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61
Ordet er fritt / 2018-19: Carabao Cup
« på: Juni 11, 2018, 20:11:31 »
Leeds United

The @Carabao_Cup Round One draw is set to take place this Friday at 10.45am, with #LUFC ball number 16 in the Northern Section


62
Ordet er fritt / Lånespillere - reglement
« på: Juni 04, 2018, 18:35:24 »
Make up of EFL Championship Squads.

I’ve seen some discussion on Twitter today about the number of loans and foreign players that Leeds United can take on and was asked my view. Some of the answers given by others seemed to have got the EPL requirements mixed in and so I thought I’d have a go at explaining how I see it.

I’m going to go through the recruitment of players by the Club to give contracts to first and then explain the match day requirements of the team sheet in the second half of the essay.

Club Consideration – foreign players
Unlike the EPL Championship clubs can register as many 1st team players as they like. They can also register as many U23 players as they like.

The EPL makes each Club declare a squad of 25 players at the start of the season and again during the mid-season transfer window. The EFL does NOT do this.

Football clubs are subject to the same EU laws as any other company and they struggle to put restrictions on the number of foreign players, just like any other employer. There is no limit within the EPL fixed-sized squad or the EFL squads for how many or how few foreign players a club can register on it’s books as employees.

Some EPL clubs register a huge number of players on standard or loan contracts and then do not put them on their 25 man squad list. The EFL has no squad size restriction.

Club Consideration – loan players
There are no restrictions on the total number of loan players that a Championship club can register at any one time.

In the same way, there are no restrictions on the number of International loans that a Championship club can register.

Club Consideration – so it’s a free-for-all?
Yes, at the club level it is. Employment laws and so forth must be followed by football clubs and to limit employment through race, gender, nationality etc. is forbidden within football just as it is within the wider employment scene.

But I’ve heard of restrictions
The crucial word within my previous paragraph is “employment”. Clubs cannot discriminate when employing people and the FA and EFL cannot enforce such rules, even if they thought it might help the national team.

What the FA and EFL can do is lay down rules of a sport and let the clubs select the best suited players from their squads for match day teams.

So let’s look at these Match Day requirements
A Championship club can present up to 18 players on the match day team sheet.

In days gone by there was complete freedom for a coach in selecting his match day team but that is being eroded and the rules have been getting tighter in past seasons.

The rules have got tighter again for next season and a coach must now ensure that he meets certain conditions or he will not be allowed to put a full 18 names on the sheet.

I’m going to go through these requirements as if selecting a team based on these requirements but, of course, a real coach would start with his best players.

Home Grown Player
Every Championship club must now include one Club Developed Player on the team sheet.

A Club Developed Player is defined as a player who joined Leeds United before the start of the season where he turned 19 years old. He cannot count as a Club Developed Player unless he joined us by, or before, that date AND has got a year training by us under his belt.

For clarity, this would include an 18 year old lad joining us on a professional contract and spending one year training with the U18 or U23 squad. The next season he would qualify as a Club Developed Player for inclusion in the match team sheet.

So that’s one of the 18 team sheet players chosen.

Home Grown Players
This requirement has been around for a while but has got stiffer for the next season.

Every Championship club must now put EIGHT Home Grown Players on the team sheet.

A Home Grown Player is someone who has spent at least three complete seasons registered with a football club affiliated to the FA or the Welsh FA before the season that he turns 22 years old.

This has nothing to do with nationality, race or anything remotely like that. It just covers players who have arrived in England or Wales from anywhere in the world and got themselves registered at a club. They must have been registered for three seasons but they can swap clubs and even have a season off providing they have three seasons registered before the season when they are 22 years old.

Combinations
If the Club Developed Player on the team sheet also qualifies as a Home Grown Player then the number of Home Grown Players is reduced to SEVEN plus the Club Developed Player.

That’s NINE players!
Yes, that has put nine players on the team sheet just to comply with the new regulations.

So what of the remaining nine players?
Well the coach still cannot pick who he wants from the rest of the registered squad employed by the Club.

Loan Player Restrictions
The coach can only pick up to FIVE players on a loan contract in his match day team sheet.

Of course, he can pick fewer.

Again, the Club may have registered many more loan players that form the pot that he selects from but the maximum he can pick is only FIVE – this includes a goalkeeper registered on an Emergency Loan Contract outside the normal transfer window.

Any Exceptions?
Yes, of course. Nothing from EFL regulations is simple.

Selling Club Developed Players
Leeds United could sell TWO Club Developed Players to another Championship club or an EPL club in the January transfer window and that would remove the requirement to name any Club Developed Players for the rest of the season.

Anything Else?
Probably but my eyes have worn out my Specsavers’ specials reading EFL regulations!

Conclusion
It is a complex task that Victor Orta and any coach face in balancing our first team squad recruitment.

Injuries and suspensions may mean a small squad cannot meet the regulations and we have to name fewer than seven substitutes. A large squad costs loads-a-money and tends to be lower quality.

Loan players may be the flavour of the week in fans’ minds due to lack of transfer fee but a backbone of purchased players and established youth is a must.

Interesting summer ahead.

Mike Thornton 3rd June 2018

63
Ordet er fritt / TV inntekter
« på: Mai 31, 2018, 13:34:10 »
Vet ikke om vi trenger en ny tråd om økonomi, men TV inntektene slår beina under konkurransen i engelsk fotball.

Leeds United ble vist 20 ganger på TV grunnet stor oppslutning, men tjente kun £ 100.000 pr kamp!

