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KUYT


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Guest Huntelaar

Kuijt played left wing. Het did that quite good actually... He worked his ass off and his hard work motivated the rest of the team to make it a football game. Again a very poor performance from the Dutch team. Only players that played well were Kuijt, Sneijder and Van Persie. I'm curious about Kuijt his performance against PSV next week... PSV just bought Diego Tardelli (Brazil -21 striker) and Patrick Kluivert and although they don't seem to be as strong as 2 years ago I don't think it's gonna be an easy one for Liverpool...

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Kuijt played left wing. Het did that quite good actually... He worked his ass off and his hard work motivated the rest of the team to make it a football game. Again a very poor performance from the Dutch team. Only players that played well were Kuijt, Sneijder and Van Persie. I'm curious about Kuijt his performance against PSV next week... PSV just bought Diego Tardelli (Brazil -21 striker) and Patrick Kluivert and although they don't seem to be as strong as 2 years ago I don't think it's gonna be an easy one for Liverpool...

 

From the previous seasons, conceding shouldnt be a major proble for us in Europe the early rounds. As you imply, PSV arent the force that they were 2/3 years age, but they are our major rivals in the group. I wont be expecting six points from them, but i wont be surprised if they faulter against one or both of the other two teams. Hopefully we can pull ahead of the rest while he rest fight out for second.

Huntelaar, are you a recent convert to Liverpool thanks to Kuyt, if one at all, or a long time fan. Are a lot of Dutch fans following Liverpool because of Kuyt, or is the general interest the same as that with Arsenal and Van Persie?

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Guest bigf00t

Huntelaar...

 

Dont you feel Van Persie is a bit of a greedy gobshite when he plays for Holland?

 

Everytime i see him play he doesnt seem to want to pass the ball... and it looks the same from these highlights...

Granted its got him a couple of goals this game...

 

whats the general feeling with you lot?

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From the previous seasons, conceding shouldnt be a major proble for us in Europe the early rounds. As you imply, PSV arent the force that they were 2/3 years age, but they are our major rivals in the group. I wont be expecting six points from them, but i wont be surprised if they faulter against one or both of the other two teams. Hopefully we can pull ahead of the rest while he rest fight out for second.

Huntelaar, are you a recent convert to Liverpool thanks to Kuyt, if one at all, or a long time fan. Are a lot of Dutch fans following Liverpool because of Kuyt, or is the general interest the same as that with Arsenal and Van Persie?

 

I'm looking to the highlights of liverpool because kuyt is playing for liverpool :D ( i also like the fans. fanatics :D ) Van persie is sometimes a big ''egotripper'' i mean sometimes he only think on his own succes , but he plays good... kuyt is more a team player :) :D

 

hope you understand what i mean :$

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Guest Huntelaar

First of all, I actually like Liverpool since Rafa Benitez is coaching the squad. Houllier's Liverpool was rather borring to look at and over the years he managed to buy some terrible players (best example still being one-day-fly Al Hadji Diouf, hate that spitting scumbag). Back then my favourite British club was Arsenal, not in the last place because Dennis Bergkamp and Marc Overmars (Ajax heroes) played for them. I got into Liverpool after their amazing comeback in the CL final against Milan. Liverpool probably got some more exposure in Holland because of Kuijt. Nonetheless Dutch television broadcasts the premier league every week... I was delighted with the fact that Liverpool signed Kuijt. I was actually a big fan of him since he played for Utrecht, but because he played for Ajax' biggest opponent Feyenoord, I could never really express it haha. What I like about him most is that when he plays shit for example for the first 15 minutes, he's able to fight himself back into the game. He's got a great mentality and that is what players with probably more individual class such as Robben or van Persie lack. Nice example is a home match of Feyenoord against Ajax a couple of years ago. First half there was a storm on the Feyenoord goal and within 30 minutes Ajax was leading 1-0. After the break Feyenoord still played shit and Kuijt (who again was working his balls off) wanted to motivate his squad. Therefore he all of a sudden very roughly kicked the feet of our captain Rafael van der Vaart away under his body (no intention of playing the ball) somewhere near the middle of the field. He knew he would get a yellow card and he probably also knew it would start a row. After that Feyenoord suddenly played a lot better and Kuijt managed to score the equalizer. I guess Kuijt is more of a team player than Robben or van Persie and Kuijt most of the time reaches a constant level, while for example Robben can be completely invisible and play shit for 90 minutes. Nonetheless I'm glad we have players like Robben and van Persie and as long as they win matches for us I don't mind them being greedy while being in a scoring position...

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Don’t ‘misunderestimate’ Dirk Kuyt

 

By Simon Kuper - Financial Times

 

Published: September 8 2006 18:34 | Last updated: September 8 2006 18:34

 

I knew footballers like Dirk Kuyt even before he was born. As a kid I played against them in the dunes of his home village of Katwijk on the Dutch coast. I respected and feared the Kuyt type but I never imagined Liverpool Football Club signing one. Yet last month the club bought the Dutchman for about £10m. Today he hopes to start his first match for them, the Merseyside derby against Everton. The temptation is to say he won’t be worth £10m but then Kuyt has always been “misunderestimated”.

