Africa: al ahli - zamalek Asia: Mohun bagan - east bengal Europe: Real madrid - barcelona North america: Club America - Chivas Guadalajara Oceania- Sydney Fc vs Melbourne victory fc South America: boca juniors - river plate
Because of the immediate success being brought up, I wanted to suggest a documentary video about the man that brought probably the best immediate success in both club level and national level. Otto Rehhagel. He is barely mentioned in talks about the best managers of all time, probably because he had not won the Champions League. However between 1996 and 2004, he made outstanding achievements. In 1996 he made Kaiserlauten win the second German division while in 1997 he immediately made them win the Bundesliga. In 2001 he got a mediocre Greek, from losing his first game against Finland 1-5 to qualify for Euro 2004 and win it. There have been quite a few managers that have one "miracle" in their CV. But Otto Rehhagel had two. In Germany he was famous for his attacking football, while everyone knows how Greece plays ever since his second game in charge.
Dusan Tadic at Ajax is a shout. He came in and instantly had a huge impact, becoming one of Europes top goal scorers and assisters in his first year at the club. Leading them to a CL semi final and winning the league + national cup.
@@brandonhey7797 firstly, the Saarland national team lasted from 1950-1956, so six years. Secondly, I wrote it myself "the brief history". I never said it lasted long.
@@brandonhey7797 ah I see, my bad. However, I think there is a lot to talk about. Alfie loves telling us about the historic background of the event (in that case WW2 and the time in which Germany was actually three different countries), he could mention the special history of the 1. FC Saarbrücken playing in the French 2nd Division instead of the Ehrenliga Saarland, their reserve team actually winning the league in 1950/1951 and the game in which the team, after being down 0:2 against Norway after 10 minutes and with one player having to carry one despite a broken leg, still won with 3:2. I think with the right research this can be very interesting.
I finally have an idea for a video! 7 stars who took paycuts to help a smaller cut in the twilights of their careers. Players like Fernando Hierro and Cristoph Dugarry did amazing stuff for low premier league sides, but nowadays players from big clubs just chase the money. If only Messi went to a club that needed him, rather than a club that could pay his absurd salary.
@@user-hf6vy8xc4i Yes, he played as an attacking midfielder and, together with Sandro Mazzola and Mario Corso, was considered as one of the most creative and technically gifted players in Inter Milan's squad at the time. I think he also won a European title with Spain and came really close to the Ballon d'Or title.
As a Newcastle fan, Papiss Cisse is the one I remember the most for us. Came in, scored on his debut, went on to score 13 goals in 14 games in the league to fire us into 5th in the Premier League and into Europe. Not to mention the unbelievable brace he scored against Chelsea. Was awful to see the decline he went on.
What happened to the captain of every Premier League club's best performing season in the FA Youth Cup? Would be interesting as lots of top players in these squads were captained by lads who pretty much disappeared.
Day 3 (belatedly): Idea for a video: Pick a top quality team, Liverpool, Bayern, City etc (starting 11, bench, maybe some key squad players), and imagine if that club folded completely, and had to sell every player (for a competitive price, I'd probably go off transfermarkt for ease). Then do 'where you think each player would end up'. Taking into account transfer fee, wages, rivalries (both with the current club and previous clubs), financial situation of the buying club, level of depth in a position for a buying club, fitting into a system/style of football. In addition to nuanced things like language, previous relationships with managers and players, whether they strike you as money grabbing or just love to play football
Video idea: make the best team made up of only players born from a certain month e.g. January XI. This could either be present players or past and present players, including either a current or past and present manager. You could make this a mini series and maybe even put them in a little cup competition at the end and predict which team would come out on top
Another incredible thing about Cantona moving to Utd is the low fee despite him important to Leeds winning the previous title, and Cantona scoring the first hattrick of the Premiership era. Can you imagine this call somewhere else, like Liverpool and City... 'Pool: Can we have Walker? City: No! City: Can we have Salah for £5m? 'Pool: Ok.
