FC BARCELONA FAN CLUB

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joi, 28 mai 2009

FC BARCELONA - QUEEN OF EUROPE!



Barça makes history in the Eternal City


The Eternal City has witnessed the triumph of an unforgettable Barça. The victory against Manchester United has brought the Club its third Champions League / European Cup and an historic treble. Barça, Barça, Barça!
We all know about the Barça of the Five Cups and the Dream Team. Now we have the Barça of the treble. Josep Guardiola’s unbelievable first season as head coach has culminated in taking the Champions League away from Manchester United, until now widely considered the best team in the world. The English champions were looking to be the first side to win back-to-back Champions Leagues. But now there is a new champion. Barça. 

The first treble of the 21st century 

Until now, only four teams could boast of having achieved the treble of league, Cup and Champions League / European Cup: Celtic (1967), Ajax (1972), PSV Eindhoven (1988) and Manchester United (1999). Now FC Barcelona has entered that select group, the first team to do so in the ferociously competitive 21st century. The 27th May will now be a day for all Barça fans to celebrate. 

A love of good football 

And what makes victory taste even sweeter is that Barça has risen to the top of European football playing the kind of football that has delighted fans everywhere. The whole of Europe recognizes the Barça style, the natural successor to Johan Cruyff’s Dream Team. 

The current squad of players has played a fundamental role. In these days of chequebook teambuilding, Barça has reached the top with 7 first team players that have come up through the Barça youth ranks. This combination of home-grown talent and foreign stars is again a reflection of the Club’s policy of remaining true to its local roots. 


Guardiola's role 

Guardiola has downplayed the significance of his contribution but there is no doubt that he has changed the face of the team in just one short year. His capacity for leadership, his ability to motivate the players and make them believe in themselves, combined with an extraordinary capacity for work and technical analysis of the game are factors, backed up by results, which have found him a place in the history of FC Barcelona and football in general. 


These are the same virtues we saw a year ago (in charge of Barça B) and which won him the chance to lead the first team. It wasn’t an easy decision but it has turned out to be correct. Now the Barça family can enjoy the fruits of that decision. And how!

marți, 19 mai 2009

Countdown To Rome


Countdown TRome

In order for the first team to get as much rest as possible before the Champions League final, Guardiola has given his players a two-day break. They will not start preparing for the big game on May 27 in Rome until next Wednesday. As the Barça manager had already announced, the players that did not travel to Mallorca will not be playing any further part in the league programme in order for them to be in the optimum condition to play in the Champions League final on May 27, where newly crowned Premiership champions Manchester United will be waiting for them.

Maximum intensity 

Following the game in Mallorca, Josep Guardiola scheduled his next training session for Wednesday at 18.00. There will be training at the same time on Thursday, and then on Friday training will take place in the morning. 

Saturday fiesta at the Camp Nou 

On Saturday, Barça face Osasuna in their second to last league game. The match at the Camp Nou will double as an opportunity to celebrate the club’s 19th league championship title. 

To Rome on Tuesday 

On Sunday and Monday, Josep Guardiola’s side will be fully concentrating on getting ready for the high profile clash with Manchester United. They will train twice in Barcelona before flying off to Italy on Tuesday.


Road To Rome (UCL FINAL)



The
 2009 UEFA Champions League Final will be the 54th final of the UEFA Champions Leaguefootball tournament and the 17th final under the current format. The final is to be played at the 72,698-capacity Stadio Olimpico in Rome, the home of Roma and Lazio, on 27 May 2009, for the fourth time following 19771984 and 1996.
The match will be contested by Barcelona and holders Manchester United, who are the first defending champions to reach the final since Juventus in 1997, and will be looking to be the first team to retain the European Cup since Milan in 1990. This is the fifth year in a row in which the final involves at least one English team.
Manchester United and Barcelona have faced each other nine times in European competitions: three times in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and six times in the UEFA Champions League. Of those nine matches, Manchester United have recorded three wins to Barcelona's two, with the remaining four matches finishing in draws. The only time that the two teams have met in a final came in 1991, when they contested the 1991 Cup Winners' Cup final. The first meeting between the two sides came in the third round of the 1983–84 Cup Winners' Cup; Barcelona won the first leg at the Camp Nou 2–0, but Manchester United won the return leg 3–0 at Old Trafford to reach the semi-finals. That result marked Manchester United's biggest win over Barcelona; Barcelona's biggest win was a 4–0 home victory in the group stage of the 1994–95 Champions League. The most recent meeting between Manchester United and Barcelona came in the semi-finals of the 2007–08 Champions League, when United held Barcelona to a 0–0 draw at the Camp Nou before beating them 1–0 back at Old Trafford.

