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Tequilo
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Posts: 313
Founded: Dec 04, 2018
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

Cálculo-4 Intro

Postby Tequilo » Tue Feb 16, 2021 2:02 am

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TAPALUPÉ, TEQUILO - Welcome to the fourth season of Liga-TQ, Tequilo's premier domestic pitxi (football) competition; installment number four already? - How time flies when you're locked up! As ever, the briefest of summaries tells us that revenues are up, attendances were impressive, commercial opportunities are on the increase and we've even got some foreign types in the league now. Not to mention some fancy new graphics on the newswire... sit back, enjoy the gloss, and watch the season unfold.


THE CAROLINA PLAN
RESTRUCTURING FOR CHAMPIONS, SEASON FOUR


At Big Ten club Fábrica, the board of directors always seem to be too busy when the annual Liga-TQ General Meeting comes around, off on their jet-skis and speed boats in a fancy tax-free resort like Ipanema or Taxhavn or the principality of Mustardy. So they send poor put-on commercial shop manager Carolina Ruiz to the meetings, to listen to all that the powerful chairmen and women have got to say, take some notes, deliver any messages and to report back on how it all goes in the fancy meeting rooms of the Museo de Pitxi, the Tequiloan FA's HQ, in Tapalupé. Two seasons ago she got a bit ahead of herself and threw an idea into the pot that led to the adoption of the 'Cosmopolitos Amendment' - permitting unlimited foreign players to feature in Liga-TQ, largely for the benefit of widening television audiences, increasing shirt sales, encouraging pitxi tourism... generally leveraging as many chèlinpesos from the game as possible. Well done Señora Ruiz - it certainly worked.

Repeating her habit of uninvited interventions last season, she suddenly came up with a plan to help all the big clubs ensure they had a better chance of qualifying from the state championship to the money pot of Liga-TQ via the now widely known but barely understood ‘Carolina Plan’. To make the most of her strategic vision, and to stop her making all the chairpersons look stupid at this year’s meeting, the Unión have put her in charge of the disastrous City of Football project, to build new facilities for the national team - now eight years behind schedule. Of course, she has already got it back on track. She’s a very underrated shopkeeper, that Señora Ruiz.

It is only left for me to advise you that the Carolina Plan is well under way, and to explain to you how it will work this season - given that it adds seven and a half layers of extra complexity over an already indecipherable league structure that has aspirations to be as confusing as the old Farv leagues (before they upped their Confusionist approach to world class levels with the Banija-Busoga multi-association thingammy-whatsit). With the mass relegation of season three complete and the state championships suitably resized for the next edition of Liga-TQ, this is approximately what will happen:

The state championships will fight out a two-stage apertura and closura system. From the second tier (2-Sección) downward, the twenty-team divisions will simply play a home and away round robin totalling 38 games with the usual amount of promotions, relegations and play-offs at the end. They will play 19 games in the apertura, and 19 returns in the closura.

The top tier divisions (1-Sección) now have only ten teams in each of the six states. So, at the end of apertura, when the lower tiers have completed half their games, the 1-Sección divisions will have completed all their home-and-away round robin ties. Then it will be time to move into the closura, and the newly enlarged Liga-TQ. Each of the three Liga-TQ divisions - Primera, Proxima and Pequeña - will be expanded to ten teams. The important one - the Primera - will contain last season’s champion and runner-up, plus last season’s Proxima winner, and last season’s Copa Tequilo winner, leaving six remaining places for the winners of the six state championships, or the next best teams if they have already qualified by dint of one of the four reserved places listed.

The next ten-team division, the Proxima, will contain the winner of last season’s Pequeña, six state runners-up and the three best third-place teams, plus more if any have gone upward into the Primera because they won the cup or something. Finally the Pequeña will take the three remaining third-place teams and the next best teams per state filling up to ten. Each of these divisions will play out a home/away round robin, 18 games, as the closura that will end at the same time as the lower tier state championships.

For all those teams from 1-Sección who don’t make Liga-TQ for the closura (precisely half of them), they will play in three more divisions of ten in descending order of merit, called the Interstate League, or Liga-IS; with a single place for the champion of the IS being guaranteed a spot in next season’s Liga-TQ Pequeña.

There. Simple really.


