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Friday, 30 December 2011

Transfer News

Here is a list of transfer news to get you up to date with Stoke City.


Bradford have now announced they have signed Andrew Davies on an extended loan. He will then leave Stoke in the summer.


Tony Pulis has stated that Stoke will keep all top players, despite exit rumours surrounding Kenwyne Jones & Jermaine Pennant.


Blackburn look to have given in as they bid to keep star & Stoke target, Junior Hoilett


Stoke are going to clear some unused players this window, the names so far are: Danny Pugh, Micheal Tonge, Danny Collins, Tom Soares and Arismendi.


Kenwyne Jones has personally said that he doesn't want to move away from the Brit.
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 12:00 No comments:
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Thursday, 29 December 2011

Stoke Want Uchebo

Michael Uchebo scoring for VVV Venlo
Stoke are on the brink of completing a deal to sign giant striker Michael Uchebo from Dutch outfit VVV Venlo.

The Nigerian is out of contract with his club in the summer, and they have therefore opted to cash in during the winter transfer window to avoid losing him on a free later in the year.

Tall order: Michael Uchebo could be on his way to Stoke in January
The 21-year-old forward, who is 6'5" tall is now expected to travel to England next weekend to hold talks with the Potters.

And VVV chairman Hai Berden has now revealed that discussions are already going on well among all parties concerned.

‘In regards to the transfer of Uchebo to Stoke City, we are at an advanced stage,’ he told Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf. ‘But there is a possibility that we will get him on loan.’
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 12:48 No comments:
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Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Marshall Offered A Stoke Contract


Stoke City manager Tony Pulis has confirmed his intention to hand Ben Marshall a new contract after the winger impressed on loan at Sheffield Wednesday.
Marshall has spent the first half of the campaign at Hillsborough and is out of contract at Stoke at the end of the season.
Wednesday boss Gary Megson wants to keep the 20-year-old on loan or a permanent move, while League One rivals Huddersfield Town have been linked with a £500,000 January bid.
However, Pulis is not looking to let Marshall go permanently in the New Year as he believes he has a long-term future at the Britannia Stadium.
Instead, Pulis will reportedly give Marshall a new three-year deal with the Potters before allowing him to finish the season on loan with the Owls.
"Ben is a fantastic prospect and it was always our intention to keep him here," said Pulis in the Daily Express.
"He's done well at Wednesday and will get good experience there but we think he has a great future at Stoke."
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 10:51 No comments:
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Monday, 26 December 2011

Stoke vs Aston Villa Review


With nine goals conceded this season from corners before Boxing Day's clash, Aston Villa could have chosen better places to visit than the unforgiving bear pit that is the Britannia Stadium.
Stoke City’s most potent weapon is their ability to punish brittle defences from set-plays. Alex McLeish must have known he was in for an aerial bombardment.
Villa stood up to everything hurled at them admirably, setting the tone for a spirited first-half performance that maintained the form shown against Arsenal in their last game.
Even without Darren Bent for the third successive match - the forward trained but was not risked with a niggling thigh injury - Villa were more fluid in attack in a first half that would have not compelled viewers watching at home on television to stay tuned.
Gabby Agbonlahor, in particular, buzzed around with intent and menace.
Their best chance fell to Emile Heskey when Charles N’Zogbia floated over a wind-assisted corner and the forward headed the ball against the upright. Stiliyan Petrov also went close, drilling wide from a good position after a flowing move.
Stoke, without record signing Peter Crouch because of illness, struggled to create chances in the opening period.
Kenwyne Jones almost created an opportunity for himself after outjumping James Collins but was denied by a sprawling Brad Guzan.
On current form, the American goalkeeper has rendered the loss of injured Shay Given almost inconsequential.
Match details:
Stoke City (4-4-2): Sorensen; Woodgate (Pennant 70), Huth, Shawcross, Wilson; Shotton, Whitehead, Palacios (Delap 67), Etherington; Walters, Jones. Booked: Huth, Whitehead, Delap Subs: Begovic, Diao, Upson, Wilkinson, Jerome.
Aston Villa (4-4-2): Guzan; Cuellar, Collins, Dunne, Warnock; Albrighton, Clark, Petrov, N’Zogbia; Heskey (Delfouneso 46), Agbonlahor. Subs: Marshall, Ireland, Bannan, Weimann, Johnson, Gardner.
Referee: M Clattenburg
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 23:05 No comments:
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Stoke vs Aston Villa Match Preview


