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Arsenal v Notlob; Billy the Dog’s contribution to football journalism is recognised by O2.

By Billy the Dog McGraw

Oh yes indeed!!!  It’s Arsenal vs Notlob Wanderers. (And by the way Tony has a spare ticket for the Wednesday European thing match.  Call me on 07714 76 2250, or email Tony with your contact details (Tony.Attwood@aisa.org).  Cost price obviously, but you have to sit next to Tony and I must warn you he goes on and on about that bloody book he wrote about the Arsenal.  Don’t blame me if he drives you insane.)

But back to the plot.  (The line up is near the end of the post – but the bit about me and O2 is quite jolly, so I hope you’ll read that too).

I have of course known for some time that my fame as a journalist, breaker of myths, and recorder of the histories of our rivals, has been striking a chord with the wider world.

And this very week I received a call from O2, official membership partners of Arsenal FC, asking me for my advice, guidance and general participation in their support of our wonderful club.

O2 are about to launch a new special wonderful magnificent match day experience for selected fans of our Wonder Club, our Victory through Harmony (as we should say), and they were looking for some mug who would be willing to go through it all while the process was in Beta Test (or “we wanted you to be the very first” as they said.)

Would I be the executive, the respected member of the blogsphere, the glorious leader of opinion, who took on the O2 experience?

Not being one to decry a free lunch (or anything else free come to that) I said, yes, yes, and quick where do I sign?

So, the deal thus far is that they pick myself and my partner up (and yes stop sniggering at the back, I do have a partner) at the Highbury and Islington Station, and drive us in a rickshaw to the grand central Emirates Stadium, where upon the two of us indulge in the fun, and the games, and the general what-not, all courtesy of the O2 telephonic corporation.

Then there is the Brown Room, or is it the Green Room?  I forget in the overwhelming O2-ness of it all, but whatever it is they are taking me there.

After that there is the match avec (I trust) le pint of booze.  And that is at club level.

Now I have to admit I have done a bit of hankering after a seat in club level, simply because I ain’t been there (apart from a walk around on a tour).

During the old Highbury Days I had (over a number a years) a little plan to try and stand or sit in every single part of the ground, and as it was redeveloped, to continue this scheme, sitting where I had stood etc etc.  I completed my task when a business associate who was a very senior supporter of Oxford took me as a guest to the one and only Arsenal v Oxford league game (Don Howe was manager at the time I recall).  I got to sit in the director’s box (ok on the guest side, but still in the Director’s Box) and that was a tick – the complete, the final bit of Billy the Dog meets Arsenal Stadium.

Later they built the boxes at the clock end, and my dear pal Roger included me a couple of times on the guest list when he was taking out people as part of his business life with Kodak, and indeed as he was a bond-holder I was able even to visit the bond-holder’s bar as a guest on occasion.  (I actually told Roger not to waste his money in buying bonds, but he never listened to me, and the fact that he made a trillion pounds profit when he sold them in later life shows just how right he was).

Anyway, back to O2. I am, as yet, a little unclear on the details other than the ride from Highbury and Islington, to the ground, some “fun and games” (the partner is looking at me very askance) a massage (partner looking even more askance) and the club level bit.  And the puce and maroon room, or some such.

I shall of course be reporting back.

In the meanwhile I understand everyone is injured and so we are putting out the reserve team against Bolton. Never mind.  Apparently they (the reservoir dogs) are jolly good.

Arsenal Reserves will line up as…

Manuel Almunia

Sagna, Koscielny, Vermaelen, Clichy (Gibbs, Djourou, Squillaci)

Alex Song, (Diaby, Denilson)

Cesc Fabregas, Samir Nasri (Eboue, Wilshere, Lansbury)

Tomas Rosicky, Andrey Arshavin,  Marouane Chamakh (Vela)

I can only hope that Theo now realises the utter and total contempt with which Fabuloso Cappuccino holds him.  “It’s a very little thing,” he said.   Did you hear that Theo?  Did you hear how the Italian fraudster spoke of you?   I’ll show you a very little thing Mr Cappuccino.  Just you wait.

Editor’s Note: Billy the Dog McGraw is currently helping police with their enquiries.

———————————–

Violence

More Violence

Anti-FA Anti-International Anti-England

The solution for international football and a way to end injuries

By Walter Broeckx

I must admit the first hours when I found out about the Walcott injury I was down. Very down. Why oh why did it happen again to one of our players.

We all remember last season. Robin Van Persie who was on fire. From the start of the season he gave assists and then he started scoring himself for fun. Nothing seemed to stop him in the EPL.