THE COMMISSIONER’S ELECTION
NUMBER-CRUNCHER GETS THE NOD OVER SORCERER AND MEDIA DARLING


Not content with the huge shake-up at the Unión following the Kipolalia scandal - the infectious disease brought to Tequilo from the Iast IAC in Gibberwilde; and with sacking the national team management and coaching staff; and with appointing a competent person to manage the ruinous City of Football project; it was also time for the first election of the Commissioner’s post for Liga-TQ, held in the first place by the non-elected appointment of legendary former footballer and shaman Pablo Invocador. The man who once spoke a magic enchantment to make an opposing goalkeeper stand on his head whilst he took a penalty against the unfortunate fellow - and who got a red card for unsportsmanlike conduct for his efforts - had, by everyone’s general agreement, done a splendid job overseeing the foundation of the league and it’s immediate impact on Tequiloan pitxi society, where it had overturned the 120-year dominance of state football in only three seasons, increased crowds and television audiences, and consequently - and most importantly - trebled the income to clubs and chairpersons. It seemed a dead certainty that no-one would oppose the charming legend from Fábrica Tapalupé, let alone beat him in an election; but for all his charm and uncanniness, and for all his success in helping to establish Liga-TQ, he did not stand alone.

Sensationally, but perhaps not surprisingly, Motozintla chairman, billionaire owner and A-List celebrity Gedeó Dosrius decided he must stand in opposition - officially, to provide the sort of business sense, as the owner of a multiversal shipping consortium, that would take Liga-TQ to the next level of fame and fortune. Unofficially, of course, it was encouraged by the television production company that was still charting the fortunes of his club through the hugely successful fly-on-the-wall documentary series, Make Moto Great Again. Each season the producers were looking for a new angle, and having Gedeó compete for the Commissioner’s job at the league would make a perfect backdrop to the season ahead. Being a man of unlimited ego, constantly in need of exposure and attention, he was more than willing to oblige, and put himself forward on a ticket of making Liga-TQ not only the primary footballl product of Tequilo and the Wide Enness Ocean, but making it the biggest and best damned commercial sports enterprise in the whole flaming multiverse. When Gedeó left the producers office with his mind set, they must’ve known he surely couldn’t possibly win against Pablo Invocador; but they would be rubbing their hands with glee knowing how badly he would play up once he lost the election. It was going to be carnage, and they would be right there, cameras rolling.

As the owners of the clubs gathered for their annual meeting, joined as usual by the shopkeeper Carolina Ruiz representing for the Fábrica board who were off on their holidays, they were introduced to a lecturer allegedly from the Kelssek Electoral College who had been brought in in an advisory capacity, since it was widely agreed that, in order to keep with the tradition in Tequiloan football for massive, incomprehensible and needless complexity, a straight majority vote between two candidates would be boring and counter to the ethos of the Unión. As everyone knows, the Kelssek Electoral College (KEC) is the multiverse’s premier academic institution for the study of bestowing a deceptive perception of democratic process upon the selection of a predetermined-by-privilege individual or group to maintain a balance of power over a wider cohort of individuals and groups, and primarily by devising comprehensively complex and indecipherable filter mechanisms through which to accomplish this (Editor’s note: The Legalese Electoral Polytechnic (LEP) might with some justification dispute the assertion that KEC is the premier institution). Introduced simply as ‘Mr. Wilson’, the electoral advisor suggested a complicated system using repeating run-offs and blind ballotage contigencies with D’Hondt filter mechanisms and whatnot, (something like that anyway, no-one was quite sure what he was going on about really) which basically called for a third candidate with absolutely no hope of being successful also being on the ballot to lend some additional air of credence to the winner (who everyone knew was going to be Señor Invocador) and preventing the runner-up (who everyone knew was going to be Señor Dosrius) from being able to delegitimise the vote in any way.

No-one in the room of powerful and rich club owners wanted to volunteer to be the lame duck in a crapshoot, so naturally they all turned to the shopkeeper Carolina Ruiz for her thoughts, and probably rather hoped she would volunteer. But as we know, Carolina was by now about to quit her job as the manager of the Fábrica club shop, to manage the City of Football project; so all she could offer was some sage advice. She was of the mind that with two big personalities fighting it out in Señors Invocador and Dosrius, what they needed was someone who wouldn’t compete for air… an administrative type, someone who could be relied upon not to attract too much attention. When they looked around the room, there weren’t many of those types about. Just Carolina, and that fellow over there, from the Unión, in the grey suit with the grey tie, and the double-entry ledger on the table in front of him, who would soon do a statistical presentation for them on the cash flow forecast for the next three years which, if they didn’t turn the aircon down to just above freezing, would send them all to sleep.

