

Fiorentina 2 – Cagliari 1: Plus, Some Easter Tidbits!
By: Ted | April 11th, 2009
This being the Holy Weekend and all, I would like to begin by wishing a very happy Easter to all of our Christian readers out there. To all of our Jewish readers, I hope you had a happy and safe Passover. If there are any atheists out there, I hope you had and continue to have a pleasant and productive weekend. And if there are any Juve fans reading this: get a life, you ugly pieces of shit. I’ve never seen anything quite as hideous as those embarrassing black & white stripes. You look like escaped convicts from a 1930s road comedy starring a youngish Bob Hope. Only instead of having wacky, funny adventures, you suck.
Before starting today’s match recap, I thought I would address some of the news coming out of the Viola camp this week, and specifically highlight what is true and what is made-up jive.
• Viola Star Man Adrian Mutu is injured and will be out for a while: TRUE. On Monday Mutu’s “exploratory surgery” reveled that the striker needs at least a few weeks before he can play again. He may be back in three more weeks, or he might not come back this season. Frankly, both options give me a stomach-ache.
• Adrian Mutu was apparently not too injured, since he was able to get Alessandro Gamberini’s girlfriend pregnant: FALSE. Apparently that is a made up rumor. But a fun one.
• The Great Man is no longer speaking to the players on the team: FALSE. However, that rumor is more worrisome. When stuff like that starts sneaking out, even when untrue, you know there may be chemistry problems on the club.
• Felipe Melo beat up some poor sap in the tunnel after today’s game vs. Cagliari: TRUE. Melo apparently beat the shit out of Diego Lopez. Although kind of awesome, this stuff is frowned upon, especially by the great man and the Viola ownership, who are justifiably proud of the “good guy” rep that Fiorentina have earned. So we will see how this all shakes out for Melo. Who is still a badass.
Okay, aside from Melo throwing a beatdown on Lopez, today was another successful step in our goal of getting the fourth spot in the league. Our win keeps us in fifth place, and on pace with the continually impressing Genoa, who beat Newcastle like a drum today. Roma coughed it up in the big Derby vs Lazio, which means we sit six in front of the Romans, and remain two behind Genoa. Credit where credit is due: regardless of Newcastle’s all-around suckiness, Genoa keeps on winning. They are certainly worthy opponents as we come into the home stretch.
As to today’s game: I can’t say much about the first half, since I didn’t see it. As usual, the family, and particularly my kid, came first. But I caught all of the second and was treated to a thrill-a-minute roller-coaster ride, even if I spent a few nervous minutes making bargains with God.
I particularly like how the team has won without Adrian Mutu. For the first time this season the club is showing real heart. The star of this match, in my mind, (and yes, I know I’m biased) was Jovetic, who spent at least from the start of the second half until when he was pulled in the 75th running strait at the Cagliari defense, wrecking havoc, beating defenders, winning free kicks and setting up the first goal, nicely taken by Pasqual. I also though Gila did his usual yeoman work up front, and Semioli had another quietly efficient match. Melo was fine as the stopper in the midfield, and Monto was again OK, although Kuz didn’t show me much. Donadel, who came in late as another midfield stopper, launched the picture perfect cross-field pass to Vargas that led to the second goal. That was about as nice a pass as you will see in football and reminded me of a very similar pass Zinedine Zidane once launched to his leftback (Roberto Carlos) for a similar goal when they both played for Real. But I digress.
The only real worry today was the defense, which looked shaky all day, even when Cagliari went down to ten, and then nine, men. (I am excepting Bassy Frey, who was sublime, and would get an 11 if rated on a 1-10 scale). Our centerbacks continue to be the most worrisome and stomach-ache inducing part of the club. The first player we should buy this summer is another centerback. The second player we should buy is ANOTHER centerback. (Although Ivanovich might be off the table the way he is playing for Chelsea). Anyway, there’s not much we can do about it now. We have to play the cards we are dealt.
So, on this holiest of weekends (except, perhaps, for the weekend of the opening of Serie A and maybe the weekend where they play the Champions League final) we should gladly accept the gift of this win. A few weeks ago I was beginning to think that our beloved club was losing heart; now I know we’ll be in it to the end, fighting hard for that fourth spot. As a fan of any club, that’s all you can ask for.
Forza Viola, everyone. Have a great weekend.
| Serie A Match Schedule | Discount Travel to Florence | |||
| Fiorentina Results | Stadio Artemio Franchi information & hotels |
Subscribe
|
Print
|
Share
![]() |
Comments
-



don’t be so pessimistic,bruce. donadel can fill in just fine.
Posted from
United States

-



Taking a stab at the rest of the season
Genoa 57 points
Fiorentina 55 pointsGenoa:
Lazio W
@ Bologna W
Sampdoria T
@ Atalanta T
Chievo W
@ Torino T
Lecce W
=15 + 57 = 72Fiorentina:
@ Udinese W
Roma T
Torino W
@ catania W
Sampdoria W
@ Lecce W
AC Milan T
=17 + 55 = 72Hopefully our goal differential is better than Genoas to capture the 4th Champions league spot
Posted from
United States

-



I’m going to be honest… Genoa have a much easier schedule for the rest of the season. At least we’re home to Roma and Milan.
Posted from
Canada

-



roma and milan matches are overrated. in the form that roma is now, a midtable team has decent chances of taking on them, while milan, in the last matchday, do you really think they’ll play to win? i tnink the upcoming game with udinese is holding more dangers than this, but they’ll be tired after the midweek uefa cup game with werder, so, no worries.
Posted from
United States

-



Di Natale is gone for the year. Udinese were lucky to win against 9 men reggina
Posted from
United States

