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Champions League QF L2


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Michael Carrick a top lad,Doing it for all the Lyle n Scott wearing teenagers in the white areas with their Corsas, Puntos and Polo's whos father gives them some labouring to do for £50 a day.True Lad.
LOOOOL
:D
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Guest Klitschko
Michael Carrick a top lad,Doing it for all the Lyle n Scott wearing teenagers in the white areas with their Corsas, Puntos and Polo's whos father gives them some labouring to do for £50 a day.True Lad.
LOOOOL
:D
:D :D :D
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So about my previous comments comparing Fernando Torres to Michael Owen......1 good season at liverpool ( 1 and a half at a push )Euro 2008Peak has passed£50 mil? No one better for that price? Coulda probably copped Luis Fabiano. And man call Ronaldinho washed up?

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/Onto tomorrowSo Inter are 5-2 down and travel to Schalke. But as Champions, they've got everything to lose, so they will go all out for a winAdded to the upset / comeback at Bayern MunichReccomending everyone watch Inter vs Schalke

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Their problem is accommodating the lady boy, but in the tougher games Carlo will have to go 4-3-3 imo
I knew that donkey wud cost Chelsea but Utd played well and deserved itCarrick was outstanding and Rooney as a number #10 has got his swagger back, ive always been a Rooney fan but I was starting to doubt him but he is back, tis a joy to watch!! Giggs >>>>I wonder how long Fergie is gona continue with this formation with Giggs in cm and Rooney inda #10 role
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The highest number of bets with paddy power have been on a 5-0 Spurs win :lol:If Spurs get even two goals, Mourhino will park the bus, two coaches and a tank infront of the goal.The counter attacking potential will be a lot from Madrid.

