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wie weit davor wird bei barcelona in der regel der genaue termin eines meisterschaftsspiels festgelegt und wie sicher kann man davon ausgehen, dass barcelona-malaga tatsaechlich am sonntag, den 22.3. und nicht schon am samstag gespielt wird? (champions league ist weder davor noch danach)

danke.

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easy, lucky, free

wie weit davor wird bei barcelona in der regel der genaue termin eines meisterschaftsspiels festgelegt und wie sicher kann man davon ausgehen, dass barcelona-malaga tatsaechlich am sonntag, den 22.3. und nicht schon am samstag gespielt wird? (champions league ist weder davor noch danach)

danke.

planst du auch, dieses spiel anzuschauen? ich würd auch gern zu dem datum dieses spiel anschauen gehen!

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Im ASB-Olymp

Die Zeiten werden von der LFP immer 7-10 Tage vor dem Ankick bekanntgegeben, früher leider nicht.

Nachdem diese Saison bis dato TV-bedingt so gut wie alle Barça-Heimspiele am Samstag stattfanden, nehme ich an, dass das gegen Málaga auch so sein wird. Ganz sicher kann man da allerdings nicht sein, wird alles sehr kurzfristig entschieden.

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¿Por Qué?

SID LOWE (Guardian)

Dani Alves: the best player in the world (well, after Leo Messi)

He might only be a right-back, but Barcelona's Dani Alves would be the world's best player if it wasn't for a certain Argentinian

Dani Alves, the world's second best player. Photograph: danialves2.jpg

Madrid didn't want him, Liverpool didn't want him enough, and Chelsea wouldn't pay for him. After all, they reasoned, he's only a full-back. Forget dark and brooding or squeaky-clean: he doesn't do adverts, has a cheeky grin rather than a winning smile, a wife not a WAG, and couldn't pout if his life depended on it. He came to Europe for a million euros when that wasn't a million pounds, isn't the outstanding man for his club, doesn't play regularly for his country, and didn't get a single vote at the Fifa World player awards. Not even from the representative from Guam, who was too busy pencilling in the words Frank and Lampard. Hell, even Cameroon captain Rigobert Song preferred to spoil his ballot paper than vote for him.

But don't let that fool you. Because Dani Alves is still the world's best player. Well, maybe not the best. That's Leo Messi. And that's also the point. Because while in Brazil they giggled at the unlikeliest of metrosexuals, commenting more on the six tubs of facial cream Alves had confiscated at the airport than the six touches he had on the pitch last time he travelled thousands of miles for a handful of international minutes, while he got ignored by Fifa's judges and France Football's correspondents, while he'd never launch a Cristiano-esque crusade – Gazzetta today, L'Equipe tomorrow, Kicker the day after - and while, above all, the eulogies fall on the unbelievably brilliant Messi, Alves has built a case to be considered the world's second best player.

From right-back.

And right-wing. And just about everywhere else. Roman Abramovich decided €30m was too much for a defender but Alves is not just a defender. He's a one-man band wearing cymbals on his knees, a drum on his back, Johnny Cash's harmonica strapped to his gob and Barça sweatbands on his wrists like a 10-year-old suffering a Peter Withe fixation. He offers killer passes and crunching tackles: a screeching lunatic kid, perfect technician, tactical genius and - let's face it - sneaky little cheat, all wrapped into one hyperactive ball. A footballing Sonic the Hedgehog.

You've got to love him. Or least you would have to if you weren't so busy loving Leo. Take this weekend. It was the first game of the season's second half and Barcelona had broken more records than Toxteth O'Grady: more points than any other team ever, the biggest lead ever, and the best debutant coach in Pep Guardiola. They'd completed over 2,000 more passes than anyone else, had more corners, more shots, and conceded the fewest goals, scoring a staggering 59 as well as hitting 17 posts – more posts than Espanyol have goals, enough to have given then a 100% record.

Something, though, was missing. And not just defeat for Madrid, who scraped another win off Raúl's ear. Barcelona sought revenge on Numancia, the only side to beat them. They also sought reassurance after the sinister shadow that saw off Ramón Calderón cast a cloud over Catalunya. Florentino Pérez, said Marca, would soon make a comeback – with Messi under his arm. All it would take is a little persuasion and his buy-out clause: €150m (plus 46% tax). That Marca talked it up was no surprise; the consternation it caused in Catalunya was. They actually took it seriously. The charmingly titled crappingyourselfometre appeared to be firing up again. Suddenly, they were spitting denials, shooting evils at that geezer looking at their bird, and begging like terrified lovers. It couldn't have been more desperate if they'd stalked Messi round Sainsbury's or spent the small hours tearfully breathing down the phone, silently picking the petals off a daisy.