Stoke are hoping to get back to winning ways when they return to the Britannia Stadium to host Aston Villa on Boxing Day.
Stoke had won four straight Premier League games for the first time before visiting Manchester City on Wednesday night.
The Potters were up against a City side top of the league having dropped just two points at home in 2011.
Manager Tony Pulis made four changes to the side that won 2-1 at Wolves and it soon became apparent they did not expect to get anything from the game.
Even after Sergio Aguero broke the deadlock in the 29th minute, Stoke seldom pushed bodies forward and settled for damage limitation, ultimately losing 3-0 to the league leaders.
Pulis' men remain eighth and they return to the Britannia looking for a third straight home win.
They face a Villa side which has lost three of their last four games, although the three defeats were at home to Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal.
Villa struggled to pose Liverpool any problems after going 2-0 down inside 15 minutes last Sunday but manager Alex McLeish was encouraged by his team's response against Arsenal on Wednesday night.
Yossi Benayoun's 87th-minute condemned Villa to a 2-1 defeat which McLeish described as "heartbreaking" having produced what he saw as a "magnificent performance".
Villa are now five points behind Stoke in 12th and although they won 2-1 at Bolton on their last road trip, they have taken just one point from their three Premier League games at the Britannia.

Team news

Stoke could welcome back record signing Peter Crouch after missing the Manchester City defeat.
Their joint-top scorer had been suffering from severe headaches and has also had to deal with a burglary at his home.
Glenn Whelan (calf) is again doubtful but his fellow midfielder Matthew Etherington could return after a slight strain and defender Ryan Shawcross is back from suspension.
Aston Villa are also hoping to welcome back their record signing and joint top-scorer, namely Darren Bent.
The England international, who has netted five goals this season, has returned to training after being ruled out of the previous two games with a thigh injury.
Fellow striker Emile Heskey (Achilles) and defender James Collins (knee) are also expected to be in contention after missing the midweek home defeat against Arsenal but full-back Alan Hutton is suspended after his sending-off against the Gunners.
Possible starting XIs
Stoke: Sorensen, Wilson, Huth, Shawcross, Woodgate, Shotton, Whitehead, Palacios, Etherington, Walters, Crouch.
Aston Villa: Guzan, Cuellar, Dunne, Collins, Warnock, N'Zogbia, Petrov, Clark, Albrighton, Agbonlahor, Bent.
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 17:51 No comments:
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Saturday, 24 December 2011

Tony Pulis Interview

Game for a laugh: Tony Pulis poses for Sportsmail in his interview with Matt LawtonAs a resident of Lilliput, albeit the one in Dorset, it’s perhaps not surprising that Tony Pulis likes to keep a low profile. Take the remarkable progress he has made as the manager of Stoke City. He is reluctant to accept too much credit, preferring instead to praise his players and the family that has provided him with so much support.
‘I’m indebted to Peter and Denise Coates [club owners],’ he says, and in fairness they have done a marvellous job alongside Pulis in turning Stoke into an established Premier League club. A solvent one too. 
The smart new training ground appears to be Pulis’s pride and joy. He insists on giving a guided tour, introducing everyone from the medical staff to the laundry lady. ‘That’s where the players go for their cuddles,’ he says as we stroll past the treatment room. 

Saturday Interview: Petr Cech exclusive: Behind the mask of a man who's still No 1