Burnley derimot ble kun vist 10 ganger i PL’s beste sendetid grunnet dårlig oppslutning. De tjente £ 12millioner pr kamp!!!!


Det virker som om storklubber lavere ned i systemet blir hindret fra å utvikle seg videre!


True Villan
So infact they (Burnley) got paid 60 times the amount we did for featuring twice as less. They get paid roughly £12 million per match while we were paid £100k. That’s taking the piss that!  @

Keep Fighting
Radz reckons to be on it. Dunno what he's gonna do. Derby made noises about it too. Cellino locked sky out of Elland Road once to to a point. Let em in a few hours before kick off when Shaun Harvey turned up. It's scandalous the way tv money is shared out

Mike Thornton
The new TV deal allows streaming in the Uk and will allow season passes to be sold from next season. Small change but on the right road.


64
Ordet er fritt / Winterbreak - fra 2019-20
« på: Mai 30, 2018, 19:02:11 »
Joe Urquhart

The FA are set to implement a winter break in 2019-20 - #lufc will only be affected if they're in the top flight or in the FA Cup fifth round that season.



How could Leeds United be affected by a winter break?

Joe Urquhart
Published: 12:41 Wednesday 30 May 2018
The Football Association are set to introduce a two-week Premier League winter break for the 2019-20 season.


The proposed break at the end of January and start of February will be implemented in a bid to give top flight teams a 13 day rest period to battle fatigue.

 Kalvin Phillips in action against Sheffield Wednesday.
Kalvin Phillips in action against Sheffield Wednesday.
The move also comes in an attempt to give England players some time off in the build-up to the European Championship's in the summer of 2020 in which Wembley Stadium will host the semi-finals and final.

France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Scotland all have mid-season breaks in place already and the lack of one in England has received criticism in the past from players and managers alike.

However, the break would not be applied to any Football League clubs but the FA Cup fifth round will be moved to midweek in a bid to create space for the proposed period meaning any teams lower down the pyramid still involved in the competition will be affected.

The Whites would therefore only be involved should they reach the top flight ahead of the 2019-20 season or the fifth round of the FA Cup that year.

The proposal also looks to stagger fixtures with half of the Premier League teams playing on one weekend and the other half of games taking place the following week.

Therefore all teams in the top flight will have a full 13 day break where they will be allowed to take their squads abroad for warm weather training if they so wish.

The news was confirmed by FA Chief Martin Glenn on Tuesday in a speech made to council members: "We're working closer and more collaboratively with the professional game than at any time in recent years.

"Very soon this will pay dividends with the creation of a mid-season break, which is a much needed improvement for our clubs and England teams."

65
Ordet er fritt / Battle of the Roses
« på: Mai 23, 2018, 18:37:47 »
The War of the Roses: A bitter rivalry with fallen foes



 
On the 25th November 1992, the Leeds United managing director Bill Fotherby rang Manchester United chairman Martin Edwards about the possibility of signing Denis Irwin. The Cork man was not for sale. However, Alex Ferguson who was in the room urged Edwards to ask about bringing Frenchman Eric Cantona to Manchester United. Fotherby said that Cantona was unsettled at Leeds and he would get back to Edwards with a fee over the next 24 hours. Manchester United then signed Eric Cantona for a fee between £1 million and £1.2 million. The maverick of a striker went on to be a catalyst for United’s success in the 90s. To this day Manchester United fans will taunt Leeds fans over letting Cantona join them.

The rivalry between Manchester United and Leeds United is known as the Roses rivalry or the Pennines derby. Historically, the rivalry between Manchester and Leeds stem from a 15thCentury English civil war known as the War of the Roses. Manchester is situated in the county of Lancashire whilst Leeds is situated in the county of Yorkshire. Appropriately Manchester United’s home colours resembles the red rose of Lancashire whilst Leeds United’s home colours resembles the white rose of Yorkshire. Although today Leeds United sit in the second tier of English football, a fierce rivalryand attitude exists between both sets of supporters even today.

During the 18th and 19th centuries, this geographical rivalry began to develop even further. Leeds and Manchester became direct economic rivals. Leeds was growing due to its woollen industry whilst 40 miles west, Manchester was beginning to sprout due to their rapid cotton industry.

Manchester United and Leeds United met in the 1965 FA Cup semi-final. The game was played at an intense level with many clashes on the pitch. A picture emerged after the game that feature United striker Denis Law and Leeds defender Jack Charlton punching and wrestling each other on the pitch. This is a sight that illustrates the ferocity of the game between the two sides.

The rivalry was continuous throughout the years. In 1978 Joe Jordan and Gordon McQueen joined Manchester United from Leeds. McQueen was subjected to much abuse from the Leeds fans whilst he travelled to Elland Road. He was booed, abused and had objects thrown at him.

Clashes on the pitch continued to happen in the Premier league era. Most notable an incident which took place on Saturday 3rd March 2001. Manchester United travelled to Elland Road for a game with Leeds which finished 1-1. During the game Leeds fullback Ian Harte challenged United keeper Fabien Barthez which the Frenchman felt was unfair. Barthez lashed out at Harte and received a yellow card and gave a way a penalty.

Two Leeds United fans were stabbed to death during an away game to Galatasaray in the UEFA Cup in 2000. At the time United fans paid their respects, however incidents occurred the next time the two sides met. Throughout the rivalry between the two clubs, taunts were a regular thing. Leeds fans often taunted United over the Munich Air Disaster. When the two clubs met in their next tie after the tragedy in Istanbul, United fans produced flags which read “MUFC Istanbul Reds” and “Galatasaray Reds”. This immediately angered Leeds fans as they burst into Munich chants and some are believed to have ripped up seats in Old Trafford.