Team news

Two Barcelona players will miss the final through suspension: right back Daniel Alves, who picked up his third yellow card of the tournament in Barcelona's semi-final second leg against Chelsea on 6 May 2009, and left back Éric Abidal, who was sent off in the same game for a professional foul on Nicolas Anelka. Defender Rafael Márquez will also miss the match after he picked up a knee injury in the first leg of the semi-final, ruling him out for the rest of the season. Carles Puyol, however, will be available for selection after he served a one-match suspension in the semi-final second leg.

Following John O'Shea's winning goal in Manchester United's semi-final first leg victory over Arsenal, United manager Alex Ferguson suggested that the Irish utility player would be guaranteed a place in the starting line-up were United to reach the final. Midfielder Park Ji-Sung has also been promised a place in the team after he missed the 2008 final. Meanwhile, midfielder Darren Fletcher will be forced to miss the final after picking up a red card in the second leg of the semi-final. Although replays suggested that Fletcher played the ball before felling Cesc Fàbregasin the penalty area, the UEFA appeals process only allows for cards to be rescinded in the case of mistaken identity. Despite this, an appeal was submitted by Manchester United on "compassionate" grounds, and the UEFA Control and Disciplinary Body will meet on 11 May to discuss the case. Two players from United's starting eleven in the 2008 final – Owen Hargreaves and Wes Brown – will both miss the match because of long-term injuries that saw them play little part in the 2008–09 Champions League campaign.


duminică, 17 mai 2009

Campions 08/09


Second title in four days

Four days after lifting the King’s Cup, Barcelona have won their 19th League title to complete the double. That means this season has already been a resounding success and there is still the  Champions League final in Rome to come.

There are still three games to go but this Saturday night Barça are now mathematically the League Champions for the 2008/09 season. It’s a reward for good football and attacking play involving keeping possession and moving the ball around fast. Apart from the players, it is also the League for those who took the risky decision to choose Guardiola and for the manager himself, who made clear on his appointment that he was pledged to skill, work and commitment. Those are all features of this Barça double team. 

Record breakers 

With 86 points from 35 games, the team has smashed records. It had 50 points at the halfway stage, has beaten the record for home wins in a row (9), was unbeaten from game 2 to game 24, scores almost three goals per game on average, has the players who so far are the top goal scorer (Eto’o) and the best keeper (Valdés) in the competition, won 2-6 at Bernabeu and beat sides like Valencia and Seville 4-0 at Camp Nou; a side that can do that could only be the champion. Because it is a team that is insatiable, that has always attacked and has never had enough irrespective of what the scoreboard says. 

Bouncing back from the lows 

This Barça has only had its doubts twice this season; firstly when it only managed to pick up one point from its first two League games, and then secondly after consecutive defeats by Espanyol and Atlético Madrid when the League was going into the home straight. On both occasions the players and coach bounced back as only the great sides can by putting together a run of incredible performances. The team is now unbeaten in 17 in three competitions and previously went 22 games without losing in the League. In the process it racked up a 12-point lead over Madrid, who this Saturday lost at Vila-real to hand the Catalans the title on a plate. 

