Mié. May 1st, 2024



Dan Thomas, Steve Nicol, Craig Burley, Luis Garcia and Frank Leboeuf answer your questions on ESPN FC Extra Time.

0:00 Steve has a question for Luis
2:31 Has scrapping away goal rule impacted Euro competition?
3:23 Will Spain or France go further this summer?
5:24 Are players from before the 90s being forgotten?
10:04 Craig & Frank (Chelsea) vs. Luis & Steve (Liverpool) in a 5 v 5 game
14:05 What FC pundit would Dan pick to take a penalty in UCL final?
17:02 What rule from today would you want during your playing days?
21:37 What is Ansu Fati’s ceiling?
23:33 What will happen first?

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30 comentario en “Will Spain or France go further in Euro 2024? | ESPN FC Extra Time”
  1. France for sure. Spain have always struggled against physically bigger and stronger teams and I don’t expect that to change. Yes, they managed a WC and a Euros, but that team had an unbelievable roster with arguably some of the best players of all time at their positions.

  2. France are so predictable they play a 4 3 3 their line up is the same their midfield cant control the game mbappe only plays up the field he never plays behind the ball(defend) the middle is getting penetrated easily if they dont get gusto and olisé to the euros they will get embarrassed

  3. I would like to add my take on thr 90s legends who playing the football game. I do recognize Platini, Cruyff, Baggio, Romario and the likes did the spectacular and unbelievable performances on thr world stage. Such plaudits were very visible and tangible in those eras and onlh now we seem to have not equate the same kind of pedigree in their games and styles.

    Consequently, the football is ever changing and everyday revolving around nations and clubs in order to build up characters and personalities that will overtake the next generation. As we can see with the likes of Haaland, Mbappe, Bellingham, Endrick, Wirtz and many other upcoming marquee talents across the world.

  4. Group B and D are interesting. Surely Ronaldo is laughing. Can England bring it home or Italy takes it, once again, to Rome. Germany after a horrible world cup campaign can they repeat '64, '08 and '12 of Spain. Belgium certainly will rely on KBD to bring the magic when playing for City.

  5. This is silly. The likelihood of Arsenal winning the UCL is way higher than England winning the World Cup. Arsenal is 6 to 1 for this year's UCL alone versus England's 7 to 1 in 2026 and the UCL happens every year versus every 4 years for the WC.

    If one extrapolates all the way to 2030 (2 WCs and 7 UCLs) and assume 6 to 1 for Arsenal this year and 20 to 1 every subsequent year until 2030 as well as 7 to 1 for England in both 2026 and 2030, that gives us:

    England: 7 to 1 twice is 26% chance.

    Arsenal: 6 to 1 and 6 times 20 to 1: 6/1 is 0.17 so 83% chance NOT to win. 20 to 1 is 0.05 so 95% chance NOT to win.

    0.83 * 0.95 * 0.95 * 0.95 * 0.95 * 0.95 * 0.95 * 0.95 = 0.58

    58% chance NOT to win is a 42% chance to win.

    So England has a 26% chance to win the world cup from now to 2030 and Arsenal has a 42% chance of winning the UCL in the same period.

  6. I tell u what frank Italy, Spain and Brazil are not what they used to be. They’re not scary anymore They’re just normal teams now you can easily beat them nowadays

  7. Computer games are the only reason a lot of under 40s , under 30s know who most the of legends are. Its not because they have ever seen them play unfortunately.

  8. About the 80s. I was born in 1995 and I consider myself a huge football fan. I read a lot, watch a lot… but I only learned about Aston Villa's European championship a few years ago in my mid 20s. You would expect that to be the sort of fact everyone would know about

  9. There is definitely recency bias among modern day fans who seem to think football only started in the 1990s. When Ashley Cole was inducted into the Premier League Hall Of Fame the other day, so many noobs were posting in the comments that he is the best left back of all-time. If their knowledge of football history went back further than the 90s they would be aware of legends like Paul Breitner, Ruud Krol, Giacinto Facchetti, and Antonio Cabrini, who were all better players than Cole, and had more successful careers.

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