Yesterday Monaco - Nice, the rich vs the poor, the stars vs the blue collars...
For the 11th year, Monaco couldn't defeat the underdog Nice...
Like every year more than 10000 fans of Nice made the short trip to Monaco. (Only 10000 because the Monaco authorities wouldn't sell us more tickets.
Here are 2 vidéos from the past years:
The fans sing the anthem of Nice before the game - 2006.
Football goal seen from the pitch - 2004.
The side of Nice:
Monaco scored at the 86th minute and celebrated like if they had won the Champions' league. This contributed to get the players of Nice revolted. Here is a video of that goal.
Nice egalized at the last minute by Lilian Laslandes who scored an amazing goal: http://soccers.free.fr/2007-2008/Monaco ... landes.wmv
It's like a victory for us.
The Chairman of Nice, Maurice Cohen, thanks the fans for their support:
On Friday: ES Conque-Madeleine 1 - 0 Garibaldi FC
Here is a video to show you how unlucky we were. Garibaldi FC wear the darker shirts. (Sorry for the bad music).
New football season 2008-2009
1202downing! why did i ever throw you into the game? what was i thinking? you are worthless.
New football season 2008-2009
1203I went on tour in Europe with some friends in October/November, and since returning haven't found the rhythm to post here much (lot's going on). So it's taken me until now to say:
Salut, Sylvain! Was good to meet you in Nice!
I had intended to accompany this greeting with a photo of the OGC Nice lighter you gave me, safely returned to Yorkshire. Sadly I haven't had time, but it is close at hand and much appreciated. Also appreciated was the moment in Nice, as you paced around nervously smoking before going on stage, when I told you that Rob, our driver, supported Halifax Town.
"Ah yes," you said, preoccupied with pre-performance thought. "They play in blue and white stripes."
Such knowledge of non-league football under pressure! Rob said the next day, "that chap in Nice really knew his football!"
I remember when Leeds United played in Monaco in 1995, in the UEFA Cup. They won 3-0, Tony Yeboah scored a hat-trick wearing the unusual green-and-blue striped away kit, and the Leeds fans changed the words of the chant 'you're going home in a Yorkshire ambulance' to 'you're going home in a red Ferrari'.
On our way out of Nice on that tour, we drove through Monaco, and I passed quite close to that curious stadium.
I may as well throw in the rest of the football content from the tour. The aforementioned Rob Kito is a seasoned tour driver and always takes in as many games as he can, matching tour itineries to fixture lists where possible so he can sneak off during soundchecks and the like. On this trip, he had me for company for the footie end. In Lisbon, we arrived at a venue a stone's throw from The Stadium Of Light an hour before Benfica vs Celtic. We managed to score some cheap tickets from a Celtic fan who had bought them in the Benfica end for insurance but then got some in the Celtic end. We only needed two but bought all three; the third went to a tramp who had tried to sell us a very torn looking ticket earlier. The game was a good one, settled when Benfica finally brought on an English style centre forward and he scored with moments to spare. Here I am, outside with Eusebio:
Two nights later, in Ponte Vedre in Spain, we caught Spurs' UEFA cup game, not realising that this was the match when Martin Jol's sacking was announced at half time. We had an inkling from the way the cameras spent half the second half focussed either on Jol or Daniel Levy. And I ate a fine slice of tortilla.
Pisa vs Modena had slipped off Rob's radar, so it was a coincidence that we got stuck in Pisa football traffic as we tried to find the tower. In the dark. And the pissing rain. Having got caught near the ground, we drove away to be free of traffic, and thought we saw the leaning tower in the distance. This turned out to be a mobile phone mast. It did, however, get us back into town, where after an hour of aimless driving we asked and found that the football ground is basically right next to the tower. The game was underway by this point, and just as we walked to the tower, there was a huge cheer as the first goal was scored, and I ran toward our fabled tower as if I had scored the goal. I got some great photos of the tower at night, illuminated by the floodlights from the football ground:
After a pizza, Rob and I tried to sneak in to catch the last ten minutes but the ground was really hard to actually get to and the final whistle defeated us. We found out next day that it the game ended 3-3.
