KAMP: vs. Carlisle 12/5 (Play off-semi 1)

Started by kjelvi, May 03, 2008, 21:02:42

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isak

Quote from: MartinR on May 07, 2008, 07:47:42
Quote from: RuneR on May 07, 2008, 07:46:46
Quote from: MartinR on May 07, 2008, 07:25:48
Quote from: isak on May 06, 2008, 23:19:41
Korleis klarer du å kopiere frå heimesida Martin? ??? Eg får det ikkje til..
Jeg trykker hvesiden av teksten øverst, så bare drar jeg den helt ned til der jeg vil stoppe, så slipper jeg den, så høyre-klikker jeg på den, så trykker jeg på kopier.
Når jeg skal legge det inn, så trykker jeg på høyre-knappen, så kommer det opp: Lim Inn, så trykker jeg der.  Skjønner ???
Martin,
du burde kanskje fortelle Isak at du bruker Opera, ikke Internet Explorer (IE).  Dette funker ikke i IE, i hvertfall ikke hos meg. 
Men med Opera og Firefox går det helt fint  ;D
Hehe, jeg visste ikke det jeg, Sorry Isak   :-\ :-\
Det går bra ;)

kjelvi

United ace Huntington warned


Paul Huntington

Dobie has warned that Paul Huntington will face a hostile reception from Carlisle United's supporters when Leeds United travel to Brunton Park for the second leg of their League One play-off semi-final a week on Thursday.
The Carlisle midfielder expects Huntington to encounter a heated reaction in Cumbria following last month's clash between the two clubs at Elland Road.
Leeds produced a 3-2 victory in Yorkshire despite Dobie's first half strike, but the fixture was marred by the subsequent controversy involving Huntington and Carlisle's fans.
The young defender angered the travelling support at Elland Road by gesturing at them repeatedly, and Huntington moved to issue a public apology over his behaviour 48 hours after full-time.
United manager Gary McAllister is unlikely to have any concerns about retaining the impressive centre-back in his line-up throughout the play-offs, but Dobie, who is Huntington's half-cousin, said: "Fans don't forget things like that.
"I don't know him well enough to know whether it will affect him next week but it's definitely going to be a lesson for him.
"I know he hasn't done himself any favours with the fans."
But speaking last month Carlisle manager John Ward insisted the matter should be forgotten, saying: "I think as a football club we have to be big enough to accept his apology and leave it at that."

YP

kjelvi

Freedman targets double promotion 


Freedman could win promotion with two clubs this season

Leeds United's on-loan striker Dougie Freedman has targeted a double promotion this season.
His club Crystal Palace are in the Championship play-offs while Leeds are also in the League One play-offs.
Freedman told BBC Radio 5 Live: "If my wishes come true then both teams will get promoted.
"My loyalties will be with Palace but in the meantime I've got a challenge in front of me and I'm hoping to overcome that and get Leeds promotion."
Freedman has scored five goals in his 11 games while on loan at Leeds and would love to end the season with a Wembley triumph.
While Crystal Palace play the first leg of their Championship semi-final against Bristol City on Saturday, Leeds host Carlisle in the League One play-offs on Monday night.
After seeing more than 38,000 fans at Elland Road for Leeds' final game of the regular season at home to Gillingham, Freedman would like another bumper turn-out.

"I think all these controversial issues off the pitch have helped us to bond together"
Dougie Freedman
[/color]

"I'm fully expecting the same crowd to come and support us on Monday night against Carlisle," he said.
"I've heard too many stories that people say you're under pressure to play at home in front of that crowd.
"The way the Leeds lads are playing right now it's a joy to play in front of them because they're right behind the team.
"I think all these controversial issues off the pitch have helped us to bond together like the good old days when fans and players came together, and that's what's helping us right now."

BBC

Trond90

Da er jeg tilbake fra Leeds ;), leser her att kampen på mandag ikke skal gå på viasat?  :( Er det 100% ?
We are Leeds, We are Proud, Standing up, Singing loud,
and there's nothing you can do against the Yellow Whites and Blue!