 

On winter Saturday mornings around 1980, the year of Kuyt’s birth, my football team would travel to Katwijk in the back seats of our dads’ cars. Often our opponent would be Kuyt’s future club, Quick Boys. As we passed Katwijk’s churches, chip shops and the bed-and-breakfasts with German signs, sea gales would shake the car.

 

Quick Boys’s changing-rooms were always packed because Katwijk’s sailors and fishermen all played their football on Saturdays. Sundays were reserved for worshipping the Lord. Every local male seemed to play: Quick Boys currently have 20 men’s teams and 15 teams in the under-nines age group alone. Telling the men from the boys was often tricky because many Katwijk children – raised on fish, milk and the west wind – were already as big as Kuyt is now.

 

Our opponents tended to be albinos like Kuyt and only had a handful of surnames between them, often Kuyt. They didn’t bother much with ball control, perhaps because the wind and the Lord took charge of that, but in my memory we always lost. Sometimes there were hundreds of spectators. And Quick Boys weren’t even the best club in Katwijk. Their rivals, FC Katwijk, later also became Dutch amateur champions. Having often watched the Quick Boys v Katwijk derby, Kuyt won’t be overawed by Everton v Liverpool.

 

Amateur football was such a big deal in Katwijk that the local stars seldom bothered joining professional clubs. Yet at 18 Kuyt signed for FC Utrecht. Nobody expected much of the pot-bellied sailor’s son with Katwijkian ball control but he almost instantly became a regular. The only thing that seemed to throw him at Utrecht was the godlessness. “In Katwijk certain things are taken for granted. I came to FC Utrecht and saw guys who lived with their partners, got a child and only then got married,” he marvelled. The Lord only knows what he will make of the Premiership.

 

In 2003 a bigger Dutch club, Feyenoord, reluctantly shelled out €1m for Kuyt. Few expected him to cope with the higher level but his unforeseen rise continued: within a year he was Feyenoord’s best player. This was probably because Kuyt works harder than does any other footballer. He treated training sessions and matches as mere episodes in his packed working schedule. When not in the gym, or studying future opponents, he paid weekly visits to a mental coach, a layer on of hands and his personal physiotherapist.

 

None of this was intended to treat injuries. Kuyt never gets injured. He went five years and a month until this spring without missing a Dutch league match, 11 months longer than Frank Lampard’s record streak in England. Rather, Kuyt hires healers to perfect an already superhuman body, much as Pamela Anderson got breast implants. He gives an example: “Recently my physio got special soles installed in my football boots. Tests showed I don’t stand completely straight on my feet so that I can’t move my neck fully. Since I’ve been wearing those soles, my neck is free again.”

 

Besides injuries, Kuyt has also virtually eliminated loss of form. He is mentally so strong that he almost never plays badly. In each of the last four seasons, he scored at least 20 league goals.

 

Kuyt exudes the joy of a man in his prime whose every body-part is in perfect working order. Most goalscorers save their energy for scoring. Kuyt gallops down wings and tackles on his goal-line. A better defender than most defenders, he gives more assists than most wingers. His speciality is accelerating while receiving the ball, a horror for opponents.

 

Because he is never injured and always working, he could advance inexorably from Quick Boys to Liverpool. This is an indictment of other footballers. Kuyt’s rise implies that his colleagues, even those who aren’t sots, are performing below potential. If they all lived like Kuyt, professional football would be better. “Doing your best isn’t a chore, is it?” he asks. “I must thank God on my bare knees that I became a footballer. And I do.”

 

There is one thing Kuyt can’t learn. No Katwijker will ever develop perfect ball control. “I don’t have the technique of Robin van Persie,” he once admitted, “but of all the Dutch talents I do have by far the best mentality.” It has taken him far: last month his deathly ill father, a tube emerging from his nose, presented him with the Dutch Footballer of the Year award at a gala evening.

 

But this summer’s World Cup suggested that even Kuyt’s mentality can’t take him all the way. On his first venture on to international football’s upper slopes, his running kept defences busy but in his only match as Holland’s first-choice centre-forward, against Portugal, he failed.

 

Last month Glenn Roeder, manager of Newcastle, one of countless clubs hoping to sign him, watched Ireland v Holland in Dublin. Holland’s centre-forward duly scored twice. Sadly it wasn’t Kuyt but the 23-year-old debutant Klaas Jan Huntelaar, scorer of more than 50 goals last season. Huntelaar is the latest to overtake Kuyt in the hierarchy of Dutch centre-forwards.

 

It’s possible that Liverpool bought the wrong Dutch striker: that although Kuyt won’t flop at Anfield, because he never flops, he won’t quite conquer the place either. However, Kuyt always proves doubters wrong. “My career is a straight line upwards,” he notes. At the very least he will teach his teammates something about being a footballer.

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I like Kuper a lot. Good to hear these sorts of things about Dirk; I do like a committed and switched on player.

 

 

Yeah, Dirk's not going to be great because the wind swirls where he comes from but he's got a strong head. He practically calls him inbred when he says they have few surnames, often Kuyt. It's shite.

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