We were in Rome the next day, on the day of the Rome derby, Roma vs Lazio. We definitely wanted a piece of that, but the Romans we spoke to just laughed it off as impossible to attend without a ticket. We also heard some nightmare stories of innocent Brits attending the game, only to be herded onto a train at the final whistle and forced to travel twenty miles out of town. We settled for watching it on a TV in a small cafe, in the company of some good ol' boys cheering for Roma (which was a relief; I wouldn't like to be in a Nazio bar). A great game finished 3-2 to Roma, and Rob and I emerged from the cafe astoundingly pissed.
Last, in Zurich, again we were a mere fifteen minutes walk from FC Zurich's ground (this being pre-assertained by Rob), arriving at five for a five-thirty kickoff. We parked the van and fucked off to leave the bands to it. Only two gigs in Switzerland meant a limited number of Swiss Francs; tickets were 33F each and we had sixty. On hearing our plaint to the ticket window, an astoundingly kind kid of about fifteen tapped our arms and handed us the required six francs. Rob (more lingo-conversant than I) stammered our thanks and handed over some euros in exchange, and we got in. The ground appears to have been redone for the forthcoming European Championships; it had very modern looking signage, with huge Helvetica-letters indicating entrances, and curious floodlights: a series of stalks angled away from the stadium with a row of lights on each.
Sion took an early lead but Zurich ran out 4-1 winners. We were right next to the main fans' section, the SudeKurve:
- where songs were partly orchestrated through loudspeakers at the front of the section. Most of the songs seemed to be a variation of 'la la la la la la la, FC Zurich', best of which was to the tune of 'Moonlight Shadow', 'FC Zurich' replacing the words 'Moonlight Shadow'. Oh, and everybody seemed to be pissed out of their heads: teenagers necking cans of lager were prolific outside the ground.
I returned to find Leeds' assistant manager Gustavo Poyet pilfered by Tottenham, and Leeds seemingly stumbling slightly as a result. The appointment of Dave 'Harry' Bassett as replacement hasn't exactly inspired confidence (Wise and he did some comedy press-conference routine about Bassett getting the names of the players wrong) and I do hope that Poyet hasn't taken all the management knowhow at the club away with him to London. It does kind of speak to how good he must be that Spurs nicked him, and not Wise. It will be interesting to see if Leeds keep the momentum going under the dwarf; I've no doubt that promotion will come, but will it be with the same esprit and elan as the first months of the season, or will getting knocked out of the cup by no-marks become the level?
Salut, Sylvain! Was good to meet you in Nice!
I had intended to accompany this greeting with a photo of the OGC Nice lighter you gave me, safely returned to Yorkshire. Sadly I haven't had time, but it is close at hand and much appreciated. Also appreciated was the moment in Nice, as you paced around nervously smoking before going on stage, when I told you that Rob, our driver, supported Halifax Town.
"Ah yes," you said, preoccupied with pre-performance thought. "They play in blue and white stripes."
Such knowledge of non-league football under pressure! Rob said the next day, "that chap in Nice really knew his football!"
I remember when Leeds United played in Monaco in 1995, in the UEFA Cup. They won 3-0, Tony Yeboah scored a hat-trick wearing the unusual green-and-blue striped away kit, and the Leeds fans changed the words of the chant 'you're going home in a Yorkshire ambulance' to 'you're going home in a red Ferrari'.
On our way out of Nice on that tour, we drove through Monaco, and I passed quite close to that curious stadium.