Only Rome to go 

This historic season will bring at least the double , the fifth in the club’s 110-year history. But Barça can still do more and win the treble, something it has never done before and which few teams have had the chance to achieve in Europe. Now with both the Cup and the League in the bag, this third title is just 90 minutes away on 27 May against Manchester United in the Champions League final. Yet whatever happens in Rome, this season will have been a dream come true for nine months.

joi, 14 mai 2009

FC BARCELONA-ATL.BILBAO 4-1 (Spain Cup Final)

THE GOALS


THE CELEBRATION

Spain Cup Win


Three years after Paris, Barça have once again won a major trophy. They came from behind to beat Athletic 4-1 and in doing so, gave a lesson in creative football. Total football is back!
On Wednesday night, Mestalla witnessed FC Barcelona win the first trophy in a potential treble. The first is in the bag, the second is almost won, and the third will be decided in Rome. Nobody said it would be easy, but despite the missing players and the tiredness, Guardiola’s side has stayed faithful to their philosophy, and if they play like this on the night of May 27, then Manchester United will have a very difficult job indeed. 

Guardiola off the mark 

At Mestalla, Barça produced their enviably competitive spirit to eventually win the game comfortably despite conceding an early 9th minute goal. They reacted by sweeping aside Athletic Bilbao to the tune of four goals and in doing so, provided Pep Guardiola with the first trophy of his managerial career. It was a victory for good football. 

Clash of styles 

It was always going to be a fascinating encounter, between the two teams that have won this title the most times. Yet it was also a clash of styles, and two very different ideas of what football is about. Barça’s combination passing game against Athletic Club’s high balls and physical approach. The first half produced what most pundits had expected. 

As early as the 9th minute, Athletic were awarded their first corner following an excellent Pinto save. Yeste sent the ball over to the far post, where Toquero was waiting to beat both Keita and Xavi in the air and head the ball straight into the back of the net. In imitation of Endika’s exploits 25 years previously, the Basques were into an early lead against their Catalan opposition. At this stage of the game, the red and whites were not only a goal to the better, but also seemed to be enjoying the lion’s share of the play. 

Xavi conducts reaction 

Barça were struggling to bring the ball out of defence, with the Basques applying constant pressure to the centre and full backs. But following a disorientated first quarter of an hour, Xavi in particular starting guiding matters back in the right direction. With deft through balls to Eto'o and Bojan, gaps started appearing in the Bilbao defence. In fact, Eto'o could easily have tied the match in the 20th minute following an excellent assist from Xavi, but the Cameroonian dallied just that little bit too long to get a decent shot in. 

Touré becomes Messi 

Barça’s pressure was causing more and more concern to Athletic, whose lines were pushed further and further back. Barça were evidently more composed, and got their reward on the half hour. The unexpected protagonist was Touré, playing today at centre back. In an individual move displaying both skill and strength the Ivorian advanced from midfield and slalomed around three defenders before sending a low, powerful drive straight into the bottom right hand corner of the goal, just beyond the reach of Bilbao stopper Gorka. 

The two goals were a reflection of the respective styles of the two teams, Bilbao scoring from a corner and showing their superiority in the air, while Barça’s was a display of sheer skill and flair. The sides went in at the break in very different moods. Barça’s goal had knocked the wind out of the Basques, while Barça could even have gone in as leaders if Alves’ well-taken long range free kick had hit the target. 

Barça dominate second half 

The game restarted with Barcelona absolutely dominating almost every aspect of the game. This was made clear by the way Messi enjoyed three consecutive chances. Surely there was a goal on the way. And there was, in the 52nd minute, and it had to be Leo Messi who scored it. The Argentinian latched onto a rebound in the area and directed the ball past Gorka to put his side into a well-deserved lead. 

More and more 

Barça had been offering almost all the good football, and as they have always done this season, rather than sit back on their lead, they went straight out in pursuit of more against a team that was losing confidence as every minute went by. 

The third goal was a clear reflection of the way the game was going. Alves regained possession in his own area, played it out to Messi, and the Argentinian flew off on a counter attack. Messi played it through to Bojan, who finished the move off in spectacular style. It had looked like a pass to Eto'o would have been the most simple option, but the young striker from Linyola did what was expected of him and sent ball narrowly below the opposing crossbar. 

Total football 

It was all too much for Caparrós’ side to take, and yet there was more of the same to come. Barça produced their fourth from a dead ball situation – a free kick on the edge of the area that Xavi converted in magnificent fashion. Once again with a shot that squeaked in just inches from the post - Gorka could do nothing to prevent Barça taking a 4-1 lead. 