Martín Escorinato.

There were two major surprises in the election for the next commissioner of Liga-TQ. The first was that Gedeó Dosrius had far more support from the lower echelons of the football community than anyone had ever imagined - his populist “I can make everyone great again” message, which didn’t really hold one drop of water when you actually thought about it, was very alluring to your Nómada Clubs, your Sardíneros, your Hipopótamus-Joaxhas and your Raití Tangos of this world. He rode a wave of approval on a ridiculous ticket right up to the desk of safe bet incumbent Pablo Invocador, who actually had made the league great and did seem to know what he was doing. The second surprise came in the form of Mr. Wilson’s ‘narrow margin Droop quotient separator’ mechanism for splitting indivisible ties. It seemed, though he had neglected to mention it in plain Tequiloan, that in the case where there was very strong support for one or other candidate with great resistance for the other, it was likely the middle-of-the-road, not-competing-for-air lame-duck-in-a-crapshoot third candidate would appeal to both sides as the alternative so as to exclude the strong unwanted second candidate. Señor Martín Escorinato won the election in the Droop-off to become the second commissioner of Liga-TQ. And after all, he did know how to make the league work. He had spent a lot of late nights and early mornings generating the data that kept the system running. He knew how to use the XK OpTeq simulator.

Quietly, and without leaving his invoice on the secretary’s desk, Mr. Wilson took his leave of the stunned board room, and grabbed an express taxi to the airport.
::: FORGOTTEN BUT NOT GONE :::
BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE

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Tequilo
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Posts: 313
Founded: Dec 04, 2018
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

Cálculo-4 Pre-Season News

Postby Tequilo » Tue Feb 16, 2021 11:22 pm

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OFF-SEASON NEWS & MOVES
CLUBS SHUFFLING THEIR PACKS BEFORE KICK-OFF
₸ = Tequiloan Chèlinpeso, the national currency, pegged close to 1:1 to the NS$

Money is moving Liga-TQ like never before... another record-breaking off-season sees the largest transfer fees paid domestically, and internationally too - Vilca Hualla's move to Mar Sara FC the second highest fee paid in the window, creating immense pride back home that the national team captain has once again been recognised by an international powerhouse nation for his fine abilities; and he seems to have hit the big time for a modest young man from the cloud forests of Guastenango state.

THE HEADLINERS

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VILCA HUALLA to MAR SARA FC - NS$10m
For a second season in a row, national team captain Vilca Hualla makes a big foreign move and breaks his own record as the most expensive Tequiloan of all time, switching from KT Itzalovalle in Audioslavia to Mar Sara FC in, of all places, Valanora. After a mixed season at Itzi, it seemed the Audioslavs were happy to cash in with a quick ₸2m profit and for the first time, a Tequiloan will try his hand in Eternal Empire's Premiership. For Liga-TQ executives, it opens another mouthwatering market for potential commercial spin-offs and extra cashmoney, so they must be rubbing their hands with glee.

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MÂÁRTËN ÂLLÁMBÂLÁR to FLORENTINO - ₸4.8m
Florentino confounded all the usual big spenders - Moto, Haïtiens and the 77o - to break the domestic transfer record, swooping for CF Frantxizko-A's exciting Farv striker with an irresistible offer and sending out a strong message that Los Violetas remain full of ambition after becoming one of the dominant forces of the early Liga-TQ era. Since signing from the chaos of the Farv lower leagues Mâártën Âllámbâlár had been a standout in lifting CFFA back toward the top where they belong, and in the process got longlisted for the Galacticos Award, the first Tequilo-based player to do so.

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ISIDORO ARTECHEVARRIA to MOTOZINTLA - ₸4.6m
Not prepared to let Florentino grab all the headlines so far as money and records go, Moto chairman Gedeó Dosrius opened his chequebook to break Haïtiens' record for a domestic transfer of a Tequilo national - ₸4m for Roxelio Toran last season - to prise the national team left midfielder from Urbo Ibaeta in what looks like it could be one of the signings of the season. Moto needed someone to help toughen up a squad which at times looked a little flaky last season and fell from a title-winning position to third in the last five games of the season. If anyone brings spine to a team, it is Isidoro.

