

Football Blogging, Great Depression Style
By: Ted | March 10th, 2009
Once again I must begin a post about Fiorentina with an apology for not getting more stuff up sooner. Work is pilling up and I just never have time to write anymore. The free time I do have is spent with my little boy so he doesn’t grow up to be an axe murderer resentful of a dad who spent all his free time writing about a football team that plays more than an eight-hour jet plane flight away.
Still, I did find the time on Sunday afternoon to watch the Palermo match with a nice glass of wine (which quickly turned into 3/4ths of a bottle of wine), my little son, and his stuffed duck Mr. Quackington. My wife was in the next room reading but figured we lost 2-0 to the men in pink judging by the two wretched screams I produced in the second half. Anyway, she never needed to ask what the score was.
I was feeling good when the whistle blew to end the first half. I thought our play was inventive and attacking up front, I actually thought Jorgensen was pretty good in the hole, and the defensive-ish midfield (including both Donadel and Melo) left me cold when I saw the starting line-up, but I thought they played well in the first half. It also seemed like the back four had things well in hand.
The second half, as we all know now, was a different story. The club came out listless and played sloppy, without any fire or urgency. Montolivo, Gamberini, Gila, Donadel, and virtually the rest of the team were wither terrible (Monto) or indifferent and ineffective. They gave up one goal after the break, quickly followed by another. They never seemed to threaten the Palermo goal in the second half, unlike the first.
The club was booed off the field. After the match, players like Montolivo and Frey said they deserved it. The Great Man seemed tired and subdued. The team owner released a fiery statement to the press calling out the players and the club. In the days that followed players called for a renewal of team spirit and unity. All in all, it was a terrible beginning to the week in Beautiful Florence.
So where do we now stand? Remarkably, for all the negativity of the past few weeks, we are still in fourth place, albeit only a point in front of the increasingly formidable duo of Roma and Genoa. The Beckhams are now five points clear in third, so it now seems as if it will be a three-way dogfight for that final CL spot. With Inter at the San Siro coming up this weekend, things might get worse before they get better, but we need to get our act together soon.
What, then, is needed for us to finish the season convincingly? The answer for me, unequivocally, is better play from our midfield. Yes, the defense, and particularly our centre backs, continues to worry. But they are what they are. We’ve got no one to play with Gamberini, and either Gamberini is losing ground, or he is covering too much ground backing up for his teammates. Whatever, that’s not likely to change. But we have enormous talent in our midfield, only we haven’t seen it in the last few weeks.
Melo has been solid covering the back (and actually coming forward a LOT) but we need massive improvements from Monto and Kuz (assuming they still play regularly after this weekend’s embarrassment) and we somebody in the hole who can do some damage. I would still run out My Precious, because, as I said, he was always running at defenses and sending them back on their heels. True, he still needs more seasoning. But whether it is him, Jorgensen, Semioli, or Mario Santana on one leg, we need somebody to fill that spot and get the ball into Mutu and Gila. If those three (Monto, Kuz and the grab-bag in the hole) can step it up, we have a shot at fourth. If we continue to see play like Sunday, however, I will be happy even with a UEFA Cup spot.
I will endeavor to be back soon with more posts. Maybe when the economy turns around or something. In the meantime, send out a happy birthday wish to my co-blogger Tim, who turns (30? 85? 15?) tomorrow. Anyway, it’s his birthday, a fact I am only aware of because I signed up for facebook to be a part of our little facebook Viola family. Have one on us, Tim.
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Comments
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bunch of fricken morons. this shit has to be stamped out
An Arsenal fan has been stabbed in the leg after being attacked by a group of Roma ultras as he made his way to the Olimpico on Wednesday night.
The Guardian reports a group of Roma fans ambushed a mini bus taking Arsenal fans to the match against the Giallorossi at around 19:00 last night.
It is believed the group of attackers began kicking the vehicle before smashing windows with stones and other objects. It is not clear as to whether the injured fan was stabbed by a Roma thug or injured by broken glass after windows were smashed.
