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Heart Of Midlothian Football Club

UEFA Cup Draw Live

Friday, August 25th, 2006

We’ll be covering the draw as it happens for the UEFA Cup first round as British clubs Tottenham Hotpsur, Newcastle United, West Ham United, Blackburn Rovers, Derry City Hearts and Rangers wait to see who they’ll face.

The first-round matches are played over two legs on 14th and 28th September.

A total of 40 teams will then advance to the group stages, where pools of five teams vie to reach the knockout stages.

The winner, runner-up and third-placed team from each group advance to the last 32 where they are joined by eight clubs knocked out of the Champions League.

The competition will culminate in the final at Hampden Park on the 16th May.

UEFA Cup First round 2006/2007 Draw:

Levadia Tallinn v NEWCASTLE
Molde FK v RANGERS
DERRY CITY v Paris St Germain
Sparta Prague v HEARTS
FC Salzburg v BLACKBURN
WEST HAM v Palermo
Slavia Prague v TOTTENHAM

UEFA Cup Draw 2006/2007

Friday, August 25th, 2006

Monaco hosts today’s UEFA Cup First Round draw as 80 teams prepare themselves for their ticket to a European adventure. While the glitz and glamour of yesterday’s Champion’s League draw mightn’t be quite as evident, the UEFA Cup still holds some of it’s old glory and there is a strong selection of Europe’s big footballing names, both seeded and unseeded, with which to make for an interesting tournament this season.

These 80 sides will play each other home and away before the winners progress to the group stages where eight groups of five teams will play each other once.

For today’s draw the sides have been split into seeded and unseeded groups and then further divided into eight pools of ten teams, five seeded, five unseeded from which the draws will be made. Seeded teams can only play unseeded teams from within their own group or pool. Confused yet? Have a look down the following tables to see which of the British clubs involved (Newcastle United, Rangers, West Ham United, Tottenham Hotspur, Hearts, Blackburn Rovers and Derry City) have the toughest possible draw.

We’ll be covering the draw live here at State of the Game from 1200 BST.
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Linfield and Derry City Meet In Their First Competitive Football Match In Over Thirty Years

Monday, February 20th, 2006

It may seem strange that two sides that both hail from the same country have not played each other in a competitive game in such a long period of time. In 1973 Derry City were forced to leave the Northern Irish League because of safety concerns. It was not until 1987 that Derry City decided a return to competitive football would be a wise decision and instead of returning to the Irish League they became part of the League of Ireland.

Linfield on the other hand remain one of Northern Ireland?s most successful club sides but they have yet to establish themselves in European competitions. In 2005 the media in the south and the north predicted that talks had been on going between officials from each association and it had been leaked to the press that an All Ireland competition would be set up. The two associations had come to an agreement to stage the first ever All Ireland cup which would involved three of the best Eircom League sides and three of the top club sides from the Northern Irish premier division. The two leagues had grown apart in more ways than one and FAI had taken the decision to move the Eircom League to the summer time to deal with trouble with pitches and player fatigue and more importantly hopes of financial gains.

The Premier Division in Northern Ireland remained in its current slot of August to May. With the change of the footballing season to the summer time some Eircom league sides took the opportunity to move to full time status whilst their northern counterparts remained on part time status. It was seen as a controversial decision at the time and many wondered would the change to summer football really make much difference. The answer was YES! In the first season Eircom league clubs found that the change to summer football was a huge success. Many clubs changed their matches to Friday nights and crowds were flocking back to watch football.

Was the reason for the increasing in gate receipts down to the change to Friday night football or was it simply down to summer football and at a time when there is no major football on television? The change of season has also affected the players and Brian Kerr selected Bohemians striker Glen Crowe for several of his international squads and further down the age groups Eircom League players were making their presence felt.

For years, league players had been used to slogging through the winter season in harsh conditions more rewarding to endurance and strength than skill. With the change to the summer footballing season teams have been forced to adapt to a style of football that comes with playing during the summer months. After all, most people who attend soccer matches want to see attractive ?sexy football?. Teams no longer will want to hoof the ball forward anymore, they will want to retain possession and play football that everyone will enjoy.
On the other hand the Irish Football Association have been left puzzled as to how to revamp football in the north and get on the same playing field as their southern counterparts. Dwindling gate receipts and poor attendances have left the local game in disarray and despite a proposed injection of investment into Northern Irish soccer, the association is still left wondering what should be done to save football in Northern Ireland. It could be said that the failure of the local game had a detrimental effect on the national side and they went through an agonizing 1298 minutes without scoring a goal whilst their southern counterparts were enjoying much success in the World Cup in 2002.

Some critics of the Premier Division in Northern Ireland argue that the reason for the poor attendances and lack of income into the game was due to the fact that the IFA had ignored the idea of moving to a summer season and expanding the main league to sixteen sides. The league in the Republic left the size of their league to ten teams. Was it the question of quality not quantity? The failure of the league to develop at home has had affects on the top sides progressing in Europe and it was an annual occurrence for the Irish leagues top sides to be knocked out of European by sides from Lithuania and Estonia. In 2004 Shelbourne the Eircom League champions held Deportivo La Coruna of Spain to a 0-0 draw at Lansdowne Road, sure testimony as to how the league down south had developed and progressed. In that same year Linfield fell at the first hurdle and lost on both legs to HJK Helsinki of Finland.

In the past few years, however, the Irish League has shown their southern counterparts that they have upped the anti and Glentoran have defeated AC Allianssi to progress to the next round of the UEFA Cup. The Setanta All Ireland Cup will provide the top sides from each nation a chance to show that Irish football is on the rise once more and last year the North overpowered the South courtesy of a 2-0 final victory for Linfield over Shelbourne at Tolka Park. This was seen as a huge achievement and it was some sort of consolation for Linfield having already thrown away the Irish League title to Glentoran. In 2006, will the South get revenge over their Northern rivals or will the North regain its crown?. We will just have to sit back and watch as events unfold in the next couple of months.


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