Friday 22 January 2016

The blog is starting to gain readers from all over the world - welcome to In Off The Post!

My blogs are starting to take off a little and I've found interest from different parts of the world. I has readers contact me from Spain, India, Canada and the USA in recent weeks.

It's good to know that people are reading!



As part of the promotion of my blog, I've written a couple of guest post recently. It's something that I enjoy and it helps with the publicity of my blog.

One is in a website called best football apps and I have written about my kids obsession with FIFA16-


Another guest post has appeared on a website that I reviewed a little while ago called Footie Quiz.

My guest post is about the transfer window and it can be found here-


I think that it is always good to spread your wings and every new reader I get is a bonus.

Next up will be a blog about the enigma that is Everton football club, more views on the transfer window and a response to the Deloitte football "rich list."

See you all soon.


Thursday 21 January 2016

If you want in-depth analysis of football but in an easy-to-read format - look no further than Sporticos

In Off The Post likes to look at the beautiful game of football from all angles. This edition introduced you to a fantastic website that gives you the lowdown on the facts and figures involved with football.
What is football if it's not facts and figures? We see stats and analysis attached to every game nowadays, from the World Cup to the FA Cup, from the Premier League to League 2. It's one of the reasons why the game translates so well to fantasy football - you can dissect it, analyse it, put it into graphs and charts and see what comes out of the other side.

If you're like me and you just love to look at the factual and statistical analysis of football then you can't go far wrong with https://sporticos.com

It's perfect if you want to look at the game from all angles (which after all is the In Off The Post motto) but don't really have the time to do all the analysis yourself. Sporticos looks at a match at a time by breaking down the opposing teams statistics. It then represents these stats in easy to understand infographics. It is then easy (and fun) to look at the facts and figures relating to any given match.
It is a positive aspect of the FIFA-isation of football that you can take a brief look at the match-up between two teams and immediately understand how their form and players can and will affect the game that is about to be played. My children love the easy access it gives them to-

  •          Predicted score
  •          Probability of win, lose or draw
  •          Key players
  •          Top scorers
  •          League standings
  •          Goals per game (both scored and conceded)
  •          As well as information about the stadium and the likely weather conditions




As someone who likes the occasional bet, I’m sure that I will use Sporticos to check out the form of the teams involved, as well as some of the statistics, particularly relating to predicted score and probability of result. I like to take a look at patterns when I’m betting and try to make a bet that I’m 80% sure about rather than taking a punt on a long shot. This website gives you the ability to do that because you can just take a look at the matches you may be considering and check out the infographics. You can start to work out the form and probabilities at a glance. Who else makes it this easy? Certainly no other website that I’ve ever seen.

Sporticos prides itself in being “a source for all essential information about football every fan would ever need.” I totally agree with this statement. It covers every league under the sun that you would or could want to know about. From the A-League in Australia to the Ykkonen in Finland; from the Indian Super League to the Major Soccer League in the USA. If there are facts and figures to be gathered and turned into easily-digestible graphics then Sporticos have been there and done the leg work for you.
I just love the way that In Off The Post gives me the opportunity to look at so many different aspects of football , including things that I may have missed through my everyday life and hopefully things that interest you – my readers.


https://sporticos.com is a great website that gives you all the information you may need but it doesn’t feel like you are wading through pages and pages of data. It is information for the information age made easy. There is so much to like about this website. I urge you to take a good look at it.


Tuesday 19 January 2016

Football has it's part to play in fighting global wealth inequality

In light of a story that has appeared in the news today about wealth, I'm looking at leadership on the issue of pay.

Oxfam report that the richest 1% now has as much wealth as the other 99% combined. This is a moral issue that affects every business, and I believe that it is a leadership issue. Every business has the moral obligation to look after the people that work for them. It's not just pay (which a lot of companies need to go much further on) but working conditions, time off, work-life balance and benefits.



At this moment in time, the UK economy is hugely skewed towards business - particularly big business. Media stories regularly show big business not paying their fair share of tax. The minimum wage has served it's purpose and needs to be replaced by the living wage. The taxpayer is subsidising people with a family to work for these companies through working tax credit.