Pulis loves a cuddle. You could not meet a more tactile person. Everyone gets an arm around the shoulder or a friendly nudge with an elbow, as well as a smile that could stretch from the Britannia Stadium to his home on the South Coast. 
‘My wife has never wanted to move,’ he says. ‘I have a place up here and I go back when I can but she’s right; football can be a precarious business and it was better to bring up the kids in one place.’ 
She is right, even if her husband must now rank alongside Sir Alex Ferguson, Arsene Wenger and David Moyes as one of the most secure managers in English football. He did not just guide Stoke to promotion but he has kept them there while also taking them to last season’s FA Cup final and into Europe. 
They were the only British club to progress from the group stages to the last 32 of the Europa League, their reward a glamorous encounter with Valencia. ‘Have you been to the Mestalla?’ he says with all the excitement of a kid at Christmas. ‘We can’t wait.’ 
Pulis is like everyone’s favourite uncle. So much energy and enthusiasm; the kind of personality that clearly inspires those around him. ‘I have my grumpy days,’ he says. ‘The players will tell you that. But you have to be positive because you have to lift them.
‘The biggest thing about management is self-motivation. The biggest thing about being in the Premier League, if you’re a club like Stoke, is recognising that you are going to lose games on a fairly regular basis. If you can’t handle that you are going to go under. You have to be strong.’ 
There is no doubting Pulis’s strength, because for all this bonhomie there is another side to this son of a Welsh steelworker. The hard as nails side and one that does not suffer fools or tolerate indifference. ‘If we have anyone who doesn’t buy into what we are doing here, we try and get them out as quickly as possible,’ he says. 
Great strides: Stoke have become a solid Premier League side under Pulis' guidance
Great strides: Stoke have become a solid Premier League side under Pulis' guidance
One particular incident springs to mind, two years ago. There was a problem involving James Beattie, and what was said to be a row over the cancellation of a Christmas knees-up after a game at Arsenal. There was a physical confrontation, Pulis emerging naked from the showers to challenge his then striker. 
‘It’s not very good Matt, is it?’ he says with an uneasy laugh and a squeeze of my arm. ‘But the biggest thing for me is what happens in the dressing room stays in the dressing room, and I’m not telling you buggers what went on. But everything was sorted. The lads went out.
‘I’m actually a lot softer now than when I first started in management. Society has changed. Football has changed. The world has changed. If you don’t change with it you’ll get left behind, so we all have to adapt. But you still have to be in charge of the group, and there are times when you have to show you are in charge of the group.’ 
Beattie moved on, Pulis moved on, again with the full support of his chairman. But he accepts now that such incidents probably helped him cement his position at Stoke. One only has to see the way he engages with his players in the staff canteen to realise that Pulis is very much the boss. 
There were reports that it was only after meeting Pulis that Peter Crouch decided to leave Tottenham for Stoke. The Welshman’s infectious personality seduced the England striker, enabling the club to secure the services of a player in a deal that amounted to a ‘real statement of intent’. 
Again, though, Pulis is reluctant to take any real credit. ‘I think the biggest thing was getting to the Cup Final and into Europe,’ he says. ‘We felt it gave us a better chance of selling the club to one or two bigger name players.
‘At the same time, though, I think there’s a respect for what we’ve done and the way we’ve done it. When it came to speaking to players like Crouch, Woodgate and Upson, they recognised the fact that we have progressed gradually year after year.
‘This place helped as well. We couldn’t have brought Crouchy to the training ground two years ago when there were just Portakabins where the car park is now. Now we can show them this and we can tell them they will enjoy it, because the spirit is fantastic here. Everyone gets on well. It’s a good place to come to work.
Man in the middle: Pulis has guided Stoke to a Europa League clash with Valencia
Man in the middle: Pulis has guided Stoke to a Europa League clash with Valencia
‘Signing Crouchy was a real statement of intent, and he’s not let us down. He’s been absolutely fantastic. All the lads who have come in have been fantastic. On and off the pitch. They’ve embraced the club, bought into what we’re about. It’s given everyone a lift because the players who were here already enjoy working with good new players too.’ 
They must enjoy working with this guy as well. ‘I’ve come from a working class background in South Wales with eight of us in a three bedroom house,’ he says. ‘Four boys in one bed, two sisters in the other bedroom and mum and dad in the box room.
‘My dad was a steelworker but I had the opportunity to become a player. A very average player but a player all the same. But I worked my socks off to make something of myself. When I left Newport on the train at 16, to go to Bristol Rovers, I told myself then that I was never going back to that life. Not because I don’t love South Wales. I still have friends I went to school with. A couple of weeks ago I had four lads up for a game from my under 12s team.
‘I just thought this is my chance and I wanted to take it. And after playing I was lucky enough to be guided into coaching. My attitude has always been to make the most of it, and I feel like I’m the luckiest person in the world. Every day is Christmas Day.’ 
When Pulis was first at Stoke, they would have Christmas dinner every week. ‘We’ve stopped that because the chef got a bit tired of doing it,’ he says. ‘But we have a theme day every week. Chinese one week, Indian the next. And we’ll have our Christmas dinner this week too.’ 
The boss: Pulis has his eye on the ball
The boss: Pulis has his eye on the ball
They’ve certainly earned it, the four straight wins that came prior to Wednesday’s defeat at Manchester City propelling them to eighth in the table and so proving that a club of Stoke’s stature can juggle the demands of domestic and European football. 
‘I actually think some of our players were looking forward more to playing in Europe than in the Premier League, because it was fresh and new,’ he says. ‘We’ve embraced it, I’ve enjoyed it, and the Britannia on a Thursday night can be amazing. 
‘We just want to give it a good crack. We need to make sure we stay in the Premier League but we like to give the cup competitions a good go too.’ And yet people still have a go at them. Their long-throw specialists get accused of wearing towels under their shirts; Arsene Wenger brands them a rugby team. It must annoy him. 
‘Most of it just makes me laugh,’ he says. ‘Manchester City have one of the biggest pitches in the league and the grass is half an inch shorter than ours. They also have the best players and the biggest budget. Everything they want. We go there and we give it our best shot and we don’t complain when we lose.
‘But then teams come to the Britannia and our grass is half an inch longer, the pitch is within regulation but smaller and they moan if they lose. That pitch is the same size as the one Arsenal played on for 120-odd years at Highbury. The same as Goodison Park. 
‘Our fans are great. Arsene Wenger called us a rugby team and our fans now sing “Swing Lo, Sweet Chariot” when we play Arsenal. And this thing about towels is ludicrous. They all wear undershirts and a couple of the lads have had them cut because they rub under the armpits. It might look like a towel but I can assure you it’s not.’ 
But what about Wenger? ‘In life you do the best you can with what you’ve got,’ he says. ‘I’ve got no gripes with what people say. I get annoyed if other clubs criticise us as a club, but personally I try not to let it affect me. I can’t affect what Wenger thinks so I don’t worry about it. We all need to stop worrying about things we can’t affect. We worry ourselves into our graves.’ 
Instead, Pulis tries to draw inspiration from criticism. ‘We played Bolton first game of our first season in the top flight and got beaten 3-1, and one of the big bookmakers offered to pay out on us going down there and then,’ he says. 
Big test: Stoke will take on the might of Valencia in Europe next year
Big test: Stoke will take on the might of Valencia in Europe next year
‘They made a big song and dance about it and got a lot of publicity but I’ll never forget that. It was actually a real source of inspiration. It helped us immensely. Nobody expected us to get promoted just as nobody expected us to stay in the league. And the greatest thing about it is the fact that we’ve done it at our own pace. We’ve not got carried away. We’ve been sensible. 
‘This is something the Coates family always had in mind; to build an infrastructure that will last a long time. This year we will spend more on our academy than ever before. Peter wants us to achieve the top academy status and that takes a lot of money. 
'But we realise we are surrounded by some strong competition — north, south, east and west — and the aim is to try and fight against that and bring more of our own players through.
‘This place is a great story, and I hope I’m here for a long time yet. But when I do leave one day it’s a proper football club I want to leave behind.’ 
It would make him the proudest man in Lilliput. 

