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penk22_
11-03-2019, 03:08 AM
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Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Manchester United

Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Manchester United - FA Cup Quarter-Finals
Minggu, 17 Maret 2019
Kick Off : 02:55 WIB
Venue : Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton
Wasit : Martin Atkinson
Live : tbc

FA Cup form guide
Manchester United: WWW
Wolverhampton Wanderers: WDWW

Team News
Manchester United : Matteo Darmian, Jesse Lingard, Juan Mata, Antonio Valencia and Alexis Sánchez ruled out. Phil Jones and Ander Herrera doubtful.
Wolverhampton Wanderers : No missing players.

penk22_
11-03-2019, 03:09 AM
Head to Head pertemuan kedua tim :
ManUtd menang : 48x
Imbang : 17x
Wolverhampton Wanderers menang : 34x

10 pertandingan terakhir kedua tim :
29 Januari 2006 - Wolverhampton Wanderers 0-3 Manchester United - FA Cup
23 September 2009 - Manchester United 1-0 Wolverhampton Wanderers - League Cup
15 Desember 2009 - Manchester United 3-0 Wolverhampton Wanderers W - Premier League
6 Maret 2010 - Wolverhampton Wanderers 0-1 Manchester United W - Premier League
26 Oktober 2010 - Manchester United 3-2 Wolverhampton Wanderers - League Cup
6 November 2010 - Manchester United 2-1 Wolverhampton Wanderers - Premier League
5 Februari 2011 - Wolverhampton Wanderers 2-1 Manchester United - Premier League
10 Desember 2011 - Manchester United 4-1 Wolverhampton Wanderers - Premier League
18 Maret 2012 - Wolverhampton Wanderers 0-5 Manchester United - Premier League
22 September 2018 - Manchester United 1-1 Wolverhampton Wanderers - Premier League

Zulfan
11-03-2019, 04:07 AM
Bang @penk22_ judul threadnya [FA Cup] bukan [EPL] hehe..

penk22_
11-03-2019, 01:22 PM
Bang @penk22_ judul threadnya [FA Cup] bukan [EPL] hehe..

Oiya, terimakasih sudah mengingatkan :D

Andi Istiabudi
14-03-2019, 11:57 PM
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EARLY TEAM NEWS FOR WOLVES V UNITED IN FA CUP

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer must rotate his defence on Saturday evening, with Ashley Young suspended for the Emirates FA Cup quarter-final against Wolverhampton Wanderers at Molineux.

The 33-year-old full-back is set to serve a one-match ban in the competition after picking up a second yellow card of this season’s competition, in the fifth-round victory at Chelsea.

Diogo Dalot is arguably the favourite to take his place at right-back, with Antonio Valencia and Matteo Darmian both injured, although Eric Bailly did play in that position at Paris Saint-Germain this month. Phil Jones has not played since the Premier League win at Fulham on 9 February due to illness.

Meanwhile, further up the pitch, Chilean forward Alexis Sanchez is expected to be unavailable with the injury that he suffered in the recent victory over Southampton at Old Trafford on 2 March.

Mason Greenwood, who made his Premier League debut at Arsenal last Sunday, is presumably a doubt after an illness prevented him from joining Nicky Butt's Under-19 squad in Denmark for today's UEFA Youth League tie against FC Midtjylland.

WHO COULD RETURN?

Solskjaer’s squad was boosted last weekend when Nemanja Matic and Anthony Martial both returned to action from injury, with Marcos Rojo also among the substitutes once again.

Our photographers at the Aon Training Complex last Friday also captured Ander Herrera, Juan Mata and Jesse Lingard taking part in a session, which suggested the trio are moving closer to comebacks.

In his latest weekly blog, published this week, Mata wrote: “On Friday, I was able to put in some work out on a pitch again and my recovery is progressing as hoped. Hopefully I can rejoin the team soon.

“Thank you for your messages and I hope that you have a fantastic week. I’m going to keep doing everything I can to be back fit as soon as possible.”

WHAT ABOUT WOLVES?

Nuno Espirito Santo is lucky enough to say that his squad currently has no injuries at all, which is almost unheard of in modern football and especially at this busy time in the season.

Ryan Bennett is about to serve a two-match ban, but that only applies to the Premier League after the defender collected his 10th booking of the season in the 2-0 win over Cardiff City at Molineux.

Their last starting XI, for the 1-1 draw against Chelsea, was: Rui Patricio; Doherty, Saiss, Coady, Boly, Otto; Dendoncker, Neves, Moutinho; Jiminez, Jota.