It's time to take a lead.

Football has a part to play in all of this. It's more than just a cliche that millionaire footballers make money off the back of hardworking fans that scrimp and save to be able to attend matches. Just this part week, Sunderland fans have had to travel over 1,500 miles to see their team play away to Arsenal, Swansea and Spurs. From the top of the game, football needs to sort out ticket prices, away travel, fixture planning, value for money, the cost of kits (especially for children) and the price of good and drink at the ground.



Players need to take a long hard look at their role in this. Granted they have a short career and need to look after themselves and their family for the rest of their lives but players' salaries are obscene.

A salary cap is the really obvious answer but it needs to be global to avoid players just moving country. Financial Fair Play is designed to help counter this but it hasn't worked. It's time for FIFA to change president, take a moral stand and actually change the game for the better - and not just for the few.


It is really difficult as someone who loves football to try to explain to my children why a Premier League player gets tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of pounds every week for playing the game they love. I hope that the game doesn't further turn it's back on the loyal fans in search of the television money. It won't keep on rising forever.











Monday 18 January 2016

The pain of queuing for a half-time pie and pint is disappearing. Never miss a 46th minute goal again!

In Off The Post prides itself in looking at football from all angles. I’ve covered Christmas presents, gambling options, football video games and even the best food to go with football. Something I haven’t covered enough of is going to a football match. Today I’m taking a look at something that brings out the joy and the pain in that activity.

I love going to the match, the buzz as you approach the stadium, buying a programme, going through the turnstiles and walking up the steps to view the pitch. It's unrivalled. But there is something that I dread about the whole day. It's one of the perennial downsides of going to the football. It has the potential to spoil the day or make you miss a goal.

It's the half- time queue for the toilets and your food and drink.

I can't do anything for the toilet queue, or at least anything I'd want to do myself. But I've found a solution to the problem of getting your pie, your burger, your pint or your cup of Bovril at half time. It’s called Qjacker. First, you simply choose from one of their venues-

  •         Ricoh Arena, for conference and events
  •          Old Trafford, the Theatre of Dreams, home of Manchester United
  •          The National Exhibition Centre (NEC)
  •          St Mary’s Stadium, home of Southampton FC




You then choose your event, let Qjacker know where you are sitting and then it’s time to order your food. Once you’ve placed your order you can walk past the melee that always ensues at half-time in the match to the front of the Qjacker lane and collect your food. No queuing, no searching for change, no messing around and no missing that vital goal that’s scored in the 46th minute!

The scale of the problem and the solution are highlighted in the following YouTube video-





To get the full experience of Qjacker I followed a fellow fan called John through his experience at St Mary’s Stadium for the Southampton v Crystal Palace, The Emirates FA Cup tie at 3pm on Saturday 9th January 2016.

I met with John the day before as he downloaded the app onto his smartphone, ready to make use of it and place the order. The app downloaded quickly and was intuitive to use – just click through the options and get to the menu.
  • We’re at St Mary’s (one click)
  • We’re going to Saints v Palace (2 clicks)
  • We’re in the Kingsland Stand (3 clicks)
  • And we’re in blocks 27 to 39 (4 clicks)

Only 4 clicks and we’ve got to the menu!

Once you are at the menu page, it’s just like standing in front of the food stand at the ground, but without the queue. You can browse the app in total comfort (lying on your sofa in John’s case) as you put together your food and drink choices. He’s ordering for both of us so we’ve got-
  1. .       An All Steak Pie
  2. .       A Standup Pasty
  3. .       A Saints Ale (I just have to try this!)
  4. .       A Sprite (John is driving)
  5. .       A packet of Skittles
  6. .       A Matchday Magazine

The amount of time it took you to read these 6 bullet points is the amount of time it took to put this order together. The menu is in sections for meal deals, hot food, beers & wines, soft drinks, snacks, hot drinks and the matchday magazine. This means it’s easy to scroll to the area you want. My only (very small) criticism is that I’d like to see hot drinks a little higher up the list when it’s a January FA Cup 3rd round tie and the weather is tipped to be grey and drizzly. Perhaps a menu that changes order in reflection of the venue, the event and the seasons? Aside from the obligatory payment for your order, this is all you need to do pre-match.

