Euro 2012 Team Profile – Czech Republic by Neil Patterson

December 15th, 2011

Play-off Winners
Coach Michal Bilek
One to Watch Vaclav Pilar

As we approach the summer of 2012 all of our minds, well most of them at least, will turn away from the domestic football competitions within our own countries, towards the International arena for the eagerly awaited European Championship Finals, to be held in Poland and the Ukraine. Within a fortnight from now, the world will know the names of the last four teams/countries, which will join the 12 nations already guaranteed a place at Euro 2012. Over the next three weeks, we shall be profiling each of the 16 finalists who will bid to become the champions of Europe until 2016.

We visit the Czech Republic for our next Euro 2012 team profile. The Czech Republic has only been an independent footballing nation since the early 1990s, they played their first match against Turkey in 1994 which they won comfortably 1-4. Prior to becoming a sovereign nation, the Czech Republic made up part of the Czechoslovakian team which competed internationally for over fifty years. The Czechoslovak team of yesteryear were a recognised force in international competitions, finishing runners up in the World Cup Finals of 1934 and 1962, and winning the European Championships in 1976.

Since separation, the Czech Republic have done fairly well on the international stage for such a relatively small country. They succeeded at their first attempt, qualifying for the European Championships in 1996, which were held in England. When the action got underway, the Czechs lost their opening group game to Germany 2-0, however, they were undeterred by this setback and, were able to put together a magnificent run of performances and results to become the surprise package of the tournament, reaching the final. Unfortunately for the Czech Republic, they would again face the Germans, and despite taking a 1-0 lead, they were pegged back, eventually losing to an extra time Golden Goal, scored by Oliver Bierhoff. The performances of the Czech team gained them a lot of admirers, and several of their star players, such as Karel Poborsky, Patrick Berger, and of course, Pavel Nedved, earned lucrative contracts at big European clubs on the back of their showing in the tournament.

After doing so well at Euro 96, Czech Republic were heavily fancied to go on and do well at World Cup 98 in France. However qualification did not go according to plan as the Czechs finished the campaign in third place behind Spain and Yugoslavia, therefore not making it to the tournament proper. Slightly unfortunate elimination in the group stage of Euro 2000 was followed up by yet another failure to make the World Cup Finals in 2002. Finishing second in their group, behind Denmark, the Czech Republic would face Belgium in a two legged play-off; they lost both legs 1-0. Undefeated in qualification for Euro 2004, a very strong Czech Republic side arrived in Portugal in great form. With the likes of Milan Baros, Jan Koller, and, the evergreen Pavel Nedved, the Czechs took the tournament by storm, winning all their group games and making it to the semi-final, where they were cruelly beaten by Greece, with an extra time Silver Goal.

Czech Republic qualified for their first World Cup as an independent nation in 2006. Full of high hopes after their success at Euro 2004, the Czechs arrived in the group stages, however, unfortunately for them and their fans, they also departed in the group stages, and said good-bye to, the retiring, Nedved and Poborsky. Group stage elimination at the hands of Turkey was to follow at Euro 2008, and failure to make the World Cup Finals in South Africa 2010 was the first time the Czechs had failed to make the grade since 2002.

Czech Republic finished second in their qualifying group, amassing 13 points and losing three matches along the way, two of those defeats were against the reigning World and European champions, Spain, so we can’t really hold that against them. They won their play-off against Montenegro 3-0 on aggregate and thus qualified for next summer’s finals in Poland and Ukraine. The Czechs under manager Michal Bilek are a solid, well-disciplined outfit, who are hard to beat, if somewhat lacking in flair. They have many experienced players such as Petr Cech in goal, Tomas Rosicky (c) in midfield, and Milan Baros up front, as well as a couple of exciting youngsters breaking into the team. One of these youngsters to look out for is Vaclav Pilar, he is a 23 year old attacking midfielder, who’s recently signed a contract with Wolfsburg in Germany, rated very highly in his homeland, Pilar scored a tremendous goal to put the Czechs in command of their play-off first leg.

The Czech Republic have done well to make it to Euro 2012, they are a decent side, who may prove difficult to beat, but they will need a favourable draw to avoid group stage elimination.

This article is the property of and copyrighted to its owner http://e-u-r-o-2012.com.
We welcome any links to blog articles – however they may be reproduced or copied only with the prior written permission of http://e-u-r-o-2012.com.
The opinions expressed are not necessarily those ‘EURO 2012 Blog’ but of the contributor.
Subsequent comments to the blog articles that appear on the site are not the opinion of ‘EURO 2012 Blog’ but only of the comment writer.
Personal attacks, offensive language, racist, sexist, bigoted views and unsubstantiated allegations will not be printed. ‘ EURO 2012 Blog’ reserves the right to determine if comments are any of the above.