Leeds were relegated to the Championship at the end of the 2003/04 season due to financial difficulties. To add insult to injury, local Leeds lad and supporter of the club joined Manchester United creating further controversy. Smith appeared on Soccer AM years before stating Manchester United are the club he would never join.

Manchester United and Leeds have only met twice in the last 10 years. Both sides won one each. Leeds beat Manchester United 1-0 at Old Trafford during their 2009/2010 FA Cup run. The other clash being when United beat Leeds 3-0 away at Elland Road. There was trouble at this game as two Police officers were injured and 21 fans were arrested.

Long gone are the days of extreme football hooliganism in the 70s and 80s. Clashes with Leeds United’s Service Crew and Manchester United’s Red Army today, wouldn’t be met with the numbers as it was back when hooliganism was at its peak. However, the bitterness and rivalry still exist. At both Old Trafford and Elland Road there are regular chants that taunt either side. The advancements in social media have elevated the rivalry to a new context. There will be online abuse concerning both clubs.

If Leeds do get promoted back to England’s top tier, be sure that fireworks will go off when they meet Manchester United. Perhaps the rivalry with Leeds is fiercer than say with Liverpool and Manchester City based on previous incidents.

Written by Shane Purcell


66
Ordet er fritt / Lokalderbyet kommer nærmere
« på: Mai 14, 2018, 16:43:10 »
Harrogate Town 3 Brackley 0: Knowles double helps Town seal historic promotion

Leon Wobschall
Published: 17:09 Sunday 13 May 2018
A FIRST-HALF double from goal machine Dominic Knowles and a second-half strike from Joe Leesley saw Harrogate Town secure a historic first-ever promotion to the National Leeague in style with a sweet success over FA Trophy finalists Brackley Town.


Knowles took his goals tally to an incredible nine in three home games at the CNG Stadium with two first-half strikes - the first from the spot and the second from close range.


Gloss arrived in the second period with a fine team goal to seal victory 19 minutes from time, with National League North player of the season Leesley clinically netting from close range.

It was the prelude to party time for delirious home supporters at a sun-drenched Wetherby Road as Town clinched promotion in champagne fashion amid regular chants of ‘Town are going up.’

It represented the perfect end to the campaign for long-serving manager Simon Weaver, with the club’s Holy Grail of Conference football now a joyous reality.

An eventful first-half saw Harrogate make the all-important breakthrough, courtesy of an ice-cool 26th-minute penalty from in-form Knowles.

WE'RE GOING UP: Harrogate Town's Dominic Knowles celebrates his second goal of the game. Picture: Tony Johnson.

Referee Leigh Doughty pointed to the spot after Brackley defender Alex Gudger was adjudged to have blocked Leesley’s goalbound strike with his arm and Knowles proceeded to send visiting keeper Danny Lewis the wrong way with his confident penalty.

Nine minutes later, the predatory striker spurned a golden chance to notch his second when he wastefully fired wide after profiting from a defensive misdemeanour from Brackley and racing clear.

But the home marksman shrugged off that miss to showcase his clinical streak to double Town’s tally five minutes before the break.

A free-kick from Leesley was not cleared and Knowles reacted quickest to splendidly hook the ball home in instinctive fashion from close range.

It represented the perfect end to the campaign for long-serving manager Simon Weaver, with the club’s Holy Grail of Conference football now a joyous reality.

Leon Wobschall
While Knowles extended his recent purple patch on the goalscoring front, his opposite number Aaron Williams did not fare so well, with the prolific 36-goal striker denied by a fine reaction save from Town keeper James Belshaw shortly after Harrogate’s opener and glancing a header inches wide just before the hosts’ second.

George Thomson saw a low shot fly just wide early on, but it was Brackley who displayed the early conviction with Town rocked by the early departure of big striker Mark Beck, stretchered off with a leg injury after coming off second best in a challenge with visiting captain Gareth Dean.

Town captain Josh Falkingham did well to get in the way of a goalbound shot from Shane Byrne and then made an even more telling intervention, clearing a point-blank header from Gudger off the line following a Brackley corner.

It proved key with Knowles firing the hosts in front just over five minutes later and after his uncharacteristic miss, normal service was resumed with a second for the hosts, who suffered a second untimely blow just before the break when substitute Jake Wright became the second Harrogate player to be stretchered off with an injury after colliding with Dean.

ON TARGET: Dominic Knowles celebrates one of his two goals against Brackley. Picture: Tony Johnson.

Brackley’s profligate finishing traits also resurfaced on the restart, with Lee Ndlovu being the guilty party after racing clear, but with only keeper Belshaw to beat, the forward inexplicably lobbed the ball over.

At the other end, Town almost grabbed a game-sealing third with Leesley’s left-wing cross picking out Thomson at the far post, but his angled shot was blocked by Lewis.

A goalmouth scramble then saw Brackley also profit, with Jimmy Armson just failing to convert as the visitors desperately sought a lifeline to get back into proceedings.

Pressure was sustained from the Saints, but they could not find a way through.

A lovely team goal then made the game safe for Town with Leesley finishing off an excellent low cross from Ryan Fallowfield on 71 minutes.

An audacious Lloyd Kerry lob almost added a fourth for the hosts and Joe Emmett struck the post after racing away, but three goals proved plenty on a historic afternoon for Harrogate as the Saints were left to focus on their forthcoming Trophy final with Bromley.

