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A portuguese post card from Dirk


Paco
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From .tv

 

Dirk Kuyt has revealed what he and his teammates have been getting up to during their five-day training camp in Portugal.

In a diary piece for icons.com, the Dutchman admitted the lads were having a great time preparing for next week's Champions League clash with Barca.

 

He said: "I'm in Portugal at a training camp with Liverpool at the moment. We haven't got a game until next Wednesday so the boss has brought us away for five days to do some training and team-building.

 

"We're training in the morning, and then in the afternoon we'll have a game of golf, play some cards and have a meal with the lads in the evening.

 

"It's a great chance for everyone to get to know each other better, particularly for people like me who are in our first season at the club.

 

"It's also a good chance for me to improve my golf! I don't have a handicap, but I reckon I would play off about 22. It's not something I played much before, but the lads at Liverpool play all the time and some of them are pretty good.

 

"So I'm taking lessons now. I play every week and go to a driving range because I'm determined to get better. I like to win at everything I do, and golf is no different. I'll let you know how I get on."

 

Kuyt also spoke about his love of Liverpool and the Anfield faithful.

 

"To have the respect of the supporters is great. It has really helped me settle in," he said.

 

"I'm so lucky. When I was at Feyenoord, I had the greatest fans in Holland behind me, and now I'm at Liverpool I think we have the best fans in England.

 

"The support they give us is unbelievable, I've never known anything like it.

 

"What honours me most is that when we played Arsenal in the Carling Cup, it was a horrible night, it was cold, it was raining, and of course it's a lot of money to come and watch. But it was sold out!"

 

The striker has inspired several Kuyt-related songs since his arrival in the summer, but he admits there is one that has stuck out.

 

"I've heard the song the fans sing for me, too: Put your hands up for Dirk Kuyt. I want to thank every one of them for that. To have the respect of the supporters is great. It has really helped me settle in. It was a great song already and now I like it even more!"

 

Kuyt also revealed he and his teammates are feeling confident of progressing to the quarter-finals of the Champions League despite the quality of next week's opposition.

 

He said: "What a game it is, away to Barcelona. We will have to improve on our performance against Newcastle, for sure.

 

"I believe we drew the best team in the Champions League when we got Barcelona, they are the champions after all, but I also believe we can beat them.

 

"It's always good to play against the best teams, and if you want to win the trophy you have to beat the strongest teams at some stage.

 

"We're lucky that we have the second leg at Anfield, and when we get them back there we will have the incredible Anfield crowd behind us."

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The official site is lame. Multimedia technology in football is lagging behind massively. For baseball it's possible to buy a season subscription for about £60; that's every game at 700kbps quality. Not every game of one team, every game, you can watch one or you can have six on the go at once. It's something the Premier League should look to exploit but they won't because the television companies would shit it. Whereas, for our official site you get highlights and interviews for about £40. It's a rip off.

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The official site is lame. Multimedia technology in football is lagging behind massively. For baseball it's possible to buy a season subscription for about £60; that's every game at 700kbps quality. Not every game of one team, every game, you can watch one or you can have six on the go at once. Whereas, for our official site you get highlights and interviews for about £40. It's a rip off.

I guess if the "baseball model" is at all viable on this side of the pond, we've got the right guys in charge now.

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Multimedia technology in football is lagging behind massively. For baseball it's possible to buy a season subscription for about £60; that's every game at 700kbps quality. Not every game of one team, every game, you can watch one or you can have six on the go at once. It's something the Premier League should look to exploit but they won't because the television companies would shit it. Whereas, for our official site you get highlights and interviews for about £40. It's a rip off.

 

The problem may be that if the games were available over the net then very few would pay for the TV version, which might lead to TV losing interest. With Premiership clubs receiving an average of £30m a season from TV they may not want to kill the Golden Goose.

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My word Dave, I expect you passed your 11+ as well!

 

The TV deals can't go on; it's only a matter of time before the big guns challenge for the right to show games for themselves.

 

They almost do that now in Spain. Real Madrid's TV contract is £800m for the next 6 years. Barca's is almost as high.

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They almost do that now in Spain. Real Madrid's TV contract is £800m for the next 6 years. Barca's is almost as high.

 

Exactly. And with the hard nosed business men in charge of several high profile clubs the Premier league will be bricking it come next negotiation time.

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£100 quid a year from 200,000 fans is a lot of money.

 

It would have far greater subscription levels as the money goes to a central pot, so to speak. It gets divided by all teams but as I said, and Dave said too, the tv companies wouldn't like it. Where baseball get away with it is this, baseball is hardly broadcast outside of North America. It's possible to watch some games on the telly, but it's only a few and each team plays almost every day for six months, so there's a lot of games and probably well over ninety percent of them aren't shown on television outside of North America. So the MLB aren't treading on anybody's toes by creating this service. The ones that are shown on television in a particular territory get blacked out.

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