Important Hertha Berlin win! – They beat last seasons Bundesliga winners Dortmund away 1-2

September 14th, 2011

Hertha Berlin beat Stuttgart on Friday, ending their embarrassing and dismal 17 winless home games in the Bundesliga.

What an upset – what a shocker and yes even for Hertha Berlin fans!

Hertha Berlin, just a couple of weeks after their re-entry into the Bundesliga after having been relegated to the 2nd division last year, beat the current reigning champions, Dortmund!

After this game Dortmund side are now ….wait for it…..10th in the table! Always the consummate gentleman, Jurgen Klopp Dortmund’s manager at the end of the game admitted that ‘Hertha deserved to win the game’.

The action all came in the 2nd half of the game with the game being scoreless at ½ time. However Hertha upped the tempo and enjoyed the better part of the opening and it was left for Raffael Caetano de Araújo who went run-about beating defenders to get a direct shot on goal. However the Dortmund goalie was not asleep and prevented an immediate goal. But Mister Raffael is if nothing else persistent and put the rebound into net!

Dortmund 0 – Hertha Berlin 1!

There were 3400 Hertha fans who went along for the game and they went bezerk!

Dortmund had to take immediate remedial action and threw everything forward but lacked the creativity and luck which stood them in such good stead last season.

Hertha did not panic and their defence and midfield remained solid in fact they had a great chance to increase their lead when an unmarked [?!] Raffael hit the cross bar.

Then the newly spirited Dortmund sent a projectile which hit the Hertha crossbar – however all to no avail and Hertha in the form of its central defender Peter Niemeyer in the 81st minute pushed the ball across the line …2-0 to Hertha!

Seven minutes later Borussia Dortmund were shaken out of their stupor and the Polish international Lewandowski headed the ball home into the net from the near post.

The remaining 12 minutes plus 4 minutes of extra time saw a concentrated last effort of Dortmund to salvage a tie but Hertha survived the onslaught and celebrated their first away win of this new Bundesliga.

This was a well deserved win by Hertha season and based on their second half performance well deserved.

 

In other weekend news Bayern Munchen striker Mario Gomez – top Bundesliga scorer last season -scored 4 goals and French international Franck Ribery 2 goals as Bayern pulverized Freiburg 7-0 Saturday. With so many goals and with this positive goal balance – it takes them to the top of the Bundesliga.

They will have to play Villarreal in Spain this coming week in Champions League action and with Arjen Robben back in action they probably can keep this great scoring pace – but don’t expect any 7-0 results in the Champions League!

Other Bundesliga games this weekend saw Borussia Mönchengladbach beat Kaiserslautern, and Bayer Leverkusen beat Augsburg 4-1.

Hoffenheim moved to 6th place after crushing Mainz away 4-0 with Dutch striker Ryan Babbel scoring 2 goals.

Werder Bremen beat losers Hamburg SV at home 2-0. Claudio Pizarro, was man-of-the-match for Werder scoring 2 great goals. He was brought off at game’s end to a standing ovation. The former ‘bad-boy’ Peruvian international seems to be the scorer they so desperately need at the moment.

On Sunday Schalke 04, travelled to VfL Wolfsburg only to see a Raul goal in the first half be overtaken by a better playing Wolsburg in the 2nd half. Striker Mandzukic was man of the match and new Swedish signing Rasmus Jönsson formerly from Helsingborg IF made a very positive impression in this his first Bundesliga game.

Schalke goalie Fährmann looked like he came from a 2nd division team – who were probably glad to get rid of him! Perhaps he was ‘having a bad day’ – well it certainly was a bad day with him seemingly unable to hold even the most simple of crosses. While he could do nothing about the last deflected goal, he also had Raul of all people save a sure goal when he headed from the goal mouth.

He is supposed to replace a great keeper Manual Neuer, but he has a long way to go to get anywhere near Neuer’s type of competence!

Read more about the game on Hertha’s own website – http://www.herthabsc.de/index.php?id=2075&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=11011&cHash=ed33aac664101dbf1774e491f508fbaa

Kindly reprinted by permission of OTA-Berlin “……the intelligent Apartment Alternative to Hotels in Berlin”

This article is the property of and copyrighted to its owner http://e-u-r-o-2012.com.
We welcome any links to blog articles – however they may be reproduced or copied only with the prior written permission of http://e-u-r-o-2012.com.
The opinions expressed are not necessarily those ‘EURO 2012 Blog’ but of the contributor.
Subsequent comments to the blog articles that appear on the site are not the opinion of ‘EURO 2012 Blog’ but only of the comment writer.
Personal attacks, offensive language, racist, sexist, bigoted views and unsubstantiated allegations will not be printed. ‘ EURO 2012 Blog’ reserves the right to determine if comments are any of the above.

