Monday 29 October 2012

PROFILE OF KING KENNY DALGLISH


Kenneth Mathieson Dalglish born 4 March 1951 in Scotland. His footballing career spanned for 22 years, as he played for Celtic and Liverpool. He played 102 games for Scotland scoring 30 goals. In 1983 Dalglish won and the PFA Player of the Year and the FWA Footballer of the Year in 1979 and 1983. In 2009 FourFourTwo named Dalglish as the greatest striker in post-war British football,and in 2006 he topped a Liverpool fans' poll of "100 Players Who Shook the Kop". He has been inducted into both the Scottish and English Football Halls of Fame.
Dalglish began starting playing for Celtic in 1971, and won 4 Scottish First Divisions, 4 Scottish Cups and 1 Scottish League Cup. In 1977, Liverpool manager Bob Paisley paid a British transfer record of £440,000 to bring Dalglish to Liverpool. His years at Liverpool were among the club's most successful periods, as he won 6 Football League First Divisions, 2 FA Cups, 4 League Cups, 7 FA Charity Shields, 3 European Cups and 1 UEFA Super Cup. For these achievements and his style of play he was given the name King Kenny by Liverpool supporters.
Dalglish became player-manager of Liverpool in 1985 after the resignation of Joe Fagan, winning a further 3 First Divisions, 2 FA Cups and 4 FA Charity Shields, before resigning from Liverpool in 1991. Eight months later Dalglish made a return to football management with Blackburn Rovers, whom he led from the Second Division to win the Premier League in 1995. Soon afterwards he stepped down as Blackburn manager to become Director of Football at the club, before leaving altogether in 1996.
In January 1997 Dalglish took over as manager at Newcastle United. Newcastle finished runners-up in both the Premier League and FA Cup during his first season, but they could only finish 13th in 1997–98, which led to his dismissal the following season. Dalglish went on to be appointed Director of Football at Celtic in 1999, and later manager, where he won the Scottish League Cup before an acrimonious departure the following year.
There can only ever be one King and the man who's earned the right to take his place on the Anfield throne is the one and only Kenneth Mathieson Dalglish.Regarded by the majority of Liverpudlians as the club's greatest ever player, his all round stunning brilliance has been deemed to have shaken the Kop more than anyone else.

HONORS - PLAYER
CELTIC
LIVERPOOL
FA Cup 2

HONORS - MANAGER
LIVERPOOL
FA Cup 2
BLACKBURN ROVERS
CELTIC












AWARDS
RECORDS

Sources (credit)….