There were still 25 minutes to play, but with the result already way out of doubt, it was essentially just a matter of running down the clock before the celebrations could begin. It was a scintillating, ambitious display of perfect football from a Barça team that after three dry years, finally has a major title to celebrate.

luni, 11 mai 2009

Fans Celebrating Iniesta Goal against Chelsea (06.05.2009)

Chelsea-Barcelona (semifinal 06.05.2009)




FC Barcelona snatched a remarkable UEFA Champions League semi-final win through Andrés Iniesta's goal three minutes into added time to earn a showdown with Manchester United FC in Rome on 27 May.

Drama
Chelsea FC thought they had done enough to earn a repeat of last season's final as they defended Michael Essien's breathtaking ninth-minute strike with great resilience only for Essien to then err in failing to clear his lines in the dying moments. Lionel Messi squared to Iniesta and he cut his shot skilfully away from Petr Čech to give the 2006 champions – playing with ten men after Eric Abidal's second-half dismissal – victory on away goals and the chance to reclaim their crown, although they will have to do it without the suspended Abidal and Daniel Alves.

Template
The visitors set a template for the entire contest by dominating possession in the early stages with Xavi Hernández prompting away, yet their confidence soon took a dent as Essien conjured a goal totally befitting this illustrious company. The move developed down Chelsea's left with Ashley Cole prominent and Frank Lampard finding a threatening position just outside the penalty area. The midfielder saw his attempted cross brush off Yaya Touré and as the ball ballooned up Essien was alive to the possibilities, taking two steps forward before unleashing a lacerating volley with his left foot that shook the underside of the bar before coming down over the line.

Living dangerously
It was a stunning blow and Chelsea looked to kill the tie off before the Spanish league leaders could recover, with Lampard shooting over and Didier Drogba just beaten to a through ball by the onrushing Víctor Valdés. When Florent Malouda was checked illegally on the edge of the Barcelona box, Drogba went for goal from the free-kick and was frustrated to see his effort fly to safety off the goalkeeper's knee. John Terry headed just wide from the ensuing corner and two minutes later Barcelona were living dangerously again as Drogba, charging on to Lampard's lofted pass, tumbled under Abidal's challenge but referee Tom Henning Øvrebø was unmoved.

Missed opportunities
Would Chelsea come to regret those missed chances? Another followed at the start of the second half as Nicolas Anelka played in Drogba with Barça badly exposed. The Ivorian checked back inside but his attempt to find the net was foiled by the foot of Valdés and Malouda blazed the follow-up into the side-netting. In the main it was the away team who were asking the questions now, with Iniesta becoming more of an influence down the left and Alves, his first-half yellow card having ruled him out of the final, looking to raid down the opposite flank at every opportunity. Messi was not quite firing at his best in the face of constant attention from three or four defenders.

Red card
Drogba was always in the thick of things when Chelsea responded at the other end. He had another shout for a penalty denied and with the Camp Nou side throwing more men forward they were increasingly vulnerable to the counter – when Anelka went to the ground just outside the area it led to Abidal's red card. The Frenchman's dismissal increased the scale of Barcelona's task but they kept pegging away, survived a number of scares at the back, and then took their late, golden chance – Iniesta's 93rd-minute strike their first shot on target of the entire match. It was a crushing blow for Chelsea who were left to reflect on a fourth semi-final defeat in six seasons.

sâmbătă, 9 mai 2009

CAMP NOU














A Five Star Stadium

 

The old Les Corts ground after several expansions had increased its capacity to 60,000.

It was still not big enough to cope with the surging interest in the team though, especially after the arrival of Hungarian superstar Ladislau Kubala and the new Barça stadium was built to replace it.















The stadium was designed by architects Francesc Mitjans Miró and Josep Soteras Mauri, with the collaboration of Lorenzo García Barbón, and it was constructed between 1954 and 1957, using mainly concrete and iron. The whole project cost a staggering 288 million pesetas, which meant the club would spend the following years in heavy debt.  