Article form The Daily Mail
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 17:48 No comments:
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Labels: Blog, Interview, Stoke City FC

Saturday, 29 October 2011

Stoke vs Liverpool (Carling Cup) Report

Luis Suarez, Stoke v LiverpoolLuis Suárez answered some of his critics with the two goals that took Liverpool into the Carling Cup quarter-finals. A goal down at the interval, the visitors were indebted to their Uruguayan striker for almost single-handedly masterminding their recovery, dispelling in the process the myth that he does not convert enough chances to be regarded as a clinical finisher. He missed a few chances here too, but took the important couple well enough to impress anyone.
"The wee man scored a fantastic goal," was Kenny Dalglish's appraisal of the stunning second-half equaliser. "And the header for the second wasn't bad either. We wouldn't mind him scoring the odd tap-in, and if we had put a couple of our chances away in the first half it would have made things easier, but all you can say about a goal like that is that it was worth waiting for."
Liverpool made eight changes from the draw with Norwich City at the weekend but kept faith with Suárez, their outstanding performer in that game, and kept Pepe Reina in goal. Both players were involved quickly, the goalkeeper backpedalling hastily and being relieved to see Jon Walters's speculative chip land on the roof of his net, then the striker just failing to fasten on to a rebound when Thomas Sorensen beat out a powerful shot from Andy Carroll.
On Saturday Suárez was mostly foiled by the excellence of John Ruddy, a pattern that seemed to be repeating itself here when Sorensen saved at point-blank range midway through the first half. Liverpool had just put together their best passing move of the game through Maxi Rodríguez and Lucas Leiva, and when the latter's square ball found Suárez free on the six-yard line Sorensen had to react quickly to smother a first-time shot.
Apart from Rory Delap's long throws Stoke were finding it difficult to put Liverpool's defence under pressure, although Jamie Carragher was lucky to escape with only a yellow card for an ugly, scything tackle that upended Matthew Etherington. Lucky he wasn't playing for Chelsea against QPR at the weekend, for instance, otherwise he would have been off.
Sorensen was called upon again to save from Carroll and then Martin Kelly either side of the first half's major talking point. Stoke moving their touchlines in by a yard or so has given Delap even more of a runup and less ground to cover, and he achieved such a velocity in the 36th minute that Walters was able to beat Reina with a simple glancing header. Lee Probert had already decided that the goalkeeper had been impeded, however, although it was impossible even after a few replays to establish by whom. Certainly Walters did not make any sort of illegal contact, indeed any contact, and there was no one else in the goalkeeper's vicinity.
If that was an injustice, it was quickly corrected. Stoke took the lead on the stroke of the interval through a Kenwyne Jones diving header, following a fairly calamitous mistake by Sebastián Coates. Having indicated to team-mates he was about to deal with a bouncing ball near the left touchline, Liverpool's Uruguayan defender was surprised to be dispossessed by Walters, and could only watch as the hitherto anonymous Jones stooped to meet a low cross and direct a header expertly beyond Reina's reach.
Kenny Dalglish sent out Martin Skrtel for the second half, not for the hapless Coates but for the cautioned Carragher. It appeared that what the visitors lacked was a midfield presence rather than another centre-half, yet while Suárez is on the pitch there is always hope and the striker conjured an early equaliser without needing anyone's help. Cutting inside Robert Huth on the left, Suárez weighed his options, nutmegged Ryan Shotton on the edge of the area, then found the inside of the right-hand upright with a curling shot that not even Sorensen could reach.
That deflated the home side a little, though a labouring Liverpool were unable to come up with any more moments of individual brilliance until Suárez hit the winner five minutes from the end. When the substitute Craig Bellamy struck a post moments earlier it was Liverpool's first real threat since their equaliser, but Suárez was in position once again when it mattered. Jordan Henderson deserved most credit, improvising cleverly to angle in a volleyed first-time cross, which found Suárez onside at long last for a firm header back across the goalkeeper.
"He's special," Tony Pulis agreed. "A real handful whether he's got the ball or not. I don't have any complaints about the result, I thought Liverpool were the better team, but we should have had a penalty at the end when Peter Crouch was brought down. It was a clear foul, and not getting anything for that was a bit hard to take after having a goal chalked off in the first half for something no one could see."
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 08:22 No comments:
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Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Whelan - Don't blame Europe

