Upon reading Kevin McCarra's piece in The Guardian sport blog on how Arsenal and Liverpool are "flawed" and may struggle to qualify in this year's Champions League group stage, I felt compelled to comment on this naive notion. I had earlier predicted that Arsenal and Liverpool were among my favourites for this year's competition, so I was surprised to read this. What made the article even more surprising is the fact that Manchester United arguably have a trickier group.
Arsenal face Porto, Fenerbache and Dynamo Kiev in Group G. Liverpool will be up against PSV, Marseille and Fernando Torres' old club, Atletico de Madrid in Group D. These groups will not be easy, and Arsenal face long trips to Kiev and Istanbul, but the English duo will not be faced by anything new, or anything that will worry them too much. Dynamo Kiev's 8-2 aggregate victory over Spartak Moscow was imposing Mr McCarra, but their record in last season's Champions League, played six, lost six, was far from imposing. Despite posessing a great home record, Fenerbache are not so hot on their travels, not winning away last season, and Porto, as Mr McCarra acknowledges, are not the side they were under Mourinho. Therefore, Arsenal should qualify from Group G without too much trouble.
In Group D, Liverpool have slightly tougher opposition. PSV, Marseille and Atletico are all good sides but PSV are not the same outfit that reached the Champions League Semi-Finals a few years ago, under the guidance of Gus Hiddink. Kevin McCarra uses the argument that PSV should not be disparaged as they eliminated Spurs in last season's UEFA Cup. This is the same Spurs side that finished eleventh in the league last year and lost their first two matches this season. Marseille and Atletico will be a challenge but anybody who has seen Atletico defend over the last year will realise they are not up to much at the back, however, they do have Kun Aguero, one of the best young players in the World. Despite this, a "flawed" Liverpool should make it through unscathed.
However, Manchester United will face difficult trips to Celtic Park and Villarreal's Madrigal Stadium. How many times have Celtic lost at home in the Champions League recently? In fact, in the last two seasons, Celtic have won every match at Celtic Park in the Champions League group stage, beating the likes of Benfica (twice), Manchester United, A.C Milan and Shakhtar Donetsk. Villarreal are no push over's either, reaching the Champions League Semi-Final's two years ago and playing very well on their way to second place in La Liga last season, finishing above Barcelona. Now I'm not suggesting for one minute that United will not qualify, but if Arsenal and Liverpool will struggle in their respective groups, then surely United will too.
McCarra's article was easy to write as everyone is criticising Arsenal and Liverpool right now. Arsenal were hopeless against Fulham and Liverpool made a meal of the Standard Liege matches. However, it is inconceivable to think that in the space of a few months Arsenal and Liverpool have become "flawed". In April this year they both played out a fantastic Champions League quarter-final, Arsenal finished only four points behind the champions Manchester United and Liverpool reached the Champions League semi-final. It is an overstatement to suggest that Arsenal and Liverpool have become "flawed" after the first few games of the season.
To read Kevin McCarra's article click on the link! http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/sport/2008/08/29/no_easy_rides_for_flawed_arsen.html
Arsenal face Porto, Fenerbache and Dynamo Kiev in Group G. Liverpool will be up against PSV, Marseille and Fernando Torres' old club, Atletico de Madrid in Group D. These groups will not be easy, and Arsenal face long trips to Kiev and Istanbul, but the English duo will not be faced by anything new, or anything that will worry them too much. Dynamo Kiev's 8-2 aggregate victory over Spartak Moscow was imposing Mr McCarra, but their record in last season's Champions League, played six, lost six, was far from imposing. Despite posessing a great home record, Fenerbache are not so hot on their travels, not winning away last season, and Porto, as Mr McCarra acknowledges, are not the side they were under Mourinho. Therefore, Arsenal should qualify from Group G without too much trouble.
In Group D, Liverpool have slightly tougher opposition. PSV, Marseille and Atletico are all good sides but PSV are not the same outfit that reached the Champions League Semi-Finals a few years ago, under the guidance of Gus Hiddink. Kevin McCarra uses the argument that PSV should not be disparaged as they eliminated Spurs in last season's UEFA Cup. This is the same Spurs side that finished eleventh in the league last year and lost their first two matches this season. Marseille and Atletico will be a challenge but anybody who has seen Atletico defend over the last year will realise they are not up to much at the back, however, they do have Kun Aguero, one of the best young players in the World. Despite this, a "flawed" Liverpool should make it through unscathed.
However, Manchester United will face difficult trips to Celtic Park and Villarreal's Madrigal Stadium. How many times have Celtic lost at home in the Champions League recently? In fact, in the last two seasons, Celtic have won every match at Celtic Park in the Champions League group stage, beating the likes of Benfica (twice), Manchester United, A.C Milan and Shakhtar Donetsk. Villarreal are no push over's either, reaching the Champions League Semi-Final's two years ago and playing very well on their way to second place in La Liga last season, finishing above Barcelona. Now I'm not suggesting for one minute that United will not qualify, but if Arsenal and Liverpool will struggle in their respective groups, then surely United will too.
McCarra's article was easy to write as everyone is criticising Arsenal and Liverpool right now. Arsenal were hopeless against Fulham and Liverpool made a meal of the Standard Liege matches. However, it is inconceivable to think that in the space of a few months Arsenal and Liverpool have become "flawed". In April this year they both played out a fantastic Champions League quarter-final, Arsenal finished only four points behind the champions Manchester United and Liverpool reached the Champions League semi-final. It is an overstatement to suggest that Arsenal and Liverpool have become "flawed" after the first few games of the season.
To read Kevin McCarra's article click on the link! http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/sport/2008/08/29/no_easy_rides_for_flawed_arsen.html