Jacob
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- Oct 22, 2005
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I must've missed when Isco signed for Real, came as a shock when I saw his name on livescore.
It literally is unwatchable in Australia.
When someone like Sid Lowe said he isn't looking forward to La Liga this season you know the league is in trouble. I really hope equal TV revenue comes into play in the near future, it's unwatchable currently.
It's only unwatchable if you think only of the end of year places, but then the PL is unwatchable if you think in those terms. There are only three teams in for the PL title and historically we know that by Christmas there will probably only be two.
Last night we had a desperate Madrid clawing out a 2-1 home win, and Atletico demonstrating that under Simeone, they're a serious outfit despite losing Falcao (and despite him confirming that for La Liga, "there's only two teams in it"). Much more entertaining than Chelsea's walkover earlier in the day. I admit I didn't watch the second half of the Barca match - that kind of game can be like watching the Harlem Globetrotters, fun for an hour. They'll have more challenging games.
I agree with your overall point but it's a bit too defensive of you to try and claim the EPL is as "uncompetitive" as La Liga. Stats might prove your point somewhat (there's only been 5 different winners of the EPL since it's inception, only 1 of 3 teams can win it etc etc.), but the fact remains, one dioesn't have to look too far beyond the "stats" to realise Lynk has a point.
La Liga IS way more uncompetitive than the EPL. In the EPL, you hardly get the feeling that there's a guaranteed 3 points in any fixture, yet the opposite is true for La Liga. Madrid "struggling" last night was more of a shock than anything. I'm not advocating that the EPL is the bestest league ever etc, because I love watching Madrid and Barca matches as well.
Though they should distribute the tv money better because Barca and Madrid are practically handicapping their opponents before a ball is even kicked.
You don't get the feeling of certain 3 points when the likes of United and City play teams like Hull, Stoke, Norwich, West Brom or Crystal Palace at home? I'd say it's as certain as Barca beating teams like Levante, Rayo or Betis when they play them albeit United and City don't have as much offensive quality so don't produce 5-0s and such as often. They win those sort of games 19 out of 20 games just as Barca though.
Yeah, at OT I'm fairly comfortable but on the flip side, any team in the top 6 can take points off each other, home or away.
I don't really get that about La Liga. Look, I'm not advocating that the EPL is the bestest league ever, I'm just saying, to me, it IS much more competitive than La Liga. We can agree to disagree on it as well, no harm.
I think a lot of this is down to the fact that Barcelona are head and shoulders above everyone else and pure quality while Madrid have caught up a little in the last couple of years, squad wise they are better than any Premier League team. If you put a team like Atletico in Premier League they wouldn't really be worse than Liverpool or Spurs and could probably give Arsenal a challenge too. If you paired Betis, Athletic or Sevilla against West Brom, Newcastle, Fulham or any other typical mid-table side it'd be close too.
Premier League obviously has more money and it's much closer at the top but I don't think it's overall quality is that much better.
2-3 years ago, I would have agreed. Right now, I'm not so sure anymore. Barca isn't comfortably better than other topteams in europe anymore, but the gap to the 2nd tier and midtable clubs has widened even further. So far, the great youth development helped the league in staying competitive but over the last years a lot of the great young players left for foreign clubs and now Madrid started to buy them instead of bringing foreign topstars in, which hurts the overall quality in the league as well. It's always hard to judge the quality of a league at a single moment, but the development doesn't look good to me and it will show the next years, if nothing changes.I think a lot of this is down to the fact that Barcelona are head and shoulders above everyone else and pure quality while Madrid have caught up a little in the last couple of years, squad wise they are better than any Premier League team. If you put a team like Atletico in Premier League they wouldn't really be worse than Liverpool or Spurs and could probably give Arsenal a challenge too. If you paired Betis, Athletic or Sevilla against West Brom, Newcastle, Fulham or any other typical mid-table side it'd be close too.
Premier League obviously has more money and it's much closer at the top but I don't think it's overall quality is that much better.
You don't get the feeling of certain 3 points when the likes of United and City play teams like Hull, Stoke, Norwich, West Brom or Crystal Palace at home? I'd say it's as certain as Barca beating teams like Levante, Rayo or Betis when they play them albeit United and City don't have as much offensive quality so don't produce 5-0s and such as often. They win those sort of games 19 out of 20 games just as Barca though.
2-3 years ago, I would have agreed. Right now, I'm not so sure anymore. Barca isn't comfortably better than other topteams in europe anymore, but the gap to the 2nd tier and midtable clubs has widened even further. So far, the great youth development helped the league in staying competitive but over the last years a lot of the great young players left for foreign clubs and now Madrid started to buy them instead of bringing foreign topstars in, which hurts the overall quality in the league as well. It's always hard to judge the quality of a league at a single moment, but the development doesn't look good to me and it will show the next years, if nothing changes.
More clubs will give their young players a chance and already there are 3 or 4 youngsters to keep an eye on. Bernat and Fede at Valencia, with Paco Alacacer being an option off the bench. Oliver Torres at Atletico. The young lad Betis got on a free who burst past Ramos to set up Betis goal against Real Madrid last night, Cedric, looks a livewire too. All the big names that have left this summer were these young players given a chance a few seasons ago. And more Iscos and Illaramendi's will announce themselves this season in la liga because theres always more and more young talent coming through and now they'll have a bigger chance to play
Agreed, there's a flip side to every coin, but then how long before these talents leave for England/Germany/Serie A or even Madrid and Barca? If the cycle continues, you'd have to rely on smaller clubs producing 2-3 good players every other year, or eventually go bust, which is a lot to ask.
In the EPL, Spurs won't sell Bale to any other team in England (or they wouldn't do so easily). Malaga, nor Valencia can afford to say no to big offers from Barca/Madrid etc. It's a dangerous situation.
He was probably right. For Spain's big two, draws have long been the new defeats. Over the last four years, from a possible 114 points, the team who have won the league have racked up 100, 100, 96 and 99 points (compared to 89, 86, 80 and 86 in England) and, with Madrid and Barcelona strengthening and everyone from third to ninth losing their best player, those figures might be bettered. Two points is a lot of ground to cede, even now. Madrid's challenge ended in the first four weeks of last season. That creates a whole new type of pressure; for Barcelona and Madrid, a kind of knock-out mentality has reached the league. Winning is an obligation, right from the start. Matching your opponents is a must.
http://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2013/aug/19/real-madrid-la-liga-day-one
Oliver Torres looks the business.
I'm sure its done so they can broadcast it, as they aren't allowed to show domestic games when UEFA matches are on. But I'm kinda surprised they can't get away with it with the Super Cup. It's not like the Super Cup has a UEFA Place on the end of it so I would think normal rules don't apply (the Community Shield has 7 subs for example).
Still, UEFA pay the bills.
It's a joke to start a match so late.
Are these people mental? How on earth they start playing a match on 11pm (especially considering that it isn't a weekend day_.
Seems to be common thing in Spain where a lot of things are generally done later, although even 11pm for them seems a tad excessive.