Although it was originally going to go under the official name of ‘Estadi del FC Barcelona’, it soon came to be popularly known as the 'Camp Nou' (the ‘new ground’), as opposed to the club’s old home at Les Corts. It was not until the 2000/2001 season that, following a mail vote made by the club membership, that the decision was made to make ‘Camp Nou’ the official name of the stadium. Of the 29,102 votes the club received, a total of 19,861 (68.25%) preferred Camp Nou to Estadi del FC Barcelona.
 
The stadium’s maximum height is 48 metres, and it covers a surface area of 55,000 square metres (250 metres long and 220 metres wide). In accordance with UEFA stipulations, the playing area has been downsized to 105 metres x 68 metres. 

With a capacity of 98,787, it is now the biggest stadium in Europe. However, the total capacity has varied over the years owing to different modifications. When it was first opened in 1957, it held 93,053 spectators, which would be increased to 120,000 in 1982 on occasion of the FIFA World Cup. However, the introduction of new regulations outlawing standing areas reduced the stadium’s capacity in the late 1990s to just under 99,000.
 

In the 1998-99 season, UEFA recognised the services and functionalities of the Camp Nou by awarding it five star status. In the whole of Spain there are only three other stadiums that can claim that, the Lluís Companys Olympic Stadium, also in Barcelona, the new Cartuja Olympic Stadium in Seville and the Vicente Calderón, home of Atlético Madrid.
 

Of the different facilities on offer inside the stadium, of particular note are a chapel next to the changing rooms, the presidential box, the VIPs lounge, the press rooms, several television studios, the Sports Medicine Centre, the Operative Control Unit (UCO), the veteran players area, the FC Barcelona club museum, the nursery and the offices of all of the many different club departments.
 


MORE THAN A CLUB

MORE THAN A CLUB

The slogan “more than a club” is open-ended in meaning.It is perhaps this flexibility that makes it so appropriate for defining the complexities of FC Barcelona’s identity, a club that competes in a sporting sense on the field of play, but that also beats, every day, to the rhythm of its people’s concerns.








FC Barcelona is “more than a club” in Catalonia because it is the sports club that most represents the country and is also one of its greatest ambassadors. Also, for different reasons, FC Barcelona is “more than a club” for many people living elsewhere in Spain, who see Barça as a staunch defender of democratic rights and freedom.

Today, football has become a global phenomenon, and support for Barcelona has spread spectacularly around the world. The number of club members from outside of Catalonia and Spain is increasing daily, and the club wants to respond to that show of passion for Barça. This has developed into a need and an obligation. And the best way for the club to do that has been to take a step further and become “more than a club around the world” as well. This Barça that is so concerned for its people needs to be globalised. This caring and humanitarian Barça needs to be globalised. It is a strategic decision that is in keeping with the club’s history and the way that football is continuing to develop on a worldwide basis.

That is why the club has decided to contribute 0.7 per cent of its ordinary income to the FC Barcelona Foundation in order to set up international cooperation programmes for development, supports the UN Millennium Development Goals and has made a commitment to Unicef’s humanitarian aid programs through the donation of one and a half million euros for the next five years and now wears the Unicef logo on its shirts. An agreement that has made Barça unique.

vineri, 8 mai 2009

History



HISTORY OF FC BARCELONA

 

On November 29, 1899, Hans Gamper founded Futbol Club Barcelona, along with eleven other enthusiasts of 'foot-ball', a game that was still largely unknown in this part of the world.

He could never have imagined the magnitude of what that initiative would eventually develop into. Over more than one hundred years of history, FC Barcelona has grown spectacularly in every area and has progressed into something much greater than a mere sports club, turning Barça’s ‘more than a club’ slogan into a reality. 



Barça has become, for millions of people all around the world, a symbol of their identity, and not just in a sporting sense, but also in terms of society, politics and culture. Throughout the most difficult of times, Barça was the standard that represented Catalonia and the Catalan people's desire for freedom, a symbolism that has continued to be closely linked to the idiosyncrasy of the Club and its members to this day. Within the context of Spain, Barça is seen as an open and democratic club. And all around the world, Barça is identified with caring causes, and most especially children through its sponsorship agreement with Unicef. 











