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goin to it myself. not expecting much.
might get to see a few world class players. |
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a score
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I'm bringing my young lad to it, it's his first Ireland match
He wants to wear a Germany jersey! ![]() |
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Sounds a bright kid,seems to have a keen political brain.
Seriously I hope ye both enjoy it. |
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will bird o donnell be making the short trip from ballymun to the aviva 2nite that is the question?
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Richters you obviously haven't heard the dreadful news,Rocketfingers is leaving the forum this weekend.He threatened this before but we managed to get him back but this time he is not for changing,we will just have to get used to it.
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It will be a miracle to get a point out of this game never mind 3 points. I hope they leave the lady gaga end in the state it was in for the rugby last friday night, it might hinder the Germans and suit our lads better.
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You are one cool dude Gant007,the forum is crushed by the imminent departure and you can post dispassionately about soccer,GANT the iceman.
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where has he announced this wmfb?
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He has stated it on a few threads,sadly he is not for changing,no words of ours will do any good.
I was hoping Never Give Up would come to our aid but he selfishly is standing idly by but then he will be getting personal messages so isint as badly affected. |
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Wildman........Rocketfingers and his crew care very little for the International team and would refer to the supporters as barstool scum and the ole ole brigade.
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Heartless GANT ,we know all about his hatred of the GAA,we know all about his dreaming of being part of a soccer elite but the fact is he is leaving so now is the time to show respect and just sadly bid our farewells.
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You would think on this black day you would put past differences to one side,the forum is in crisis and you seem totally ambivalent.
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Wildmanfromborneo you once again have misquoted me. I said i will leave the forum if Sligo Rovers become champions. I would be going to this only i have a family issue in Belfast so can't go, will only be coming back to Sligo on the Saturday morning.
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I've never said i was leaving for sure Rovers have to win the league Wildman.
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dear oh dear the old im leaving the forum as and from this weekend threat........why wait for the weekend imo.......waiting for the usual apologists to start begging him to stay......lol......cant wait for the tribute fred wmfb.......
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We are all Sligo Rovers supporters now,come on the bit of red.
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Once again people are ignoring what i really said. I want no tribute thread and i certainly don't want made up contributions that i never said. I will then leave the forum undefeated, King.
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once again a thread about an interesting sporting event descends into forumite bollox.....
walofs. |
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Roger i think Ireland might perform better with this 3 man midfield if he goes with that.
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Gave this forum a miss for the past few years due to this sort of rubbish - came back for a look and sad to see it is still full of the same childish behaviour. Shame - used to be a useful forum for debating sport and betting opportunities.
FWIW, Ireland at 9.0 have to be worth a look on Friday night if the crowd decide to back the team and do not see it as an opportunity to begin the end for Trap. |
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WE greatly honoured for your 6th replies over the last 11years kerrybhoy ..and we look forward to your next reply in 2019.
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if you are prepared to leave your patriotism aside, laying ireland at 9/1 looks the safest 11% on your money you are going to get anywhere.
we have the poorest back 4 representing us at international level in years, ward one of the biggest turkeys i have ever seen representing ireland, right up there alongside gary breen and paul mcshane...speaking of whom, he could be a starter. in the cold light of day this is as big a mismatch as chelsea against the danes last week, home venue and past reputation and the odd few mugs backing roi, is the only reason we are not 14/1 or bigger. i said it a few months ago on another thread, with trap at the helm with tactics that are of another era, and no premiership stars, we are a grade 3 outfit at best. i am happy to believe that we are inferior to sweden and austria, and i believe and will back with cash the view that we will get less than 6 points from the 4 games with those two rivals. having watched an under 21 team play putrid stuff at home to turkey recently, i would not be too optimistic for the future. just lay ireland for a sure profit, the germans to win 3-0,3-1,4-0,4-1,5-0 would all be in play as well. |
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I was in P.P last monday K.L. and for 15mins only PP gave odds of 6/4 for the Germans to lead at h/time and f/time MAX e200 ..like you said i left patriotism aside and wagered e50 ..ihave to say i was sry i did;nt put the max on because i was of the same opinion as yourself. PART of me does not feel good about the bet but Patriotism and Gambling dont mix.