Jon R

Quote from: Trond90 on May 07, 2008, 23:37:58
Da er jeg tilbake fra Leeds ;), leser her att kampen på mandag ikke skal gå på viasat?  :( Er det 100% ?

Hvis man skal ta denne tråden på alvor ( og det skal man) , tror jeg vi kan si 110 %.  ;)
http://www.leedsunited.no/forum/index.php?topic=10329.30
Jon R.

kjelvi

Andy Ritchie predicts Leeds United v Southend final

Andy Ritchie today predicted a winner-takes-all contest between Leeds United and Southend United at the end of a play-off campaign which he expects to champion the merits of League One football.
The former Huddersfield Town boss claimed the line-up for the division's play-off semi-finals - involving Leeds, Southend, Doncaster Rovers and Carlisle United - was an accurate reflection of the more talented teams seen in League One during the 2007-08 campaign.
Doncaster and Southend begin their semi-final with the first leg at Roots Hall in Essex on Friday night, with Leeds and Carlisle due to play the first 90 minutes of the second semi-final three days later.
The fixtures will be settled within 24 hours of each other next week, sending two teams towards the play-off final on May 25, and Ritchie expects Leeds and Southend to contest League One's last remaining promotion place at Wembley.
Ritchie, who was manager of Huddersfield until the beginning of April and was involved in at least one league fixture against all four clubs this season, said: "Every one of them has a great chance, but my head says that Leeds will reach the final along with Southend. For personal reasons, I'd then hope Leeds would win it.
"You don't get any prizes for losing in the play-offs or any real satisfaction from reaching the top six and finishing with nothing, but what pleases me - and what should please the clubs involved - is that the four teams have got here by playing football.
"It makes a nonsense of the idea that you have to kick your way out of League One and this year you've got four clubs involved who are genuinely capable of winning the play-offs. That's not always the case."
The former Leeds striker, who managed Barnsley to victory over Swansea City in the 2006 League One play-off final, added: "The play-offs are a high-pressure situation, and it's when a manager really earns his corn.
"The responsibility's on you to get everything absolutely right over three games, to keep the players as relaxed as possible and also to find those little bits of luck you inevitably need. The one thing you know about the play-offs is that anything can happen."

YEP

kjelvi

Leeds fans crash booking system

So many Leeds fans have tried to book play-off tickets on-line that ticketing partner Software4Sport's servers have been brough to a halt.
For the second day running, the number of fans wanting trying to book for the home leg against Carlisle caused the system to crash.
"Demand like this has never been experienced by them before, including their clients Liverpool, Newcastle and Rangers," said a club spokesman.
"Improvements are being made. However, in an attempt to reduce the fustration of our fans this service will be withdrawn."
The Elland Road club say tickets are now limited but remain available at the ticket office counters or by calling 0871 334 1992.

http://www.leedsunited.com/page/NewsroomDetail/0,,10273~1308207,00.html

kjelvi

Breaking: Beckford back in training for Leeds

LEEDS UNITED have been boosted by the return of top scorer Jermaine Beckford.
The striker returned to training for the first time in almost a month to give Gary McAllister's squad a lift ahead of Monday's night's League One play-off semi-final first leg.
McAllister will be drawing on the experience gained under Gerard Houllier during Liverpool's unprecedented cup success of 2001 when Leeds kick off their play-off challenge.
The Scot was the midfield inspiration behind the Reds winning the treble of FA Cup, League Cup and UEFA Cup before adding the European Super Cup and Charity Shield a few months later.