The Black Country club are confident of causing an upset, according to Romain Saiss: “We have to switch on for this game now,” he has said this week. “It’s an important game for us to get the semi-final at Wembley. We play at home, and we have to be ready for this game. We’re going to prepare for this game all week now and try to do something great on Saturday.”

Ex-Wolves forward Don Goodman, who scored the winner in their last quarter-final win, at Leeds in 1998, also said: “They’re all seasoned professionals, playing under a wonderful coach, so they don’t need any advice from me. I’m sure they’ll all realise it’s a fantastic opportunity – one that may never come around again. If you’re a team outside the top six, you don’t get these opportunities every year.”

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Andi Istiabudi
15-03-2019, 06:58 AM
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WHEN UNITED BRAVELY BATTLED WITH WOLVES

Of all the myriad achievements of Manchester United down the decades, maybe the most undersung, and arguably the most extraordinary, was finishing runners-up to reigning league champions Wolverhampton Wanderers in the 1958/59 title race.

Considering the poignant, uniquely emotional circumstances, the odds against any degree of competitive success in the first full season after the Munich Air Disaster, which had cost the lives of eight top-quality footballers and maimed two more so badly they would never play again, appeared astronomical.

United manager Matt Busby, who had contemplated retirement in the wake of the tragedy but who had been persuaded to carry on – at least in part as a memorial to his beloved young charges who had perished – was still suffering both physical and mental agonies after escaping only narrowly with his own life. Selflessly and courageously, he was showing a brave face to the world as he sought to rebuild the club while struggling to make a personal recovery, but those close to him were all too aware of his constant anguish.

His heroic assistant, Jimmy Murphy, who had worked miracles in guiding a patchwork team to the final of the previous term’s FA Cup and to spirited displays in the last four of the European Cup, remained grief-ridden at the loss of boys who had become like sons to him as he’d nurtured their precocious talent.

Meanwhile, the players who had survived the catastrophe were carrying unknowable psychological baggage that, in some cases, would never be erased. Reds goalkeeper Harry Gregg looked outwardly strong, but granite-tough defender Bill Foulkes and rookie sharpshooter Bobby Charlton wore perpetually haunted expressions, clearly striving to come to terms with their demons, while others suffered similarly.

So how did United contrive to fly so high, so soon?

A free-scoring forward line – comprising 29-goal Charlton in easily his most prolific term, his clinical fellow marksman Dennis Viollet, flankmen Albert Scanlon and Warren Bradley, and schemer Albert Quixall – had plenty to do with it as the team racked up 103 league strikes, but enormous credit was due, too, to a makeshift, inexperienced defence, which performed far better as a unit than was widely expected.

Going into 1958/59, an ominous omen for the Reds' immediate prospects was to be found in their understandably poor post-Munich league form during the previous spring, encompassing one win, five draws and eight defeats, yielding a mere seven points from a possible 28, and prophets of doom were predicting a relegation battle on the immediate horizon.

But neither for the first nor the last time in the club’s history, United proved defiantly indestructible. Starting in the swashbuckling vein that had become the gleeful trademark of the now-decimated Busby Babes, the Reds steamrollered Chelsea at Old Trafford on the opening afternoon, with Charlton – starting at inside-left but roaming ungovernably across the attacking line – contributing a dashing hat-trick. Not even the emerging genius of Jimmy Greaves, who poached a brace for the Londoners, could steal Bobby’s thunder, and the unassuming north-easterner continued to shine as the talisman of the reborn team four days later with two more hits in a 3-0 victory at Nottingham Forest.

Not surprisingly, the sudden wave of optimism was tempered as results began to level off, and the future Sir Matt recognised that for all the spirit and enterprise of his fresh combination, more quality was needed. Accordingly, he broke the British transfer record in late September by paying Sheffield Wednesday £45,000 for England international inside-forward Albert Quixall.

Though the skilful Yorkshireman was portrayed in some quarters as the golden boy of English football – his blond, baby-faced good looks and preference for exceedingly short shorts were mentioned frequently – he took time to settle and United hit an autumn slump which prompted a descent into the wrong half of the First Division table.

A tonic was needed and it arrived from an unexpected quarter. When the club had been in desperate need of reinforcements following the disaster, England amateur international-cum-geography teacher Warren Bradley had been among several recruited from Bishop Auckland as a temporary measure to bolster the reserves.

But Bradley had remained on the Reds’ books, and in November 1958 Busby drafted the sturdy little battler into the team on the right flank. Few observers expected a spectacular outcome but Bradley gelled almost instantly with inside-forwards Charlton and Quixall, along with two men who had lived through Munich, roving spearhead Viollet and tearaway left-winger Scanlon, and United embarked on an exhilarating sequence of eight straight wins, which catapulted them into championship contention.

