Therefore, the majority of the expenditure would, it seems, have been spent on reports on youth players. This, again, could be proved easily. However, there remains the question of why would you ask a referee to scout players, and pay him handsomely to do so?
  3. It's about 400K GBP per season... That's a lot of reports, and a lot of data to assimilate, particularly when it is likely that more than a club will have other sources providing information, opinion, and stats.
  4. Oh dear! When sharks turn on shark, there is generally blood in the water. FOOTBALL Barcelona could face Champions League ban over payments to former referees’ chief Uefa opens investigation into £6.5m spend over 16 years, which club has said was for ‘technical reports’ on officials Martyn Ziegler Chief Sports Reporter Thursday March 23 2023, 3.00pm, The Times https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/barcelona-could-face-champions-league-ban-over-payments-to-former-referees-chief-f5rrzxzn9 Barcelona are facing the threat of a possible Champions League ban after Uefa announced its own investigation into the club paying millions of euros to a company run by a senior Spanish refereeing official. It comes as Spanish prosecutors pursue a case against Barcelona over payments to Jose Maria Enríquez Negreira’s company totalling €7.3 million (about £6.5 million) from 2001 to 2017, while he was the vice-president of Spanish football’s referees’ committee. Regulations introduced in April 2007 allow Uefa to ban teams from its competitions for one season if they have been involved in fixing matches, even if those were not in Uefa competitions. It previously barred the Turkish clubs, Fenerbahce (from the Champions League) and Besiktas (from the Europa League), under those regulations. Barcelona have denied any wrongdoing, saying the money was for technical reports on referees and youth players. No evidence has yet been published that referees or individual games were actually influenced. Any suspension from Uefa’s elite club competition would be a serious blow to Barcelona, who have been struggling financially since the Covid pandemic. The club have a 12-point lead in La Liga and look certain to qualify for next season’s Champions League, which would guarantee at least €50 million of income. Uefa said in a statement: “Ethics and disciplinary inspectors have today been appointed to conduct an investigation regarding a potential violation of Uefa’s legal framework by FC Barcelona in connection with the so-called ‘Caso Negreira’ [Negreira case]. ” Prosecutors in Spain have formally accused Barcelona of corruption, fraudulent management and falsification of business documents. An investigating judge will decide if this will lead to charges. The payments came to light as part of a tax probe into Negreira’s company. The Barcelona president, Joan Laporta, said last month: “Barça has never bought referees and Barça has never had any intention of buying referees. Absolutely never. The forcefulness of the facts contradicts those who try to change the story.”
  5. Did St Nikla not say that the difficulties were just 'growing pains'?
  6. The ITA v ENG match is on terrestrial TV, Ch 4, tonight, ko @19.45hrs, while SCO will play CYPRUS (the Greek part) on Saturday ko @ 14.00hrs, on something called Viaplay Sports 1, so good luck if it rains, hails, sleets, or snows, all of which are forecast. I will, thus, miss our National XI's efforts. Not that I'm bothered, could care more about it, could even, if pushed, care less, and, of course, not watching on an obscure satellite streaming subscription service is a point of principle.
  7. The odour of sanctity overwhelmed by the stench of corruption. More than a club? Indeed. Barcelona host Real Madrid amid angst over referee payment scandal La Liga’s giants were briefly on the same page but the case against Barça has injected a level of paranoia into this title race Barney Ronay @barneyronay Sun 19 Mar 2023 08.00 GMT https://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2023/mar/19/barcelona-host-real-madrid-amid-angst-over-referee-payment-scandal The battle for the glorious past will be fought in the inglorious present. And it will be fought with heavily edited Twitter videos. Early last week Real Madrid TV released what can only be described as an attack video, aimed at the former La Liga referee José María Enriquez Negreira. If this seems a little extreme, it is worth noting this was in fact a follow-up, sequel to Real Madrid TV’s previous attack video aimed at referee Carlos Clos Gómez, now head of La Liga VAR. There have been grander, s******, more knife-edge meetings between Barcelona and Real Madrid. But not many have been more strangely pitched than Sunday night’s clásico at the Camp Nou, or more obviously fraught with angst, mudslinging and paranoia. The game itself will either decide the title race or inject a little late-breaking life. Defeat would cut Barcelona’s lead at the top to six points with 12 matches to go, which still looks like a lot of points. The gap from Barcelona to Atlético Madrid in third place was a muscular 17 going into this weekend. Squint and it could almost be the grand old days of the global duopoly, when the bloom of the Messi-Ronaldo years made this fixture football’s grandest single event. But this isn’t quite that. Instead this is a fixture that will be played out to the sound of the recent past being angrily divvied up. The European Super League fiasco had seemed to heal the old wounds in the name of pursuing common interests, with reports of Joan Laporta and Florentino Pérez being seen regularly taking dinner together. The latest from Barcelona is that Laporta is considering cancelling the traditional pre-clásico lunch. Instead La Liga’s two most powerful clubs seem intent on eating one another. The spark for all this is of course the charges brought against Barcelona this month in relation to payments made to Negreira during his time as a senior La Liga referee. Real Madrid have now formally