YEP

Yeboah

Quote from: kjelvi on May 08, 2008, 13:49:11
Leeds fans crash booking system

So many Leeds fans have tried to book play-off tickets on-line that ticketing partner Software4Sport's servers have been brough to a halt.
For the second day running, the number of fans wanting trying to book for the home leg against Carlisle caused the system to crash.
"Demand like this has never been experienced by them before, including their clients Liverpool, Newcastle and Rangers," said a club spokesman.
"Improvements are being made. However, in an attempt to reduce the fustration of our fans this service will be withdrawn."
The Elland Road club say tickets are now limited but remain available at the ticket office counters or by calling 0871 334 1992.

http://www.leedsunited.com/page/NewsroomDetail/0,,10273~1308207,00.html

Fantastisk! Snakker vi 40 000? :)

Trond90

Noen her som vet om kampen vises på en pub i Haugesund ?
We are Leeds, We are Proud, Standing up, Singing loud,
and there's nothing you can do against the Yellow Whites and Blue!

lojosang

Quote from: Trond90 on May 08, 2008, 23:30:24
Noen her som vet om kampen vises på en pub i Haugesund ?

Følg med her, og ignorer snakk om damplokomotiv og ferjekøer. Herr Bjøndal Lund skulle sjekke og Sir Toby viser den.
- Leif Olav

Svend Anders

Jeg har laget en felles event på facebook der jeg poster alle stedene i Skandinavia etterhvert som de kommer inn: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=14226627405

Glomma Pub i Fredrikstad regner jeg med blir stappfull!

SA
Følges på:
www.twitter.com/svendleeds
www.twitter.com/svendanders

Sølvreven

Jeg er i Tromsø, på jobb, denne helgen. Er det noen fra Tromsø som vet om denne kampen blir vist noen plass? Håper at dere kan svare meg på denne.
***************

Leedsoholic. Oppfinneren av "pretting".

kjelvi

LORIMER: United in shape to go one better


CREDIT: Gary McAllister has done a great job at Leeds United

By Peter Lorimer
Talking Soccer


The arrival of the League One play-offs inevitably brings back memories of 2006, when two excellent semi-final performances against Preston North End were followed by the most disappointing of days at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium.
On this occasion we're looking for the full set and everything about Leeds United says to me that we're in the right form and the right shape of mind to regain our place in the Coca-Cola Championship.
A huge amount of credit is due to Gary McAllister and his players for securing a play-off position, but as wonderful an achievement as that is, there's another massive step to be aken. The journey starts on Monday night.
Carlisle United are a very strong team and are capable of beating anyone on their day.
That's been proven by their results and it would be foolish to under-estimate them.
Let's not forget that they were the first side to take three points from Leeds this season, or that they're the club with the best home record in League One.
It is no accident that Carlisle have appeared in the play-offs and all four of the teams involved are talented enough and mentally strong enough to claim a place in the Championship.
The fact that Carlisle are so strong at Brunton Park â€" a ground where few teams seem to enjoy playing â€" underlines the importance of the first leg at Elland Road.
I was delighted to see 38,000 supporters at the stadium for last weekend's game against Gillingham, especially since there was nothing at stake for Leeds.
It was the type of match that the fans could easily have bypassed â€" saving their hard-earned money for the play-offs â€" but the massive attendance is evidence of the feel-good factor that is swirling around the city and the club at the moment.
We're expecting to see the same size of crowd at Elland Road for the first leg of the semi-final on Monday, and that is undoubtedly a factor we must take advantage of.
It would not concern me if Leeds went to Brunton Park for the second leg next Thursday without a lead because under Gary we've looked capable of winning anywhere, but the intensity of our own surroundings could be crucial to the outcome of the tie.
Carlisle know that they will be asked to deal with a deafening atmosphere and their manager, John Ward, will also be aware that his side's form is not as good as that of Leeds.
Form is not always important in cup ties but if you ask either John or Gary whose results they would rather have behind them right now, both would say Leeds United's.
Leeds have won six of their last seven games, and the bonus last Saturday was that Gary was able to rest a few key players.
He'll go looking for a win on Monday night and I believe that Leeds will get it, giving them a lead to take to Cumbria.
There is every reason to be confident but no excuse for being over-confident. The play-offs can throw up all sorts of surprises and when it comes to knockout football, the little things are so crucial. A referee's decision or a flukey goal can easily be decisive.
The trick in these situations is not to panic â€" to remember that the game is being played over 180 minutes, not 90. There is a balance to strike between being aggressive and positive, and making sure your performance is controlled.
Everything I have seen of Leeds convinces me that they have the character and belief to do that. Let the drama begin.

