1. Let's see how the English sides fair in the Europa League...

  2. kiss the future
  3. Last night's Ajax team cost €4.4m to build. Yaya Toure earns more than double that a year at Man City

    Haha
  4. don't want to ruin all the right enthusiasm about yesterday but this statement had been not done after the match with Real

    happy for you i used to love Ajax .. before-Van Basten hehe
  5. I know, but we just have to be happy with this result. Im fair enough to know that this was most likely just a one time succes and that the next round or even place 3 are almost impossible to reach
    But to get that succes against one of the most ugly clubs of the world and one of the clubs that ruins football with spending a crazy amount of money only makes it better
  6. Arsemal vs Schalke last night----- dunno whenever we will achieve a 2 goals victory there in the CL again, probably never, so I have to take a moment to be happy....

  7. oh and..... don't you ever quote me on this, don't you dare, but..... I have to admit..... respect for Dortmund last night. Well done, well done, what a game
  8. Dortmund is the best team to watch at the moment
    and so Kirsten now you can put in the oblivion that never-played match uh
  9. Not sure which post to quote. The legendary Schalke post or the legendary Dortmund post...

    Great victory last night Kirsten
  10. An MP has suggested that football fans should switch their support to non-league clubs because of the high cost of tickets in the Premier League. Liberal Democrat President Tim Farron has tabled a motion in the House of Commons following BBC Sport's 2012 Price Of Football survey.

    Farron said many football fans find prices "unaffordably high". The price of the cheapest average adult tickets in English football has risen by 11.7% over the last 12 months. Farron, who represents Westmorland and Lonsdale in Cumbria, cites Chelsea and West Ham as examples of high pricing, where the cheapest matchday tickets cost £41 and £36 respectively. He believes supporting non-League teams, such as Kendal Town and Barrow, "will boost community football whilst also bringing collective consumer pressure on the top teams to reduce their prices".


    Erm...what? Who is going to change the club they support?