Last Minute, Second Leg Podcast Episode 8: The Infamous Inland Revenue

1 02 2010

The new podcast is available via the iTunes store just by searching for Last Minute, Second Leg or download via podbean at:http://lasminsecleg.podbean.com/2010/02/01/lmsl-podcast-ep8-the-infamous-inland-revenue/

In Episode 8 of the Last Minute, Second Leg Podcast, Dov Schiavone guest hosts with regular host Matthew Semisch otherwise engaged with teacher training. Joining Dov are LMSL co-founder Ross Andrew Gallacher and once again Kristan Heneage, a freelance journalist that many listeners will know from his correspondence for World Soccer Daily (now World Football Daily) last season.

The show is very much about the financial issues which have dominated the footballing headlines in recent weeks. Four football league clubs who have faced financial difficulties :Crystal Palace, Stockport County, Notts County and Watford are the topics of discussion in this area.

Some of the topics featuring in the discussion are the causes of these four club’s financial problems, the Victor Moses transfer saga and Notts County soap opera.

Some of the non financial based discussions include: Dov give us his two cents on Tom Cleverley and Craig Cathcart, both at Watford on loan from Man Utd.

Kristan reports on Crystal Palace’s recent visit to Newcastle.

The panel discuss the Championship team of the season so far, Forest. In this speaking about on form goalkeeper Lee Camp.

You can catch more of Dov Schiavone on the RedCafe.net and Italian Serie A Football Fancast podcasts respectively. Both are available free from the iTunes store just search for “RedCafe.net or “Italian Serie A Football Fancast”.

As ever, feel free to contact us via email at either msemisch@gmail.com or ross.lmsl@gmail.com, via our Facebook group (search: Last Minute, Second Leg), on Twitter (twitter.com/lasminsecleg), or in the comments sections on our blog at www.lasminsecleg.com. Thanks for your continued support of LMSL despite such a long wait, and enjoy the show!





Voakes: Pub Atmosphere Encapsulates Inter’s Changing Attitude

8 11 2009
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Photo courtesy Kris Voakes

UEFA Champions League nights in Milan can be enjoyed in very different ways, and Matchday 4 threw up polar opposite experiences for the city’s football fans.

Tuesday’s trip to the San Siro to witness AC Milan’s entertaining 1-1 draw with the Galácticos of Real Madrid provided the glamorous side of calcio, but it was Wednesday night’s nail-biter between Dynamo Kiev and Inter which provided all of the drama, and where better to experience this drama than with lifelong Interista Alessandro Polenghi, owner of Milan’s 442 sports pub, known locally as the first-choice place to watch football from all over the world. Read the rest of this entry »





Europa League Preview: Celtic’s European Dream On Life Support

5 11 2009

Photo courtesy sandro.s's Flickr account

Football fans have for years had to endure the proverbial old chestnut from managers and players about how minnows are playing in ‘their cup final’ when they travel to play against bigger clubs.

Unfortunately for Celtic, which visits Hamburger SV in the UEFA Europa League on Thursday, the Hoops’ matchup with their German foe marks one of those instances. Read the rest of this entry »





Champions League Preview: Win Or Go Home? It’s Not That Simple

4 11 2009

Photo courtesy Bornaz Sebastian's Flickr account

Rangers striker Kenny Miller told reporters this week that it’s win-or-bust time for the Scottish champion as it faces Romanian upstart Unirea Urziceni in the UEFA Champions League on Wednesday evening.

He wasn’t wrong in his assessment, of course, but the following would’ve been not only more forthcoming but also more honest: Anything but a win in Bucharest, and it becomes damage-control time for the Scots.

Rangers currently sits bottom of Group G with one point from a possible nine going into the club’s rematch against Unirea, a team that hammered Miller and his teammates, 4-1, at Rangers’s Ibrox ground a fortnight ago.  On top of that, the Teddy Bears’ only point in this season’s Champions League campaign came all the way back on Sept. 16 – a 1-1 stalemate away to VfB Stuttgart – so a loss in Romania on Wednesday would likely kill any remaining hope the Scots might have of advancing into the knockout phase of the competition. Read the rest of this entry »





Football League Preview: Keane’s Praying For Ipswich’s First Win – Will It Come In Plymouth?

24 10 2009

Photo courtesy Andrew Dolan (via Wikimedia Commons)

Photo courtesy Andrew Dolan (via Wikimedia Commons)

With his Ipswich Town club holding the dubious title of being the only Coca-Cola Football League team yet to win this season, it’s hard to blame manager Roy Keane for one of the tactics he’s using these days: Prayer.

One reporter had asked the Irishman if the Ipswich boss had tried asking for a favor from a higher power, as captured on film this week by BBC Sport, and Keane gave confirmation that he has indeed given it a go.    “I pray all the time,” the ex-Manchester United and Celtic star said.  “Obviously, the man upstairs is busy at the moment, though, as he’s got bigger issues to deal with than (Ipswich Town’s) problems.

“Listen, I’ve got great faith that things will change for us.  As I’ve said, of course, when you’re not winning games, you analyze, and the danger is (that) you can overanalyze it.”

Indeed, Keane and his charges at Ipswich have been under the microscope all season long, and the further the Championship season goes along without the Tractor Boys picking up a win – they’ve drawn seven and lost six from their first 13 league matches – the heavier the pressure on Keane to turn things around.

The Ipswich faithful will hope that happens this Saturday, though, when the Tractor Boys travels down to Devon to play against Plymouth Argyle, which sits in 23rd place in the Championship – still in the relegation zone, but at least it’s one step above dead last – on account of having won two more games than its visitor this weekend.