Stoke City midfielder Glenn Whelan insists his team-mates are not using Europe as an excuse for their Arsenal defeat. 

The Potters might be top of Europa League Group E but their form has been poor immediately after European games.
That trend continued on Sunday when they followed up a win over Maccabi Tel Aviv by losing 3-1 at Emirates Stadium.
Stoke have also lost Premier League games to Sunderland and Swansea following Europa League outings, but Whelan insists that is just a coincidence.

No excuses

 

"Because we have been beaten in the games after Europe, it is easy for everyone to say that - and it gives us an excuse," Whelan told The Sentinel.
"But the manager has made changes. He knows what the lads are like and what they have in their legs to play these games.
"If he's picking a team to go out on a Thursday and then a Sunday he knows he has a team going out to try to win the game.
"We won't be using that as an excuse. We have to hold our hands up and say, on the day, maybe the better team won. But I thought we gave a good account of ourselves."
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 15:13 No comments:
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Stoke vs Liverpool (Carling Cup) Preview

TEAM NEWS

Stoke City winger Jermaine Pennant, who has been nursing a hamstring problem, looks unlikely to play against his former club.
But Danny Higginbotham could feature following a knee injury.
Liverpool midfielder Lucas is available after missing the weekend draw against Norwich because he was serving a one-match ban.
Fit-again defender Daniel Agger came on as a late substitute in that game and could be involved on Wednesday.

MATCH PREVIEW

Liverpool, who have won the League Cup seven times - more than any other club - hope to take another step towards lifting the trophy for the first time since 2003 when they take on Stoke.
They will also be looking to avenge their 1-0 league defeat at Stoke in September, when lifelong Everton fan Jon Walters scored the Potters' winner from the penalty spot.
The Anfield club, who have failed to score in only one of their last 40 League Cup matches, won at Brighton in the previous round and a victory at the Britannia Stadium would see Liverpool record successive away wins in this competition for the first time in 17 years.
Stoke added to their squad in the summer, signing former Liverpool striker Peter Crouch among others, and they needed to given the busy schedule because of their involvement in the Europa League. This will be there third match in six days.

MATCH FACTS

Head-to-head

  • Liverpool have won 62 and Stoke 28 of the 123 previous matches between these clubs.
  • Stoke have failed to score in six of their last nine games against them.

Stoke

  • City are appearing in the fourth round for the fourth season running.
  • They have lost only one of their last seven home League Cup ties.

