Rui Costa retires

Tuesday, 13 May 08, 02:28 PM

Legendary Portuguese midfielder Rui Costa has brought an end to his illustrious career at the age of 36.

The Lisbon-born Rui Costa impressed Benfica legend Eusebio at the age of ten to win a place in the capital club's youth setup. In 1991 Costa won the youth world cup with Portugal before winning the Cup of Portugal in 1993 and the Portuguese Liga in the 93/94 season with Benfica.

But it was in Italy where the cultured midfielder would become famous. In 1994 Rui Costa joined Italian giants Fiorentina where he would win two Coppa Italia championships and beat out the great Zidane to be named played of the year at his position on multiple occasions. In 2001 Rui Costa made the move north to Milan, Costa would win a plethora of honors with the Rossoneri including the UEFA Champions League.

In 2006 Costa took a sizable pay cut and returned home to Lisbon to end his career at Benfica. Made captain for his final game Rui Costa ended his career by handing his red number 10 shirt to his father.

Rui Costa -

1990-1991: AD Fafe (6 league goals)

1991-1994 & 2006-2008: SL Benfica (23 league goals, Portuguese Liga 1994, Portuguese Cup 1993)

1994-2001: Fiorentina (40 league goals, Coppa Italia 1996, 2001, SuperCoppa de Italia 1996)

2001-2006: AC Milan (7 league goals, Serie A 2004, Coppa Italia 2003, Champions League 2003, European Super Cup 2003)

1993-2004: Portugal (94 caps, 26 goals)

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Ups & Downs in Europe

Monday, 05 May 08, 04:22 AM

It's the time of year where two extreme emotions take the headlines. For some the specter of relegation causes nightmares and agony, while for others the thought of promotion sends them into a state of euphoria.

Following Arsenal's spectacular meltdown the title race is between Manchester United and Chelsea. After Chelsea's recent victory over Man Utd the race is proving to be a tight one with the two sides equal on points headed into this weekend. However, Chelsea must check the rear view mirror as they could still be caught by Arsenal for the valuable automatic Champions League spot.

With Derby already down the race for safety in England is proving to be an exciting one. A solitary point separates Fulham, Reading and Birminham with Bolton three points ahead of Fulham and Reading not yet mathematically safe. The momentum is firmly with Fulham who seemed to receive new life with the return of former American international Brian McBride following his long injury layoff. The striker's work rate has inspired teammates to lift their game in recent weeks and may be enough to see Fulham continue in the Premiership next season.

Meanwhile in the Championship it's West Brom and Stoke City who are celebrating promotion to England's lucrative top flight. Though it wasn't easy, it took until the final week of a topsy-turvy season to determine who would finish where, who would go up, who would be in the playoffs, and who would go down. In the end it was Leicester who would be forced endure the drop to the third tier for the first time in the club's 124-year history. Leicester's relegation was confirmed after their draw with second place Stoke saw them hoping for Southampton to drop points, it didn't happen as the Saints dispatched Sheffield United 3-2 despiting having Stern John sent off late. The playoffs will see Hull City, Bristol City, Crystal Palace and Watford compete for the third and final promotion place as Mick McCarthy's Wolves barely missed out. Watford will be hoping to return to the Premier League at the first attempt while yo-yo club Palace will be hoping to go up and get it right this time. Bristol City, after facing financial ruin in the 80's, will look to return to the top flight after a long, tumultuous absence. Third place Hull have matched their best ever finish in the league, having finished third in the old second division during the 1904 season. The club have never played top flight football and will be looking to bring that honor to a city which has been starved for so long.

In France there is a title race, albeit a slight one, for the first time in years. Lyon have continued their domination of Ligue 1 but not without a challenge from Bordeaux. Under the management of former France international Laurent Blanc, Bordeaux have established themselves as a legitimate challenger to OL's throne. Indeed Bordeaux still sit with an outside chance of pipping Lyon to the title. But Bordeaux's high flying antics have been overshadowed by the hard fall of many of France's most traditional clubs. Auxerre, Monaco, and Lens have found themselves in the bottom half of the table while PSG see themselves in a right mess in the relegation zone. Headed into the final weeks Lens and PSG are both on 39 points with Lens hanging onto a one goal advantage. Lens have the tougher run-in, traveling to sixth place Lille and hosting second place Bordeaux while the Parisians host fifth place Saint-Étienne and travel to 13th place Sochaux. On the promotion front, Nantes will join Ligue 2 champions Le Harve in Ligue 1 next season while Grenoble and Troyes race to decide the final promotion spot. Any of six clubs could still drop to the Championnat National as Stade Reims, Amiens (who host PSG in a French Cup semi-final this week), Châteauroux, Dijon, and Boulogne all seek to avoid falling into the 18th position currently occupied by Niort.

In Italy it's Inter and Roma who will fight it out for the Scudetto in the final weeks with Juventus too far back to present a challenge in their first season back following relegation as punishment for a match-fixing scandal. Milan, Fiorentina, and Sampdoria are locked in a war for the final Champions League spot which currently sees the Rossoneri with the edge over their two less famous rivals. The bottom of the table sees all the relegation spots still up for grabs at the time of this posting, but Livorno will require a miracle to avoid the drop. Though they have a high chance of climbing out it seems that Parma's incredible downfall is showing no signs of slowing down. Currently in 18th, the club are a long way from the halcyon days of the 1990's. Mathematically 13th placed Lazio could still be dragged down but the spotlight will be on Empoli, Parma, Catania, Reggina, Torino and Cagliari to see who survives. A tip of the hat goes to tiny AlbinoLeffe who will join Serie B champions Chievo in Serie A next year. Pisa will join Bologna, Lecce, and Brecisa in the playoffs to see who secures the third promotion spot.

Scotland's relegation was confirmed early as Gretna's dream season quickly turned into a nightmare and they're now concentrating on the survival of the club as an entity. Celtic and Rangers will, as usual, fight it out for the SPL crown while third place Motherwell look to hold off Dundee United and Hibernian for the league's UEFA Cup birth. Hamilton will replace Gretna in the Premier League for next season.

Wow, that was long winded. I'll write about Germany and Spain later as their is still plenty of football to be played.

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