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Speakers' Corner #4
Sep 11, 2006 | 6:52AM | report this

Some possible topics to get stuck into.

Daniel Finkelstein “The Fink Tank” on the Cole – Gallas swap and statistically which club got the best deal.

Mihir Bose on the West Ham Argentine transfer “coup” in last Thursday's Daily Telegraph. Bose wrote the definitive book on the aborted Sky takeover of Manchester United - "Manchester Unlimited".

Some more details on the upcoming “Panorama” program to be broadcast in the UK concerning corruption.

Neil Clark has a story in The Independent about Argentine clubs selling the rights to players to businesses.

David Lacey looks at Peter Crouch the England scoring machine.

Meanwhile Nick Townsend takes a bit of a different view.

Is Crouch one of the world’s great strikers as 11 goals in 14 England games would seem to indicate? Or is it a case of an awkward forward riding an international hot streak and that his ratio of slightly better than 2 goals in every 7 Premiership is a fairer reflection of his true worth?

 Here is a list of the top 100 Premiership goalscorers to the end of August 2006. Crouch’s stats have inserted at the relevant level even though he has yet to break-in to the top 100 club. (The number attached to each player is their position in the all-time goals list as opposed to their goals to games ratio).

Source: premiersoccerstats.com

Player Goals Games Avg.

3 Thierry Henry 164 239 1.46

13 Ruud van Nistelrooy 95 150 1.58

1 Alan Shearer 260 442 1.70

7 Michael Owen 125 228 1.82

10 Ian Wright 113 212 1.88

2 Andy Cole 186 389 2.09

8 Jimmy Hasselbaink 125 266 2.13

 29 Eric Cantona 70 156 2.23

4 Robbie Fowler 161 361 2.24

5 Les Ferdinand 149 352 2.36

26 Mark Viduka 72 176 2.44

74 Yakubu Aiyegbeni 42 104 2.48

19 Ole Solskjaer 85 219 2.58

16 Kevin Phillips 87 226 2.60

36 Stan Collymore 62 163 2.63

12 Matthew Le Tissier 101 270 2.67

22 Robbie Keane 79 214 2.71

33 Nicholas Anelka 64 174 2.72

6 Teddy Sheringham 145 405 2.79

31 Paolo Di Canio 68 190 2.79

11 Dion Dublin 111 312 2.81

24 Tony Cottee 78 220 2.82

45 John Hartson 55 155 2.82

9 Dwight Yorke 122 348 2.85

51 Mark Bright 50 144 2.88

20 Chris Sutton 82 247 3.01

63 Wayne Rooney 44 133 3.02

64 Louis Saha 44 133 3.02

28 Chris Armstrong 71 216 3.04

37 Robert Pires 62 189 3.05

75 Marian Pahars 42 129 3.07

48 Efan Ekoku 52 160 3.08

52 Paulo Wanchope 50 156 3.12

68 David Hirst 43 135 3.14

23 James Beattie 79 252 3.19

40 Peter Beardsley 58 185 3.19

 94 John Spencer 35 112 3.20

55 Craig Bellamy 47 156 3.32

 69 Frederic Kanoute 43 144 3.35

46 Eider Gudjohnsen 54 186 3.44

47 Gustavo Poyet 54 187 3.46

56 Jermain Defoe 47 163 3.47

70 Andrei Kanchelskis 43 151 3.51

42 Kevin Gallacher 56 198 3.54

17 Dennis Bergkamp 87 315 3.62

34 Dean Holdsworth 63 229 3.63

54 Ian Rush 48 176 3.67

76 Juan Pablo Angel 42 155 3.69

77 Julian Joachim 42 156 3.71

83 Tore Andre Flo 38 141 3.71

14 Paul Scholes 89 342 3.84

39 Gianfranco Zola 59 229 3.88

Peter Crouch 97 25 3.88

91 Paul Dickov 36 142 3.94

18 Emile Heskey 87 344 3.95

21 Kevin Campbell 82 325 3.96

32 Duncan Ferguson 68 269 3.96

81 Steffen Iversen 40 159 3.98

84 Dean Sturridge 38 155 4.08

30 Brian Deane 70 286 4.09

38 David Beckham 62 265 4.27

78 Nwankwo Kanu 41 175 4.27

41 Niall Quinn 58 250 4.31

57 Fredrik Ljungberg 46 199 4.33

43 Jason Euell 56 244 4.36

60 Rodney Wallace 45 197 4.38

95 Peter Ndlovu 35 154 4.40

65 Dean Saunders 44 196 4.45

25 Frank Lampard 75 337 4.49

71 Darius Vassell 43 201 4.67

44 Harry Kewell 56 262 4.68

35 Mark Hughes 63 296 4.70

15 Ryan Giggs 89 437 4.91

 61 Alan Smith 45 224 4.98

96 Benito Carbone 35 177 5.06

85 Darren Huckerby 38 201 5.29

62 Kevin Davies 45 241 5.36

66 Robbie Earle 44 244 5.55

97 Damien Duff 35 196 5.60

72 Noel Whelan 43 243 5.65

92 Patrik Berger 36 208 5.78

49 Nicky Barmby 52 302 5.81

98 Marcus ####le 35 204 5.83

73 Nolberto Solano 43 252 5.86

86 Don Hutchison 37 220 5.95

58 Paul Merson 46 280 6.09

93 Ruel Fox 36 223 6.19

87 Steven Gerrard 37 234 6.32

59 Graham Stuart 46 293 6.37

53 Gary McAllister 50 325 6.50

67 Lee Bowyer 44 295 6.70

79 Steve McManaman 41 275 6.71

27 Gary Speed 72 486 6.75

50 Trevor Sinclair 51 346 6.78

99 Muzzy Izzet 34 248 7.29

80 Paul Ince 41 306 7.46

100 Dennis Wise 34 278 8.18

88 Darren Anderton 37 319 8.62

89 Tim Sherwood 37 341 9.22

82 Roy Keane 39 366 9.38

90 David Unsworth 37 352 9.51

 

