ZLATAN: THE LEARNING CURVE

No doubt about it Ajax have been the surprise team in this season's Champions League. After three years away from Europe's leading club competition, few expected the Dutch champions to reach the quarter-finals at the expense of other, wealthier sides such as Arsenal and Roma.

ZLATAN: THE LEARNING CURVE

GERMANY PREPARE YOURSELF: THE DAWN OF THE BUNDESLIGA

After next year's summer interval, association football in West Germany will be completely reorganised.

GERMANY PREPARE YOURSELF: THE DAWN OF THE BUNDESLIGA
Keir RadnedgeComment

INTER - THE SICK JOKE OF EUROPEAN FOOTBALL

How many more times can the tattered reputation of Internazionale of Milan be called into question before the Italian federation take special powers to investigate in depth this most controversial of European clubs?

Keir RadnedgeComment
INTER - THE SICK JOKE OF EUROPEAN FOOTBALL

THE EXPLOSIVE ARRIVAL OF PIERINO PRATI

Gianni Rivera’s 89th minute winner against Brescia at San Siro on March 31, 1968, secured for AC Milan the ninth Italian championship in their history, for this win gave them a nine-point lead at the top of the league and with only four games left to play they could not be caught.

THE EXPLOSIVE ARRIVAL OF PIERINO PRATI
Eric Batty1 Comment

VERSATILITY FOR SUCCESS: THE FUTURE OF FOOTBALL TACTICS - 1966

Not many years ago "talent" was everything, and given reasonable fitness and the will to win, a talented player could be relied upon to win matches and pull in big crowds.

Eric Batty1 Comment
VERSATILITY FOR SUCCESS: THE FUTURE OF FOOTBALL TACTICS - 1966
Bernard MoserComment

FLÓRIÁN ALBERT: THE FUTURE OF HUNGARY

Since the great Kocsis, Hidegkuti, Puskas team of the nineteen-fifties broke up; Hungarian football fans have been looking to young stars to re-establish Budapest among the Continent's football centres.

Bernard MoserComment
FLÓRIÁN ALBERT: THE FUTURE OF HUNGARY
Gavin HamiltonComment

THE TAKING OF BECKHAM 2003

David Beckham lingered longest on the Old Trafford pitch after Manchester United's  aggregate defeat by Real Madrid in the Champions League quarter-finals.  He will have no doubt been reflecting on his role in a most remarkable European Cup tie. But he may also have been reaching the inevitable conclusion that his lifelong love affair with Manchester United is coming to a close.

Gavin HamiltonComment
THE TAKING OF BECKHAM 2003
Brian GlanvilleComment

BAN THIS UNFAIRNESS TO 'KEEPERS

It seems fairly certain now that FIFA will bring in legislation during 1966 to prohibit charging the goalkeeper. In effect, an unwritten law to this extent is already in force throughout the Continent and South America. Thus, Britain alone will be affected.

Brian GlanvilleComment
BAN THIS UNFAIRNESS TO 'KEEPERS
Leslie PageComment

THE SUMMER IS IMPORTANT: ENGLISH FOOTBALL IN THE SHADOW OF THE 1966 WORLD CUP

Somewhere along the line there had to be a calming influence, for the draw for the World Cup Finals in London early in January threw the domestic soccer season into something of a panic.

Leslie PageComment
THE SUMMER IS IMPORTANT: ENGLISH FOOTBALL IN THE SHADOW OF THE 1966 WORLD CUP
Derick AllsopComment

NO ROOM FOR TIKI TAKA, WE WANT TO KICK MANCHESTER UNITED: BERND, DIEGO AND THE BRUTALITY OF BARCA 84

Barcelona’s Camp Nou is as awesome as ever, its tiers rising endlessly, obliterating a clear, winter's sky. The place exudes prosperity and arrogance, seemingly challenging the world to match its majesty. But linger here, mingle with the customers, listen to the players and watch the football. Then the senses communicate an entirely different story of this enormous club.

Derick AllsopComment
NO ROOM FOR TIKI TAKA, WE WANT TO KICK MANCHESTER UNITED: BERND, DIEGO AND THE BRUTALITY OF BARCA 84
Eric BattyComment

SEARCHING FOR THE YOUNG SOUL REBELS: THE REAL MADRID BLUEPRINT 1965

It has been said by the critics that one man cannot make a team, yet when Argentina-born Alfredo Di Stéfano flew the Atlantic to join Real Madrid in 1953, it marked the beginning of an era in which the blond centre-forward led the club to real greatness.  Champions eight times in eleven seasons, Real became the most famed and most feared club side of all time, and at the height of their power between 1956 and 1960, set up what will probably remain an all-time record by taking the European Cup five times in a row.

Eric BattyComment
SEARCHING FOR THE YOUNG SOUL REBELS: THE REAL MADRID BLUEPRINT 1965
Eric Batty2 Comments

THIS IS SANTOS: 1962

During the last two or three years it has become increasingly apparent that sooner or later Santos would wrest the ‘World's-best’ tag from Real Madrid, and now that it has happened only those who wear blinkers will be surprised.