Scoreline prediction: Leeds 2 Carlisle 0.

YEP

kjelvi

Leeds play-off set for sell-out

ELLAND Road is heading for a sell-out for Leeds United's Coca-Cola League One play-off semi-final, first leg against Carlisle on Monday.
Demand for tickets has jammed the club's online booking system as the Whites seek a place in the Wembley final and a return to the Championship.
United's players are eager for a repeat of the atmosphere they experienced during their 2-1 victory over Gillingham last weekend.
A crowd of more than 38,000 packed into Elland Road and midfielder Andrew Hughes said: "It was a great spectacle. It takes your breath away when it's like that.
"I was honoured to be on the pitch in front of those fans, but that is Leeds United Football Club.
"There's no experience like that. I've been at different clubs and experienced different fans, but you can't find the words to describe what it was like on Saturday.
"We need to do them proud now and do it for ourselves."
The second leg will be held at Bruton Park on Thursday, and Hughes is wary of the Cumbrians' home record.
"They have a fantastic home record and we have to go there and try and get a result," said Hughes.
Meanwhile, Hughes is hoping a strong personal performance in the play-offs can increase his standing at the club.
"I've still got to prove myself at the club and to the fans," he said. "Hopefully, they'll say I've done okay to that end so far, but we've got to get this club up now.
"I'm really looking forward to (the play-offs) but, having said that, I've looked forward to every game since the Tranmere game. I just love being at the club."

yorkpress.co.uk

kjelvi

HAY: This time United are ready for play-offs

By Phil Hay
Inside Elland Road


You get nowt for being second, as the title of Billy Bremner's autobiography still professes.
There spoke a man who knew. Bremner won two league championship medals with Leeds United and was a runner-up on five occasions, showing him the clear distinction between two sides of a very thin line. All the title of his book might have added is that someone invariably has to be.
Where the play-offs are concerned, United received nothing for finishing second in 2006. In fact, they were not even lucky enough to finish with that.
Promotion to the Premier League was the pay-day th never arrived, and Leeds were like the compulsive gambler whose final chip had been collected by the house. United had already flogged their home; 12 months later they lost virtually everything, not least the sum of 15 points. Nothing would have been a preferable bargain.
I spoke to the Leeds chairman Ken Bates shortly after the 2006 play-off final to ask for his vision of the future.
"Sunday was a disappointment," he said, "but we didn't expect to be there so soon. It was a bonus, if you like."
His words made sense on one level, but failed on another. It may well have been a surprise to find Leeds in a play-off final within 18 months of taking over a club which was almost insolvent, but United were not without potential.
In the summer before Cardiff, the club signed Robbie Blake, Richard Cresswell, Eddie Lewis and Jonathan Douglas. Liam Miller supplemented the squad on loan from Manchester United in November, adding to a pool of players which was ageing slightly but still of the required standard. There was just cause for optimism.
Qualifying for the play-offs was a credible achievement, but a bonus? That remains both a matter of opinion and the fundamental difference between 2006 and 2008.
Leeds were contenders from the outset two years ago; in August of 2007, it was impossible not to believe that United's season had the makings of a nasty write-off.
Gary McAllister would concur with Bremner's view of the comparative merits of success and failure, but Leeds United's season has not been devoid of achievement to date. If anything, the credit due to McAllister, his players and everyone else involved in nine months of excellence â€" even before the play-offs begin â€" is vast.
The outcome of their season rests on the next 16 days, but the reputation of Leeds and those employed to protect and enhance the club does not. The facts and figures behind this term speak not only of a team that is good enough to join the Championship but also of a team which deserves to hold that status already.
At the end of their 46th game last weekend, United's vital statistics set 27 victories against nine defeats; 72 goals scored against a mere 38 concessions; they boasted a home record bettered only by Carlisle United â€" their opponents in the play-off semi-finals â€" and an away record which was eclipsed by champions Swansea City alone.
They say you can prove anything with statistics, but these figures do not require the power of spin.