 

27 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Ashley Cole, William Gallas, Mihir Bose, West Ham Utd, Panorama, Neil Clark, David Lacey, Peter Crouch, Nick Townsend, Thierry Henry, Ruud Van Nistelrooy, Alan Shearer, Michael Owen, Ian Wright, Andy Cole, Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink, Eric Cantona, Robbie Fowler, Les Ferdinand, Mark Viduka
 
Soccer Books
Aug 08, 2006 | 12:39PM | report this

 

 In response to a posting on the blog “When Saturday Comes” that asked about decent soccer books, here is a summary of an article written at the end of 2004.

Colin Shindler’s “George Best and 21 Others” (Headline Book Publishing) is a great follow up to his two previous soccer books “Manchester United Ruined My Life” and “Fathers, Sons and Football”. Shindler takes the 1964 FA Youth Cup semi-final between the two Manchester clubs as his anchor and weaves together the stories of the individuals who played in that match, along with the social upheaval that was sweeping Britain in the 60’s. “How Soccer Explains the World” by Franklin Foer (Harper Collins) can be judged one of the best books of the year without limiting the category to soccer. Foer, who writes for the New Republic, does a masterful job of describing the powerful forces that the game often unleashes. Racism, ethnic-cleansing, bigotry and violence are all put under the microscope. Simon Kuper has followed up his acclaimed “Football Against the Enemy” with another stunner, “Ajax, The Dutch, The War” (Orion). Kuper tells the story of Amsterdam’s Jewish population during the Second World War and the role of Ajax during those terrible times. The Second World War is also the setting for Andy Dougan’s book “Dynamo” (Harper Collins). Dougan tells the story o####ame played in 1942 in occupied Ukraine. A team largely comprised of the pre-war Dynamo Kiev side played a Luftwaffe side. The consequences of the result were brutal. Dougan does an incredible job of separating the facts from the folklore of the game. This one is a riveting read. Tom Bower is an investigative journalist rather than a sports journalist but that is not a handicap in his book “Broken Dreams” (Simon & Schuster). You can’t read this book and not feel uneasy the next time you hear or read a rumour about an imminent player move. The book is devastating in its expose of the largely unregulated industry of soccer and the millions siphoned by sleazy agents, unprincipled owners and managers. Another book with a business and financial bent is “Manchester Unlimited” by Daily Telegraph reporter Mihir Bose. This book was published in 2000 and focuses on the attempted takeover of United by Sky TV. The book not only lays out how the Sky bid failed, but also provides the context for the current goings-on at Old Trafford involving Martin Glazer as well as the “Fergie – Coolmore Mafia” feud earlier this year. “White Storm” written by Phil Ball (Bloomsbury) thankfully manages to deal with subject of Real Madrid without mentioning David Beckham in every second sentence. The history of the world’s most successful club is charted. The roles played by all the great and influential figures in building the institution that is Real Madrid are described. A couple of years ago Alex Bellos gave us “Futebol – The Brazilian Way of Life” (Bloomsbury) and on a second reading a couple of months ago it is still a standout book.  Nothing is left untouched as the book covers topics as diverse as the export of Brazilian players, poverty, religion, Carnival and the 1950 World Cup final. If it is statistics you want then you cannot go wrong with “Soccer Yearbook 2004/5” by David Goldblatt and published in the United States by DK Publishing. With over 500 pages the book is crammed with all the information you could want on a country-by-country basis while covering the history of all the major competitions. The statistics, graphics and the photographs make this a must have for all anoraks out there. Finally “Motson’s National Obsession – The Greatest Football Trivia Book Ever” (Publishers Group West) maybe a slight exaggeration although I must admit I cannot name a better one. Compiled by the late Adam Ward and with a foreword by legendary soccer commentator John Motson, it makes an enjoyable and often interesting little read.”  

 

14 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Colin Shindler, George Best, Manchester United, Franklin Foer, Simon Kuper, Ajax, Andy Dougan, Dynamo Kiev, Tom Bower, Mihir Bose, Phil Ball, Real Madrid, David Beckham, Alex Bellos, David Goldblatt, Adam Ward, John Motson
 
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ABOUT ME


BobbyMcMahon
I am the soccer analyst for the Fox Soccer Report and appear twice a week - every Monday and Friday at 10:00 EST. I have also been a regular contributor to the Fox Soccer Channel website since the summer of 2004. Over the last twenty years I have contributed to various radio and television programs throughout North America as well writing about the game for newspapers, magazines and websites. Thank you to all who take time to visit this blog and especially to those of you who post your comments and thoughts. PS - If you have questions please post them on the regular Monday blog. I am unable to answer e mails posted to the inbox on this site. And one more thing. If you have questions or complaints or compliments about programming please contact Fox Soccer Channel or Fox Sports World Canada directly. I have no control over what the stations televise.
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