Eric Batty2 Comments
THIS IS SANTOS: 1962
Paul ParishComment

IF ENGLAND ARE NOT INFERIOR, WHY HAVE WE FAILED?

By now we should be accustomed to English failure. By now we should have learned the lessons from a decade of disappointment. Alas, nothing changes.

Paul ParishComment
IF ENGLAND ARE NOT INFERIOR, WHY HAVE WE FAILED?
Dima IstowComment

FOOTBALL AND THE FUTURE OF THE BLACK SPIDER: IBWM MEETS LEV YASHIN

It’s early 1971 and the footballing world is still coming to terms with the god like genius of current World Champions, Brazil.  As the curtain comes down on an illustrious career, Dima Istow, for World Soccer magazine, catches up with the legendary USSR goalkeeper Lev Yashin to talk football and the future.

Dima IstowComment
FOOTBALL AND THE FUTURE OF THE BLACK SPIDER: IBWM MEETS LEV YASHIN
Arthur RotmilComment

MATTHAUS: THE DESIGNER STAR

Lothar Matthaus, 28, the midfield ace and captain of the West German national side looks back on a splendid year. In his first season with Italy's lnternazionale he won the league championship, and with the national team he is on course for the World Cup finals next year.

Arthur RotmilComment
MATTHAUS: THE DESIGNER STAR
Brian GlanvilleComment

LESSONS IN STYLE FOR WADDLE AND MCCARTHY

When, in the customary steaming heat of summer, the French began their championship in Lyon last July, Chris Waddle and Mick McCarthy, the new arrivals from Britain, found themselves in direct and contrasted opposition.

Brian GlanvilleComment
LESSONS IN STYLE FOR WADDLE AND MCCARTHY
Nick Bidwell1 Comment

BERTI: ITALY'S NEW TARDELLI

If one player symbolises the renaissance of lnternazionale then that young man is Nicola Berti. While the media glare focuses on Giovanni Trapottoni, free-scoring Aldo Serena and imported German stars Lothar Matthaus and Andy Brehme, 22-year-old Berti has captured the hearts of Inter's 'tifosi' with his driving midfield play and ability to score vital goals.  Not only has Berti played an instrumental part in Inter's first 'scudetto' since 1980, he has also laid claim to a permanent spot in an Italian team among the favourites for next year’s World Cup.

Nick Bidwell1 Comment
BERTI: ITALY'S NEW TARDELLI
Keir RadnedgeComment

REAL MADRID: TOSHACK'S GREATEST CHALLENGE

John Toshack, team boss of Real Madrid, is a fully paid-up member of the European managers' society.

Keir RadnedgeComment
REAL MADRID: TOSHACK'S GREATEST CHALLENGE
Leslie VurnonComment

PREJUDICED NURSES, A CUT PRICE TRIP TO NAPLES, SHANKLY AS HANNIBAL: LIVERPOOL IN ROME 1977

The checking-in booths at Terminal 3 at Heathrow Airport seemed unusually crowded on that sunny morning when our intrepid party gathered to 'vene,  vide', and if possible, 'vici' in Rome.

Leslie VurnonComment
PREJUDICED NURSES, A CUT PRICE TRIP TO NAPLES, SHANKLY AS HANNIBAL: LIVERPOOL IN ROME 1977
Derick AllsopComment

THE RISE AND RISE OF MANCHESTER UNITED'S LETHAL YOUNG MARKSMAN

The rise and rise of Mark Hughes is the comic strip story of the 1984-85 European soccer season.

Derick AllsopComment
THE RISE AND RISE OF MANCHESTER UNITED'S LETHAL YOUNG MARKSMAN

HODDLE WINS OVER ROBSON

England went some way to restoring the tarnished reputation of British football with their ultimately successful, if gruelling, tour of Mexico and North America. Starting the three-week tour within hours of the carnage of Brussels and against a backcloth of grief and emotion, the players revealed a profoundly genuine team spirit that was to support them right through the tour to its ritzy finish on Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles.

HODDLE WINS OVER ROBSON

SCIFO - THE NEW KOPA?

Vincenzo Scifo is not, in many ways, so very different from thousands of other 18-year-olds growing up in Belgium. He is fascinated by the sight and sounds of a smart sports car and in his spare time he delights in a game of tennis.

SCIFO - THE NEW KOPA?

JUAN ALBERTO SCHIAFFINO AND THE DEMISE OF URUGUAY

Juan Alberto Schiaffino is now 51, and it's 34 years since he was given the opening to launch a career which brought him fame as the world's most expensive footballer. Today Schiaffino lives on the outskirts of Montevideo, his native city, in a spacious villa out towards the airport.  “I’m not rich," he'll tell you. "But I'm not poor either."

JUAN ALBERTO SCHIAFFINO AND THE DEMISE OF URUGUAY