So, when Messi scored the opener for a struggling Barça with a clever flick four minutes into the second half, they breathed a sigh of relief. When he kissed the Barcelona badge, they went all gooey. When he scored another, provided an assist and was denied a hat-trick by the bar, leading them in a brilliant 45 minutes that finished 4-1 and eclipsed a ropey first in which, but for the ref, they would have been trailing, they were doing cartwheels. And when he insisted he'd "never leave", they were dancing through a summer meadow.

"We Love You Messi", simpered Sport's cover, its editor declaring "Messi's kiss not just any kiss", and "this won't be like Figo because Messi is nether a money grabber nor a gypsy". Mundo Deportivo emblazoned "Messi Barcelona" across its front page. And Joan Laporta was losing the plot. "They're trying to destabilise us," he ranted, "and Madrid have an unfair advantage because they have the support of institutions we all pay for – especially the Catalans." "Messi," he added, "proves he's happy with brilliant performances every game."

He was half right. Messi was brilliant again. But amid the dreamy eulogies, another decisive performance from Alves went relatively unnoticed. The Brazilian is the only consistent starter who wasn't there last season when they finished 18 points behind Madrid. Now they are 12 ahead. That's not to say he's responsible – Guardiola's been immensely impressive, Eto'o's scored 19 in 19, Henry is winning not whining, Xavi controls games, and Iniesta's touch and vision is wonderful – but his contribution has been colossal. He's buried the mistaken belief that Barça need defenders who defend – a belief that saw off Belletti and took the balance and element of surprise with it - and has brought dynamism, bite and desire, helping inject life into a moribund mob.

In September, Alves insisted he wouldn't be the Sevilla Alves. Under Guardiola's guidance, he's been better - and he was pretty good before. It's no coincidence he's played more minutes than anyone else or that Barcelona's right wing has delivered three times as many goals as the left, with the full-back providing 10 assists. Not just any assists either, key assists: assists that opened the scoring against Valladolid, saw off Betis 3-2, equalised against Getafe and Osasuna, and broke Saturday's deadlock. But it wasn't just that Alves produced a brilliant flick and headed pass for Messi. It was that Barça turned to him in need, that in the opening four minutes of the half, they'd already speared five balls his way.

For all their collective brilliance, Barcelona have been accused of Messi-dependency. But who wouldn't depend on him? And, besides, Messi's not alone. He might be just a right-back, he might not be glamorous and he might not even be the best player in the team, but right now Daniel Alves might just be the second best player in the world.

Sonic :lol:

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ASB-Legende
has a cheeky grin rather than a winning smile, a wife not a WAG

:lol:

Sehr guter (und amüsanter) Artikel wieder mal von Sid. :)

- Rafa ist heute auch wieder ins Training eingestiegen:

http://fcbtransfers.blogspot.com/2009/01/m...s-to-pitch.html

- Aja, die Wett-HP Expekt.com zahlt nach 20 Runden bereits alle Personen aus, die auf Barça als Meister getippt haben :D

http://www.goal.com/en/news/1706/barcelona...lona-league-win

bearbeitet von Jorly

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Im ASB-Olymp

Hat Iniestas Schwester wohl auch mal Samus Frisur bearbeiten dürfen :D

http://www.elmundodeportivo.es/web/gen/200...DMC=53627411027

Und heute:

27-01-09_WEB_ETOO_0Y_ALVES_1.jpg

27-01-09_WEB_ETOO_01.jpg

:D:allaaah:

@Jordi: Genialer Artikel, obwohl das mit dem "mistaken belief that Barça need defenders who defend" nicht ganz stimmt, schließlich war ja Danis Vorgänger Zambrotta und der ist ja nun auch kein Verteidiger.

Bezüglich Dani ist nicht viel zu sagen, bin unheimlich foh darüber, dass wir ihn haben. Es ist unfassbar, was er Spieltag für Spieltag leistet. :super: Und seinen unsympathischen Krätzn-Charakter aus Sevilla-Tagen hat er auch vollkommen abgelegt, bisher nur vier gelbe Karten in allen Bewerben. :eek:

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planst du auch, dieses spiel anzuschauen? ich würd auch gern zu dem datum dieses spiel anschauen gehen!

ja, ich bin an diesem wochenende zufaellig in bcn. bei mir ginge es allerdings nur, wenn es am sonntag ist.

insofern sind chinomorenos informationen leider ganz schlechte neuigkeiten. trotzdem danke.

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Chi se ne frega!

Die Verteidigung dürfte für nächste Saison wohl der einzige gravierende "Krisenherd" (LV!) sein, sofern man in dieser Form überhaupt davon sprechen kann.

Im MF sollte man es mMn so belassen wie es ist, sofern Henry nicht wirklich gehen sollte, was ich bezweifle und für Barca nicht hoffe. Dann wäre Silva wirklich eine adäquate Verstärkung.

Eto'o wird ja hoffentlich verlängern!

Ansonsten alles eitel Sonnenschein! :)

Btw: Kommt nicht aus der "B" wieder was Brauchbares nach???

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Gast
Dieses Thema wurde für weitere Antworten geschlossen.


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