Poland and Germany tie in friendly – lucky result for both teams.

September 7th, 2011

Germany played Poland in a friendly yesterday evening at the new Gdansk stadium – the first game played there in preparation for EURO 2012 which starts in days.

The game, like most friendlies ended in a tie, 2-2, however just!

Germany scored in extra time in an entertaining game to equalize on a very nice goal by the Brazil-born striker Cacau , who had all the hard work done by Mueller who came in as a substitute in the 2nd half.

While it was a great achievement for the Polish team to have kept the game so tight – in spite of major German absences in the form of Ozil, Schweinsteiger and Neuer – it does not tell the entire story.

Many times the Germans in this game were simply unlucky and better in such a game where things do not really matter all that much than if this occurred in an important match.

If there was a man of the match then that had to be the Polish and Arsenal goalie Wojtek Szczesny who time upon time made the Polish tie, and almost a win possible.

The resultant 2-2 tie with Poland will have given German manager Joachim Löw and some of his defence players a wake-up call as problems in the back occurred again and again.

Many Poles, including coach Franciszek Smuda, players and fans will be asking a similar question when their own team just gave a goal away – conceding a goal in the final seconds of the game.

As much as they may have relished a win, the Poles were moral victors in that they held the world’s third best team to a tie and they showed what a great stadium Gdansk now has.

It augurs well for Poland, EURO 2012 and for Polish football.

This article is the property of and copyrighted to its owner http://e-u-r-o-2012.com.
We welcome any links to blog articles – however they may be reproduced or copied only with the prior written permission of http://e-u-r-o-2012.com.
The opinions expressed are not necessarily those ‘EURO 2012 Blog’ but of the contributor.
Subsequent comments to the blog articles that appear on the site are not the opinion of ‘EURO 2012 Blog’ but only of the comment writer.
Personal attacks, offensive language, racist, sexist, bigoted views and unsubstantiated allegations will not be printed. ‘ EURO 2012 Blog’ reserves the right to determine if comments are any of the above.

Hertha Berlin 1-0 win over Stuttgart – First home Bundesliga win since……wait for it…….August 8th 2009!

September 2nd, 2011

Hertha Berlin beat Stuttgart on Friday, ending their embarrassing and dismal 17 winless home games in the Bundesliga.

Raffael Caetano de Araújo – aka Raffael – the ever productive Brazilian striker for Hertha scored in the 86th minute. This after a cross from veteran Hertha midfielder Patrick Ebert crossed for the Brazilian to head past the Stuttgart keeper Sven Ulreich.

Ebert was able to pass a rebound from Ulreich’s previous save from a Hertha shot to an unmarked Raffael at the other open ended goal post.

The Japanese forward playing for Stuttgart, Shinji Okazaki, had hit the post in the first half and the game could have gone either way.And Stuttgart had a somewhat questionable penalty request turned down in their forward Harnik was brought down.

In what became a chippy affair towards the end of the match the referee allowed, already in ‘extra-extra’ time a controversial free kick for Stuttgart. This in turn did produce a goal, only to be disallowed – again controversially – by the referee for alleged offensive foul in the Hertha box.

This was not to be Stuttgart’s afternoon and Hertha should count themselves lucky with the win – as nice as it is to see Berlin’s Bundesliga represenative team achieve a middle of the tables ranking – albeit very early in the season. Long may they remain there!

In other Bundesliga action FC Koln beat HSV- Hamburg in the last 6 minutes when Canadian substitute Kevin McKenna struck the decisive blow as 1. FC Köln recovered from 3-2 down .

Hertha forward Rob Friend is another Canadian playing in the Bundesliga for Hertha, as is Dutch-Canadian Marcel De Jong who plays for newly promoted Augsburg .

Canada needs all the good football players it can muster to be able to qualify for the next world cup. Canada presently is 102nd in the Fifa Ranking between Bahrain and Oman [!!!!] which means its time to get their national team act together.

Read more about Canadians in the Bundesliga at – http://rednationonline.ca/AcrossthePondMay92011.aspx
This article is taken over from the OTA Constituency Blog located at http://www.ota-berlin.de/blog.
OTA Berlins best vacation homes
This article is the property of and copyrighted to its owner http://e-u-r-o-2012.com.
We welcome any links to blog articles – however they may be reproduced or copied only with the prior written permission of http://e-u-r-o-2012.com.
The opinions expressed are not necessarily those ‘EURO 2012 Blog’ but of the contributor.
Subsequent comments to the blog articles that appear on the site are not the opinion of ‘EURO 2012 Blog’ but only of the comment writer.
Personal attacks, offensive language, racist, sexist, bigoted views and unsubstantiated allegations will not be printed. ‘ EURO 2012 Blog’ reserves the right to determine if comments are any of the above.