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ger -1 is a great bet.5/4 pp
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It should be a winner alright kavvie, as Ireland wont score, but I cant believe Germany are 4/9..........imho Germany should be in the region of 4's or 5's on.Maximum bet certs..........
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the prob is the mentality the germans will have.they might be happy to take a one goal lead and defend it as many of german teams in the past have done.however the current manager is a progressive type of guy and id say he will want at least 2 goals of a cushion to be comfortable.
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Germany are big value, should be 1/5. This is a woeful back 4
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Germen football is very strong at the min.. betfair odds for a 3-0 is around 12.5 and 2-0 will be 7.8 i hope im wrong but i will be surprised if ireland score let alone win.
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germany to win both halves @ 5/2
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The feel-good factor has faded for Germany and even a win in Dublin won’t restore it, writes RAPHAEL HONIGSTEIN
GERMANY LAST dropped points in a tournament qualifier over three years ago (1-1 v Finland, October 2009). They’re ranked second in the world behind Spain, have enough depth in the squad to compensate for a wave of injuries and welcome back key midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger (Bayern Munich), who’ll wear the armband for the suspended Philipp Lahm at the Aviva Stadium. However, Schweinsteiger’s optimistic “sense of anticipation” before the trip to Dublin isn’t shared by many. The immediate past, the Euro 2012 semi-final defeat by Italy in Warsaw, still hurts so much the task at hand is struggling to take centre stage. The Republic of Ireland will meet a Nationalmannschaft stuck in an introspective, brooding mood. A debate about the exact reasons behind Joachim Löw’s most incisive result has raged non-stop for almost four months, and as a consequence, the feel-good factor that has been a mark of the side since the World Cup in South Africa has all but disappeared. “There is friction [in the camp],” admitted general manager Oliver Bierhoff at yesterday’s terse press conference in Frankfurt. Bierhoff was at pains to insist the discord in the ranks was simply a natural by-product of increased competition and as such not negative per se. “We have a strong Bayern bloc, a strong Dortmund bloc, two confident players from Real Madrid (Sami Khedira, Mesut Özil) and the two Londoners (Per Mertesacker, Lukas Podolski),” said the 44-year-old. “We’ve rarely had a situation where so many players felt they should start. We are happy and grateful this is the case. Of course, there will be some who’ll be unhappy about not getting in but the team spirit has been totally sound and I’m sure it will continue to be so.” Not everyone would agree. Schweinsteiger, for starters, pointedly remarked that “the whole bench didn’t jump up [to celebrate a goal] at the Euros”, in an interview with Süddeutsche Zeitung 10 days ago. Bierhoff and Löw since spoke to him but he was unapologetic yesterday. “That’s how I saw it, and that’s my opinion,” he said. A lack of harmony had also been evident in the aftermath of a nervy 2-1 away win against Austria a month ago. Dortmund centre back Mats Hummels publicly criticised Lahm’s positioning in the run-up to the hosts’ goal and a few days before, Khedira had disagreed with the Bayern full back about the team’s targets for the World Cup. “We want to win it,” Lahm had said, but the Madrid midfielder, in contrast, said “talking about the World Cup final was all wrong”. On the pitch, it’ll be fascinating to see whether Schweinsteiger and Khedira can regain their understanding in front of a weakened back four. Schweinsteiger played through the pain barrier last season and arrived physically as well as mentally shattered in Poland after his traumatic penalty miss in the Champions League final against Chelsea. Khedira, his understudy in South Africa, became the more dominant part of the duo during the tournament. When Schweinsteiger was rested for the first three internationals of the new season, Khedira continued to shape Germany’s game with confident box-to-box runs. But the defence lacked protection as a result. Now the Bayern man is back, Löw is faced with his very own version of the Lampard-Gerrard conundrum: can both curb their attacking instincts – as well as their egos – to bring cohesion back to the German centre? Löw’s team were certainly far too open in the 3-1 defeat by Argentina in August and in Austria. Even the Faroes were allowed a few decent chances before Germany secured a comfortable 3-0 win. Schweinsteiger obviously feels a return to more togetherness is needed for Germany to reach Spain’s level and finally win a title. “We need to flip the switch,” he demanded. The perils of increased competition aside, Löw’s standing has also suffered. His mistakes of sticking with the patently unfit Schweinsteiger and over-accommodating the Italians with a narrow midfield that stifled