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All Stars Teams & Era teams request
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Cristiano_Naniano
Joined: Thu Jun 27, 2013 2:51 pm Posts: 589
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pesman wrote: Ok guys (girls???) post here your requests for classic teams, not anymore in classic section threads....
Also don't request 100 teams from once. Well, as Pesman posted the Players request, I'll post this topic for the same but with teams INDEXEra Teams Europe 00's | Done Deportivo La Coruña 1999-2004 "El Eurodepor" | Done Algeria 1982-1986 | In Progress Queen's Park Rangers 1975-1976 | Done
All Stars El Clásico All Stars | Done Venezuela All-Stars | Done Russia All Stars | Done Football League/English Top League All Stars | Done Arminia Bielefeld All Stars | Done Sevilla FC All Stars | Done Brasileirão All Stars | In progress Argentinian Primera División All Stars | In progress Primeira Liga All-Stars | In Progress FIFA World Cup All-Stars | In Progress
Last edited by Cristiano_Naniano on Thu Nov 06, 2014 3:50 pm, edited 19 times in total.
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Mon Dec 02, 2013 9:17 pm |
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Nacho1605
Joined: Fri Apr 02, 2021 11:21 pm Posts: 324 Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
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gurkenjoe93 wrote: The team's style was acting like brainless jerks then? I mean, destroying the glasses of opponents (Pachamé) or purposely breaking an opponent's jaw (Aguirre Sanchez) seems like total normal stuff to me - at least for psychopaths. Kind of yes. That team had rough and harsh players, in fact by 1969 the different Argentine graphic media were beginning to consider them "anti-football", and not precisely because of these violent actions. They were not very technically gifted so they had to resort to a much more physical game than other teams. However, if you look at the biographies of the players you would agree that this just happened when they played for Estudiantes. Of course, these are generalities; Ramón Aguirre Suárez, for example, WAS a violent player, regardless of his time at Estudiantes, Granada, or Salamanca. Carlos Pachamé, on the other hand, was a tough player, but not at all violent. Zubeldía, Bilardo, Togneri, Malbernat, and Verón were the calmest of that team. gurkenjoe93 wrote: And while those retards didn't end up in a lunatic hospital, they still were locked up in their own president.. And yes, Poletti, Aguirre Suárez, and Manera were arrested by the government after the Intercontinental final, but so was Milan's Néstor Combín. The president at that time, Carlos Onganía, was de facto president of a military coup; he was a dictator. The country's context at that time did not cooperate either; The popular mobilizations that had followed the "Cordobazo" had increased social tension amid political and economic unrest: the arrest of the players was only to demonstrate that whoever committed excesses would inevitably end up arrested. Their detention was simply a political trick that had nothing to do with the disaster that was that night on the field, if they had won the game they wouldn't have been sent to jail. There is a quote by Carlos Bilardo that sums up this incident pretty well: "They (the government) told us it was either victory or Devoto.", Devoto being the name of the prison the Estudiantes' players and Combín stayed for a month. If you want violent, or at least very harsh players from our football, I can suggest: Ramón AGUIRRE SUÁREZ Eduardo BENNETT José Luis Félix CHILAVERT Blas Armando GIUNTA Enrique HRABINA Julio MONTERO CASTILLO Rubén NAVARRO Tomás ROLAN Óscar RUGGERI Gastón SESSA Roberto TROTTA Flavio ZANDONÁ
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Mon Jan 22, 2024 12:05 am |
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StuartBannigan
Joined: Fri Sep 15, 2017 8:43 pm Posts: 1628
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If you're lacking in forwards, British football has always had lots of forwards known for their brutality: John Fashanu, Billy Whitehurst, Mick Harford, Duncan Ferguson, Eric Cantona, Kevin Davies, Joe Jordan, probably many more. For a long time, the striker in England was usually a battering ram that just elbows defenders in the face. Even guys like Shearer and Mark Hughes were known for their aggressive fouls and elbowing people.