I may as well throw in the rest of the football content from the tour. The aforementioned Rob Kito is a seasoned tour driver and always takes in as many games as he can, matching tour itineries to fixture lists where possible so he can sneak off during soundchecks and the like. On this trip, he had me for company for the footie end. In Lisbon, we arrived at a venue a stone's throw from The Stadium Of Light an hour before Benfica vs Celtic. We managed to score some cheap tickets from a Celtic fan who had bought them in the Benfica end for insurance but then got some in the Celtic end. We only needed two but bought all three; the third went to a tramp who had tried to sell us a very torn looking ticket earlier. The game was a good one, settled when Benfica finally brought on an English style centre forward and he scored with moments to spare. Here I am, outside with Eusebio:
Two nights later, in Ponte Vedre in Spain, we caught Spurs' UEFA cup game, not realising that this was the match when Martin Jol's sacking was announced at half time. We had an inkling from the way the cameras spent half the second half focussed either on Jol or Daniel Levy. And I ate a fine slice of tortilla.
Pisa vs Modena had slipped off Rob's radar, so it was a coincidence that we got stuck in Pisa football traffic as we tried to find the tower. In the dark. And the pissing rain. Having got caught near the ground, we drove away to be free of traffic, and thought we saw the leaning tower in the distance. This turned out to be a mobile phone mast. It did, however, get us back into town, where after an hour of aimless driving we asked and found that the football ground is basically right next to the tower. The game was underway by this point, and just as we walked to the tower, there was a huge cheer as the first goal was scored, and I ran toward our fabled tower as if I had scored the goal. I got some great photos of the tower at night, illuminated by the floodlights from the football ground:
After a pizza, Rob and I tried to sneak in to catch the last ten minutes but the ground was really hard to actually get to and the final whistle defeated us. We found out next day that it the game ended 3-3.
We were in Rome the next day, on the day of the Rome derby, Roma vs Lazio. We definitely wanted a piece of that, but the Romans we spoke to just laughed it off as impossible to attend without a ticket. We also heard some nightmare stories of innocent Brits attending the game, only to be herded onto a train at the final whistle and forced to travel twenty miles out of town. We settled for watching it on a TV in a small cafe, in the company of some good ol' boys cheering for Roma (which was a relief; I wouldn't like to be in a Nazio bar). A great game finished 3-2 to Roma, and Rob and I emerged from the cafe astoundingly pissed.
Last, in Zurich, again we were a mere fifteen minutes walk from FC Zurich's ground (this being pre-assertained by Rob), arriving at five for a five-thirty kickoff. We parked the van and fucked off to leave the bands to it. Only two gigs in Switzerland meant a limited number of Swiss Francs; tickets were 33F each and we had sixty. On hearing our plaint to the ticket window, an astoundingly kind kid of about fifteen tapped our arms and handed us the required six francs. Rob (more lingo-conversant than I) stammered our thanks and handed over some euros in exchange, and we got in. The ground appears to have been redone for the forthcoming European Championships; it had very modern looking signage, with huge Helvetica-letters indicating entrances, and curious floodlights: a series of stalks angled away from the stadium with a row of lights on each.
Sion took an early lead but Zurich ran out 4-1 winners. We were right next to the main fans' section, the SudeKurve:
- where songs were partly orchestrated through loudspeakers at the front of the section. Most of the songs seemed to be a variation of 'la la la la la la la, FC Zurich', best of which was to the tune of 'Moonlight Shadow', 'FC Zurich' replacing the words 'Moonlight Shadow'. Oh, and everybody seemed to be pissed out of their heads: teenagers necking cans of lager were prolific outside the ground.
I returned to find Leeds' assistant manager Gustavo Poyet pilfered by Tottenham, and Leeds seemingly stumbling slightly as a result. The appointment of Dave 'Harry' Bassett as replacement hasn't exactly inspired confidence (Wise and he did some comedy press-conference routine about Bassett getting the names of the players wrong) and I do hope that Poyet hasn't taken all the management knowhow at the club away with him to London. It does kind of speak to how good he must be that Spurs nicked him, and not Wise. It will be interesting to see if Leeds keep the momentum going under the dwarf; I've no doubt that promotion will come, but will it be with the same esprit and elan as the first months of the season, or will getting knocked out of the cup by no-marks become the level?