Liverpool

  • Liverpool are aiming to make the last eight for the first time in four seasons.
  • They have kept only two clean sheets in their last 12 games.
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 07:08 No comments:
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Monday, 24 October 2011

Arsenal 3 - 1 Stoke City Report

There isn’t much more one can say about Robin van Persie. The Arsenal captain scored another 2 goals this afternoon, to make it 25 goals in 26 Premier League appearances in 2011 and to turn 1-1 into 3-1 for Arsenal. The fact that his two goals came in little under 25 minutes makes his performance all the more remarkable.
Arsenal started well, holding onto the ball well, and dealt with Rory Delap’s long throws with ease. Marouane Chamakh had a free header from Mikel Arteta’s corner, but headed wide. Aaron Ramsey played a wonderful chip into Gervinho’s run, but the Ivorian winger couldn’t quite bring the pass under control. No matter though; minutes later, Ramsey tried the same routine from an even closer angle, and Gervinho brought it down before rounding Asmir Begovic and tucking away for 1-0.
Arsenal’s weakness at set pieces, though, came back to bite them. For some reason, Lee Mason gave Stoke a free kick when Laurent Koscielny jumped above Peter Crouch. Whelan’s ball to the right was headed across by Shawcross, headed back in by Walters and tapped home by Crouch. Not a foul, but, the only blemish on the Arsenal defence who dealt with set pieces fairly well. Moments later, Arsenal should’ve had a penalty; Andy Wilkinson grabbed Marouane Chamakh from behind and brought him down. It was more of a foul than the one Mason gave, highlighting the inconsistencies that make him one of the worst referees in the League.
Arsenal passed and tried to probe their way through Stoke’s defence in the second half, but the game was crying out for Robin van Persie. On he came, for the ineffectual Chamakh, and almost immediately, he scored. Gervinho did ever so well to beat Marc Wilson, get to the byline and cutback for van Persie, who’s shot beat was hard enough so that Begovic could only get a touch. It was the kind of goal van Persie has been scoring a lot recently, showing his superb poaching instincts to go along with his Bergkamp-esque creativity and passing range.
van Persie added a second 9 minutes later. Arshavin played a superb pass to put Gervinho in, who slid for van Persie who again hit his shot hard enough so that Begovic could only get a touch. 3-1, and all 3 points for Arsenal, making it 6 wins out of 7 for the team supposedly "in crisis".
Arsenal move up to 7th, just 2 points behind Liverpool and 4 behind Newcastle, while Stoke drop to 9th.

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Monday, 26 September 2011

Crouch - 'Never known work-rate like it'


PETER CROUCH believes that Stoke City's workrate is second to none . . . after they got their reward for a storming fightback by taking their first Barclays Premier League point off champions Manchester United at the Britannia Stadium.

Crouch grabbed the headlines by with his first goal in a City shirt since the club record £10 million move from Tottenham Hotspur on deadline day, but he was quick to acclaim the contribution of his team-mates in a pulsating live televised match.


The Potters were trailing to an outstanding solo effort from Nani when the England striker popped up with a 52nd minute equaliser and he had the opportunities to turn that long-awaited first point against United into all three after that goal.

"It was a tremendous all-round team performance," said Crouch, who was named man-of-the-match. "I have never known a workrate like it here.

"The manager has instilled that work ethic in the players and it certainly showed in the way that we got at United and created some excellent chances.

"When you think that we went through 120 minutes and then penalties against Tottenham in midweek and yet it didn't show out there today.

"I thought it was a top class performance and we should perhaps have won it in the end. I felt I could have got the winner, but then you can't be greedy."

Crouch admitted that it was a particularly special moment when his firm header for Matthew Etherington's corner hit the back of the net.

"To get it against Manchester United was special, but to score it in front of the home supporters was just as pleasing for me," added the big striker.

"I am sure it will be the first of many goals I score for the Club.

"As long as I get the chances, then I am confident that there are a lot more to come.

"Ferdinand and Jones are top class performers at the centre of their defence and they are always difficult to play against, but I thought we mixed it up well, created chances and were perhaps unlucky not to come away with three points."
Posted by Jus'Robb at 18:31 No comments:
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Pulis - Raise the roof vs. Besiktas


TONY PULIS today challenged Stoke City's supporters to make their Europa League tie this week a particularly noisy occasion . . . to match the atmosphere they are likely to face when they travel to Istanbul for the final Group E encounter.

Pulis is hoping that his side will be roared on by a big crowd when they take on Turkish Cup winners Besiktas at the Britannia Stadium on Thursday evening, with a significant number of tickets still available to see the Europa League tie.

City's manager sampled the electrifying atmosphere which City will step into when they play the return match just before Christmas, having travelled out to watch Besiktas beat Antalyaspor in their Super League game on Sunday evening.