Monday 8 October 2012

A review of Sunday's action in the Barclays Premier League


Manchester United moved up to second with a comprehensive 3-0 win at Newcastle in an epic encounter on Sunday.
The visitors came flying out of the blocks and were 2 up after 15 minutes as they capitalized on some truly awful and dreadful defending.
Jonny Evans escaped his marker to power home a header from a Robin van Persie corner and, from a Wayne Rooney delivery, Patrice Evra ghosted into the area to head home the second.
Newcastle put up more of a fight thereafter and Demba Ba was denied by the bar and then Papiss Cisse by a fine recovery save from David De Gea, the Spaniard clawing the ball away just before it could cross the line in a controversial manner.
But Tom Cleverley sealed the points for the visitors with a cross-shot from the left which curled right into the top corner.
The win took the Red Devils level on points with Manchester City and four points behind leaders Chelsea.
Tottenham made it four league wins in a row as they saw off Aston Villa 2-0 at White Hart Lane.
Steven Caulker and Aaron Lennon got the goals for Andre Villas-Boas' side and they move into fifth spot with 14points.
The main talking point prior to kick-off was the inclusion of Hugo Lloris in Spurs' starting XI, with his selection bringing Brad Friedel's remarkable run of 310 successive top-flight appearances to an end.
Both sides wasted a number of good opportunities before the deadlock was finally broken in the 58th minute.
A corner was allowed to make its way to birthday boy Jermain Defoe and he saw his shot from close-range ricochet into the net off the heels of Caulker.
Spurs then doubled their lead on 67 minutes, with Joe Bennett - who was later forced off on a stretcher - backing off Lennon and allowing the England winger to drill a low drive through his legs and into the bottom corner.
Stoke produced a solid defensive display to hold off Liverpool and take a hard-earned 0-0 draw away from Anfield.
Liverpool created chances and hit the woodwork on three occasions in the second period via Raheem Sterling, Suarez and Martin Skrtel.
But Stoke held on as the Reds continue their wait for a first home league win under new boss Brendan Rodgers.
Jose Fonte's last-gasp header secured Southampton a 2-2 draw and saved defensive partner Jos Hooiveld's blushes against Fulham.
The Portuguese centre-back nodded home a 90th-minute leveller in a game in which he had broken the deadlock after just four minutes.
Hooiveld scored an own goal in Southampton's 6-1 humbling at Arsenal and did so again when he directed home a speculative John Arne Riise drive in the second half.
Hooiveld, who came on eight minutes into the clash after Frazer Richardson suffered a thigh injury, then saw Kieran Richardson's close-range strike brush off him on its way in two minutes from time, although the goal was credited to the Fulham man.
However, Fonte saved the Dutchman and his side late on to earn Southampton a fourth point of the campaign.
League leaders Chelsea, deepened the woes of Norwich City after thrashing them 4-1 at the Bridge last Saturday. Norwich did threaten a shock when Grant Holt justified his recall by firing them in front but they looked every inch relegation fodder defending that lead as Fernando Torres, Frank Lampard, Eden Hazard and Branislav Ivanovic put them to the sword.
It was the perfect way for Chelsea to go into the international break, one that should see Cole earn his 99th and 100th caps for England despite Friday's extraordinary foul-mouthed Twitter rant at the Football Association.
Champions Manchester City recovered some of their swagger as Aleksandar Kolarov, Sergio Aguero and James Milner fired them to a convincing Barclays Premier League win over Sunderland.
The scoreline barely reflected the hosts' dominance as they comfortably recorded their first clean sheet of the season in a one-sided contest at the Etihad Stadium.
There may have been some nerves with only Kolarov's fifth-minute free-kick to show for their first-half efforts, but the Black Cats were then overrun as they slipped to their first loss of the season.
Aguero came off the bench to add the second on the hour and Milner fired a free-kick through Simon Mignolet after 89 minutes.

Leighton Baines lashed home an 88th minute penalty to deny his former club their first home win of the new Barclays Premier League season after an all-action encounter at the DW Stadium.

Baines kept his nerve after Kevin Mirallas was pulled down by Maynor Figueroa in the box to claim a point for David Moyes' men, who had dominated much of the second half but until then failed to find a leveller.
Arouna Kone's 10th-minute opener for the home side was cancelled out almost instantly by a Nikica Jelavic header, but Franco Di Santo's 23rd minute strike put the attack-minded Latics back in control.

Reading are still without a Barclays Premier League win this season after throwing away a two-goal lead at Swansea.

The Royals went 1-0 up against the run of play in the 31st minute when goalkeeper Michel Vorm allowed Pavel Pogrebnyak's shot to slip beneath him and in.
They then doubled their advantage a minute before the break as Noel Hunt beat Vorm with a tidy volley, but Swansea continued to dominate play in the second half and after Michu converted a 71st-minute header, Wayne Routledge's fierce strike drew the contest level in the 78th minute.

West Brom increased the pressure on QPR boss Mark Hughes as a fifth defeat in seven games left the west London team anchored at the bottom of the Barclays Premier League without a win.

Rangers have taken only two points out of a possible 21 and they were always facing an uphill task after early goals from James Morrison and Zoltan Gera.
They showed signs of improvement after Adel Taarabt had reduced the arrears. Youssouf Mulumbu made it 3-1 before an injury-time effort from Esteban Granero again cut the deficit.
QPR defender Anton Ferdinand was booed during the first half by some Albion fans in his first appearance since the full report from the Football Association into the John Terry case was published.
Albion registered their fourth home win, their best start to a top flight season in front of their own fans since 1919.

Olivier Giroud netted his first Barclays Premier League goal as Arsenal came from behind to beat West Ham 3-1 at Upton Park.

The Gunners had seen their unbeaten start to the new season ended by a 2-1 home defeat against leaders Chelsea last weekend.
However, Arsene Wenger's men, who beat Olympiacos in the Champions League on Wednesday night, showed great character to recover from conceding an early goal to Mohamed Diame.
France striker Giroud, a £12m summer signing from Montpellier, netted from close range just ahead of half-time, with substitute Theo Walcott slotting home another on the break before industrious Spaniard Santi Cazorla struck a superb 25-yard effort.