For a whole century, FC Barcelona has passed through moments of glory and pain, periods of brilliance and other less successful ones, epic victories and humbling defeats. But all these different moments have helped define the personality of a Club that, due to its peculiar nature, is considered unique in the world. 

 

With over one hundred years of history, there have naturally been many different periods, both in a social and a sporting sense. In the early years (1899-1922) , from the foundation of the club to the construction of Les Corts stadium, Barça was a club that had to distinguish itself from all the other football teams in Barcelona, to the point that it would come to be identified with the city as a whole. Barça soon became the leading club in Catalonia, and also associated itself with the increasingly growing sense of Catalan national identity. 


From Les Corts to the Camp Nou (1922-1957), the club went through contrasting periods. Its membership reached 10,000 for the first time, while football developed into a mass phenomenon and turned professional, and these were the years of such legendary figures as Alcántara and Samitier. But due to material difficulties and the political troubles of the Spanish Civil War and post-war period, the club was forced to overcome several adverse circumstances, including the assassination of president Josep Sunyol in 1936, the very person who had propagated the slogan ‘sport and citizenship'. But the club survived, and a period of social and sporting recovery materialised in the form of the Camp Nou, coinciding with the arrival of the hugely influential Ladislau Kubala. 

From the construction of the Camp Nou to the 75th anniversary (1957-1974) , Barça suffered mediocre results but was consolidated as an entity, with a constantly increasing membership and the slow but steady recovery, in the face of adversity, of its identity. A very clear sensation that was manifested for the first time ever in the words ‘Barça, more than a club’ proclaimed by president Narcís de Carreras. The board presided by Agustí Montal brought a player to Barcelona who would change the history of the club, Johan Cruyff. 

From the 7th anniversary to the European Cup (1974-1992) the club saw the conversion of football clubs to democracy, the start of Josep Lluís Núñez’s long presidency, the extension of the Camp Nou on occasion of the 1982 World Cup and the Cup Winners Cup triumph in Basle (1979), a major success not just in a sporting sense but also in a social one, with an enormous and exemplary expedition of Barça supporters demonstrating to Europe the unity of the Barcelona and Catalan flags. Cruyff returned, this time as coach, and created what would come to be known as the 'Dream Team' (1990-1994), whose crowning glory was the conquest of the European Cup at Wembley (1992), thanks to Koeman’s famous goal. 

 


From Wembley to Paris (1992-2006) was when the club’s most recent developments occurred in between its two greatest achievements, becoming champions of Europe. Josep Lluís Núñez’s long presidency came to and end, and the club displayed its finest potential during the celebrations of the club Centenary. Following on from Joan Gaspart (2000-2003), the June 2003 election brought Joan Laporta into office, and the start of new social expansion, reaching 150,000 members, and more successes on the pitch, including two league titles and the Champions League won in Paris. 

The grandeur of Futbol Club Barcelona is explained, among many other factors, by its impressive honours list. Very few clubs anywhere in the world have won so many titles. The Intercontinental Cup is the only major football trophy that has never made its way into the club museum, where the club's greatest pride and joy remain the two European Cups won at Wembley (1992) and in Paris (2006). 



These were Barça's finest hours on the continental stage, but the Club also has the honour of being the only one to have appeared in every single edition of European club competition since the tournaments were first created back in 1955. Barcelona's many achievements in Europe include being considered 'King of the Cup Winners Cup', having won that title a record four times. 

In addition, FC Barcelona also won three Fairs Cups (the tournament now known as the UEFA Cup) in 1958, 1960 and 1966. In 1971, Barça won that trophy outright in a match played between themselves, as the first ever winners of the competition, and Leeds United, as the last. But Barça not only rules in Europe, but also in Spanish competitions, specifically in the national cup, the Copa del Rey, which they have won 24 times, more than any other club. 


  The Spanish League has traditionally been one of the competitions Barcelona has found the hardest to win, but especially thanks to some wonderful seasons in the 1990s, a decade when six championships were won, and two more championships in the last two years, Fútbol Club Barcelona has now won 18 Spanish League titles.

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