-
53
2
MayFunniest moment of the match: Van Bommel’s foul on Brienza.
I am laughing so harddddddddddddd XDDD
oh my god lol mark van bommel. the only one who smiles when he knows he’s getting a card.
ahahahahahahahaha and at the end Brienza‘s like “WHAT THE F– oh it’s Mark.”
Mark van Yellow Card strikes again.
-
1
23
AprGhost Goals and The Preetz Effect.
Goal line technology
And so it returns. The much maligned debate over goal line technology. The bile riven indignation of an entire week’s headlines as sport proves once again that, despite the best efforts of EA Games, is not as simple as a computer program.
Juan Mata’s goal to put Chelsea 2-0 up in the FA Cup semi-final against Tottenham should perhaps have not been counted. The ball, from several angles, appeared not to have crossed the line. Even that famous bastion of sly dishonesty John Terry admitted that the ball did not cross the line (though, for all such gallantry, he notably failed to tell the referee that at the crucial moment.)
-
30
19
Apr
Just a heads up for those of you living in Germany: The Ferrero products are once again featuring stickers of the mannschaft. The stickers are included in duplo, hanuta and Kinder-Riegel. There’s also a webshop where you can order missing stickers.
Do I have German friends who love me enough to send me a 12-er package of Hanuta? I can paypal you.
(Source: nostarstonight)
-
3
25
Mar
WE WON YOU GUYS. I can’t remember how this feels. We’re still in 17th place, but if we keep not sucking like this, we might not get relegated.
(Source: herthabsc1892)
-
4
4
MarA WIN. WE WON. I’D FORGOTTEN HOW THAT FELT.
(Source: herthabsc1892)
-
904
4
Mar(via nieme18)
-
66
24
FebOn Thomas Müller
I’ve always said Thomas Müller looks like a newborn colt: all awkward elbows and knees. And he looks so happy out on the pitch, like he’s tickled pink to be out there playing football.
There are a lot of reasons to be happy about Germany right now. Comparatively, things are really great there. More importantly, they have an excellent soccer team. As James Tyler wrote at The Classical, they’re a really good soccer team because they’ve decided to stop being German.
As James writes:
“Classic” Germany—the one defined by square-jawed, stoic demigods like Lothar Matthaus, Berti Vogts, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Michael Ballack, and the downright frightening Oliver Kahn—is dead, and pleasingly so. The spontaneous combustion of the new class—Mesut Ozil, Thomas Mueller, and Lukas Podolski swarming in support of Miroslav Klose in the penalty area, with Mario Gotze unleashing his jet-heeled brilliance coming off the bench—seems wholly un-German compared to the controlled explosions of Ballack and Co. But when viewed in context of the system that created them, it feels natural. Compared to the natural ease of Spanish soccer or the fiery genetics of Brazil, the Germans solved their soccer stagnation at the turn of the 21st century with a typically left-brained Teutonic approach to a right-brain problem, the end result being a team drilled in the art of individualism. Where German teams used to collapse so predictably if their Plan A faltered, they’re now so well schooled in self-expression from an early age that their in-game possibilities seem limitless.
But despite the attempt to cast off the characteristics that defined the Germany of the past, the German National Soccer Team is still the German National Soccer Team. And that’s where Thomas Müller comes in.
-
3
21
JanLiebe Hertha
Ick liebe dir, aber du musst bestimmt besseren Fußball spielen. Was für Scheiße is’n das?
LG,
deine Fans
-
109
7
Jan -
652
13
Dec
-
Here is a Science fair project presented by a girl in a...
-
-
-
So there was this meme in which you took a screenshot out of a cartoon/animation and drew it again...