Harrogate Town: Belshaw; Fallowfield, McCombe, Burrell, Parker, Thomson, Emmett (Agnew 90), Falkingham, Leesley; Knowles, Beck (Wright 12 (Kerry 45)). Substitutes unused: Cracknell, Kitching.

Brackley Town: Lewis; Murombedzi, Dean, Gudger (Myles 84), Franklin; G Walker, A Walker (Lowe 58), Byrne, Armson, Ndlovu (Brown 66), Williams. Substitutes unused: Graham, Iaciofano.

Referee: L Doughty.

Attendance: 3,000.


67
Ordet er fritt / Leedsfans vi aldri må glemme
« på: Mai 12, 2018, 08:43:02 »
Leedsversjonen:


WEST OF IRELAND LEEDS UNITED SUPPORTERS

Most football fans rememer Heysel,Bradford,Hillsborough,All terribly sad events for Football in the 80s.
But as supporters of Leeds United,its our duty never to forget Ian,a young boy who saved up to go to his first Leeds United game at St. Andrews in Birmingham,and never came home.
A wall collapsed at the end of the game,when police overreacted,charged some Leeds supporters in a corner of the ground,and Ian just 15,was buried underneath.It happened on the same day as the fire in Bradford.
Yet apart from Leeds fans who ll always keep Ians memory alive.
The rest of football have forgotten this boy,a life taken away too young.
Gerry.

Rest in peace Ian! #LUFC

68
Off-Topic / Keepertabber
« på: Mai 11, 2018, 20:18:23 »
Bjarte Flem er her, men ikke Wide-wall:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5YrF3D8fLuQ

 :D

69
Ladbrokes

2006: Released by Ipswich
2007: Worked as a Milkman
2008: Bury Town Reserves
2011: Joins Charlton
2011-2015: Eight loans
2016: Joins Burnley FC
2017: Premier League debut
2018: Burnley's Player of the Season

What a journey for Nick Pope







Tålmodighet!!!!  8)

70
Ordet er fritt / Humor som strategi
« på: April 27, 2018, 08:15:19 »
Er vi i ferd med å erstatte enorm frustrasjon med humor og litt mer befriende kommentarer?


Over litt for lang tid har vi gått i strupen på hverandre for enhver meningsforskjell.


Fint at noen slår følge med Lojo og setter andres frustrasjon i et annet lys med litt mer positivt ladede innlegg.

Det er jo ganske så frustrerende dette livet som Leedssupporter. Når temperaturen stiger så er det godt å trekke litt på smilebåndet.

«Banter» passer godt med engelsk fotball!


 :D



71
Ordet er fritt / Preseason 2018-19
« på: April 26, 2018, 08:08:53 »
Adam Pope

The newly formed Ossett United have just told @BBCleeds they will play an #lufc side at Ingfields on Saturday July 14. @ossettunited



72



Leeds United are delighted to announce the #AYABankTour18, featuring two friendly matches in Myanmar

https://www.leedsunited.com/newsmobile/team-news/23301/leeds-united-to-embark-post-season-tour-in-myanmar?__twitter_impression=true


LEEDS UNITED TO EMBARK POST-SEASON TOUR IN MYANMAR

24 Apr 2018

Leeds United are delighted to announce the AYA Bank Tour 2018

Leeds United are delighted to announce the AYA Bank Tour 2018, featuring two friendly matches in Myanmar against the National Team and the Myanmar National League (MNL) All-Stars.

The fixture schedule will be as follows:

9th May 2018 – MNL All Star Team V Leeds United (Thuwunna Stadium, Yangon)
11th May 2018 – Myanmar National Team V Leeds United (Mandalar Thiri Stadium, Mandalay)
With the support of AYA Bank, the tour is part of the Aser’s ongoing commitment to partnerships in the region. The matches will be broadcast globally via the LUTV App and locally in Myanmar.

In addition to the friendlies, Leeds United will be running football clinics with the Myanmar Football Federation Academies in Yangon and Mandalay, in which players and coaches will run football and education sessions with children from local communities.

The team will also make visits to the cultural sites; Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon, and the Maha Myat Muni Pagoda in Mandalay.

Managing Director Angus Kinnear said:

"Myanmar is one of the fastest growing nations in South East Asia and is passionate about English football. They have ambitious goals for grassroots and elite football development that we are delighted to be able to support. This tour gives us an opportunity to meet new fans of football who will hopefully support our journey back to the Premier League in the coming years."

“From a football perspective we welcome the opportunity for our players who have not featured much in the past six months due to injuries the chance to continue their rehabilitation. The squad are very excited for the chance to represent the Club in Asia.”

General Secretary of the Myanmar Football Federation U Ko Ko Thein said:

"We are very pleased to welcome an English club with the history and heritage of Leeds United. The football infrastructure in Myanmar continues to improve and develop, and this is an important milestone on our journey"

"Myanmar is a football-mad country and this tour will help us to showcase our passion for the game at and abroad. I'd like to thank the sponsors of the tour AYA Bank, and of course Leeds United for coming to play here. We wish them very well for the future."

Myanmar is the fastest growing country in South East Asia with a population of close to 53 million.

The country has developed rapidly across a variety of industries in recent years, but especially in the infrastructure and technology sectors.

More information on our trip to Myanmar will be released in the coming days.