Day 39: "Final Yugoslavia First League Teams: Where are they now?" would be interesting with Red Star winning the 90s CL but then falling from grace as a lot of teams in the region. + maybe how a lot of them changed names or logos as socialism felt off (loosing a red star etc.)
requests : Top 7 Best and Worst Premier League 2nd Seasons Attempt 33 Context : Rate any teams, no need to be newly promoted, re promotion is ok, their 2nd seasons after surviving the first one
One very overlooked player (possibly rightly) is Dwight Yorke. Yorke's time at the pinnacle of the game was short, and he didn't do enough to get into GOAT debates, but he wasn't just a complete striker, he was a really top player! Quite but not lightning fast. 5' 10"... not short, not tall. Strong, almost stalky. Good with his head, could finish with either foot. Good dribbling. He moved like a footballer... he glided ran similarly to Henry or Ronaldinho, but wasn't quite as fast as those two. Kind of something in-between Henry and Tevez in physical attributes and playing style. Anyway. Utd lost everything in 97/98. Yorke signed for a then club record fee of £12.6m, and finished the season as Utd's top scorer with 29 and joint top assists with 23. Most importantly, his signing was the catalyst for Utd being the first English club to win the treble. It had been 31 years since Utd had been champions of Europe. In the group stage he scored away at Bayern, and 2 away to Barça. 2 headers to beat Inter 2-0 in the QF first leg. Scored the equaliser away to Juventus in the 2nd leg of the semi-finals, and if Cole hadn't tapped in for the 3rd, Yorke possibly would've won them a penalty after rounding the keeper but being brought down. 98/99 - Yorke had a top season, individually and collectively!!
7 best uncapped footballers ever 7 players you can see becoming celebrities/pundits in future Every French player signed in Newcastle’s ‘French Revolution’ where are they now?
Can you make a video about 7 better countries to host a wc than Qatar? Here’s my Ivory Coast-Ghana Cameroon-Nigeria- Gabon Netherlands-Denmark-Belgium Egypt-Morocco-Algeria Nz-Australia Czech-Slovakia Austria-Switzerland Argentina-Chile Uk Greece-Italy Columbia-Ecuador-Peru Spain-Portugal
What about Luis Suarez? Came to Barcelona after just being in a bite scandal. Was banned for initial 3 months and then formed the most deadliest striking trio with Messi and Neymar.
Zlatan's impact: 1) Led inter to their 1st title in 17 years 2) Led PSG to their first title in 20 years 3) Led Milan to their first title in 7 years in 2011 4) Right now....
I would argue you missed Samuel Eto'o at Inter Milan in 2009-10. He comes to town in place of Ibra and they win the Treble under The Irish Guy's Crush Jose Mourinho.
Think Haaland overshadows Aguero now. Insane goal scoring record and finally helps City get the Champions League, which happened to be part of their treble
Higuain, Di Maria, Semedo, Dybala, Garay, Heinze, Pique, Arthur, Pjanic, Trincao, Larsson? That is all I can think of at the moment Such a great idea pal
Js people that compare Messi n rondalod to pele and players from that era football is basically two different games due to the tackling laws and how they evolved let alone the pass back rule
After winning the treble themselves, Barça didn't just sell the title of European champions to Inter - they paid the Italian club a world record fee which Eto'o was part of. That is an almighty blunder that Pep doesn't get criticised for - especially considering Ibrahimović had no better success of getting on under Pep! The narrative of the 2009 summer transfer window was Real Madrid breaking the record fee twice, first for Kaká, then £80m for CR7, along with signing Xabi Alonso and Benzema who was the best young striker in the world. Barça paid £69m PLUS Eto'o as part exchange... Eto'o at 28 years old was worth a lot more than £11m!!! That Barça/Inter deal was absolutely the world record fee at the time! People just don't think about it like that for some odd reason.
Day 36 for world XI featuring only players who currently play outside of Europe's big 5 leagues. -This extends to the lower tiers of these leagues as well, so no players from the Championship, Bundesliga 2, Serie B, etc. -Players who are on loan at a club outside of Europe's big 5 from a club in Europe's big 5 are eligible for this XI.