Spartanforlife4
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Minnesota blew it against América. América gets a red in the 62nd, Minnesota takes a 3-2 lead in the 65th and then give up the tying goal in the 90th. Go on to lose in penalties 8-7.
Unfortunate for Minnesota trying to advance too.Minnesota blew it against América. América gets a red in the 62nd, Minnesota takes a 3-2 lead in the 65th and then give up the tying goal in the 90th. Go on to lose in penalties 8-7.
It’s hard to say. Overall (all 18 Liga MX teams vs all 30 MLS teams), yeah MLS is stronger but in the top tier Liga MX is still better (as CONCACAF Champions Cup results show).
Poch: "We need to give MLS the value, because I think competing there, I think players can show that they can perform in the national team. I think it's not necessary to move from MLS to Europe. Because sometimes MLS, under my assessment, maybe is more competitive than some leagues in Europe..."
"...We have some players competing in different leagues [that] maybe are not so competitive, or in every single week compete in the same way that you compete in MLS every single week... 'Oh, if you play in a team in Europe, you are above the players that are in MLS.' That is not the way to assess"
Thanks. Good explanation.It’s hard to say. Overall (all 18 Liga MX teams vs all 30 MLS teams), yeah MLS is stronger but in the top tier Liga MX is still better (as CONCACAF Champions Cup results show).
As for ranking leagues worldwide, again it’s hard to say. The quality of a lot of leagues can vary wildly from top to bottom, France’s Ligue 1 is a prime example: PSG is the best team in the world but Angers and La Havre would likely struggle against teams from Brazil or Mexico. I think league rankings like that tend to overrate leagues based upon their top teams, the Dutch, Portuguese and Belgian leagues especially, and underrate leagues that are far more competitive like Brazil.
You’re welcome. The sad part is, that’s actually a controversial take in a lot of places.Thanks. Good explanation.
Buh-wah-fucking-ha.
Manchester United sank to a new low under Ruben Amorim by getting eliminated by fourth-tier Grimsby Town after a marathon penalty shootout in the second round of the Carabao Cup on Wednesday.
Grimsby won a dramatic shootout 12-11 at the 9,000-capacity Blundell Park on England’s east coast, with Bryan Mbeumo missing the decisive penalty in the competition formerly known as the English League Cup. United needed late goals by Mbeumo and Harry Maguire just to salvage a 2-2 draw in regulation, having trailed 2-0 at halftime.
It will go down as one of the most embarrassing results in United’s history and leaves the team winless in three games so far this campaign, after a woeful 15th-place finish in the Premier League last season.