This was stretched into a run of 16 victories in 18 matches, including a 2-1 home triumph over leaders Wolves in February, which drew them level at the summit with Stan Cullis’s ruthlessly efficient Molineux machine – Charlton contributed the late winner – and a 6-1 Good Friday drubbing of Portsmouth at Old Trafford to lift the Reds to the top of the table with only six games to play.

An astonishingly unlikely fairytale seemed possible, only for Busby’s boys to falter in the final straight, losing at Burnley, then dropping further points at Luton and Leicester, allowing Wolves to stretch away to lift the crown by a six-point margin. Still, United cemented second spot emphatically, five points clear of third-placed, Arsenal, a sensational effort given the calamity that had overtaken the club so recently.

Praise was heaped on Charlton, and deservedly so, but Viollet’s tally of 21 goals and Scanlon’s 16, with Bradley adding a dozen in only 24 games, were also massively valuable, while Quixall’s modest return of four did not reflect his colossal input as the deep-lying play-maker.

At the back, Gregg was a tower of strength in goal, though the usually rock-like Foulkes was not at his most commanding at right-back, not relishing the captaincy and struggling grittily through his ongoing trauma as a crash survivor. Recognising the problem, Busby gave him a rest in the spring before recalling him at centre-half – ultimately his specialist position, in which he was to taste serial glory in the years ahead – for the last few games.

There were mammoth contributions, too, from two other full-backs, Ian Greaves and Joe Carolan, while Ronnie Cope was a classy central bulwark and Freddie Goodwin laboured shrewdly at right-half. Meanwhile young Wilf McGuinness – destined ultimately to briefly succeed Busby as Old Trafford boss – enjoyed the finest season of his career at left-half, granted his first extended senior run following the death at Munich of his close pal Duncan Edwards.

Sadly the dynamic, ultra-competitive McGuinness’s long-term prospects were sabotaged all too soon by a chronic injury, though not before he had collected two England caps. He later recalled: “Although the opportunity came to me in the most horrific fashion, on a professional level that season was the time of my life.”

Foulkes acknowledged that United, whose form dipped over the next four years before a lasting recovery got under way in 1963, overachieved in the 1958/59 season. “Emotion played a major part,” he admitted years later. “We were high on adrenaline. But it always seemed likely that further major reconstruction was necessary, and so it proved.”

Charlton agreed, though he maintained that not enough recognition had been accorded to the remarkable events of the first post-Munich campaign, declaring with no small amount of understatement: “It was some effort in the circumstances.”

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Andi Istiabudi
16-03-2019, 01:04 PM
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IN THE COMPANY OF WOLVES

Back in the 1950s, that epochal era in which Sir Matt Busby rolled out a football manifesto still lovingly referred to by the United faithful, Saturday's opponents were a major threat to our quest for honours.

Of the top-flight titles contested between 1949 and 1959, United and Wolves shared six – three apiece – and finished runners-up on two occasions each. In only one of those 10 seasons did both clubs finish outside the top two; an achievement all the more remarkable in an age where the concept of a 'big four, five or six' was merely a glint in a marketing man's eye – if the notion of a marketing man had even been considered then.

Such were the relative strengths of the game's elite, that if United and Wolves didn't get you, Portsmouth, West Bromwich Albion or Burnley probably would.

United crossed paths with Wolves relentlessly in that glorious first post-War decade. The Red flag may have been planted by Busby's bright young things when we became English football's first continental club ambassadors in the 1956/57 season, but it was the old gold of Wolves, with their pioneering floodlit friendlies in the early part of the decade that helped usher in the European Cup, principally the dramatic 1954 victory over Hungarian giants Honved.

A live television audience – including an entranced Belfast lad by the name of George Best – had already watched, spellbound, as Wolves thrashed Spartak Moscow 4-0 the previous month.
Now, against a Honved containing 'Galloping Major' Ferenc Puskas, Josef Bozsik and Sandor Kocsis, among half the 'Mighty Magyars' that humiliated England at Wembley a year earlier, Stan Cullis's team overturned a 2-0 half-time deficit to dramatically triumph 3-2. Wolves apprentice Ron Atkinson had helped water an already sodden pitch on the morning of the game, the better for Wolves' athleticism to take its toll.

