Balotelli shoulders no blame, it was a tale of two Cities
Manchester City continued their march in the Premier League with a 5-1 decimation of the lads from Norfolk.
Manchester City continued their march in the Premier League with a 5-1 decimation of the lads from Norfolk.
When you use a search engine on the world wide web and type in ‘soccer hooligans’ unsurprisingly the sites that instantly pop up are the ones dealing with the British aspect, referring to hooliganism as ‘The English Disease’. But is it solely an English problem? Events in Napoli last night and on other European nights would beg to differ.
When the stars make you drool just like a pasta fazool, That’s Man City!
The Major League Soccer season came to a close on Sunday night in the showpiece of the season, the MLS Final between the LA Galaxy and the Houston Dynamo. With talk before the kickoff of this potentially being David Beckhams last game in the MLS and the high profile stars in the Galaxy side of Donovan and Keane it was easy to forget that there was another team playing.
Manchester City returned to Premiership action Saturday after having the last couple of weeks off thanks to the International breaks.
It is widely expressed by professional players, managers as well as the man on the street that the English Premier League is by far the most exciting League in the world, where on their day any team can beat any other team. North of the border though and you will be introduced to the complete opposite.
Manchester City return to Premiership action on Saturday with the visit of the Premierships other undefeated team, Newcastle United.
It was the 14th of November 1959 and Manchester City played Chelsea in a Division One both struggled in back then.