Last edited by daniel robert chapman_Archive on Sun Dec 02, 2007 9:19 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Twenty-four hours a week, seven days a month
New football season 2008-2009
1204And apologies for the what-I-did-on-my-holidays length of that post. I'm a wee bit drunk and can't sleep and have work in six hours and feel verbose.
Twenty-four hours a week, seven days a month
New football season 2008-2009
1205It made for an excellent read Monsieur Chapman. Thoroughly enjoyable. Also sounds like the best way to tour around Europe.
...and astonishingly, having been down as low as 17th or something awful like that at one point, I am now top of the league (until tomorrow when the Manure play. I hope both Tevez and Ronaldo do their hamstrings in the first five minutes. All you lot behind me have both of them in your squad.)
Now if I can just stay competitive while unloading some of the dead weight in my squad.
...and astonishingly, having been down as low as 17th or something awful like that at one point, I am now top of the league (until tomorrow when the Manure play. I hope both Tevez and Ronaldo do their hamstrings in the first five minutes. All you lot behind me have both of them in your squad.)
Now if I can just stay competitive while unloading some of the dead weight in my squad.
New football season 2008-2009
1207Went to the Hearts vs. Motherwell game today. Crap results, crap weather, crap referee.
CRAP.
CRAP.
"Why stop now, just when I'm hating it?" - Marvin
New football season 2008-2009
1208However, you did get to see Andrius Velicka again before he pulls on an Old Firm shirt come January.
New football season 2008-2009
1209Nice to have you back, DRC. Great post.
Hopefully a 3-0 win against Port Vale mid-week and a 4-0 win against Huddersfield today show that Leeds are back on the right track. Today 32,501 people crammed into Elland Road on the 10th anniversary of the death of Leeds legend Billy Bremner. We're only a few points off the lead and not even half way through the season. I am actually starting to think we could go up as Champions.
Incidentally, in case he is reading this thread I have to say a Salut to Sleepkid for his apparent psychic abilities in the last couple of weeks. I've been desperately trying to stay ahead of his team in the Fantasy Football league and this morning I couldn't help but wonder why he had stripped an on-form Steven Gerrard of his Captaincy and bestowed it upon Everton striker Yakubu. My surprise gave way to absolute dread as I watched Yakubu rack up three goals this afternoon. I'm going to jump the gun and congratulate Sleepkid for being the new league leader in anticipation of tomorrow. Hopefully I will provide as much food for thought in the next fortnight as he has given me the past couple of game weeks.
Hopefully a 3-0 win against Port Vale mid-week and a 4-0 win against Huddersfield today show that Leeds are back on the right track. Today 32,501 people crammed into Elland Road on the 10th anniversary of the death of Leeds legend Billy Bremner. We're only a few points off the lead and not even half way through the season. I am actually starting to think we could go up as Champions.
Incidentally, in case he is reading this thread I have to say a Salut to Sleepkid for his apparent psychic abilities in the last couple of weeks. I've been desperately trying to stay ahead of his team in the Fantasy Football league and this morning I couldn't help but wonder why he had stripped an on-form Steven Gerrard of his Captaincy and bestowed it upon Everton striker Yakubu. My surprise gave way to absolute dread as I watched Yakubu rack up three goals this afternoon. I'm going to jump the gun and congratulate Sleepkid for being the new league leader in anticipation of tomorrow. Hopefully I will provide as much food for thought in the next fortnight as he has given me the past couple of game weeks.
run joe run wrote:Kerble your enthusiasm.
New football season 2008-2009
1210yakubu totally rocked it today (no help to me)! tevez was not so shabby either ('bout time!) 42 points so far... abedayor and green had better kill.