73
Ordet er fritt / Tema: Byen Leeds
« på: April 20, 2018, 14:48:23 »
£350m masterplan for Leeds’s ‘declining’ Holbeck moves closer

Published: 19:27 Thursday 19 April 2018
 editorial image
An ambitious masterplan to redevelop a former industrial heartland of Leeds is set to go ahead – sealing a decades-long vision for the “declining” area.


Councillors yesterday approved CEG’s sprawling plans for the Globe Road part of Holbeck, to the south of the city centre, subject to certain conditions.

 
The £350m proposals for up to 750 homes, potential skyscraper offices between five and 40 storeys high, as well as leisure and retail plots, would form part of the South Bank – hailed by Leeds City Council as one of the largest redevelopments in Europe – and could provide space for an estimated 10,000 to live, work and visit.


Coun James McKenna, chairman of the City Plans Panel, said that ideas for the so-called Holbeck Urban Village first began in the early 1990s and he urged the developers to “please build it”.

The “phased” regeneration is due to include five separate development “parcels” called Globe Point, Globe Square, Globe Arches, Globe Waterside and Beck Court.


Detailed plans for two offices between Globe Road and Water Lane were approved by members. Outline proposals for a mixed-use development of up to 103,900 sqm of offices, retail, leisure, hotel, health, education and community uses, parking and up to 750 new homes, along with new public spaces and landscaping, were also deferred to the council’s chief planning officer, Tim Hill, to agree fully.

A series of pedestrian routes created through the site would be supplemented by four new footbridges over the Hol Beck, five new pedestrian crossings and the narrowing of both Globe Road and Water Lane, the latter becoming one-way.

It would also involve the demolition of existing buildings and structures except a listed bridge crossing Hol Beck and the main part of a former print works.


A council report prepared for the panel members stated: “The area has been in decline for many years and a series of unrelated schemes have not come to fruition.”

Labour’s Coun McKenna told the meeting the plan is “a rather big piece of the jigsaw” in the regeneration of Holbeck.

He said: “I think it’s a magnificent scheme.

“You don’t always get the opportunity to thank developers. Please build it, please get on with it – it’s been a vision for a long, long time.”


CEG is working on designs for the site with Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios, the architects behind Leeds’s imposing Broadcasting Place, which won the International Tall Building of the Year Award in 2010.

CEG is also responsible for the £400m Kirkstall Forge site, which has so far brought a new railway station and modern office building to the city.

And the company has previously acquired the crumbling Temple Works – a Grade I-listed former flax mill in Holbeck famed for once having what is said to have been the world’s biggest room. It is understood the firm bought that building for just £1 after fashion brand Burberry backed out of its own planned refurbishment of the site.

During the meeting, CEG’s development director Jonathan Kenny reiterated the company’s commitment to the city.

He said: “This isn’t the beginning of the end of us in Leeds – it’s the beginning of the beginning.”


Members of the panel expressed concern about some aspects of CEG’s proposals for Leeds’s South Bank.

Coun Peter Gruen, for Labour questioned whether the public transport network in the Holbeck area was good enough to accommodate the proposals and unconnected applications for nearby sites.

And Liberal Democrat Coun Colin Campbell asked why plans for the outline applications – which are later subject to separate full approval – were so detailed. In reply, Mr Kenny said: “It was to set out how we thought this whole area could have been masterplanned, connected and brought forward in a way that could address some of the long-standing issues that have blighted this area.”


https://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/news/350m-masterplan-for-leeds-s-declining-holbeck-moves-closer-1-9126050/amp?__twitter_impression=true


74
Ordet er fritt / Den beste Leedskapteinen
« på: April 19, 2018, 01:30:13 »
Team FA
Name a better captain than Vincent Kompany…


Sye Law
Ernest Shackleton, who in 1915 after his ship was entrapped in Antarctic sea ice sailed a small open rowing boat 720 miles across the Southern Ocean to South Georgia, climbed a mountain range to a whaling station, then sailed back to Antarctica to rescue all of his trapped crew
#leedsunited
#leedscity

75
Her er et godt eksempel på hvordan Wolves tilnærmer seg suksessen på. Det finnes sikkert andre eksempler også - bl.a. Southampton og Leicester -, men Wolves har virkelig fått det til over 1 sesong.


Kevin Thelwell: The man who built Wolves' promotion machine



Thelwell is celebrating a decade at Wolves

Written by Simon Austin — April 17, 2018

MUCH of the credit for Wolves' promotion to the Premier League has understandably gone to Portuguese manager Nuno Espirito Santo.

But Sporting Director Kevin Thelwell, a man we seldom hear of or from, has arguably been just as important. Thelwell has held his current position since September 2016 and first moved to Molineux as Academy Manager in April 2008, meaning he is now celebrating a decade at the club.

In a fascinating interview with OptaPro's Three at the Back podcast, he explained what he does and what the future looks like for the club:

WHAT DOES A SPORTING DIRECTOR DO?

KT: On the Continent there’s a much clearer job description for the role. In England, clubs tend to try and organise it on the basis of what they need.

You’ve got a lot of different titles - Director of Football, Head of Football Operations, Technical Director, Sporting Director. At Wolves, the way it’s always operated is that the head coach - not a manager - has a clear focus on the organisation and preparation of the first team and performances and results.

The Sporting Director has responsibility for all of the operations that support that process. So, in my remit, I have Academy, coaching, performance analysis, medical services, sport science, recruitment. On a day-to-day basis, my first port of call is contact with the head coach, having conversations about what the day looks like and what’s going on. Then it’s about supporting all the heads of department to become best in class.