****

A FEW grumbles have been heard this week regarding the Football League's system of distributing gate receipts from the League One play-off semi-finals.
Leeds United are anticipating a possible repeat of the attendance of 38,000 seen against Gillingham for the first leg of their semi-final with Carlisle United at Elland Road on Monday night, but the club does not have full entitlement to the revenue raised by such a huge crowd.
Half of the money raised by all four play-off fixtures will be distributed evenly among the four semi-finalists, with the other 50 per cent shared by all of the Football League's clubs.
Considering that Leeds have the highest average attendance of all 12 clubs involved in the Football League's play-offs, and that theirs is greater than the combined average of the three other teams in League One's play-offs, United will provide a disproportionate amount of the harvest.
The nationwide hand-out may seem unfair but, as one official at Elland Road admitted, there were fewer complaints last season when Leeds received a share of the play-off funds despite finishing 24th in the Championship.
The case is one of swings and roundabouts.
They are exceptional and almost incomparable throughout the Football League. They are also the reason for McAllister’s players to feel cautiously but genuinely confident when their play-off semi-final begins next week.
The nervous tension that precedes the play-offs is beginning to ripple through Leeds and it will strike the terraces of Elland Road in waves on Monday night.
Nerves among supporters are as natural as the typical self-assurance of the players involved. They come with the feeling of detachment which, for those who can only bite their nails, is never greater than when the margin for error disappears.
There must be, among the masses in Leeds, a great reluctance to feel over-confident, or to presume that promotion is United’s natural course.
Many hoped, believed and predicted that reaching the Millennium Stadium in 2006 equalled reaching the Premier League. The wounds of that desperate, rain-soaked day are still as raw as ever.
There is, however, an important distinction to make. In 2006, United concluded their 46 Championship matches with one win from 10 matches. Today’s squad is far removed from that mediocrity.
It is why Bradley Johnson, speaking after Saturday’s victory over Gillingham, said: “If I’m honest then I have to say that I really fancy our chances. It’s only natural for us to be quietly confident.”
Confidence is not the same as arrogance. A confident team is one which has taken six victories from its last seven matches. An arrogant team would be one which believes the club’s badge and stature will automatically land them the jackpot in the lottery.
McAllister knows which category his squad belong in, and why it is that his squad are right to have faith. The most accurate description of their semi-final with Carlisle is that of an extremely difficult tie which Leeds are good enough to win every day of the week. Under-estimating the opposition is only as dangerous as under-estimating yourself.
The crackle of anticipation is about to explode. See you on the other side.

YEP

kjelvi

Whites Arrogant And Disrespectful - Carlisle Defender  

Carlisle's Peter Murphy has accused Leeds of being arrogant and disrespectful ahead of the play-off semis next week.
The Irish defender claims comments coming from Elland Road suggesting the club were happy to be paired with Carlisle in the play-offs were disrespectful.
The defender said: "Leeds will probably say they're happy to be playing anybody because they don't think they should be in this league.
"Hopefully that little bit of arrogance will work in our favour and if we do get promoted it will be all the better.
"Leeds have a very good squad and we know we'll have to step up our game. You expect to play good sides in the play-offs. But that's where Leeds are disrespecting us a little bit, saying they are happy to play us.
"According to Leeds, everything has gone against them this season, they shouldn't be in this league, the 15 points deduction and so on.
"If Leeds are such a big club, and if we are the underdogs, that's the way it's got to be. Everyone is expecting them to win and there's no pressure on us."
Carlisle have spent £30,000 on the Brunton Park pitch ahead of next Thursday's 2nd leg.
The condition of the surface was a cause for concern and the Cumbrian club were forced to protect the pitch by delaying a junior football tournament scheduled to be held at Brunton Park last weekend. 