The Daily Mail gleefully banged the patriot's drum. “Hail Wolves, Champions of the world!” screamed the headline. As a result, French journalist Gabriel Hanot, editor of L'Equipe, who'd long since mooted his idea for a competition comprising the cream of Europe, summoned his resolve for a fresh attempt – this time it was a goer.
But perhaps the most intriguing connection – and one from which our respective post-war successes sprung – is the relationship forged between wartime pals Busby and Cullis, whose legacy remains as strong as his United contemporary. It's a tale of similar outlooks, albeit markedly differing approaches. Just as Sir Alex Ferguson's tenure carried echoes of Sir Matt's principles, so Cullis's spell as Wolves supremo between 1948 and 1964 closely mirrors the reign of his pre-war forbear, and former Red, Major Frank Buckley. Buckley, a strong disciplinarian and fitness obsessive, born in the Trafford suburb of Urmston in 1882, played just three games for United, finding – as did most of his opponents – Charlie Roberts an immovable force at centre-half. But it was as a manager that he really left his mark on his local club, albeit indirectly.

Forced to sell to balance the books, in mid-March of the 1938/39 campaign, the last full season before war broke out, Buckley fielded not one, but two teenagers against United. It was revolutionary stuff. Debutant Alun Steen, who scored in a 3-0 success, remains the club's youngest goalscorer, aged 16 years 269 days; in a wartime friendly with West Bromwich Albion in September 1942, Buckley fielded Cameron Buchanan, aged just 14 years and 57 days.

The term 'Buckley's Babes' was coined – a catchy, alliterative phrase that would be revived on a rather wider basis in these environs around 15 years later. Buckley made Cullis his captain shortly before war broke out and, as Peter Creed, secretary of Wolves' Former Players Association and a friend of Cullis, explains, his wartime billeting with Busby in Italy was hugely significant for both in the peace that followed. “They were great friends; he always used to speak wonderfully well of Sir Matt,” he says. “Stationed together in the same billet, morning, noon and night, what on earth would they talk about? Stan would have told him all about the Buckley Babes. Now what did he do when he went to United?”

It's said playfully, but the point is not lost. Buckley's template impressed Cullis and Busby, but how the two applied their principles in the post-war years couldn't have been more different. Busby's football was cerebral, cultured, his avuncular nature expressed in patient build-up play, but to equally devastating effect: in the first of United's five consecutive FA Youth Cup wins, Wolves were thrashed 7-1 in the first leg at Old Trafford, and 9-3 overall.

Cullis, a strict disciplinarian, was a stickler for the direct approach, as his fabled half-back Ron Flowers recalls from his Stafford home. “Stan was his own man,” he chuckles. “It was simple stuff that he wanted, nothing fancy, and, let's face it, he had results – who can argue with that?
He got a statistician working on every game and we scored more than 100 goals in two or three seasons.” In 1953/54, the first of their three title-winning campaigns, a season in between Busby's first and second titles, Wolves powered home 96 goals in the league alone: Cullis's tactics had paid handsome dividend.

“Over 90 per cent of the goals were scored with three or less passes,” Flowers recalls. “It was pretty direct, but it wasn't just a case of ‘bang, bang, bang'. It can't be if you've got a couple of flyers on the wing: we had ball players, too.”
It was undoubtedly an endeavor of huge athletic prowess: Cullis' men were fit as fleas, which helped when you often had to play in six inches of mud. Flowers – an attacking midfielder in today's parlance – was a staple of all those games, scoring against United in February of 1955, a game played on a midweek afternoon in the absence of floodlights. Wolves won both league games that term 4-2.

But clashes between the sides were tough to call – Wolves edged the 20 league meetings during the decade by 10 to eight, with two draws. Before it, they had knocked Busby's holders out of the 1949 FA Cup semi-final in a replay, on the way to Wembley success over Leicester City.

“All I've got is wonderful memories,” Flowers reflects. “A lot of the players were mates. Because there were Under-23 internationals as well, you played with other players. In the RAF, you'd come up and play with and against a lot of the players in the Army. We'd play them twice a year in those days – it was like being team-mates.”

“It was an exciting time, but I couldn't step in the clouds too much. I played for England and the Wolves, but I was in the forces, doing national service in the RAF, so one day I'd be playing, the next too busy to think about it. But it's nice to reflect on your part in it. I've no regrets at all.”

Flowers – the oldest member of England's 1966 World Cup squad (he finally received his medal in 2009) – has fond memories of his battles with United during those years, particularly of Duncan Edwards – Dudley-born, filched from under Cullis's nose and “the ideal man” – and Busby's skipper, Roger Byrne.

