|
Post by Caz on Apr 13, 2011 11:09:05 GMT 8
penalty kick that araneta will love to try to make sapaw the fil-fors. hehe Good thing that ball went in! On the national league thing, if a city-based team structure will succeed, I'm afraid it would have to start from absolute scratch. No money, no TV, no crowds. Only if or when it gathers a good following do I see companies investing in teams and advertising. And that'll take a long long time. The MBA poured so much money in the start that it folded pretty quickly when the ROI wasn't happening. Another way to go about it is to have the current leagues promote their top teams to a national league. These teams already have decent followings and a reasonable structure and would bring in regional fans in home games. The commercial investment is already in place in the teams too. That being said, maybe this discussion belongs in another thread? I noticed I made no mention of Ian Araneta...
|
|
|
Post by al luz812 on Apr 13, 2011 12:53:06 GMT 8
the nat'l league-ciy based structure was tried 14 yrs ago. but it lasted only one season due to lack of sponsorship. twas called the semi-pro league, teams travel to play home and away legs of the tourney. the gears and kits issued were diadora. ncr- based armed forces teams came out on top. army won with 43 pts, air force and navy were tied for 2nd with 42.
|
|
|
Post by cjeagle on Apr 13, 2011 13:25:12 GMT 8
the nat'l league-ciy based structure was tried 14 yrs ago. but it lasted only one season due to lack of sponsorship. twas called the semi-pro league, teams travel to play home and away legs of the tourney. the gears and kits issued were diadora. ncr- based armed forces teams came out on top. army won with 43 pts, air force and navy were tied for 2nd with 42. Don't you think the situation has changed a bit since 14 years ago or even 6 mos ago? Football has become fashionable and is attracting sponsors and fans like you wouldn't believe. The current Smart club tournament pitting different teams from different regions in a cup format could eventually evolve into a nationwide professional league. The only thing missing is the infrastructure(stadiums) to host the teams in the various cities.
|
|
|
Post by al luz812 on Apr 13, 2011 14:44:46 GMT 8
we really dont need new stadia to start a pro league, there are palaro(dep-ed) designed stadium in every major city nationwide. even school or municipal pitches will do for now. the important thing is to start a sustainable city-based pro league, who knows maybe 10 yrs from now a NOKIA ARENA in cebu and a GOOGLE STADIUM will rise in davao.
|
|
|
Post by vimjonk on Apr 13, 2011 15:16:27 GMT 8
how about adopting the lower levels of Brazilian league system? it is composed of originally independent leagues and even now there are still lots of parallel tournaments throughout Brazil with state championships main prize is an entry into the national league system. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_football_league_system
|
|
|
Post by cjeagle on Apr 13, 2011 22:15:08 GMT 8
|
|
|
Post by vimjonk on Apr 15, 2011 16:40:57 GMT 8
ababo, ano abab ;D 2 nalang ang kaya nyong goal in the under 23 category vs Cebu at sa second half pa. It's a great improvement of the drubbings in the past like 7-2 and 5-0.
|
|
|
Post by akosiabab on Apr 18, 2011 14:11:57 GMT 8
cnu nanalo?score? nice
|
|
|
Post by akosiabab on Apr 18, 2011 14:27:08 GMT 8
MANILA---National team standouts Ian Araneta, Yanti Barsales and Chieffy Caligdong were on target as Air Force Rider drubbed Green Archers Orient Freight, 5-1, yesterday to grab top spot at the start of second-round play in the United Football League at the University of Makati pitch.
Araneta, who scored for the Azkals in the 3-0 rout of Bangladesh in the AFC Challenge Cup in Myanmar last month, struck twice in a two-minute span in the first half after Caligdong opened the scoring for Air Force, which notched its fifth victory to jack up its record to 17 points.
Loyola Meralco earlier held erstwhile leader Global Smartmatic to a 1-1 stalemate, opening the door for Air Force to take the lead for the first time.
It was Global’s third straight draw, dropping last year’s second division champ to second with 15 points after opening with four straight victories.
Loyola moved up to fifth with six points in the league backed by LBC.
Hoping to make a late push for the title, Loyola acquired brothers Mark and Darren Hartmann, as well as Japanese midfielder Tako Yashioka during the transfer window.
And the change immediately paid off as Yoshioka struck the opening goal off a free kick from the right three minutes into the match.
Global equalized two minutes into the second half. Misagh Bahadoran looked to have handled the ball, but no call was made and the Fil-Iranian striker rifled home a shot from outside the box.
Caligdong broke the ice in the 16th minute, getting in behind the Archers’ defense before beating keeper Martin Villaflor. But Green Archers equalized five minutes later through Enrique Romero-Salas.
Araneta’s two quick goals—the first created by Caligdong from the left and the other a follow up on his saved effort—settled the outcome.
Barsales and Aubrey Amatolo completed the rout with a goal each in the second half.
|
|
|
Post by curtlanceunited on Apr 18, 2011 15:07:36 GMT 8
Ian Araneta seems to score Goals for fun in the UFL. Hope he can also do it in the international level.
|
|
|
Post by akosiabab on Apr 18, 2011 16:20:05 GMT 8
still ian is our best striker
|
|
|
Post by scrambler on Apr 18, 2011 21:05:14 GMT 8
Ian Araneta seems to score Goals for fun in the UFL. Hope he can also do it in the international level. I hope so too. UFL games and international tournaments are two different animals. Phil has a good strike rate in international matches, something like 13 goals in 19 games according to someone in this forum. If Ian can match this then we're in business.
|
|
|
Post by sheajane80 on Apr 19, 2011 0:30:57 GMT 8
still ian is our best striker the other forumers will best answer that. to translate what they mean, i can say with certainty na they're saying magaling lang si ian mag score sa local games kesa pag international na. meaning he wilts under pressure. "Phil has a good strike rate in international matches, something like 13 goals in 19 games according to someone in this forum." So the correct one is, Phil so far is our best striker at hindi si ian. Ian Araneta seems to score Goals for fun in the UFL. Hope he can also do it in the international level. I hope so too. UFL games and international tournaments are two different animals. Phil has a good strike rate in international matches, something like 13 goals in 19 games according to someone in this forum. If Ian can match this then we're in business.
|
|
|
Post by beho on Apr 21, 2011 1:46:57 GMT 8
still ian is our best striker the other forumers will best answer that. to translate what they mean, i can say with certainty na they're saying magaling lang si ian mag score sa local games kesa pag international na. meaning he wilts under pressure. "Phil has a good strike rate in international matches, something like 13 goals in 19 games according to someone in this forum." So the correct one is, Phil so far is our best striker at hindi si ian. I hope so too. UFL games and international tournaments are two different animals. Phil has a good strike rate in international matches, something like 13 goals in 19 games according to someone in this forum. If Ian can match this then we're in business. [/quote] ;D i agree. the records speak for itself, phil is the better striker when compared to ian,but i'm still hoping he could bring his scoring spree on the international level ! ;D
|
|
|
Post by jvictor on Apr 21, 2011 15:34:05 GMT 8
Ian should have been sent to Germany instead of Chris CamCam.
He could get proper training in Germany you know!
|
|