30 November 2011
UFL Cup - Quarterfinal Stallion Fc 1-2 Loyola FT
UFL Cup - Quarterfinal Stallion Fc vs Loyola today at 8 pm UMAK
Stallion FC 1-2 Loyola FT
Phil Younghusband 2 goals
Lee Joo-Young scored for Stallion FC
Stallion FC 2 red cards , Loyola 1 red card
Semifinals December 5, 2011 at Rizal Memorial Stadium:
Kaya FC v Loyola Meralco Sparks FC 6:00pm
Global FC v Air Force Phoenix FC 8:00pm
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updates....thanks
ReplyDelete2-0 Meralco HT
ReplyDeletePhil Younghusband 22' 32'
ReplyDeleteThanks !
ReplyDeleteMeralco leading Loyola in the dying minutes 2-1
ReplyDeleteCorrection: Meralco leading Stallions 2-1
ReplyDeleteFT score ?
ReplyDeleteBarangay Stallion pa rin!!!
ReplyDeleteGreat match! The atmosphere was very competitive with the fans (especially that of Stallion) giving all their moral support.
ReplyDeleteGo Stallion...si referee kasi medyu bulag...
ReplyDeletehaha Stallions! Don't you mean Korea! Best team won in the end
ReplyDeletealways the excuse when a team loses. Blame the referee!
ReplyDeleteMabuhay ang mga ilonggo! Go barangay Stallions!
ReplyDeleteSana magkaroon ng rematch 'to sa Barotac Nuevo!
ReplyDeletehoy hindi bulag ang referee..anung pinagsasabi nyu...bobo lang talaga yun...talo na, magaling talaga si phil..sya lang yung iba walang kwenta...btw whats the big deal with the the koreans on stallion...ang global nga 80% of their starters africans at born abroad..at kahit wala ang koreans napatunayan na nila na kaya nilang manalo..tinalo nila ang global na lahat ng players nila puro home grown!
ReplyDeletehirap tlga pag me perang involve konting tapik lng sa ref ok na..tsk tsk..nabulag na si ref buti nlng me red card din sya..hahaha
ReplyDeleteFootball isn't about ethnicity. In this sport, people from different races, and countries play along with each other in harmony.
ReplyDelete2008 FIFA Club World Cup champion Manchester United exemplified the importance of ethnic diversity in a club.
The final match lineup includes Van Der Sar (Holland), Rafael Da Silva (Brazil), Rio Ferdinand (England), Nemanja Vidic (Serbia), Patrice Evra (France), Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal), Michael Carrick (England), Anderson Luís de Abreu Oliveira (Brazil), Park Ji-Sung (Korea), Carlos Tevez
(Argentina), and Wayne Rooney (England).
Filipinos should accept that too. We are not in Iron Curtain. Do not divide people. Let us all unite whatever race we came from.
^^ so what about the development kung ganun ang mentallity...if you really promoting the resurgence of this sport then start promoting na makikita ng madla as in 4th 5th class na mamayan na kaya pala.....though youre right on the other hand foreign base filipino and foreign player are really needed to boost the league (as of now)and also to push the locals to learn from this foreign players...and what this shows that locals can compete just give a proper training by the international coach and proper program from pff either of the two has a win-win situation both the league and the development of the player...like pachanga vs global...global won 1-0, but im still proud of my chosen ,pachanga atleast they fought hard against the highly rated team from the player to the coach. now this is the true message to send in the province that locals can make if they train hard...again with support of pff....congrats to meralco and also to stallions.....and by the way the only disadvantage i see on your example is the drawback of the too many international player on the country league is that there national team is getting slower look what happen to england NT they are no longer a threat to the international tournament unlike spain (example barca) and germany (example leverkusen, bayern munich) and italy's AC milan (look at their league every club controls their foreign player (depending on the clubs financial status) they opted their local and they trained them hard as possible as a result they are consider a threat on intertional event (with some excemption to italy sometimes they are on the losing sidehehehe).....
ReplyDeleteDiversity should really be respected and tolerated as these are the only ways we can propagate the 'Beautiful Game' in our country. On the other side, let's all give more support to the grassroots and the development of talents in the provinces as this will be the future of Philippine Football. Long live Philippine Football!
ReplyDelete