This has been a week of discontent in Spanish football, with talk of strikes almost overshadowing everything else here, including .
Games in the Spanish first division will finally go ahead this weekend after a Madrid court ruled on Wednesday that the .
However, the concluding comments of the presiding magistrate Purification Pujol were hardly an overwhelming endorsement of the six so-called "rebel" clubs - , , , , and - who took legal action to have the strike called off.
"The League has adopted the calendar and it would be a very unusual situation if we were to reject this injunction which would then result in a sudden change in the calendar," said Pujol, making little comment about the reasons behind the strike call.
What this means is that the strike is off for now. However the remaining 14 clubs, who wanted to cancel this weekend's games - which included a tricky visit by league leaders to third-placed Villarreal - are still frothing at the mouth to get changes to the broadcasting laws that means at least one game every weekend has to be available on free-to-air television.
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will go down as one of the most ill-fated of a major football nation but coach Laurent Blanc appears to have finally got his players and the French public to focus on the future rather than the past
The noises emanating from Les Bleus' training camp at Clairefontaine in the last few days have been positive ones. Harmony, at least on the surface and in public, has been restored. Pulling on a French jersey has become fun again rather than a chore, according to captain .
After the 1-0 home defeat by Belarus which opened their Euro 2012 qualifying campaign, some wondered whether Blanc had really been the right choice to succeed .
Since then, however, Blanc's team have rattled off three straight wins to stand on top of their group.
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has been in a few difficult situations during his coaching career but the Dutch legend has really taken on a challenge by accepting the job at the helm of the Russian Premier League side
Public disagreements with the then Chelsea chairman Ken Bates and Newcastle hero Alan Shearer during his stints at those clubs seem to pale by comparison to trying to make a club competitive that finished 12th out of 16 teams in the Russian top flight last season, just three points above the relegation zone.
There is also the political situation in to take into account.
Even though the mood in Grozny, the capital city, has been a lot calmer in the last two years since the Russian government in Moscow managed to reassert its control over the region, the social, economic and psychological scars after two wars in the last 20 years still remain.
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At least in comparison to recent seasons, the last 16 in this year's Europa League seems to be loaded with clubs who have an illustrious history.
CSKA Moscow, Porto and PSV Eindhoven are names that immediately catch the eye - and Manchester City's next opponents, Dynamo Kiev, are no exception.
The pair meet for the very first time in a competitive match on Thursday, when they take to the field at the chilly Valeriy Lobanovskiy Dynamo Stadium, named after the Ukrainian side's famous former player and coach. Lobanovskiy - who died in 2002 - was at the helm when Dynamo won the Cup Winners' Cup in 1975 and 1986.
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The coming week could have profound significance for Italian football with expected to start formal talks which could result in them becoming the first major Italian club to end up in foreign hands.
Roma might not be the first top-flight Italian club to have foreign owners but they will be by far the biggest, having resided in Serie A for all but one of the 78 years of their existence and having been the champions on three occasions, .
Another Italian club, Vicenza, were under the control of , between 1999 and 2005, and they spent some of that time in Serie A.
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