Sho(la)down. Round Three.


… Or how to use statistics to prove any point you want, even if this time it is not ridiculous…

Welcome to the third in what could become a regular feature, where I compare Shola to some of the world’s leading strikers. Except this time, it is not one of the world’s greats…

Round Three.

Who is next:

Y U No

England's Michael Owen.

Oh yes. I went there again!

Step up, England’s Michael Owen.

As this series usually looks at the world’s greatest strikers, and this is clearly an exception (despite his recent Premiership medal, won after the one start he made all season), I have used a different format and scoring system to make it seem more like a Summer Special.

So, here we can compare them side-by-side. No expense spared.

 

England’s Michael Owen Shola Ameobi
It all starts on the training ground. Coming in every day and being one of the lads, working together to create something great. But EMO is not one of the lads, displaying his aloofness by coming to training in a helicopter when at NUFC. 4/10 

Training

The Pendower Pele, however, travels by bike. A man of the people, not only is he environmentally-aware, but by ensuring he turns up already warm, he guarantees that the defenders will face a torrid time in training up against him. 10/10
Number 10 at Liverpool. Number 11 at Real Madrid. Number 10 at Newcastle. Number 7 while nominally at Manchester United. How can he expect to leave a lasting legacy with that kind of indecisive attitude. 4/10 

Squad number

The Big Sho has stuck with number 23 through thick and thin. The number is synonomous with Michael Jordan, and we at NeilCranswick.com (me) feel this is a valid comparison. 10/10
Full marks here. He does it well. But what do you expect. He has to be one of the highest-paid benchwarmers in the world. 10/10

Benchwarming

The Fenham Eusebio has certainly done his share of benchwarming. About 40% of his Premier League appearances have come from the bench. Despite this promise, he has been completely unable to match EMO in this regard recently. 4/10 

I have never seen EMO wear a hat. So I Googled it. Still nothing. Maybe his head never gets cold. Either way, it’s disappointing. 0/10

Wearing of hats

We all know The Benton Baggio loves hats. He has a huge collection, in all the different shapes and colours that God created. 10/10 

EMO recently said that, “as long as my family don’t boo me, I don’t care”. That implies his family have been known to boo him. Disappointing for such a ‘devoted family man’ (I’m sure that was in his brochure somewhere). 6/10

Family

Two of the Heaton Hagi’s brothers have played professional football. In fact, the only reason Newcastle never signed Tomi was that they thought playing three Ameobis in the same team would be so powerful a force it would destroy the space-time continuum. 10/10 

Never let down his country (usually at the expense of his club side), but also never spurred them on to any championships. 8/10

International effect

Despite not playing a full international, his decision to opt for Nigeria inspired the players to beat Argentina 4-1 in a recent friendly. If they can do that without the Lagos Laudrup, the future is bright for the Super Eagles when he does finally stroll onto the pitch. 7/10 

Two, which he “will never forget”. You would think Newcastle fans would remember them more, bearing in mind he didn’t play that many other games for the club. 6/10

Goals v mackems

It is well known that the Rye Hill Ronaldo loves playing against the unwashed. In fact, goals against the mackems have kept him young – I mean, he’s been playing for us for eleven years already, and is showing no signs of slowing down! Or getting slower, which is probably a more accurate description… 10/10 

HA! Next topic. -10/10

Value for Money

The Walker Weah cost the Toon nowt, and we have gotten eleven years from him. That is like dividing by zero. Which everyone knows you can’t do, as the answer is Shola. 20/10 (his ten plus EMO’s ten)
HA! 0/10

Playing through injury

The ultimate sign of commitment to the cause. The Cullercoats Cruyff is always injured. He played a whole season without a hip. The man bleeds black and white. Literally. Probably. 10/10
Widely alleged, and we have to respect that if it is true. 10/10

Support for anti-penguin prostitution charities

Not that we are aware of. The Slatyford Stoichkov probably has bigger fish to fry, so to speak. I bet he spends most of his spare time playing with voodoo dolls of the mackem back four. And who could blame him? 0/10 

So, what are the scores on the doors?

England’s Michael Owen scores 38/100.

The Fenham Eusebio scores 91/100.

So, there you have it folks. A decisive points victory for the legend that is Shola Ameobi. And scientific proof that he is nearly two-and-a-half times the striker the England’s Michael Owen is.

Can't stop me now!

 

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Abstiegskampf


…Or how to let your season go tits up and then try to save it all with a few weeks left…

Escape from the relegation zone with two weeks left?

Since my last update about my club’s season, when Sportfreunde Berlin 06 were lying second last after imploding since Christmas, we have had the following results:

Lost 4-0 away to Prenzlauer Berger Teufel (currently one place above us in 11th)
Won 3-2 at home to Grasshoppers Tegel (currently 9th)
Drew 5-5 at bottom-of-the-league (and now relegated) FC Habay, after leading 5-1 with 20 minutes to play
Lost 2-1 at home to Aufbau Alex (currently 3rd)
Won 3-2 away to FF Friedenau (currently 13th)

Truly a mixed bag, as the cliche goes. A last minute penalty rescued a point for Habay in a game we threw away, but then a last minute winner on Saturday earned us the three points after we threw away a 2-1 lead.

