Showing posts with label David Silva. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Silva. Show all posts

09/10/2010

Spain 3 - 1 Lithuania (Highlights)


Spain 3 - 1 Lithuania
(1-0) 47' Llorente, (1-1) 54' Sernas, (2-1) 57' Llorente, (3-1) 79' Silva

Tonight was a test of Spains strength in depth and if the performance and result is anything to go by, they passed with flying colours. La Roja were deprived of Xavi, Fernando Torres, Cesc Fabregas and Xavi Alonso, but in stepped players like Santi Cazorla, Fernando Llorente, Pablo Hernandez and Aritz Aduriz to make sure Spain made it two wins out of two in Group I. Spain dominated the first half and how they went into the break still at 0-0 only David Villa will know. Usually so sharp infront of goal, he contrived to hit the post when scoring seemed far easier and looked far from happy when subbed late on. The Barca man will have better days at the office.

Fernando Llorente was the man who had opened that opportunity for Villa and it was the big man from Bilbao who broke the deadlock just after half-time after good work down the right from Sergio Ramos. Lithuania then took advantage of some poor positioning from Puyol to score their first ever goal against Spain through Sernas, before the unplayable Llorente almost immediately swooped again to put Spain ahead once more. Real Madrid will be keeping tabs on the Navarran giant. Cazorla this time was the creator, and it was just reward for a performance full of verve and imagination. David Silva added the third with a glorious header from the edge of the box to cap off a dominant display from Vicente Del Bosques side. Next up Scotland at Hampden Park.



21/05/2010

NEW BARCELONA SHIRT 2010/2011 - David Villa presented to Camp Nou

What do you make of the new Barcelona shirt for 2010/2011? Not too fond of it at the moment but the last one took a while to convince me. It's the yellow trim that puts me off. Today was also the day David Villa was presented to his new fans. 'I will contribute my bit towards making Barcelona even better than what they are now'. Personally I can't see how he won't. All Barca lacked this season, if they lacked anything, was an out and out goalscorer. Yes, Messi scored 47 goals, but perhaps a few of you will understand what I'm trying to say. Someone to take the weight off Leo when the little genius has a rare off day. Perfect example: Inter Milan. Couple of questions. Is this the end for Ibrahimovic? Will Barcelona be just that little bit more unstoppable next season? I would just LOVE to hear your opinions.

Barca shirt release date: 5th June 2010




David Villa on his presentation infront of 25,000 fans in the Camp Nou.


29/10/2009

Cloud with Silva Lining: Manchester United chase Valencia duo

With winter darkness looming and a pityful defeat to Liverpool which offered the added insult of a goal from David Ngog, Manchester United fans needed something to lift their spirits. Their ray of sunshine arrived yesterday when the Fleet Street mob splashed their back pages with news of Fergies pursuit of David Villa and David Silva. A half-hearted attempt by United to sign the pair last summer didnt work out, but it seems Sir Alex has now been given the green light from Valencia to make a renewed bid for the pair, as the mediterranean club sinks desparately deeper into red numbers.

The figure quoted in the papers was £50 million, and if Ferguson manages to sign both Villa and Silva for this fee, it will be tantamount to daylight robbery. Villa scores goals for fun and is as ruthless infront of goal as they come, whilst Silva is the footballing twin of Andres Iniesta....delightful touch, stunning vision and an eye for goal. Doubts linger as to whether they would struggle physically in English football, but as Zola, Fabregas and Joe Cole have proven, size doesnt always matter. Valencia have managed to stave off the vultures circling above the Mestalla until now, but it appears the time has come to cash in on their most prized assets.

The backdrop to this headline paints a sorry, yet all too familiar, picture of how clubs like Valencia, steeped in tradition and one of the few that could conceivably push the top two, are regularly forced to sell their best players. Real Madrid and Barcelona are the two financial powerhouses in Spanish football, regularly handpicking talent from the clubs below them, which only serves to widen the chasm between them and the rest.

The sheiks and Asian businessmen that have bloated the bank accounts (and overdrafts) of English clubs are yet to reach Spanish shores, and until the La Liga can attract the same sort of fervent interest from Asia and the Middle East as the Premier League, the situation is unlikely to change. Florentino Perez´s proposition of moving the kick-off times to 3pm could be a start, but it has been met with divided opinion among managers and presidents as well as the spanish public as, after all, this is the sacred siesta hour. Personally, I believe the national team is just as important to any sustained ´Battle of Asia´ against the Premiership, with their brand of total football more than capable of capturing the imagination of the Eastern empires. The World Cup in South Africa is the perfect shop window and could well spark a transformation in the make-up of La Liga, of the like we are now witnessing in England with Aston Villa, Man City and Spurs beginning to challenge the established order.

But until then, we will continue to see the Villas and Silvas of this world moving from, what are essentially, Spains feeder clubs to Madrid, Barca or the European big guns, and the spanish football equivalent to the poverty gap in Brazil will continue to grow.