9olou incha'Allah a jma3a
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Algérie - Etats-Unis le mercredi à 15H
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Merci "C'est SimplE" !!Et un "macha Allah" pour ton retour Myst.
C'est exactement ce qu'ils ont dit les joueurs ricains ! Ils vont être patients, parce que nous allons sans nulle doute attaquer, et du coup, ouvrir le jeu !Aussi il ne faut pas encaisser en premier, il faut la jouer fine et étre patients, méme si le but tarde à venir. à mon avis c'est eux qui vont faire le jeu
Imagines qu'on adopte la même tactique, le temps passera, et les deux équipes vont être forcées à jouer l'attaque... le problème, c'est que les américains sont plus efficaces que nous, devant les buts !!
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L'Algérie est prête à relever le défi américain
Algeria Ready to Rise to U.S. Challenge
By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY
Published: June 22, 2010
CAPE TOWN — They have had rocks hurled in anger through the windows of their team bus in Cairo, leaving some of them covered in blood.
They have faced the pressure of a must-win match in Sudan in November against arch-rival Egypt and felt the weight of expectations after nearly 100,000 of their compatriots filled a stadium in Algiers — far beyond its official capacity — for a friendly match in March.
So forgive the members of the Algerian national team if they don’t project too much concern about their ability to handle the moment Wednesday against the United States in Pretoria.
With a draw, the Americans could still qualify for the second round of this World Cup if Slovenia does the no-longer-quite-so-unthinkable and upsets England. But the Algerians’ only chance is to win.
“This team has been through a lot together, and we like challenges and know how to respond in difficult situations,” said the defender Madjid Bougherra after the scoreless draw with England last week kept the Algerians in contention. “This match against the United States is like a final for us. We’ve got to win it, and we’re going to play with the same heart and determination. I promise it. We’ll be like we were against the English: 11 warriors on the field, ready to fight until the end without letting down our guard to try to honor our country.”
Bougherra, like the majority of the Algerian team, also has strong connections to another country: France. Many of the players, including the captain, Antar Yahia, were born there to parents who emigrated to France from Algeria and many of them represented French national youth teams before deciding to play for Algeria at the senior level.
Coaches in Algeria say the country is relying so heavily on foreign-born talent in part because of the negative effect that the civil war had on sport and talent development in the country in the 1990s. But the French connection does dovetail with the history of Algerian soccer and the role it played in the country’s struggle for independence. In the 1950s, in the midst of the country’s struggle to exist while Algeria was still a French colony, the principal independence group, the F.L.N., created its own soccer team to represent the would-be nation.
Nine Algerian professionals based in France left their clubs and traveled covertly to Algeria to join the team in 1958, including Rachid Mekloufi, who was already on the preliminary list to play in the World Cup that year for France. Over the next four years, the F.L.N. team would play matches around the world to promote Algerian identity and independence, declared on July 5, 1962.
The Algerian national team, nicknamed “The Desert Foxes,” qualified for the World Cup in 1982 and 1986 before the civil war. It has returned to prominence this time with the help of the veteran Algerian coach Rabah Saadane, who was also head coach in 1986 and was rehired in 2007. To make it here, the Algerians had to fight back after losing their final group qualifying match in Egypt, where their bus had been attacked with stones. That forced a playoff on neutral ground in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, which the Algerians won, 1-0.
“We are a young team, but experiences like that have brought us together,” said the assistant coach, Zoheir Djelloul.
The team’s strength is its solid and resourceful defense, led by its back line of Bougherra, Yahia and Rafik Halliche, who were collectively exceptional against the English, winning duel after duel on the ground and in the air to the increased frustration of the star English striker, Wayne Rooney.
The Algerians also got a surprisingly poised performance from the young goalkeeper Rais M’Bolhi, who had never started an international game for his country.
But to win Wednesday, the Algerians will have to do something they have yet to do in their first two matches here and something they have struggled mightily to do in their preparatory matches: They will have to score.
“I think if we play like we did against the English, we can score goals,” said the midfielder Hassan Yebda. “We played a game based on counterattacks, and we did it really well. We managed to control the ball for much of the match. We’ve struggled a bit to put it in the net, but people shouldn’t be worried.”
Algeria showed against England that it has flair and the ability to work its way through a defense by stringing together short passes, even in the face of heavy pressure. In Karim Ziani, a flashy attacking midfielder, Algeria also has someone capable of consistently beating a defender one-on-one and creating opportunities down the left wing.
But Saadane and his coaching staff clearly are worried about the team’s capacity to score in its standard formation against the United States and, according to Algerian news reports, he is considering adding a second striker to the starting lineup to complement Karim Matmour.
The most likely candidate is Rafik Djebbour, which could mean that the midfielder Ryad Boudebouz, just 20 years old, would return to the bench after holding his own against the English in his first-ever start for Algeria.
This will be the first time the United States and Algeria have played, but there are connections between the teams. Bougherra and the U.S. midfielder Maurice Edu both play for Glasgow Rangers in Scotland.
“He’s my best friend in Glasgow,” Bougherra said. “I like the U.S.A. because the U.S.A. is like Algeria. They love their country. They are patriots, and so they play like a team, with no star in the team. So this will be a good match.”
Copyright 2010 The New York Times
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Les Verts avant les Etats-Unis (Vidéo)
A l'approche du rendez-vous important de de l'équipe nationale face aux Américains demain à Pretoria, les Verts se préparent pour ce match décisif pour la qualification en huitième de finale. Les joueurs algériens se sont notamment offert une petite balade en ville, histoire de décompresser avant le match. Extrait de la conférence de presse de Rabah Saâdane. Images des supporters algériens à la veille du match. Reportage de la télévision algérienne.
DZfoot
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Saâdane ''J'ai deux options face aux USA''
Lors de la conférence de presse d'avant match qui vient d'avoir lieu, Rabah Sâadane qui n'a pas encore choisi qui jouera demain, évoque le fait d'avoir deux options entre ses mains.
Interrogé sur l'équipe qu'il va aligner demain, il dira d'abord, ''Concernant l'effectif j'ai deux options, la plus plausible, c'est de reconduire une équipe qui a réussi un bon résultat, l'autre serait de faire un seul changement, devant.''
À la question de savoir quel serait le changement si il optait pour le deuxième choix, il dira ''En cas de changement en attaque, ce sera Djebbour qui entrera.''
de Pretoria
DZfoot
22/06/2010
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Alala, et dire que demain à cette heure-ci on sera déjà fixés ........ j'ai envie d'arrêter le temps rien que pour conjurer le sort ........... ça fait partie de tactikya w psykoulougya
Kindness is the only language that the deaf can hear and the blind can see - Mark Twain
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