With two games left, the league table is currently:

Sportfreunde Berlin in the last relegation place. Yesterday.

Realistically, Grasshoppers are safe. And Habay are down (thankfully). So that leaves four of us fighting to avoid two relegation places. Friedenau have a game in hand, but are four points behind. We have the worst goal difference (not the replacement goalkeeper’s fault, I heard…) which means we need a point on top of whatever Rudow and/or Prenzlauer Berg get to finish ahead of them.

It looks like it will all go down to the wire, on Berlin Freizeitliga Survival Sunday (which is actually on a Saturday. Hmm. Might have to rethink the marketing strategy for that one). And as the other teams around us kick off later that day, it will involve either a trip to watch their games after ours, or furiously hitting refresh on the league’s website after our match.

What’s at stake?

After the reorganisation of the leagues last season, in which we won one of the two parallel second divisions, we were given a playoff game to win promotion to the new ‘Premier League’ of Berlin free-time football (not in the league pyramid), which we won. This meant we spent this season playing the best teams from the two parallel divisions we were under last season.

And we have done quite well. We have thrown away points, like all football teams, but we have also won games we had no business winning. No one wants to get relegated. We love the challenge, and most of us would rather battle to a close loss than beat teams by 4 or 5 goals, which was often the case last season.

On a more personal note, I have refused to shave since the Habay game until our season is decided either way. This is a constant reminder of the challenge ahead. My neck is getting really itchy, and I don’t mind admitting I look even more strange than usual (my beard is red with white hairs hidden amongst them), but I was happy not to have to shave after the Friedenau game, as anything less than the three points we eventually took would have effectively sent us down.

Naturally, I’ll let you know how we get on. In the meantime, here are the fixtures for the teams battling it out:

FF Friedenau
11/6 at Bosna Hercegovina (1st)
15/6 at Biber Sport Club Spandau (2nd)
18/6 at home to Living Legends (6th)

Sportfreunde Berlin
11/6 at home to Living Legends (6th)
18/6 at home to Medizin Friedrichshain (8th)

Prenzlauer Berger Teufel
9/6 at home to Medizin Friedrichshain (8th)
18/6 at home to Grasshoppers Tegel (9th)

Rudower Kickers
6/6 at home to BSG (5th)
18/6 at home to Biber Sport Club Spandau (2nd)

Game on.

Update: 6/6 – Rudow won against BSG 3-1, moving them up to 27 points. The task got a little bit harder now.

Update 9/6 – Grasshoppers lost at home to Biber Spandau, and Prenzlauer Berg lost at home to Medizin Friedrichshain. This keeps Prenzlauer Berg level with us on points, from a game more, and drags Grasshoppers into the relegation battle. Grasshoppers still have to play Hertha Zehlendorf, and then their last game of the season is against Prenzlauer Berg. It’s getting tight at the bottom of the league.

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Sho(la)down. Round Two.


… Or how to use statistics to prove any point you want, no matter how ridiculous… again…

Welcome to the second in what could become a regular feature, where I compare Shola to some of the world’s leading strikers.

Round Two.

Who is next:

"Shola Ameobi is not better than me. Don't believe this gobshite."

Diego Forlan. Winner of the golden ball (for best player) and joint top scorer at the last World Cup.

Seem a ridiculous comparison?

Not really.

And before you start, I’m not going to take Forlan’s disappointing record this season as evidence against him. As a serious blogger-type sort of fella, I am too professional to base the comparison on just one season.

When comparing two strikers, it is best to compare their records in similar circumstances. I firmly believe Shola would have shone in both the Spanish League and as part of the Uruguayan strikeforce at the World Cup alongside Luis Suarez, but, in order to be fair, and statistically valid, let’s look at how they have both performed in the Premier League.

So, football fans, let’s look at their stats:

Forlan: 23 appearances (plus 40 as a sub)/10 goals
Ameobi: 116 appearances (plus 80 as a sub)/36 goals

So, averaged out (including sub appearances).

Forlan: One goal every 6.3 appearances
Ameobi: One goal every 5.44 appearances.

Obviously, Forlan has the individual honours, but, the question is: Who would you rather have up front for your team in the Premier League? The Pendower Pele, scoring a goal every five games or so for an inconsistent team? Or Cachavacha, struggling to hit a goal every six appearances for Manchester United?

I’m sorry, Diego. The answer is obvious.

Shola wins by TKO.

There’s only one Ameobi.

Well, in fact there is two. So it’s like take one Ameobi, get another one for free. Two Ameobis! The choice is easy.

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