Recruitment is a big part of the Sporting Director role, because it’s the biggest spend and the biggest opportunity for people to support or criticise what you’re doing. As soon as a signing crosses the white line, everyone looks across the rows of seats to me in the stand and either says, 'that’s a fantastic decision,' or 'I’m not sure it’s so good'.


The role of the Sporting Director is to manage upwards, downwards and sideways. Managing upwards, because we have to understand that owners have huge pressure to succeed. They are spending a lot of money and want to see a return for that investment. You are always trying to find ways for them to take a more stable, consistent view on the life of a football club.

You have to try and find a way of gaining their trust and making things very stable.

The head coach obviously needs a lot of support - and to understand that you are there to support him. Then of course you have all the heads of department trying to make their programmes as good as they can be.

We have regular meetings where we are all together, so people know what others are doing and can unpack problems. We also have individual meetings and staff can make me accountable as well. You get the best from people if they feel they have the opportunity to be heard and find solutions. My view on developing a club philosophy is you’ve got to live it and your staff have to believe in it and live it too.

You’re only as good as the people around you and the people you appoint. For example, I work very closely with the club secretary (Matt Wild), who is very strong on football administration. I work hard on what the budget should look like, in terms of head count and detail. I lean on him to translate that into a beautiful spreadsheet! He’s certainly a lot stronger on those elements than I am.

WHY ACADEMY DIRECTOR IS PERFECT PREPARATION

(Thelwell joined Wolves as Academy Manager in April 2008. He was promoted to Head of Football Development and Recruitment in 2013 and then to Sporting Director in September 2016).

KT: The Academy position was the perfect springboard for me to take the Sporting Director role at Wolves. It helped me massively, because I knew all the players and staff at every level. Youth development has always been a big part of the plan at Wolverhampton Wanderers, all the way back to the 1950s.

We try to have a very joined-up approach at Wolves, where we operate as one football department, but at a lot of places, it’s almost a club within a club. So as an Academy director, you will be picking up the skill-set you need as a Sporting Director, because you’re looking at sport science, medical services, player recruitment, coach training, staff development and so on. It is the perfect way in for any aspiring Sporting Director.
We did a couple of things when I moved from Academy Manager to Sporting Director to try and align things even more strongly. We created job descriptions for heads of department that had Academy as well as first team responsibilities. We had just been relegated to League One in 2013/14 and had to find a way of reconnecting with the fans and creating a young, hungry, vibrant team epitomising everything they wanted to see.
 
Fosun are an investment group and they’re business minded. In the Premier League, they don’t want to be continually spending £40 or £50m on a player. They want to have younger players we produce ourselves who are part of a strong succession plan. The key is making sure the first team is as strong as it can be but also looking to the future.

Developing players is really difficult though, because there is so much going on with young people: maturation, home life, social life. You have to apply patience.

ADAPTING TO NEW OWNERS

(Steve Morgan sold Wolves to current owners Fosun International in July 2016).

KT: We are currently in transition at Wolves. We’ve gone from a very British owner in Steve Morgan to Chinese ownership in Fosun. Understanding that culturally and finding shared philosophies and a message for the fans, players and staff is really important. It’s an exciting project.

We are in our second season with Fosun and this season has been excellent, without question. Everybody would say there are cultural differences, because we had been operating in a particular way for a long time. It’s been a difficult experience at times, but also challenging and rewarding to find common ground we all agree and believe in. We’ve created a very solid cultural platform and football philosophy.

HOW DOES THE CLUB MEASURE SUCCESS?

KT: One of the measures is who gets through to the first team. We are trying to look at player progress through all the age groups: are we identifying the right players, developing them and keeping hold of them? Player savings gets overlooked a little bit too. If we have a squad of 25 and six are from the Academy, even if they are not in the 11, that’s still a huge saving in terms of salaries and transfer fees. Our Academy is always trying to break even.

There is a softer side as well - player and staff development. We should be developing young people: to be successful at our club, at other clubs or in sport in general. You have to enjoy seeing young people get better. You also have an important role to play as a football club in the local area.

INFLUENCE OF JORGE MENDES

(Thelwell was asked about the influence that super agent Jorge Mendes has on the club at the EFL Awards on Sunday night. Fosun own 20% in Mendes' company Gestifute. Several Championship clubs have raised concerns about the relationship).

KT: Jorge is an agent just like any other. We’ve taken some of Jorge’s clients but also taken clients from other agents. My perspective on it is we haven’t broken any of the rules, we are very clear on that and the EFL suggest we are very clear on that and Jorge is an agent that has helped us to improve the squad, just like some other agencies have.

All I can say is that we were very clear on what the plan would look like in that second year. In the first year our recruitment didn’t go so well and there was not so many people talking about us then. In the second year we managed to pull it all together.

We took some risks, Ruben Neves would have been offered to a number of people - not just Wolverhampton Wanderers, as would have some of the other players. You can’t take away from the players like John Ruddy, on a free from Norwich and Ryan Bennett, on a free.




76
Ordet er fritt / Ex-spiller: Hugo Diaz Rodriguez
« på: April 11, 2018, 11:03:48 »
LUFCdata

Credit to 21-year-old centre-back Hugo Diaz who made his senior debut tonight. Thrown into the deep end, but won 2 more tackles than Pontus Jansson. #LUFC

 :)



77
Ordet er fritt / Ex-spiller: Ryan Edmondson
« på: Mars 26, 2018, 23:09:38 »
Deniese O’Flaherty

Another goal for Ryan and another win for the U18s #MOT #proud


Gerry Mc Dermott

Has Ryan any Irish relations,? Can he play for Ireland.?