Wannabe

Ikke lenge igjen nå, og ikke mye edru før KO...

MOT
 

Oggy

Quote from: Wannabe on May 09, 2008, 20:54:36
Ikke lenge igjen nå, og ikke mye edru før KO...

MOT
Du har enda en stund på deg til å bli edru, da  ;D
Oggy

Asbjørn

Gylfi og Eirik om Leeds i papir-BA:
FORTJENER OPPRYKK
Leeds skylder dem fortsatt penger (husk, jamf. adm. skal fotballrelaterte utgifter betales til fulle, så begge får visstnok mnd-lige utbetalinger fortsatt), begge "er ikke fan av Ken Bates", "men Leedsfansen fortjener opprykk".

-Jeg fikk venner utenfor stadionmurene, og det er supporterne jeg bryr meg om. Leeds har fantastiske fans, og for mine venners del håper jeg  virkelig de klarer det nå, sier Bakke til BA.

Bakke drar frem Nottingham-eksempelet og frykter klubben kan bli værende lenge på nivå 3 om det ikke lykkes nå. Gylfi følger ikke veldig godt med gamleklubben, men Brann-oppmann Raymond Sanden er blodfan av Leeds, og han holder meg oppdatert, humrer 29-åringen.



Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

Promotion 2010

Quote from: Svend Anders on May 09, 2008, 11:09:54
Jeg har laget en felles event på facebook der jeg poster alle stedene i Skandinavia etterhvert som de kommer inn: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=14226627405

Glomma Pub i Fredrikstad regner jeg med blir stappfull!

SA

Så utrolig moro og informerende for dere tre som er medlemmer av Facebook!  ::)
Min første Leeds-kamp:
Strømsgodset vs Leeds, 19.september 1973

kjelvi

Quote from: kjelvi on May 07, 2008, 20:59:40
United ace Huntington warned
Dobie has warned that Paul Huntington will face a hostile reception from Carlisle United's supporters when Leeds United travel to Brunton Park for the second leg of their League One play-off semi-final a week on Thursday.
The Carlisle midfielder expects Huntington to encounter a heated reaction in Cumbria following last month's clash between the two clubs at Elland Road.

Leeds United's Huntington can stand the heat

Gary McAllister has offered a firm vote of confidence to Paul Huntington as the Leeds United defender prepares to renew hostilities with Carlisle United.
Huntington was the subject of controversy during Carlisle's visit to Elland Road last month after gesturing repeatedly towards the Cumbrian club's fans, but McAllister has no concerns over his ability to cope with the intensity of the forthcoming League One play-off semi-final between the two clubs.
The former Newcastle United trainee â€" a £200,000 signing last summer â€" has been one of the most successful stories of McAllister's short tenure, establishing himself as a regular partner for Lubomir Michalik in the centre of Leeds' defence.
His consistent and outstanding form was responsible for relegating Rui Marques to the substitutes bench at Elland Road, but Huntington was forced to make a public apology over his behaviour during Carlisle's 3-2 defeat in Yorkshire on April 12.
The 20-year-old was allegedly the subject of death threats from irate Carlisle supporters and the coincidental pairing for the play-off semi-finals will lead him into a hostile atmosphere at Brunton Park for the second leg on Thursday night.
But McAllister, whose side will begin the tie at Elland Road on Monday evening, said: "It's a fantastic test for him and I'm sure he'll be fine."
Huntington's connection with Carlisle â€" the city where he was born â€" is an obvious sub-plot to the semi-final, but McAllister is hoping to benefit from the other member of his staff with Cumbrian links.
Neil McDonald, Leeds' first-team coach, was manager at Brunton Park for 14 months before Carlisle sacked him after the first game of this season, and the 42-year-old worked with a number of the players in the squad now managed by John Ward.
McAllister said: "He knows their players and worked in close with the Carlisle lads. We know a wee bit more about the psyche of the Carlisle players than other opponents."