And it wasn’t something or someone in the EPL that stopped him. No it was a friendly international game with Holland that stopped him. We lost him for almost the rest of the season. Things could have been different with him in the team as the understanding between Cesc and Robin was excellent. They could find each other on the pitch with both their eyes blindfolded. Giving assists to each other and scoring as if it was nothing.

And now Theo Walcott was on fire. Some pundit tried to tell us that Theo has no football brain, but maybe this was just down to the fact that this pundit has no brain at all. Theo was scoring for fun, he was creating space for others, his understanding with the other strikers was great tot see and they changed places and confused the opponents. The only difference one can say is that this time it wasn’t a friendly but it was for the qualifying games for the 2012 European Championship. Now suddenly we feel better about this, don’t we.

How long we will miss him is not sure at the moment I write this. Rumours say that he will only be out for 2 weeks. Well if that would be the case I would take it in a minute. But when we remember Robin Van Persie last year he also was said to be out for just a few weeks until the truth came out and he was out for the rest of the season. So, I am holding my breath a bit until we see Theo back in full speed dressed in an Arsenal shirt.

I have said it before I don’t care about international football at all. But I can understand the need that people may have to identify themselves with their national team. So I don’t want to say to just ban the international football from this world. But what I can do and will do is to question the system that is being used for the moment.

Some time ago Fifa and Uefa recognised the need to take on some more or less fixed dates for international football. And so they decided that the international games should take place at the start of September, halfway October, the end of march and if needed some games could be played at the end of May or at the begin of June. And we can add to that the fact that just before the start of the EPL there is a somewhat fixed date for friendly internationals.

And mostly in those weeks with international football each team is playing some 2 games. Depending on the size of the group a team is in. But some of our national federations also have the habit of introducing a friendly game when they only play one game in that period.

This means that in total we have around 6 qualifying games to be played in a season. And 2 friendly games. A total of 8 games per season in which our players are taken away and almost every time we see one or two coming back on crutches.

These 3 weekends where there is no league football mean that the league ends on May 22 this season. But if we could play those 3 weekends with no interruption for international games we could end the league at the first weekend of May.  And this would leave a gap open for about one month where the national teams could play their 5 or 6 qualifying games and still the season would have the same length as it has now.

Because now the last game England play is on 4 June 2011. And if they would play at a ratio of Wednesday-Weekend those 5 or 6 games they could finish at the same date without any problem.

So this would mean that the fans of international football could enjoy themselves and could have all their football for a month and this would be like having a world cup each year. The media could focus on this and maybe the football federations could even make more money on it. Holland could turn orange in that month. England can get crazy about their national team.

It would be better for the team spirit of the national team because the players would become more a group. I know this can also turn against you when you have troubles but that is up to the players involved to sort those things out.

And the best thing for the clubs is that they don’t lose their players during the season because of injuries they got when playing for their country. If a player gets an injury it will mean that it will be the national team that is suffering the most from this and not the club team.

The club teams don’t see their season cut in pieces with every now and then almost a whole team of players leaving and coming back with jet lag in their body or with malaria or God knows what other diseases or injuries. They can train and play games in an even rhythm because sitting in a plane for hours is not the ideal preparation for a football player to stay fit.

And it will also mean that if a player gets a very bad injury and would be out for the whole season it will mean the teams can adjust this in the transfer period that will follow the international games. So even an injury can be fixed by the clubs.

I think both the national federations and the club teams could win if they only would decide to change the dates of international football, get them out of the regular season and put the games together at the end of the season.

Match fixing and gambling syndicates in football

Arsenal: A Blogosphere survival guide

The footballing philosophy of Arsene Wenger

Part 1:  The Wengerian philosophy

Part 2: Theory and Practice

Part 3: The Total Revolution

Match fixing, gambling syndicates, Ye yeah

By Walter Broeckx

As we are in a dull period of the season with the international games having just ended, and the word corruption having been mentioned in an article I thought it could be interesting to have a look at a corruption scandal that took place in Belgium some 5 years ago. It involved Chinese betting syndicates and it was rather a big story in Belgium in those days.

The first signals from some match fixing in Belgium came from England. In the game St. Truiden – La Louviere the keeper of St. Truiden made some enormous mistakes and thus the final score of the game was 1-3.

The English company Betfair found it very suspicious that there had been an enormous amount of money been bet on this totally unimportant game and at this score. And when they discovered the fumbles made by the keeper they found it even more suspicious.