joined the case, a process that allows them to support and present evidence, which of course they were always going to do. This is already a scandal of jaw-dropping proportions. The period being investigated ranges from 2001 to 2018. During those years Barcelona won 10 league titles, four Champions Leagues and three Club World Cups, in the process establishing the Barça brand as a definitive modern sporting juggernaut. The entire basis of Messi-dom, the greatest individual club career in football history, was pegged out around that timespan. Vast, fortunes were made on the back of it. In 2018 Barcelona became the first sports team to pass $1bn in annual revenues. All the while they were simultaneously paying one of Spain’s most senior referees a regular stipend totalling almost €7m. To give some context this is the equivalent of finding out Manchester United had Howard Webb secretly on the payroll through the Ferguson years; and then arguing in their defence that this should all be seen as perfectly normal. A Real Madrid supporter makes his feelings about Barcelona clear during the Champions League second leg against Liverpool. Photograph: Alberto Gardin/NurPhoto/Shutterstock Hence the public fury, the online howls, the hostile compilations of alleged refereeing oddities in favour of Barcelona overseen by the named parties; batted back with counter-outrage about Real Madrid’s own influence over all levels of power in Spanish football. Looking back at the clips and the cuts in those slickly edited videos what strikes you is the epic shapes and colours, the iconography of what was, looking back, the greatest global club football show ever staged. Here is peak, hyper-elastic CR7 hurling himself with thrilling athleticism to the turf. Here is a boyish Lionel Messi looking baffled. Here are beautiful, glossy shots of the centre of the sporting world: Pep-José, Catalonia versus royal Spain, a celebrity two-hander that drove the commercial growth of the global game more than any other single event. What would it mean to tarnish that era now, to start pulling down those statues and throwing them into the harbour? It has been reported that Barcelona’s directors will argue Negreira was paid only to redress what they saw as bias towards other clubs, a kind of backdoor vigilante refereeing justice. It has also been claimed that Negreira threatened to go public if the payments were stopped, a statement that, if true, skirts pretty close to an admission of wrongdoing (what, otherwise, would be wrong with going public?). Beyond that the line from Barcelona seems to be the payments were in return for “scouting reports” with the implication that everyone else is up to this too. The president, Laporta, denies any wrongdoing, insisting that Negreira worked as an adviser, preparing reports and guiding players on refereeing issues – something Laporta described as “very normal”. He will give evidence, with a chance the former Barça coaches Luis Enrique and Ernesto Valverde will also be dragged in. In reality the likelihood of Barcelona being stripped, banished or financially pummelled seem remote. Which interests exactly – which source of power and wealth – would that serve? Potentially this might present an obstacle to the stadium rebuild plans, which involve taking out a €1.5bn loan. This is a club jacked up precariously on their own economic levers, hostage to a vast debt secured via their own good name, the certainty this thing will always continue to generate excess revenue. And that is arguably what is at stake here, the basic energy source, the purity of that name, Is it going to be possible to maintain that highly profitable sense of Barça exceptionalism when the grim and granular details emerge? Barcelona managed to retail the Més que un club shtick while wearing Unicef and Qatar Airways on the same shirt, like some rapaciously moralising two-face, and always presenting itself as the underdog; the ewoks not the Death Star. It all starts to look a little stranger if this version of the past takes hold. These are tricky times generally for La Liga, which has struggled to match the Premier League’s combination of vast TV rights income and the presence of nation-state clubs with economic guarantees of their own. There is something touching, and perhaps just a little bit creepy about the jealous zeal with which the president of La Liga, Javier Tebas, talks about Kylian Mbappé, who is suddenly so vital to the vibes, the energy and aura. This is a league that fed on stars for 15 years and where the president is suddenly acting as a kind of Pandarus, purring about Madrid’s enduring commercial power, aware of the vital uplift in interest and TV values his presence would bring to a league currently marinading in its own fear and loathing. For now Barcelona will be narrow favourites on Sunday night. The referee story has coincided with three consecutive wins and a sense of galvanising fury. Only Bayern Munich have won at the Camp Nou all season. Pedri is back for Barça, Karim Benzema fit for Madrid. All that really seems certain is it should be tight, angsty and a little spiteful. Some things, at least, don’t change.
  8. A thing of beauty. You would never have scored it.
  9. The Mason on the video equipment -of all people- surely knows what is square.
  10. Too late for tears. He was given 'on', which is all that matters.
  11. They drew the magic lines, and Presto! - on side.
  12. Clearly. I watched the France game on TV, and the LCF on the laptop. Modesty forbids me suggesting that that took talent, but, it took talent. And, of course, proved beyond reasonable doubt that men may multi-task.
  13. As a matter of interest, what theologically challenged bastard scheduled M/well v Rangers at the same time as SCO v ITA at Murrayfield?
  14. Self identified as a wanker? You concurred. Do they get the expensive apparel on the drip, or do they just steal the money? (Asking for a younger fellow.)
  15. Jack's the Lad.
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