Let’s recap this then. John has downloaded a free app, made only 4 clicks, chosen the food and drink we will consume (and a matchday magazine) and then made a quick and secure payment.

The next step is to get to the ground, savour the atmosphere, watch the match, get our food and hope for a Saints win. This is for two reasons – firstly John is a Saints fan and I don’t want to sit in the car with him after a loss; the second is that I’ve always had an irrational dislike for Crystal Palace, heightened by their hiring of Alan Pardew.

We get to the ground nice and early because it’s somewhere I’ve never visited. The days of the old 92 club are effectively gone but it’s always nice to tick another ground off the list. I make that 42 at first count, but it’s just a quick count from memory and I may need to check the facts when I get home. It reminds me in a lot of ways of my club’s ground, the Stadium of Light but with better players.

We decide to collect the food at half-time to get the full experience of walking past what resembles a rugby scrum at the other counters while we amble up to the Qjacker lane and collect our food with little effort. I can tell you readers – it works! We collect our food, drink and matchday magazine (can’t forget the matchday magazine) and are back in plenty of time to see the second half. It’s always been one of my dreads, paying good money to see a match and missing the vital play – a goal, a penalty, a sending-off, a disallowed goal or anything else that turns a match because I’m still queuing for my food and drink. The ridicule from your friends and family when they find out that you missed the most important play of the game and will have to catch up with the rest of the world on Match of The Day.
Those days appear to have gone at St Marys and Old Trafford. You don’t have to go through this anguish any more. Download Qjacker, make those 4 clicks and get your priority order!

http://uk.qjacker.com/#/step_1/

http://qjackerblog.com/


twitter.com/Qjacker



Thursday 14 January 2016

My guest post for Footie Quiz is available now

I've written a guest post for Footie Quiz this week.It's good to be able to share with other websites, and I've written about the great Footie Quiz website before.

Check put the blog (including my guest post) at http://www.footiequiz.co.uk/blog/

Check out the great Footie Quiz website here - http://www.footiequiz.co.uk/

Check out my previous blog on Footie Quiz here - http://inofftheblogpost.blogspot.com/2015/10/take-look-at-fun-footie-quiz-website.html


Wednesday 13 January 2016

An interview with Vicente Corral Collantes - a highly experienced Spanish football scout

In Off The Post likes to look at all sides of the beautiful game. We've managed to pick up this fascinating interview with Vicente Corral Collantes, a very experienced and talented Spanish scout who has dealt with the big Spanish clubs during his career.




What is a soccer scout? What do you like most about your job?
Being a soccer scout is an exciting job. It is at least for me because I love watching soccer and discovering new players. It means entertainment, but it is also a more sacrificed kind of job than most would imagine. Particularly on the weekends, which is when we I generally travel to the fields to watch players. It is a lot of hours, and there are many matches to choose from. Additionally, I have to combine that with televised soccer. There are not enough hours for me to watch everything I would like to.

On weekdays, all the soccer I watch is mostly international. I have an office set up to connect to virtually any channel that broadcasts soccer in the world. To be a scout, you have to be soccer crazy. Otherwise, it is impossible.

What do you like the most about your job?
What I like most, besides watching the soccer games, is the satisfaction that you feel when one of the players that you have recommended to the clubs actually makes it, or at least gets ahead and becomes a professional player.

What characteristics does a scout take most into account?
Well, that depends on each scout, and particularly on the club that you are collaborating or working with. Real Madrid does not seek the same profile of player as Osasuna, for instance. It varies depending on the team, the country, the league, or many other factors.

I try to focus on many parameters. Evidently, you look for talent most of all, which is what catches your eye at first. But not all soccer players who become prominent are the most talented. My reports are summarized in several headings: Personal data; Physical profile; Technical profile; Tactics, both offensive and defensive; Psychological profile; etc.