"The challenge is for our supporters to generate as much, if not more noise as their fans are sure to make out there," he commented.

"The atmosphere here at the Britannia Stadium was incredible on Saturday and we need the place to be rocking again come Thursday night."

He added: "It will be a fantastic night, our first major European tie for almost 40 years and I am excited about the chances of us doing well in Europe. A chance like this doesn't come along too often, so we need to make the most of it."
Posted by Jus'Robb at 18:28 No comments:
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Alan Hansen - Stoke are so much more than a new Wimbledon...


Stoke City’s 1-1 draw against Manchester United at the Britannia Stadium on Saturday was the latest in a long line of positive results achieved by Pulis’s team and, such is Stoke’s strength nowadays, Sir Alex Ferguson will ultimately regard a point as a good day’s work.
But, just as Wimbledon before them, Stoke suffer from being cast as a team who play only one way – a physical outfit who bombard opponents with aerial balls and who are happy to rough teams up.
Many people hated Wimbledon, but although they famously beat my Liverpool team in the 1988 FA Cup final, I didn’t hate them. I wasn’t a great admirer of their football and, if they played within the rules, they were only just inside them.
But Stoke are miles inside the rules with their approach to the game and Pulis deserves credit for the progress his club have made since being promoted to the Premier League three years ago.
Put simply, they play to their strengths and exploit the weaknesses of their opponents, yet that is a basic principle obeyed by all successful teams.

When I was at Liverpool, we had a European game against Dynamo Dresden and the information we had was that they were susceptible to diagonal balls from right to left. I can still recall pinging a 60-yard diagonal ball to John Toshack and seeing him flick it on for Ray Kennedy to score.
The lesson from that is that it is not all about playing total football. It is about winning the game by identifying weaknesses and capitalising on them.

Stoke do that very well. They also work really hard as a group of players and clearly spend lots of time on the training ground, fine-tuning their tactics.
But they are better than their one-dimensional reputation. If they were totally reliant on set-pieces and throw-ins, they would only get so far, yet they are actually making progress again this season. And you have to give Pulis credit for being clever in recognising the need to alter the approach with subtle changes to the way his team plays.
Yes, they continue to thrive off Rory Delap’s enormous throw-ins and heap pressure on opponents by deploying tall strikers such as Peter Crouch.
They have also got their delivery from corners down to a fine art with Matthew Etherington and Jermaine Pennant able to whip in dangerous and accurate crosses. But in Etherington and Pennant, Pulis also has two players who are tricky, pacy and capable of delivering good balls from the flanks.
Dealing with aerial stuff unsettles defenders, but when you add the ability to cause problems on the deck into the mix, then it becomes a real challenge to defend against them. Pulis appears to have recognised that, because Stoke now threaten opponents both aerially and with invention.
Another smart move by the manager is to instil and foster an ‘it’s us against the world’ mentality within his squad and you can even see it spreading to the supporters, who are some of the best in the Premier League with their vocal backing for the team and the way they play.

The Stoke fans never get on their players’ backs and you can sense the togetherness that exists on and off the pitch.
A strong togetherness inside the dressing room used to be a given 30 years ago, but the game has changed and it means that teams like Stoke have a huge advantage over those sides who are not so united.
Some teams will fall apart when things begin to go badly, but those that are strong and together find something extra when the going gets tough.
The kind of squad unity they have at the Britannia Stadium shines like a beacon. Wimbledon had that and their spirit was a major factor in their success and the ability they had to sustain it against the odds for so long. But once that spirit began to crack, it all fell apart for Wimbledon and they ended up sinking without a trace.
That is not going to happen with Stoke City, though, because there is a clear sense from the outside that the club is well run and that the manager’s system is trusted by everybody.
The mark of Stoke’s progress is that nobody would even have given a second thought to them being in a relegation battle this season.
Watching the top six go at each other is fantastic, but the Premier League still needs stories of clubs punching above and beyond their weight and Stoke deserve credit, rather than criticism, for the way they have impressively built themselves into an established top-flight team.
Posted by Jus'Robb at 17:44 No comments:
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Saturday, 24 September 2011

Pulis "Utd best in the world"

Stoke manager Tony Pulis believes the Manchester United side that will visit the Britannia Stadium on Saturday are the best team in world football.
Sir Alex Ferguson guided his side to a record 19th top-flight title last season but many pundits felt it was not one of the better line-ups the Scot had overseen.
However, there has been no such criticism this season, with United flying out of the traps, winning five straight Premier League games, including last weekend's 3-1 victory over Chelsea and their 8-2 mauling of Arsenal in August.
The addition of the likes of Ashley Young, Phil Jones and David De Gea this summer, as well as the return from loan spells of Tom Cleverley and Danny Welbeck, has given United a more youthful, energetic look.