-



While I agree Roma is nothing at this point, the sad thing is with all our injuries I just don’t know how good we are. The Cagliari victory was harder than it should have been between our woeful defense and inconsistent finishing, right now we have a team that can easily dominate games but one that also leaks goals and misses sitters. I’m trying to remain optimistic but beating Juvemerda was huge for Genoa.
Posted from
Canada

-



I would say lazio are on a high after beating Roma so they could win and genoa are hopeless at away so bologna who have score a lot of goals could win also but it looking like an exciting end to the season.
Posted from
United Kingdom

-



To win with not one, but two guys scoring their only goals of the season was well…pretty lucky. Those guys must have gone to stations of the cross the night before (hey, Ted started it). Is that sustainable? Who’ll score next – Almiron? Precious looks like he’s coming on though, so that’s encouraging.
Melo will face some punishment, for sure. The injuries on the pitch we can do nothing about. That’s just football – but doing something dumb off of it? That’s avoidable and therefore irritating as hell. That could cost the team dearly.
Posted from
United States

-



i disagree about it being lucky, well at least the statistician in me disagrees.
when you have two main scorers, and one of them is out, the other team is naturally going to focus more attention on your one remaining main scorer, thus leaving it open for the other players.
the fact that no one else, for the most part, has scored, makes it even more likely that someone was going to score their first goal.
law of probablity
the red card easter fiesta continued in the other leagues as well. seemed llike every damn match i watched (epl, mls, mexico) had red cards.
Posted from
United States

-



Hmm…not sure I agree with the logic, slakas. I might buy that if the team’s ability, or for this conversation, “probability” to score remained constant when Mutu went down. I don’t think anyone would be comfortable with that assumption.
So if we agree that Fiore’s probability of scoring, or liklihood of them scoring at the same rate, decreased with Mutu out, then the probability of each individual player scoring likewise decreased in aggregate (although perhaps not evenly among all of them). I believe that decrease in scoring probablity offset any rise in probability of scoring by any indiviaul player caused by one of the two main shooters being absent.
Can I quantify that? Hell no, get serious. I just think that two guys scoring their first goals of the season with only 7 games left is pretty freaking lucky, and that slakas is full of shizzel (my nizzel).
Posted from
United States

-



dont get me wrong, that’s just the vulcan in me.
i think vargas getting anything on frame is a freaking miracle to be honest
and then he had a chance a bit later to gift a teammate and he had his head down all the way and blasted it well wide.
Posted from
United States

-



It is say that fiorentina have signed another player who is an attacking midfielder, that two we have sighed so far. I wonder who they could be if that is true?
Posted from
United Kingdom

-



You people talking about probability, get a life.
Posted from
United Kingdom

-



According to reports in today’s edition of La Gazzetta dello Sport, sporting judge Giampaolo Tosel could hit Fiorentina midfielder Felipe Melo with a three-game ban for allegedly punching Cagliari defender Diego Lopez.
The incident apparently happened in the tunnel of the Stadio Artemio Franchi after Saturday’s match, which the Viola edged 2-1.
It is suggested that much will depend on the report of the federal prosecutor’s office inspectors, who were at the Franchi.
If they directly witnessed the scene, Melo could be suspended for no less than three games, while Lopez could be hit with a one-match ban.
And Cagliari might also have to pay a fine as they allegedly damaged the Franchi’s locker room.
If the incident was not seen by the inspectors, a full investigation could be launched.
Posted from
United States

-



Felipe Melo and Lopez have each gotten five match bans.
The Giudice Sportivo came down hard on everyone involved in this weekend’s extra-curriculars, with Mexes and Metuzalem getting three games each for their handbags in the Rome Derby (Spalletti and Tare will also be in the stands for their club’s next match).
http://www.gazzetta.it/Calcio/SerieA/Primo_Piano/2009/04/14/squalifiche.shtml
Posted from
Italy

-



5 days….were screwed…
so who takes his place now? I’m guessing Jorgensen
Posted from
United States

-



five matches.
that’s insane, they have to appeal.should be 3 at most.
Posted from
United States

-



That ridiculous if true.
Posted from
United States

-



Wow, 5 games. Stupid Melo. It was just dumb. No Melo, no Mutu…the boys are certainly up against it now…
Posted from
United States

-



mexes got a 3 match ban so he will be out for the game against fiorentina.
Posted from
United Kingdom

-



it’s true.
it’s out on reutersMILAN, April 14 (Reuters) – Fiorentina’s Brazilian midfielder Felipe Melo has been banned for five matches after fighting with Cagliari’s Diego Lopez in the tunnel at the weekend, the Italian league said in a statement on Tuesday.
Uruguayan Lopez has been given the same suspension for Saturday’s incident, which happened after Champions League-chasing Fiorentina’s 2-1 home win.
Sixth-placed AS Roma’s bid for the fourth Champions League qualifying spot has also suffered a blow with news that defender Philippe Mexes will be banned for three games for his red card in Saturday’s 4-2 defeat by city rivals Lazio. (Reporting by Mark Meadows; Editing by Rex Gowar; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)
Posted from
United States

-



My god, if this costs us fourth place… Genoa must be throwing a party right now.
Posted from
United States

-



oh well.
guess we go danish
Skoal!
Posted from
United States

-



Wow … that’s even worse than I feared. I think that this means that Donadel will certainly be in the starting 11 – and hopefully Jorgensen will be healthy enough to provide some of the midfield creativity that we are often lacking this year. I’ll try to get a post up on my lunch break shortly.
Posted from
United States

-



I think Jorgensen and Donadel just saved their future in Florence
Posted from
United States

Read the rest of the comments
Comments are closed