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Mon Jan 22, 2024 4:16 am |
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Olympique do Marcelo
Joined: Fri Jan 19, 2024 11:53 pm Posts: 4 Location: Brazil
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Linfield All-Stars Independiente Del Valle All-Stars Cienciano All-Stars Criciúma All-Stars Auckland City All-Stars
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Wed Jan 24, 2024 12:24 pm |
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MH Styles
Joined: Sun Dec 17, 2023 4:07 pm Posts: 6
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Manchester City 2022/23 (treble winners).
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Wed Jan 24, 2024 4:08 pm |
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Interista93
Joined: Tue Jun 13, 2017 4:28 am Posts: 4476
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Olympique do Marcelo wrote: Linfield All-Stars Independiente Del Valle All-Stars Cienciano All-Stars Criciúma All-Stars Auckland City All-Stars The first four are in my list of teams to post. I can add Auckland City.
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Wed Jan 24, 2024 5:27 pm |
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gurkenjoe93
Joined: Wed Jun 26, 2013 9:38 pm Posts: 2524
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@Kolektivitet: Any chance of FC Prishtina All Stars? And considering that the core of this team will likely be their golden generation from the 80s (Vokri, Shala, Cana, Batrovic, Muriqi, etc), an FC Prishtina 1981-1988 era team would be a good idea as well
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Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:24 pm |
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Kolektivitet
Joined: Fri Jun 26, 2020 10:08 am Posts: 473
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gurkenjoe93 wrote: @Kolektivitet: Any chance of FC Prishtina All Stars? And considering that the core of this team will likely be their golden generation from the 80s (Vokri, Shala, Cana, Batrovic, Muriqi, etc), an FC Prishtina 1981-1988 era team would be a good idea as well I've actually received a request from one of the fans to create FC Prishtina 83/84 squad, so I will definitely look into it I did some search a while ago for any reliable sources and similar stuff, and found out about the 81-89 golden generation but more likely it seems like 83-88 (it's all around the 81-88 years t seems) I've created an All Stars unofficial list from the sources, but when I dig deeper into the 80s, who knows what other info I'll find. So it's on my list in the coming weeks
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Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:59 pm |
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StuartBannigan
Joined: Fri Sep 15, 2017 8:43 pm Posts: 1628
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Adana Demirspor All Stars
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Sun May 12, 2024 6:58 am |
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Interista93
Joined: Tue Jun 13, 2017 4:28 am Posts: 4476
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I was thinking of creating an U21 All Star team but it's hard to choose the criteria. First of all, I'm not considering the old U23. Should I? The most relevant competition at youth level has to be the U20 World Cup, probably followed by the U21 European Cup and maybe the U20 Copa América. So, would it be fair to give priority to players who won these tournaments? I'm not taking into account very young players who won the main World Cup, for example, because I already created a "Youngest World Cup Winners" team. It's important to mention though that both World Cup and European Cup had the first edition in the late 1970s. Even the Copa América didn't exist yet before the 1950s, but I don't know when it started to feature great players: I saw names like Toninho Cerezo in the 1970s, Carlos Aguilera, Francescoli and Romário in the 1980s, Cavani in the 2000s, Neymar and Lautaro Martínez in the 2010s. Then appearances and goals with the U21 of the major national teams should have some weight, I guess? But even in this case the U21 teams, or most of them, have been existing for only 50-60 years. And a lot of players were already "world class" in their youth in the early years of football: the 1910s Pro Vercelli is the first example that comes to my mind.
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Thu Jul 18, 2024 8:41 pm |
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MH Styles
Joined: Sun Dec 17, 2023 4:07 pm Posts: 6
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Manchester City 2017/18 (Centurions) or 2018/19 (Domestic Quadruple) PSG 2015/16 (Domestic Quadruple)
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Thu Oct 03, 2024 6:18 pm |
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