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And Pulis believes, if they were now to face UEFA Champions League winners Barcelona, it would be a very different outcome to the 3-1 victory Pep Guardiola's team achieved at Wembley in May.
"If you look at their team and the way they've started, I think United now have a better team than they had last year, and they won the Barclays Premier League title last year," said the Potters boss.
"It's going to be a tough test. We have to play to our maximum, we have to have things go for us, and United have to be a little bit short on the day.

Maximum

"If they play to their maximum, they will beat any side in the world, and I put Barcelona in that because they have been pretty outstanding."
Wayne Rooney - yet to score against Stoke - has been the main man as far as goals are concerned for United, netting nine times already, but it is Mexican Javier Hernandez that has caught Pulis' eye.
He said: "I think Hernandez is the next Denis Law. His movement in the box, his anticipation, is fantastic. He's quick, he's got everything great goalscorers need and he's certainly deadly in front of goal.
"And Ashley Young, what a great signing that's turned out to be. Then you've got Rooney playing the best football he's played for years, Nani scoring goals from everywhere. They've got goalscorers and they will be a major force again."
Although Pulis is hopeful a number of players will shake off niggles to face United, he will definitely be without striker Kenwyne Jones.
The Trinidad and Tobago international limped off during the Carling Cup victory over Tottenham on Tuesday with a hamstring injury and, although the problem is not as bad as first feared, he is expected to be out until after October's international break.
Pulis said: "That is a big disappointment for us because Kenwyne had started the season really well. And, although we brought Peter (Crouch) in, we were hoping he'd put the pressure on Kenwyne to get the best out of Kenwyne."
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 09:41 No comments:
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Friday, 23 September 2011

Stoke vs Man U Preview

The size of the task facing Stoke this weekend will not be lost on Tony Pulis, as they play host to table-topping Manchester United. 

The Potters have made a solid start to the 2011/12 campaign, but will be aware that their weekend opponents are yet to drop a point.
Stoke will need to perform considerably better than they did in their last Premier League outing if they are to put the first blot on the Red Devils' copybook.
Pulis saw his side slip to a 4-0 defeat at Sunderland last time out, but will hope that a first setback of the season is nothing more than a minor blip.
The Potters will be happy to be back on home soil this weekend, as they have lost only one of their last 11 top flight fixtures at the Britannia Stadium.
They have, however, scored just three goals in their last seven Premier League games and need to find a cutting edge.


Manchester United have had no such problems of late, finding the target 21 times in their opening five fixtures.
Wayne Rooney has led the charge and the England international is only the second player to net in each of his team's first five games, after Jose Antonio Reyes for Arsenal in 2004.
He is also the first man to score nine times in the first five games of a Premier League season.
While Rooney is the danger man, Javier Hernandez has scored three goals in two appearances against Stoke - netting in the 27th minute of both games - and Pulis will be keen to keep a close eye on the Mexican marksman.
Should United be among the goals again this weekend, they will fancy their chances of preserving their 100 per cent record against Stoke - which currently stands at six wins from six.

Team news

Stoke are set to be without the services of Kenwyne Jones this weekend.
The striker suffered a knee injury during their midweek Carling Cup victory over Tottenham and will play no part on Saturday.
His absence means Peter Crouch is likely to spearhead the Potters' attack, with Jon Walters and Cameron Jerome battling it out for the other striking berth.
Ricardo Fuller could come back into contention, but Danny Higginbotham (knee) misses out against his former club.

Hernandez could make a surprise return to action for Manchester United.
A knock picked up against Chelsea last weekend was expected to keep him sidelined for some time, but he is back in training and pushing for a place in Sir Alex Ferguson's starting XI.
United are also hoping Rio Ferdinand will be ready for a recall after shaking off a calk problem.
Chris Smalling is a slight doubt while Nemanja Vidic (calf), Tom Cleverley (ankle) and Rafael (shoulder) definitely miss out.
Possible starting XIs
Stoke: Begovic, Woodgate, Huth, Shawcross, Wilson, Delap, Whitehead, Palacios, Etherington, Walters, Crouch.
Man Utd: De Gea, Jones, Ferdinand, Evans, Evra, Nani, Fletcher, Anderson, Young, Rooney, Welbeck.
Posted by Stoke City Stories at 12:47 No comments:
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      • Crouch - 'Never known work-rate like it'
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