Each heading has subheadings. For instance, in the Physical Profile I focus on speed –both long and short, Resistance, Coordination, Strength, Change of Rhythm, etc. And so on, with each heading. I try to be very meticulous with this. There are nearly 100 parameters that I study and include in my reports.
If you ask me about which parameter I focus on most, it would be speed –both physical and mental speed. I look at physical speed particularly for short distances, of 10 to 20 meters. Mental speed refers to decision-making. However, all parameters are very important in becoming a professional soccer player.

For anyone interested, I am writing a book dedicated to the world of scouting, and I will approach all these issues in it.

Are there any statistics about young players who get to be professionals?
I have references from a couple of seasons ago -2012/2013. At the time, there were total 674,326 male soccer licenses in Spain. Out of that, only 2,370 licenses belonged to professional soccer players, so you can imagine how hard it is.

Why do you think that players who show great skills at a young age frequently do not confirm these skills later on?
There are many possible reasons. Children are not fully developed, physically or mentally. And it is not the same playing junior categories –where soccer does not cease to be entertaining- than moving up to categories until you become a professional player.

Many lose skill, or the spark that they had as children, for purely physical motives. Many times genes rule, and a child who developed too soon, is left behind in many aspects. Forces balance out, and it is no longer about being a quality player, or just a strong one. You have to have the rest of the qualities and skills, and that can only be perfected with hard training.

Others lose interest and motivation because they continue to play soccer. And the effort that they have to put into their training and the matches get more and more demanding –particularly in their teenage years, when other interests surface in their lives. They change emotionally, and they are not willing to sacrifice certain things in order to try and be professional soccer players.

Others leave it because they are not comfortable with their trainers; because of bad company; their education; the weather… And we cannot forget the injuries and the consequences those leave…
In order to reach the elite, they have to love the game, and enjoy it. It must be a calling. And they need to have an innate ability to work hard. They also need to be brave. And lastly, they need to have luck… lots of luck.

And in the opposite scenario?
I would pretty  much have to repeat the same thing I just talked about. Children who did not stand out many times develop their abilities, and later on thanks to their hard work and training, they manage to stand out just when they need to. And again, they need to be very lucky, to be seen, to be given a chance, and to take advantage of it.

When they are cracks, like Messi or Maradona, I think that anyone can see that they are special, and that they have a good chance of making it. But other times it is not so clear, even at 18 years old. As an example, I will tell you that when I played in the 3rd Division at the Marina de Cudeyo, this player showed up one day –the Santander Racing had let him go after his time at Juveniles- and I thought he was a high level player, but he ended up playing with the Cantabria for a season. Do you know who that was? Ivan Helguera, an ex-player for Roma, Español, Real Madrid, and the Spanish national team. He was not worth it for the Racing, but was worth it for Real Madrid and the national team? If you talk to scouts and trainers, they will tell you lots of stories like this one.

I could tell you many more. Very few people know that James Rodriguez was brought to many first rate teams in the Spanish league when he was 17 years old. He played for the Envigado in Colombia, and 50% of his rights cost 160,000 euro. Those clubs missed out on a potential 80 million euro, and so on, and so forth.

Right now, I am introducing a player from the Nigerian sub-20 national team. His name is Zaharadeen Bello. He is just 17 years old, and he has been world champion with the Sub-17, and African champion with the sub-20. He is a player with a future. Do not discard the idea that he might be referred to as a player worth signing by one of the European leagues in the near future.

You have also combined your Scout duties with that of Sports Manager of the Santander International FC. How did you do this 2014-15 season?
The truth is we did much better than expected. It is a different club, where we try to integrate people from different countries with the people of Santander and Cantabria. Besides, on the sports level, we have always been able to build good teams. It is a reason to be happy, because in my three years as Sports Manager we have achieved two promotions, and two champion cups. We began in the Second Regional, and this year we are already at Preferential, with two cups on our shelves. It is a good reason to be happy.