Deniese O’Flaherty

His great grandmother is Irish, from Bray..My dad's his granduncle so he has connections in Longford too, thats it..



78
Ordet er fritt / Formtabellen
« på: Mars 19, 2018, 22:56:50 »
Walmot
Last 14 #LUFC games







79
Ordet er fritt / Ex-spiller: Tom Pearce
« på: Mars 19, 2018, 18:16:37 »
Debut hjemme mot Sheffield Wednesday!


Mange har i lang tid sagt at han er en spiller med stort potensiale. Har fått ut mye i denne sesongen på U-23 laget.

Lucy Ward kalte ham i sine yngre år som "Bale"!!!  :)



80
Ordet er fritt / 1968 Liga Cup Finale: Leeds United vs Arsenal
« på: Mars 02, 2018, 11:44:48 »
On This Day: A seminal moment in Leeds United’s history remembered

Published: 09:31 Friday 02 March 2018


The Yorkshire Evening Post back page.

Today marks 50 years since a seminal moment in Leeds United’s history, the club’s first major trophy after half-a-century of trying and the start of Don Revie’s roll of honour.

Leeds United, under manager Don Revie, simply wanted to win – every trophy going, and the 1968 League Cup final was the first step on that remarkable journey.

It was, says Norman Hunter, a simple matter of time, and confidence like his is a reason why Leeds United went through the gears so dramatically in the 1960s.

There were notable achievements before 1968 – two second division titles and defeats in the finals of both the FA Cup and Inter-Cities Fairs Cup – but in that year it clicked.

A League Cup victory on March 2 preceded the lifting of the Fairs Cup two months later, liberating Leeds from the role of the bridesmaid.

Left-back Terry Cooper, whose volley won the League Cup, said a 1-0 defeat of Arsenal at Wembley was akin to “breaking the ice as regards winning something.

“Our side wasn’t far off its peak then. All the players were there.”

81
Off-Topic / Fotball VM 2018 i Russland
« på: Februar 24, 2018, 15:12:38 »
Away Days Videos

Crazy scenes at Athletic Bilbao vs Spartak Moscow tonight


https://mobile.twitter.com/AwayDaysVideos/status/966764866588631042/video/1



Utrolig at dette landet fikk VM før England!

82
Ordet er fritt / Ex-spiller: Bryce Hosannah
« på: Februar 20, 2018, 17:10:30 »
Bryce Hosannah scouting report: red card tarnishes bright display for Leeds United's future star - Leeds Live

We saw everything you would expect from a young footballer in Bryce Hosannah during the under-23s clash between Leeds United and Sheffield United on Monday.

The precocious talent lined up on the right-side of a four-man midfield under Carlos Corberan at Bracken Moor, the home of non-league Stocksbridge Park Steels.


Effectively playing as a wing-back, Hosannah was expected to fulfil attacking and defensive duties in the Premier League Professional Development League encounter.

There is plenty to be excited about when it comes to the former Crystal Palace youth. He demonstrated all the attributes of a modern day full-back.


Hosannah had the pace, drive and engine of a full-back capable of getting up and down his side of the pitch for the full 90 minutes.

In this day and age, managers and coaches are expecting their full-backs to play like wingers in attack, creating the overlap and spreading the play from touchline to touchline.

Up until the moment he was sent off we saw that from the under-23s’ number two.


It was Hosannah who broke through the Blades’ defence to eventually deliver the cross Sam Dalby would guide home to put the Whites ahead.

The teenager had pressed all the way up the field to engage his opposite number, the hosts’ left-back Rhys Norrington-Davies.

If Hosannah had lost the ball in that engagement, down the right channel in the opposition’s half, they could have broken at speed and made him pay for being out of position.

However, Hosannah won that battle and in doing so released himself into clear space. He swiftly shifted through the gears and left the defenders for dead.

He was so quick he was almost dawdling when he reached the by-line, waiting for everyone else to catch up for the imminent cross.

The pace and the composure to deliver the inch-perfect ball for Dalby was impressive.

Throughout that first period he attempted to get forward and get beyond his marker, but, in truth, the hosts were a good side and Hosannah spent large periods defending, tucking in to make a five-man defence.

The story continued in the second half, but in one of his few forays forward he came a cropper.

After a yellow card for a foul in the first half, the youngster knew he was walking a tightrope and yet still theatrically threw himself to the floor, looking for a penalty.

Oriol Rey received the ball from the right-back just inside the Blades’ half, controlled and then threaded a through-ball between centre-back and left-back for Hosannah to chase.

Bobby Adekanye and Bryce Hosannah in action during the FA Youth Cup third round game at Prenton Park on December 17, 2016(Image: Nick Taylor/Liverpool FC/Liverpool FC via Getty Images)
Hosannah got there first, of course he did, but he was too wide for any attempt on goal, in fact the ball was almost certainly running out of play.

Therefore, he felt the best course of action was to dangle a left leg and anticipate the contact, which never came, from goalkeeper Hugo Warhurst.

Referee Ricky Wootton immediately blew and pulled the yellow card out of his pocket as the penny dropped for Hosannah and Warhurst gave him an annoyed shove.

It is all a part of the learning curve. The whole point of playing under-23 football is Hosannah makes mistakes like these here and not in front of 30,000 at Elland Road.

Coberan thought it was neither a penalty nor a yellow card, but it was a dive and the right decision for me, watching it through once, live.

Hosannah is one to watch for Leeds fans.