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GILES SMITH’S MIDWEEK VIEWPosted on: Wed 13 Apr 2011It without doubt hurt (again), but columnist and life-long Chelsea fan Giles Smith is certainly not betting against there being another chance, and another chance soon…Who wants to win the Champions League at Wembley, anyway?Of all the dreams one has had, down the years, of seeing the team lift the big European trophy, many will have featured a hot night in Madrid, say, or the background of a long, nostalgic trip to sultry Athens - even, yes, a rainy evening in Moscow. Absolutely none of them, surely, has involved sitting in a rammed train on the Jubilee Line.Wembley is where you go to win the FA Cup and, if you're lucky, the Carling. But it's not where you go to win the Champions League - not if you're an English club. It wouldn't have felt right.And then, assuming you had won it, everyone would have been able to say, in a detracting tone of voice, 'Well, you were kind of at home, weren't you?'Amsterdam? Now, Amsterdam looks nice. Milan, too. Barcelona, obviously. Dancing on the streets of Neasden, though? Hmmm. The more you think about it, the more you realise that we were wise to make our excuses and duck out early. Let's step up to the plate again when something more exotic comes around.For Manchester United, of course, it's entirely different. A trip to London for Mancunians, whether for a footballing occasion or at any other time, is hugely exciting - all those grand buildings and bright lights and shops with their own electricity. They love all that.And whisper it, but, in this week's encounter, it would stand to reason if their fans, accordingly, wanted it just that little bit more than ours did.Indeed, I'm no psychologist, but I wouldn't be surprised if it wasn't a factor, somewhere deep in the team's sub-conscious. 'Wembley? It's fine - you get this one. We'll wait for the next one to come along.'I mean, obviously, if there were never going to be another chance to win the Champions League, you'd take Wembley. You'd take the Walkers Stadium at Leicester, for that matter, and get there by bike if you had to.But I suspect most of us believe there will be another chance, don't we? This is the privilege of our current position (and we would do well never to lose sight of what a colossal privilege it is). In fact, if our players hold their nerve in the remaining league games of this season (and there are very positive signs that they will, especially now that they don't have anything else very much to distract them, the way that last night's tie clearly distracted them at home to Wigan last Saturday), there'll be another chance as early as next year - and with a comprehensively rebuilt and widely refreshed team, most likely. And who would bet against there being a few more chances in seasons beyond that one, as well?So, yes, it hurts to go out - and, again, in such bizarre and unlikely circumstances. (Mind you, this competition has hurt us all much harder than this before now. These days, if you want to upset Chelsea fans with a Champions League-related disappointment, you have to get to the back of a pretty long queue. Why, a fussy sending-off and an ungiven first-leg penalty barely have the power to scratch the surface these days.)But think of it this way: the Champions League dream is still powerfully alive - and even more so, for not having Wembley in it.Of course, it's traditional, at the point of exit from a cup competition, to wish your vanquishers well and to express the hope that they go on to win the trophy. And there's clearly an awful lot to be said for that attitude, with its mix of gracious magnanimity in defeat and, at the same time, fierce pride in the worth of your own team.But could I just say at this point that, in this specific instance, I don't hope that? Come on, absolutely anybody else, in fact.
>>>>>>> chelseahttp://www.chelseafc.com/page/LatestNews/0,,10268~2337513,00.html
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GILES SMITH’S MIDWEEK VIEWPosted on: Wed 13 Apr 2011It without doubt hurt (again), but columnist and life-long Chelsea fan Giles Smith is certainly not betting against there being another chance, and another chance soon…Who wants to win the Champions League at Wembley, anyway?Of all the dreams one has had, down the years, of seeing the team lift the big European trophy, many will have featured a hot night in Madrid, say, or the background of a long, nostalgic trip to sultry Athens - even, yes, a rainy evening in Moscow. Absolutely none of them, surely, has involved sitting in a rammed train on the Jubilee Line.Wembley is where you go to win the FA Cup and, if you're lucky, the Carling. But it's not where you go to win the Champions League - not if you're an English club. It wouldn't have felt right.And then, assuming you had won it, everyone would have been able to say, in a detracting tone of voice, 'Well, you were kind of at home, weren't you?'Amsterdam? Now, Amsterdam looks nice. Milan, too. Barcelona, obviously. Dancing on the streets of Neasden, though? Hmmm. The more you think about it, the more you realise that we were wise to make our excuses and duck out early. Let's step up to the plate again when something more exotic comes around.For Manchester United, of course, it's entirely different. A trip to London for Mancunians, whether for a footballing occasion or at any other time, is hugely exciting - all those grand buildings and bright lights and shops with their own electricity. They love all that.And whisper it, but, in this week's encounter, it would stand to reason if their fans, accordingly, wanted it just that little bit more than ours did.Indeed, I'm no psychologist, but I wouldn't be surprised if it wasn't a factor, somewhere deep in the team's sub-conscious. 'Wembley? It's fine - you get this one. We'll wait for the next one to come along.'I mean, obviously, if there were never going to be another chance to win the Champions League, you'd take Wembley. You'd take the Walkers Stadium at Leicester, for that matter, and get there by bike if you had to.But I suspect most of us believe there will be another chance, don't we? This is the privilege of our current position (and we would do well never to lose sight of what a colossal privilege it is). In fact, if our players hold their nerve in the remaining league games of this season (and there are very positive signs that they will, especially now that they don't have anything else very much to distract them, the way that last night's tie clearly distracted them at home to Wigan last Saturday), there'll be another chance as early as next year - and with a comprehensively rebuilt and widely refreshed team, most likely. And who would bet against there being a few more chances in seasons beyond that one, as well?So, yes, it hurts to go out - and, again, in such bizarre and unlikely circumstances. (Mind you, this competition has hurt us all much harder than this before now. These days, if you want to upset Chelsea fans with a Champions League-related disappointment, you have to get to the back of a pretty long queue. Why, a fussy sending-off and an ungiven first-leg penalty barely have the power to scratch the surface these days.)But think of it this way: the Champions League dream is still powerfully alive - and even more so, for not having Wembley in it.Of course, it's traditional, at the point of exit from a cup competition, to wish your vanquishers well and to express the hope that they go on to win the trophy. And there's clearly an awful lot to be said for that attitude, with its mix of gracious magnanimity in defeat and, at the same time, fierce pride in the worth of your own team.But could I just say at this point that, in this specific instance, I don't hope that? Come on, absolutely anybody else, in fact.
>>>>>>> chelseahttp://www.chelseafc.com/page/LatestNews/0,,10268~2337513,00.html
classless chelsea
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