“They were nice fellas,” he reflects. “I roomed with Roger on one of the England trips, and I sat up late with him one night asking him questions, because we were both interested in physiotherapy. I think it might have been about two in the morning before we went to sleep! A lot of players had the future in mind; they realised the good life wouldn't last after football – what had you got?”

That tale in itself is a poignant reminder that nothing, however good, lasts forever. Both sets of fans know that better than most, for entirely different reasons.

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Andi Istiabudi
16-03-2019, 01:05 PM
Siap-siap yach.. :)

https://scontent.fcgk7-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/54433790_10156421816707746_3586432017262182400_n.j pg?_nc_cat=1&_nc_eui2=AeHbd9sNhhgyWe7ZNgPYJ8oT2680aks1-cIFOkEwr1u_6OV-70-b5NgYK-RVSuAmXpV2UUtG2AJe_OqWcm5Y55d5QXW-8OzKdIXmd4m1lFLYxkmeTVTevth1JOOiUdKQJ_c&_nc_ht=scontent.fcgk7-1.fna&oh=97151c122209932906ee4b4ba4837087&oe=5D0FE6FB

Zulfan
16-03-2019, 09:59 PM
Ditayangkan bein kah? Karena watford vs crystal palace ditayangin nih.
Lumayan ga perlu streaming ...

rio vander vidic
17-03-2019, 07:49 AM
kocak mainnya

Andi Istiabudi
17-03-2019, 03:15 PM
https://scontent.fcgk7-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/53566422_10156423584537746_473067815608254464_n.jp g?_nc_cat=1&_nc_eui2=AeHU5kbu3ur542Rl_4UG5srDcKLEPXRNx3KpXNA-k_yMxcgg1hASBggTE-nQYvHiJ6YxbEAcfnlnjApHfhzXJNn-HBodnETaR08PqntGX1vBoU15Z9ul4UQNbS11Ga3TCKA&_nc_ht=scontent.fcgk7-1.fna&oh=d7bfe21a9ed04f1f01092546a89a1bd2&oe=5D1680FC

Andi Istiabudi
17-03-2019, 03:41 PM
Menarik nih fakta-faktanya...

9 Fakta Setelah MU Disingkirkan Wolves dari Piala FA
Femi Diah - detikSport

https://akcdn.detik.net.id/community/media/visual/2019/03/17/5056ad6f-e74f-4ec1-9dfc-be416942185a_169.jpeg?w=780&q=90

Wolverhampton - Manchester United tersingkir dari Piala FA usai dikalakan Wolverhampton Wanderers 1-2. Sejumlah fakta dicatatkan dari hasil negatif Setan Merah itu.

MU dikalahkan Wolves 1-2 di Molineux Stadium, Minggu (17/3/2019) dini hari WIB pada perempatfinal Piala FA. Tim besutan Ole Gunnar Solskjaer itu kebobolan dua gol lebih dulu melalui Raul Jimenez dan Diogo Jota. MU cuma bisa membalas satu gol lewat Marcus Rashford di masa injury time.

Kekalahan tersebut menjadi kekalahan beruntun MU dalam dua laga terakhir. Itu menjadi catatan pertama untuk Solskjaer.

Selain itu, Opta mencatat fakta lain. berikut rangkumannya:

1. Woves meraih semifinal Piala FA untuk kali ke-15 sejak 1997-1998. Mereka selalu tereliminasi di empat semifinal terakhir.

2. MU kalah dua kali beruntun untuk kali pertama sejak ditangani Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, mengulang catatan Jose pada Desember 2018.

3. Untuk kali pertama, Wolves mencetak tiga kemenangan beruntun di Piala FA sejak Februari 2003.

4. Wolves meraih enam kemenangan dalam tujuh pertandingan terakhir di kandang dalam semua kompetisi (seri 1 kali), total dari 16 laga sebelumnya (menang 6, seri 5, dan 5 kali kalah).

5. Mu baru sekali dikalahkan Wolvers di Piala FA sejak Januari 1973 sekaligus sebagai kekalahan pertama dalam empat kali duel di perempatfinal.

6. Ole Gunnar Solskjaer mencatatkan dua kekalahan dari Wolves. Kekalahan sebelumnya dibuat saat dia menangani Cardiff pada Agustus 2014 (0-1).

7. Raul Jimenez menccetak 15 gol dalam semua kompetisi musim ini, setidaknya delapan gol lebih bayak ketimbang pemain wolves lainnya.

8. Enam gol Wolves terakhir dicetak oleh Raul Jimenez (4) atau Diogo Jota (2).

9. Delapan dari 12 gol Marcus Rashford dari semua kompetisi dibuat sejak MU ditangani oleh Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.