And what can we expect for this season 2015-16? A new promotion?

Well, this year I am no longer Sports Manager of the Club. The task of building the roster is no longer mine. There was a change in management. I no longer decide who to sign, or when. But I hope they can follow the same line, and aspire to a new promotion. This time to 3rd. That would be major.

You can catch up with Vicente in all sorts of media clips-

IN THE MEDIA/INTERVIEWS/REPORTS



Rodrigo Faez (Gol Televisión) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUwn5mh14pM




Radio Nacional de España: www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjCxAJCa438






Wednesday 6 January 2016

Where will Guardiola go? My conclusion may surprise you!

Now that Pep Guardiola has confirmed that his next management assignment will be in England, it's time to look at the contenders for his signature. You might be surprised at my conclusion.



Manchester City have long been the front runners, if the press is to be believed. The fact that two of his ex-Barcelona cohorts are in powerful positions at the club is more of a sign that City want to emulate Barça than a sign that the deal is done. I'm sure that City don't see Pellegrini as their long-term manager but this also doesn't automatically mean that Pep is a shoo-in. 

Manchester United are looking seriously at the future direction of the club. The style and results of Louis can Gaal are not what they want from a manager. The points and goals tallies are more akin to David Moyes than Sir Alex Ferguson. There's no doubt that, like City with Pellegrini, they will look elsewhere in the long term. But I believe that Ryan Giggs is pencilled-in as a young manager that knows the club - not unlike what Guardiola himself was to Barcelona. And Zidane to Real Madrid, as has happened this week.

Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich is a long-time admirer of Pep. But I can't help feeling that the admiration is one-way only. The repeated impatience with managers and the seemingly all-powerful dressing room is enough to send Guardiola running in the opposite direction. I'm sure that Chelsea would break the bank to secure his service and provide him with transfer riches, but that won't be enough.



Arsenal are my tip as his surprise destination in England. I think that Arsene Wenger will move upstairs at the end of the season and this is more likely if they win the league. London would surely prove a bigger draw than Manchester - especially if he's looking for new restaurants! His style of football is most suited to Arsenal's squad, above the other potential destinations.

He's currently 8/1 at the bookmakers for this, so it may be worth getting on it now!


Monday 4 January 2016

See why this could be the costliest transfer window yet

The transfer window has opened again and I expect there to be a flurry of signings. It's a massive season for staying in the Premier League - the new television deal next year ramps up the income levels again. There are things at the top and the bottom of the league at play this season that will affect who spends, and how much they spend.






Top of the league
It's all up for grabs. Not just the title, but the Champions League places, that could go to any of a number of clubs. Even Chelsea will fancy putting on a great run and snatching a European place this season. I think that the title could still be won by Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United, Leicester City or Tottenham Hotspur. This means that all of these teams could invest in their squad. Louis van Gaal has said he needs a striker, Spurs need backup for Harry Kane, Leicester will look for quality and Man City can always spend big. There's plenty of legs in the title race and while that's a possibility, teams will try to influence it with their chequebooks.


European places
It's not over for the likes of Liverpool, Everton or even Chelsea, so there's European football to play for right down to the bottom third of the league. The Europa League had been a bit of a poisoned chalice in recent seasons but I think that Tottenham this year have shown it doesn't have to be. Teams will always prefer the Champions League but the Europa League can be a money-spinner, a chance to use the squad and an opportunity to blood youngsters. Teams will spend to get there, but not excessively.




Relegation
The relegation battle will be the fiercest ever, with the money at stake. Consequently the money spend will hit a new high, in my opinion. The following teams could still go down

  • Aston Villa
  • Sunderland
  • Newcastle United
  • Norwich City
  • Swansea City
  • Bournemouth
  • And even Chelsea
The activity could be intense because all of these teams have some major flaws that need to be addressed. Sunderland need a new defence (and Newcastle need help in this area too) whilst Bournemouth have lost some of their major attacking players to long-term injuries. You have to speculate to accumulate.