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Interesting formation for sunday
Felipe behind Gila and Mutu (Santana and Jovetic’s position)…and Jorgensen in the center of midfield (Melos place)
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lol how sad
udinese is italy’s lone banner carrierPosted from
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and they pour into the streets of Udine as the little zebras score in the 85th minute
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just for the record:
i’m glad we’re not known as any sort of equinePosted from
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Mike – where’d you get that scoop on Sunday’s formation?
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How depressing…no Italian and 4 English teams in the CL. I hope Barcelona and Villarreal can at least shut the English media up…
And no for this weekend, time for the real men to humiliate Inter!
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This might be even more depressing
Italy’s poor display in Europe this season could prove costly as four Champions League places could be reduced to three by 2011 should the negative trend continue. Italian teams have to do better in europePosted from
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The Gazzetta and Viola news
they played a friendly against a local team in mid-week with this formation and Prandelli was satisfied
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Why isn’t anyone talking about this? Melo in the hole behind Mutu and Gila? We’ve been discussing the attacking options for weeks but no one has thown that line-up out there (at least that I remember). Has Melo ever played that position? I hope he has, because to make his debut in that critical position against Inter at the San Siro is, well, daunting. With Jorgensen back, I’d like to give him a game or two more under his belt before making a switch like that. He just getting his game back together. Melo doesn’t seem technical enought to play that position. Thoughts?
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i’m more worried about our back line
inter’s d is patchwork at best, we should get our chances, whether they can make them is a whole nother story
putting melo up more is going to take awy from the back
i think dainelli’s out w/suspension, so we’ll have our not-so-great dane back there alreadyykes
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here’s that article on losing a CL spot.
we should root for udinese to win the uefa and root against chermany in all competitions
http://www.goal.com/en-us/news/86/italy/2009/03/13/1153663/serie-a-preview-inter-fiorentina
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*sigh*
In the last four seasons, in fact, Inter always managed to win their next game after getting knocked out of the Champions League.
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I actually like the Melo in the hole experiment. Inters midfield is very physical, Melo isn’t half bad technically but more importantly we are going to need to fight our way through it. Of course leaving the backline vulnerable to Ibra is playing with fire, but if we can make this a midfield battle we might be able to actually outplay them.
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important things for degenerate gamblers like myself to know:
* Sixth-placed AS Roma could be without 10 players for Sunday’s trip to Sampdoria (1400 GMT).
Juan, Rodrigo Taddei and Marco Motta injured hamstrings in Wednesday’s Champions League defeat by Arsenal while David Pizarro and Francesco Totti are doubtful after struggling through 120 minutes and penalties with thigh and knee problems.
Daniele De Rossi and Philippe Mexes are suspended while Marco Cassetti, Cicinho and Simone Perrotta are long term injury victims.
* Juventus also have a lengthy injury list with strikers Amauri and David Trezeguet, as well as winger Pavel Nedved, ruled out of the home game with Bologna on Saturday (1930) with leg injuries. Amauri could be out for a month, Juve said.
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lets hope bayern get man u or barcelona in CL darw
and bremen loss against etienne and hamburger loss against Galatasaray.
Udinese also face zenit in russia that is going to be hard for themPosted from
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ahhh crap! genoa won
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we are not anymore 4-th.
i guess we’ll be fifth for the next week
…ok, let’s see what happens tomorrow.Posted from
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i was watching man u and they looked very tired they even got beat 4-1
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another brace for pazz
in the first halfman that decision looks worse and worse
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and for the record:
8 away goals scored in the first half in italy
lets hope we continue that trend this afternoon
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If gila went back to milan, or inter or juve i doubt he would be scoring goals like the way he is for us. He’s brilliant for fiorentina but not good enough mentally/talent for the bigger clubs. I think this is the same scenario for pazzini, scoring goals for fun for a lesser club like samp, but if he was back here then we all saw what he was like with the ridiculous number of chances he wasted in front of goal. He’s gone now (and he wanted to leave) so he doesn’t really concern me anymore, we got good money for him that will be used to bring in better quality in the summer.
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Then again, as long as he’s scoring against our rivals…
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ugh
samp are up a man and still gave up the equalizerPosted from
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14 away goals today
lets hope it’s 17 by the end of the day
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