YEP

kjelvi

Douglas back and determined to banish final nightmare

IF captain Jonathan Douglas needs any more inspiration as Leeds look to earn a trip to Wembley next week, it comes with the memory of two years ago.
The Republic of International was in the United side well beaten by Watford in the Championship final at the Millennium Stadium and he cut a forlorn figure on the way home.
Travelling back to the Manchester area with team-mate David Healy, Douglas stopped off at a service station about 30 miles outside Cardiff and the pair looked like the weight of the world was resting on their shoulders.
Healy has since left Elland Road for the Premier League and Fulham, but Douglas remains and has a chance to banish those play-off memories forever.
He said: "That trip home from Cardiff was one I did not enjoy. I had to go separately from the team because I was getting married (soon after), which was another weight on my shoulders!
"A play-off final was a good game to be involved in but very disappointing to lose. Getting married probably took it (defeat) off my mind, without it then I would have been cut-up.
"It was a difficult time for everyone. We knew a lot of those players would be leaving and changes would be made."

http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/leeds/Douglas-back-and-determined-to.4070631.jp

Per-Stian

Becks is back!

TOP scorer Jermaine Beckford will train with the Leeds United squad today and tomorrow in a bid to prove his fitness for Monday's play-off semi-final clash with Carlisle.

The 20-goal frontman has been out of action with an ankle injury, but is hopeful of returning for the first leg of the Coca-Cola League One play-off at Elland Road (7.45pm).

Whites boss Gary McAllister said the striker trained for the first time on Thursday and he is expected to be named in the starting line-up.

Tresor Kandol and Anthony Elding have both deputised for Beckford, playing alongside Dougie Freedman, as Leeds clinched their place in the top six.

Left-back Alan Sheehan is out of the game through suspension, and Bradley Johnson could continue in the role after standing in for last weekend's 2-1 victory over Gillingham.

http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/sport/lufc/news/display.var.2262152.0.beckford_back_for_the_big_one.php

Asbjørn

...kanskje på sin plass med en aldri så liten WARNING...

Crystal Palace kom inn i play off i solid form, første kamp på hjemmebane, lookin' good.
Bristol City bortekamp, råtten form...
Crystal Palace har rimelig fersk  PL-erfaring, Bristol City er nyopprykket...

Og Bristol City vinner altså første kamp 2-1.



Analogen med Leeds' form i det siste er åpenbar...
Play off-kamper lever sitt eget liv.

KAMPEN ER IKKE VUNNET PÃ... FORHÃ...ND!
Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

Snow

QuoteKAMPEN ER IKKE VUNNET PÃ... FORHÃ...ND!

Det er dumt ;)  Men dette vinner Carlisle er kanskje gode men Leeds har noe de også ......  :D

fjellhaugen

Quote from: Wannabe on May 09, 2008, 20:54:36
Ikke lenge igjen nå, og ikke mye edru før KO...

MOT
[/quote

nekter å bli edru før neste helg. redd play off. og ennå mer redd finalen. wtf.... må bare legge inn årene tenker jeg. lagt inn 247 livestream men det ender jo med at jeg står i gangen og lurer på hva som skjer. nervene tåler ikke slikt
januar 3. remember the date. we beat the team that we f@*kin hate. we knocked the scum out the FA cup. we`re super leeds and we`re goin up!!!!!

kjelvi

Ward Says: 'Carlisle Are Up For It'

John Ward believes that Carlisle go into the play-off with Leeds, with the first leg taking place at Elland Road on Monday, with nothing to lose and all to gain: 'The players have seen the queues for the tickets, we know where we stand, it's Leeds, it's live television, it's massive,' Ward told BBC Radio Cumbria. 'It's a really big game for us against a really big club and we go in as the David against Goliath I think.
'In some ways that's not a bad situation to be in ahead of the game.'

Larsen.

Pride of Yorkshire

Larsen.

Kampen sendes på Corner Pub i Egersund...
Pride of Yorkshire