Argyle’s only home win of the season came in its previous game at Home Park, a 2-1 win over Scunthorpe United on Oct. 3, but England’s southernmost and westernmost Football League club has lost its last two matches – a 2-0 defeat at Blackpool on Oct. 17, followed by a 3-1 loss at Bristol City on Tuesday -  and Keane will be desperate to get his first win as Ipswich boss and thereby hand the Pilgrims their third consecutive loss.

If nothing else, though, Ipswich does have history on its side as it visits Home Park.  The Tractor Boys are unbeaten in six matches against Plymouth, and the Greens have only won one of twelve league and cup matches against the Suffolkians.

That’s good news for Keane, then, and he’s confident that his players’ hard work will finally pay off on Saturday.

“As a manager, I look at our staff and my players, and I think that we’re doing a lot of good stuff,” he said.  “We’re out on the training pitch (for purposes of) preparation, but you also need a little bit of a break, and hopefully that might come tomorrow.”

For division-by-division analysis of the weekend’s other action in the Football League, keep reading after the jump.

Read the rest of this entry »





Voakes: Milan Wins At The Bernabéu – One For The Downtrodden?

22 10 2009
Photo courtesy ArchiMs Flickr account

Photo courtesy ArchiM's Flickr account

Football fans are often questioned for their unstinting loyalty – The blind belief that, ‘on their day’, their team could beat Barcelona in the Camp Nou (even if they support Crewe Alexandra) and their sheep-like ability to keep going back even after 10 successive years of threatening not to renew their season ticket ‘to watch that shower’.

Wednesday night at the Santiago Bernabéu summed up why they bother.

In any normal year, an A.C. Milan victory against Real Madrid might have been rightly passed off as one European giant succumbing to another, but this has not been any old year at Via Turati. The Rossoneri have lost their star player – to Madrid – spent little of the proceeds, had their former World Player of the Year bouncing from nightclub to nightclub on multiple continents, been pilloried in the press and, worst of all, they have played like Ipswich Town on an off-day.

So, then, where on Earth did Milan’s 3-2 victory in the UEFA Champions League on Wednesday over the Galacticos – a team worth a quarter of a billion Euros – come from? Read the rest of this entry »





Europa League Preview: Mowbray Denies That Hamburg Is A Must-Win Game

22 10 2009
Photo courtesy Iism (via Wikimedia Commons)

Photo courtesy Iism (via Wikimedia Commons)

Thursday’s UEFA Europa League clash between Celtic and Hamburg in Glasgow may in fact present Tony Mowbray with a battle for European survival, but you wouldn’t know it from listening to him.

The Hoops’ manager knows that his charges face a tough task with last year’s UEFA Cup semifinalist coming to Celtic Park to face a Celtic team that currently sits bottom of Group C, but he’s right to try and downplay the idea that Thursday’s match is a do-or-die situation for his team.

After all, if keeping the morale up in the dressing room isn’t enough of a contributing factor for him, all he would need to do is look across Glasgow at Old Firm rival Rangers and what happened to that club some 48 hours ago. Read the rest of this entry »





Champions League: Rangers Gets Smoked At Home – Is The European Dream Deferred Once Again?

21 10 2009
Photo courtesy Sarah Quinn Armitts Flickr account

Photo courtesy Sarah Quinn Armitt's Flickr account

When Scottish champion Rangers learned of its UEFA Champions League group fate at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco on Aug. 27, many pundits concluded that the Teddy Bears would finish third in their group, at worst.

Romanian debutant – and general no-name in the eyes of most fans of Western European clubs – Unirea Urziceni would surely come bottom of Group G, the talking heads said, as they were seen as the sacrificial lamb to groupmates Rangers, VfB Stuttgart and Sevilla.

On Tuesday night in Glasgow, however, Unirea looked less like a lamb and more like the lion on its club crest, wiping the floor with the homestanding Rangers, 4-1, thus leaving the Scots’ hopes of progressing into the knockout rounds of the Champions League on life support. Read the rest of this entry »





BREAKING NEWS: Gareth Southgate Sacked By Fourth-Place Middlesbrough

21 10 2009
Photo courtesy Red Rose Exiles Flickr account

Photo courtesy Red Rose Exile's Flickr account

In what can only be described as a surprise move, Middlesbrough sacked manager Gareth Southgate early Wednesday morning GMT (Note: It’s 6:45 p.m. on Tuesday night where and as I’m writing this, hence the discrepancy. -Ed.), despite the Teessiders sitting in fourth place in the Coca-Cola Football League Championship.

Southgate, 39, was dismissed just after midnight GMT on Wednesday, with the decision from the Middlesbrough board coming after Southgate’s charges had secured a 2-0 win over Derby County only hours earlier. Read the rest of this entry »





Hughton’s Enjoying His Second Home The Second Time Around

20 10 2009
Photo courtesy Chris McKenna (via Wikimedia Commons)

Photo courtesy Chris McKenna (via Wikimedia Commons)

The forgotten men of football are those caretaker managers the men who are kind enough to step into the breach and stabilise their clubs after the departure of full-time and usually bigger-name managers.  We’ve seen this time and time again, and we’re seeing it right now with Chris Hughton at Newcastle United.

Hughton has had an unprecedented two spells in the caretaker role at the Coca-Cola Football League Championship side, having first come in for most of last September prior to the arrival of Joe Kinnear.  Kinnear has since left due to health reasons, though, and Hughton was brought back into the fray at St. James’ Park, where he is likely to stay through the end of this season, if not longer. Read the rest of this entry »