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101.www.oldtrafford.dk2040000
102.www.bfv.de2010000
103.www.calciatori.com1930000
104.www.socceramerica.com1910000
105.www.mainz05.de1860000
106.www.borussia.de1800000
107.www.flvw.de1760000
108.www.soccergenclix.net1750000
109.www.toronews.net1720000
110.www.nfv.de1680000
111.www.bundesligaforen.de1670000
112.www.gais.se1590000
113.ru.uefa.com1580000
114.www.fctwente.net1550000
115.www.ussoccer.com1520000
116.www.football.co.uk1510000
117.www.rsca.be1510000
118.www.slavistickenoviny.cz1510000
119.www.slavia.cz1470000
120.www.fussball-foren.net1450000
121.www.stadionwelt.de1440000
122.www.herthabsc.de1430000
123.www.acmilan-online.com1430000
124.www.sevillafc.es1420000
125.www.alemannia-aachen.de1390000
126.www.tifonet.it1380000
127.www.fussball.com1360000
128.www.bayer04.de1350000
129.www.stadia.gr1350000
130.www.juventus.it1330000
131.www.vfb-oldenburg.de1330000
132.www.arminia-bielefeld.de1320000
133.www.soccernet.com1300000
134.www.worldstadiums.com1300000
135.www.rfef.es1260000
136.www.trenink.com1260000
137.www.fansfc.com1240000
138.www.uslsoccer.com1240000
139.www.tuttonapoli.net1240000
140.www.soccerstats.com1230000
141.www.fpf.pt1210000
142.www.goalslive.com1200000
143.www.mackolik.com1180000
144.www.dif.se1180000
145.www.hfv-online.de1160000
146.www.rbk.no1160000
147.www.torwart.de1150000
148.www.valenciacf.es1150000
149.www.fvn.de1140000
150.www.sporting.be1130000
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101. www.oldtrafford.dk

Rating: 2040000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.oldtrafford.dk' on the other websites

www.oldtrafford.dk

Manchester United - OldTrafford.dk - Danske nyheder - jokes - sange - mobil - Premier League - forum - kampe - nistelrooy - fodboldrejser - historie - pub - TV - chat - irc - mirc - David Beckham - Giggs - Cantona - Best - Busby babes

Description: OldTrafford.dk har alt hvad en dansk United supporter har brug for.

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Christmas football on television
Don't miss a kick of the action with our guide to busy Christmas period.
telegraph.co.uk
Troubled Portsmouth hit with HMRC winding-up petition
• HMRC applied for petition on 23 December• Portsmouth express their 'shock and surprise'Portsmouth have been hit with a winding-up petition by HM Revenue & Customs. The petition was applied for by HMRC on 23 December but a full court hearing is not expected to take place until February.The Premier League's bottom club are currently operating under a transfer embargo due to their financial problems and have twice this season failed to pay player and staff wages on time.Although the club have released a statement denying they have been "formally served" with the petition, they have said they are "shocked and surprised" by HMRC's decision."The club is disputing the VAT amount outstanding and has formally notified HMRC of this. We expect HMRC to withdraw their demands forthwith."In such a tough economic environment the club finds it hard to understand this action by HMRC. It is well known that the business has been in a difficult position following former owners's decisions and the current owner is committed to resolving this and moving forward."PortsmouthPremier LeagueBusinessguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Bus Attack Highlights Security Concerns in SAfrica
LONDON (AP) -- The gun attack on Togo's national soccer team in Angola has again highlighted the security issues facing South Africa as it prepares to host the World Cup in five months.
feeds.nytimes.com
Neill signs Galatasaray deal
Socceroos captain Lucas Neill has signed an 18-month contract to join national team-mate Harry Kewell at Turkish club Galatasaray.
foxsports.com.au
The pain and peril of being an undercover Leeds United fan | Rob Bagchi
Having to sit there and soak up the home supporters' abuse can make you feel more partisan than if you were among your ownA consummate lack of organisation and the triumph of amnesia over experience have often left me on the morning of a Leeds away game with a ticket among the home supporters as my only method of going to the match. I know it's not really the done thing and indeed one of my friends would rather bail out than have to sit on his hands all afternoon but when it came to last week's FA Cup tie at White Hart Lane, squirreling myself among the Spurs fans still seemed a far more attractive prospect than not going at all and watching it on television.It can be an unsettling experience for the uninitiated, particularly when the atmosphere was as robustly "old school" as last Saturday's. The first hurdle is the walk to the ground, where the paranoia that you may get found out mingles with the even more unpalatable notion that the fans of your own side will mistake you for one of the opposition. Perhaps this is why some insist on having a secret sign about their person, the pin badge on the underside of the lapel that can be quickly flashed to save your skin if your assailant is particularly hawk-eyed, or a specific signal such as the Leeds salute.It is inside the stadium, though, that the real mental torture begins. There is an etiquette involved and its first principle is to look as nondescript as possible. It still amazes me that certain naïve and wildly Utopian supporters will deck themselves in their club colours despite standing out like a zebra among a pride of lions. If they are shrewd or cunning enough to take a child with them as a shield to deter the milder elements from having a go at them they may well get away with it. But by and large, especially if your side does not lie down and lose and thus allow the opposition fans the opportunity to patronise the youngster and perhaps even ruffle their hair, it is not the wisest approach. Besides, kids can slow you down when you've got to make a run for it.I would suggest that singing is a taboo, too. When a Forest fan of my acquaintance got Stretford End tickets for himself and his rather less worldly father at Old Trafford, his dad responded to a song alluding to Stuart Pearce's penalty miss at Italia 90 during the warm-up by breaking into the "Psycho" chorus and wondered why he spent the next two hours getting pelted in the back of the head by scrunched-up fag packets and pie foils, while his son speculated loudly on whether he had in fact been adopted.The best policy is to sit there in silence, staring resolutely ahead and trying to stifle the instinctive twitching and tensing of your body as the game progresses. Most poker players have "tells", slight, involuntary changes to their demeanour that betray the state of their hands. Even when marooned in potentially hostile territory and perennially on guard to the dangers of the sort of subtle trap that did for Gordon Jackson in the Great Escape, football fans are the same and can give themselves away by the inopportune dropping of their shoulders or the clenching of their fists and the constant muttering under their breath.So long as you act subdued and throttle the inclination to say something, you should generally be OK but the way you behave when there's a goal for your side will always carry the threat of unmasking you as a fifth columnist. I find loudly berating the defence for some perceived lapse is a good outlet for the adrenaline but there is always someone hard or drunk enough or too daft to come in out of the rain, who cannot help himself and celebrates. If you are lucky enough to be at a ground in London this usually provokes some choice Guy Ritchie-style phrases involving "our manor", "facking liberties", "norvern scum", followed by finger-pointing and entreaties to stewards and police to do something about it.At White Hart Lane after Tottenham had retaken the lead, 30,000 fans sang "Wanker, what's the score?" at the twerp on the Shelf who had leapt to his feet when Leeds first equalised. Part of me hopes there was a lone voice crying "2-2" in the wilderness in the 95th minute when Jermaine Beckford converted the penalty but I suspect he was either unconscious, long gone or had belatedly made the equation between discretion and self-preservation.Because you have to sit there and soak up the home supporters' abuse towards your team it can make you feel even more partisan than if you were among your own. The right result makes it an invigorating experience and probably heightens the celebration by the time you reach sanctuary. It cannot replace being part of an identifiable group and being allowed safely to act the goat to your heart's content but even with its constraints it is better to be there undercover than not at all.Leeds UnitedTottenham HotspurFA CupRob Bagchiguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk