* Player of the Month
1.
up
down
Fabregas, Cesc
2.
up
down
Handanovic, Samir
3.
up
down
Baptista, Julio
4.
up
down
Robben, Arjen
5.
up
down
Messi, Lionel
6.
up
down
Pepe
7.
up
down
Cannavaro, Paolo
8.
up
down
Zanetti, Javier
9.
up
down
Gobec, Sebastjan
10.
up
down
Higuain, Gonzalo

* By clicking on the arrows next to a player's name, you can vote for or against him. Voting is possible only if you are registered. You can do this for any of the thousands of players in our database by browsing through the countries, leagues and teams in the menu.

Advertising
Latest articles
»Munich air disaster
(06 Feb 2008 by Jure Bohoric)
Exactly 50 years after the tragic disaster, Extra-football puts up a tribute to the Busby Babes.
»The eternal torture of Moacyr Barbosa
(01 Nov 2007 by Iñaki Ugarte)
Ever since football became a sport as well as entertainment among villages, somewhere back in 1863 when “The football Association” was founded, one cannot remember a player who paid as high a price as Maocyr Barbosa for letting in a goal.
»This is Anfield: A History of Liverpool
(19 Jul 2007 by Jeremy Rueter)
Part Two of Jeremy Rueter's history of the Mighty Reds of Liverpool Football Club, focusing on the disasters of Heysel and Hillsborough, Bill Shankly and the legendary Boot Room.
»This is Anfield: A History of Liverpool
(08 Jul 2007 by Jeremy Rueter)
Every club has its legends, its myths, its curious traditions. But it’s a very short list that can compare to the legends of Liverpool Football Club.
»The Worst Football Disasters: Superga, Munich and Gabon
(20 Apr 2007 by Jure Bohoric)
Football has suffered from the twists of fate more bitterly than almost any other sport. In this article, Jure Bohoric takes a look at three separate air disasters which have robbed the game of some of its brightest talents – ‘what if’ stories which still capture the imagination of fans.
»Real Madrid: Part Two
(20 Apr 2007 by Jeremy Rueter)
In September of 1953, the player widely regarded as the best in the club’s history entered the field of the Chamartín – Alfredo di Stefano. He arrived at Real Madrid instead of Barcelona after bitter negotiations, just one more chapter in their eternal rivalry. Along with another major new arrival, Francisco “Paco” Gento, di Stefano led the club to its first league title in 21 years. A second consecutive title was added in 1955, which gave the club a berth in the inaugural European Cup the following season. Real Madrid battled their way to the first final in Paris, where they overcame a favored Stade de Reims side 4-3.
»AC Milan vs Internazionale: History of rivarly
(17 Apr 2007 by Grega Terzic)
On December 16th 1899, Englishman Alfred Edwards founded a sporting club in Milan and became its first president. The club was divided into a cricket part, lead by Edward Berra and a football part, lead by David Alisson.
»Real Madrid: Part One
(12 Apr 2007 by Jeremy Rueter)
To tell the story of the world’s greatest football clubs you must of course begin with the greatest of them all. Real Madrid. Voted by FIFA as the greatest club of the 20th century. Winners of the European Cup/Champions League nine times, champions of Spain’s La Liga 29. The immediately recognizable all-white uniforms. The collossal Estadio Santiago Bernabéu. Zamora, Di Stefano, Puskas, Butragueño, Raúl. If there could only be one football club in the world, this would be the one.
»World Cup 1954: Magical Magyars
(03 Apr 2007 by Klemen Kos)
The 1954 World Cup in Switzerland, the first since the conclusion of World War 2, was marked by the magnificient performance of the Hungarian national team which made it all the way to the finals in a meteoric performance which sadly turned into one of the sports' most tragic disappointments.
»Aleksandr Hleb - His years at VB Stuttgart
(14 Mar 2007 by Igor Krstic)
I’ve been a mediocre VFB Stuttgart supporter for a long time, perhaps because I grew up nearby that city, which is known for its car industry (Mercedes Benz) and for being provincial, as compared to other German cities like Munich or Berlin. So I followed their matches, their ups and downs, their big players and also their fight for recognition in the Bundesliga throughout the years. They never made an all too big impact on the international football scene and had a rather hard fight in keeping up with other Bundesliga giants, like Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund and Bayer Leverkusen.
»Flamengo vs Fluminense and the Carioca Cup
(14 Mar 2007 by Alberto Gambardella)
Brazil is a very big country... A federative country and we have almost as many states as the USA. Some of these states are bigger then whole countries in Europe. At the beginning of the 20th century, our major clubs were still amateurs. It was very expensive to travel for them, in order to play outside of their states. This was the time, when the age of States Championships began. Rio de Janeiro is the name of my state, and also the name of my city. Those who were born in Rio are called “Carioca”. So we have a Carioca Cup which stands for the State Championships of the state of Rio de Janeiro. The same counts in the state of São Paulo, where we have the “Paulista Cup”. Those who are born in São Paulo are called “Paulista”.
»Dejan Savicevic - the Montenegrin Genius
(14 Mar 2007 by Igor Krstic)
It must have been a warm Saturday morning in September 1989, when my uncle Stevo asked me to come and join him to watch the old time classic derby between Crvena Zvezda (Red Star) and Partizan at the Marakana stadium in Belgrade. I was 16 years of age then. My family and I were on summer vacations in Kacarevo, a small village nearby Belgrade, where the rest of our family lived.
»German Football: And they never give up...
(14 Mar 2007 by Igor Krstic)
Without doubt, Germany’s most talked about football event of all times is the miraculous 3:2 victory over Hungary in the 1954 World Championships final in Switzerland. This rainy 4th of July holds for many Germans the meaning of some kind of resurrection of the death.
»Brazilian Football: As if they come from another planet...
(14 Mar 2007 by Igor Krstic)
Brazilian Football myths always have a similar story: social outsiders become football legends, celebrated by millions all over the globe. No other country produced so many legends as this South-American country did with its history of European colonization, African slavery, oppression of Indians and struggle for economic and social modernization during the 20th century. Perhaps due to this multitude of political problems, football became throughout the last century some kind of alternative religion for a vast number of the Brazilian population.
»Dutch Football: The unbearable Lightness of Being Oranje ...
(14 Mar 2007 by Igor Krstic)
Our Dutch story begins in the early 1970’s, when a hitherto unknown European Football Nation, began to shine on the stage of international football, producing some of the most unforgettable moments and players in football history. During this period, when Holland started to reform it’s society, when Hippies with long hairs dreamed of Cuba and the revolution, when students smoked Marihuana in the Coffee Shops of Amsterdam, there also started a slightly different revolution on the Dutch football pitches. Suddenly and seemingly out of nowhere, two Dutch clubs, Feyenoord Rotterdam and Ajax Amsterdam, reached one European Cup Final after another, with Ajax’s triumph in the 1973 season as European and World Club Champions as the biggest triumph of this golden era of Dutch football, only to be topped by their brilliant performance at the World Cup 1974 in Germany.