83
Ordet er fritt / Sesongbilletter 2018-19
« på: Februar 20, 2018, 16:47:03 »
Statement On Season Ticket Renewal Prices 2018/19

The Trust welcomes the decision to freeze season ticket renewal prices for existing season ticket holders, however it also has a number of concerns, as highlighted by comments from our members.

The Trust notes that the proposed pricing structure creates a three-tier pricing structure that not only differentiates renewals and new applications, but further seeks to set a new price for those who were driven to buy season tickets either ahead of or during the 2017/18 season. The Trust wishes to ask the club for clarification on the decision to introduce this new pricing bracket, and why fans who chose to support the new ownership at Leeds United are paying a penalty for doing so.

The Trust has also been informed by some members that half season tickets were sold to them on the basis that they would be able to take advantage of renewal prices for the 2018/19 season. The new renewal bracket was not communicated to these supporters at the time of purchase.

The Trust also requests that the club extend the renewal deadline past March 30th to give fans opportunity to save and plan for what is a significant financial outlay.

The Trust will be picking up these issues directly with the club on our members behalf.


84
Ordet er fritt / EX-spiller: Jimmy Greenhoff
« på: Februar 12, 2018, 12:04:01 »
Da jeg fulgte med på tippekampen på 70-tallet så hadde jeg en stor favoritt som ikke var Leedsspiller, nemlig Jimmy Greenhoff.

Han var en nomadespiller som skåret nydelige mål i bøtter og spann for blant annet midlandslagene Birmingham og Stoke.

Han startet i Leeds som junior i 1961, ble profesjonell i 1963 og holdt på til slutten av 60-årene i Leeds.

Jimmy skåret 21 mål på 94 kamper for oss, men slo ikke helt til. Det var vanskelig å få en fast plass på et lag med Lorimer, Clarke og Eddie Gray langt fremme på banen.


En morsom omtale av ham ble skrevet i en utgave av Soccer Review 21/8-1965. Et par tenåringsjenter markerte sin protest mot at Leeds ville selge Jimmy G for £ 40.000. De begynte å samle inn penger til denne summen for at han skulle bli i klubben. Kanskje det var grunnen til at han fortsatte helt frem til 1968 i Leeds.  ;)




Jimmy G er forøvrig broren til Brian Greenhoff som også spilte i Leeds på slutten av sin karriere. Han døde dessverre for noen pr siden.


85
Ordet er fritt / Squad-rotation
« på: Januar 18, 2018, 15:09:14 »
Ben Mayhew

Here's how much each Premier League & EFL club has been rotating their squad this season, plus the number of unchanged line-ups they've named:

Liverpool rotating like crazy this season; Burnley hardly at all

Derby & Grimsby have already named 10 unchanged XIs

[cc: @MarkOHaire]


86
Ordet er fritt / Ex Developement keeper: Kamil Miazek
« på: Januar 11, 2018, 19:40:27 »
LUFCdata

Leeds have also signed 21-year-old Polish goalkeeper Kamil Miazek on a permanent deal for the Under-23s. He has been at the club since September. #LUFC



87
Ordet er fritt / Eks-Spiller: Oliver Sarkic
« på: Januar 11, 2018, 19:20:06 »
OLIVER SARKIC SIGNS PERMANENT DEAL

OLIVER SARKIC SIGNS PERMANENT DEAL
Leeds United are pleased to confirm the signing of Oliver Sarkic from Portuguese outfit Benfica for an undisclosed fee.

Sarkic initially joined the club over the summer on loan, but the Whites have now made the deal permanent.

The 20-year-old, who has been capped at various youth levels by Montenegro, has put pen to paper on a deal until June 2020 and the club has the option to extend this by a further year.

Sarkic has been a regular in Carlos Corberan’s Under-23 side this season and celebrated signing for the Whites, by netting a penalty in Thursday’s 4-3 victory over Hull City at Thorp Arch.


88
Ordet er fritt / Ex-spiller: Alfie McCalmont
« på: Desember 15, 2017, 22:27:30 »
Leeds United

@alfiemccalmont4 who recently stepped up to @NorthernIreland’s U19s squad, was presented with his first cap by @dallas_stuart today


89
Ordet er fritt / Ex-spiller: Yosuke Ideguchi
« på: Desember 11, 2017, 20:56:05 »



Phil Hay‏
@PhilHayYEP
 48 min48 minutter siden
Leeds United have agreed to sign Japan international midfielder Yosuke Ideguchi from Gamba Osaka. Will join in January for a deal worth £500k including add-ons. #lufc

Ideguchi won't qualify immediately for a work permit under FA rules so will be loaned abroad in January to the end of the season. Leeds see him as a signing for next season and expect him to receive a work permit for it. #lufc

a deal Leeds could have done next summer but the Japanese season is finished and Ideguchi would have been inactive for a few months.

90



Tja!

Kort til kamp igjen!

Jeg mener:
Ut med: Lasogga, Alioski, Phillips, Pennington
Inn med: Roofe, Dallas, Pablo, Shaughnessy


                 Lonerghan
Ayling, Shaughnessy, Jansson, Anita
              Viera, O'Kane
     Hernandez, Saiz, Dallas
                    Roofe

Ayling må overlappe i større grad og gi Pablo mer rom inn mot midten. Dallas må hjelpe Anita defensivt i langt større grad.
Roofe gir mer bevegelighet på topp og vil gi ALLE på midten langt større rom for uventede løp.

Og for all del: O'Kane og Viera må i langt større grad sitte bak og styre midtbanen og kampen.

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