Then at the next game of St. Truiden, the team got many more bets than they normally get for a game in Belgium.

One of the main figures in this was a Chinese man named Ye Yeah. He was wandering from club to club in Belgium and presented himself as a Chinese businessman who wanted to invest some of his money in the club. Most of the clubs where he went threw him out but when he came to Lierse they were interested. Lierse was struggling to survive in the Jupiler League (the equivalent of the EPL) and had some serious financial troubles.

Another name that was mentioned was a players’ agent Pietro Allata, a person with an Italian background. Their names keep cropping up together through the whole case. At one time both pleaded innocent in the press and pointed at the other but they both said they knew nothing. They were like Manuel, from Barcelona. He also knew nothing.  [That's a Faulty Towers reference I think - ed]

The Belgium justice department is known throughout the world for the high speed at which they work (this is meant to be very very very sarcastic) and now after five years has come to the conclusion that 31 persons should be prosecuted. It includes the manager of Lierse, Paul Put, the keeper Cliff Mardulier and 8 other players of Lierse. And also players and persons from other clubs.

Now Lierse was not the only club involved as also other clubs have been named. Other clubs who played in the Jupiler League at that time with mostly, (if you live outside Belgium) unknown names like La Louviere, Mons, St. Truiden, AA Gent, Lokeren, FC Brussels.  All have been named,  because of players having accepted or having refused money to change match results.

In Belgium the FA has in its regulations a rule that says that if you get an offer and you refuse it you still have to tell this to the FA because if you don’t inform the Belgium FA you can get banned. Some players admitted afterwards that they had been offered money, refused it but didn’t inform the Belgium FA and they got fined for this. As a result it is thought that other players who might have thought about telling their story have remained silent and other possible scandals might have been brushed under the carpet.

The bribing of the players itself was done in some cases directly by Ye himself. And for the first games some players admitted they got 5,000 euro. And just a few weeks later they got 12,000 euro for the same thing. And at the end it could go up to 100,000 euro for fixing a single game. One player admitted that he had received a total of 140,500 euro. Now this might sound like peanuts to most of the players who play in England in the EPL but for players playing for the bottom clubs in Belgium this was a lot of money.

And for those gambling syndicates it was really peanuts as when, in 2005, such a gambling syndicate was discovered by the Chinese government and they had made a profit of some 27.000.000 euro IN ONE YEAR.

The players that were involved had been telling stories about their contacts with the Chinese gambling syndicate. They had been taken to a sex parties where pictures had been taken to put them under pressure. You can imagine that the player’s wife wasn’t invited to those sex parties… So blackmail became part of the operation.

And then when a player wanted to get out of the deal they used other means. This happened to the  goalkeeper of Lierse who was blackmailed and then he didn’t feel good about it and wanted to get out. He then got a visit from some Chinese people who told him that if he wanted to get out he should have a good look at his baby every time he left the house because it always could be that it would be the last time he would see here alive. They got out their guns when talking to him – just to show they meant business. So very intimidating and this together with the blackmail it was enough to keep them under control.

Some players got banned for a period, the manager of Lierse got banned in Belgium, some players escaped punishment because they worked together with the investigation from the Belgium FA.

All this is based upon newspaper articles, TV programs and some information made available for the public by the justice department. But some people have the feeling that the Belgium FA and also the justice department have not been digging deep enough. Some clubs that were named had senior politicians involved on the board or as a big fan and some people suggest that some of those clubs were not really investigated.

The trial will have to start sometime but no one knows when this will be. Like I said our justice department has the speed of  a snail or a turtle (whichever is the slowest).  Announcing who they are going to prosecute after 5 years is one thing but to effectively start the trial will take maybe another few months if not years. By then the lawyers will claim that the normal time limits to have a justified and fair trial have been exceeded and maybe they all will get away with no punishment.  This is something we are used to at times in Belgium, so not a big deal for us.

One person who will certainly get away with no real punishment will be the Chinese person Ye. He has left the country and is never seen again. Not that the justice department knows anyway. Like I said before he came to the clubs pretending he would invest or even buy the club but he wasn’t interested in buying the clubs. He was only interested in buying the results.

Now all of this could look as something from another country which has nothing to do with the EPL.  But we all have heard about teams where they are possible new owners from the east. Clubs who have financial problems, just like most of the involved clubs in Belgium. And then suddenly a rich Chinese businessman comes over to buy the club. Just think about what happened in Belgium and it was not about buying a club but more about buying the results of the club.

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