Germany’s game were major contributing factors to the Euro exit. Stuttgarter Zeitung noticed the coach had lost his aura of “infallibility”, while Tagesspiegel diagnosed a strange “mix of over-confidence and cowardice”. The 52-year-old has refused to admit any personal shortcomings – “we will continue on our path,” he said in an angry state of the football nation type address in August – but there’s no doubt the honeymoon period he has enjoyed since taking over from Jürgen Klinsmann in 2006 has come to an abrupt end. Bild’s attack on him was especially harsh: under the headline “the wreckoning”, Germany’s biggest broadsheet slammed him for creating an environment of too much cosiness in the camp, for abolishing a strict hierarchy in the team and for tolerating that players from an immigrant background like Khedira and Özil were not singing the national anthem. Bayern president Uli Hoeness has unhelpfully picked up on some of these populist complaints, too. “There has to be more pressure on the players from Löw,” demanded the 60-year-old in an interview with Der Spiegel. “There has to be an end to the flat hierarchies,” he added, before bemoaning the fact Löw and his staff seemed more concerned about flying out the right kind of “table tennis table” to the team hotel than footballing matters. “I don’t care anymore about other people talking about these things,” Löw replied coolly in Frankfurt. “As long as the players focus on the job at hand with the same intensity as they have done before, we will continue to do things in the same manner.” Bierhoff was more measured in his response. “Uli Hoeness means well but we shouldn’t judge each other’s work in public,” said the former AC Milan striker. He was less understanding of Hoeness’s attack on Miroslav Klose. The Lazio striker is only four strikes short of Gerd Müller’s national record of 68 goals but the Bayern boss thinks his achievements need to be put into perspective. “Müller scored against England, France and Italy,” said Hoeness, “whereas Klose scored at least 80 per cent of his goals against Liechtenstein [and other minnows]”. “I’m disappointed about these comments,” replied Bierhoff. “Klose has been of great service to this team. We should all pull together instead of fostering unnecessary disquiet.” Löw must hope the 34-year-old will find Hoeness’s barbed remarks motivational as there’s no other recognised striker in the squad. Bayern’s Mario Gomez has missed the entire season with an ankle injury. The Bundestrainer has plenty of options in attacking midfield, with Thomas Müller, Toni Kroos (both Bayern), Mario Götze, Marco Reus (both Dortmund), Özil and Podolski vying for three places. But there’s concern about the lack of a suitable replacement for Lahm. Lars Bender (Leverkusen), who played so well as a makeshift right back against Greece, is injured, so the less mobile Jérôme Boateng (Bayern) will probably come in, while Dortmund’s Marcel Schmelzer will get another chance to prove his international credentials on the left. Mertesacker is expected to replace the injured Hummels (bruised foot) in the heart of the defence. Recalling the hard-fought 1-0 win in Stuttgart from 2006 and 0-0 draw in Dublin from 2007, Bierhoff warned about “a hot atmosphere” and “an important” test for his side against the Irish. Löw, too, knows that more than three points are at stake. |
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I think with these injuries the Irish side that plays, could be ok and a bit of value on the handicaps. I expect Ireland to drift to a very backable price at some stage +1.5. They only beat an Austrian who are ranked 14 places below us on the rankings i use 2-1 in their last game. Ok we're probably ranked a little high but still if we're able to hang onto the ball a bit more in midfield, presume were playing 3 in the centre of midfield it will act as a defensive mechanism and protect the defense. Saying that best maybe to see the teams and it maybe best just to totally skip betting on this one. I could well have egg on my face but i think there is zero value betting the Germans imo.
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Germany are probably maybe even a bit short now at the general 4/9 imo.Dont think the Germans would regard a draw as a disaster and i think they're slightly over hyped anyway as shown by their display against Italy.
People saying they should be 1/4 or 1/5 must be on drugs.Possibly only Spain would deserve such a price in Dublin and they are a few levels above Germany. Will be laying the Germans at anything sub 1.44 on here. |
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sub 1.44 you sound like a total pro. well done.
if germany score early (ireland probably wont score) it could be an unfortunate score. moral is shaky, the press want trap and co out and the players know this. top players retired etc, heads could go down easily. |
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thanks irish guy means a lot coming from you.
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what do you mean by that?
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will i have to explain it to you ?
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