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EMMANUEL PARÍS to HORNCHURCH - ₸3.5m
There wasn't really a record for the most expensive transfer of a youth team player but Euran talent-developers Hornchurch have set the initial bar with their acquisition of Argón Tacranza's prized youth asset, the stylish full back announcing he would not be signing a full senior contract and the Argonauts deciding to cash in while they could. They have made a decent raise on the boy, who was a stand-out in the recent under-18 World Championship and looks to have a pathway mapped to the national team seniors over the next few years - but it is still a blow, especially for the fans.


THE BIG MONEY

There was a time when the 10-Nacional (that's the members club for the ten most successful clubs of all time, commonly called The Big Ten) were ten teams that didn't include Motozintla because they hadn't won enough. But when Moto recently matched Resplendiente's title haul, so that there were 11 teams at the top, the 10-Nacional was expanded to eleven. To save time on the graphics, the elite group of clubs continued to use the name 10-Nacional and the punters still called them all 'the Big Ten'. And then, Moto's big-money rivals Haïtiens, who have hardly won a thing but are surely now the richest team in the country, demanded a place too. Money talks in Tequilo, so now, the 10-Nacional is defined as 'the eleven most successful clubs of all time, commonly called The Big Ten, plus Haïtiens'. Really we all know the 10-Nacional is the Big Ten, and then there are the Billion-Peso Two on top, in a category all their own. So what business have they been conducting in preparation for this season?

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MOTOZINTLA
It was a busy window for Moto. Not content with the impressive capture of Isidoro Artechevarria, a bonafide star in Tequilo pitxi, Chairman Gedeó and his head coach Mauricio Nores recruited some interesting young talent, briefly breaking the transfer record for a youth team signing with a ₸1.9m layout on Pelotón Academy youngster Sebastián, an attacking midfielder who has been on their radar for some time. They have also taken a punt on a rising lower league star, 21-year old rightback Huacaloya from Atléta Iparra. Not content with domestic product, Moto looked to the Cosmopolitas, bringing in senior defenders Kiyabu Shunko from FC Squidroidia Squidbreak and Boualem Ghannouchi from KT Moreazerua on free transfers.

Outbound of course was the legend, club favourite Mateo Tafalla heading for pastures new in wait, where? Clearly looking for a quiet retirement, he's off to the ZRH, the country that broke his captain's heart in the Baptism of Fire semi-final back in '72, and will sign on a free for DD Porto Nowi - or Nowi Chock as we jokingly call them here in the office. Promising rightback Päo saw out his contract and does pretty well landing a new one with Hellenic Rouge in Pasarga, giving him a serious uplift to his profile. Meanwhile, young striking prospect Macedoni Altés surprised everyone in wanting away, and Acacoyagua will feel they still have a bargain after capturing his signature for a club record ₸2m.

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HAÏTIENS
With all the cash knocking around the transfer system again this season, it was a comparatively modest window from the super-rich club from the capital, with 'The Wights' limiting their spending to one domestic signing, one Cosmo and two free transfers. Admittedly, they pulled off a coup with the ₸2.6m signing of highly-rated young keeper Abas Juanarena from Unuiĝinta, and he was still the fourth most expensive domestic transfer of the season, if measuring in cash is your thing. If not, they also picked up 23-year old rightback Guañuna on a free from El Quetan, and Tikariot midfielder John Percovich, 19, from new sibling club Molding, in Græntfjall.


THE BIG TEN

As the 'royal family' of Tequiloan football, these ten clubs, members of 10-Nacional, expect to be in the shake-up at the end of every season, and between them are the teams with the most state titles so far - and all three Liga-TQ national titles have gone to Big Ten clubs too. Mâártën Âllámbâlár and Isidoro Artechevarria aside, what have they been up to in the off-season?

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ACACOYAGUA
As the Liga-TQ cash begins to make it's impact right cross the league, Acaco broke their club record transfer fee with a surprise swoop for Motozintla's promising young striker Macedoni Altes, 20, who stunned his club and an unimpressed chairman in Gedeó Dosrius by requesting a move away, citing his lack of enthusiasm for being constantly under the gaze of the cameras from the Make Moto Great Again fly-on-the-wall documentary. Acaco also promote a couple of promising academy players into the senior squad - Amaru, 17, a leftback and Zenegalese centrehalf Güylor Ngoma, 18, adding depth to the defence.

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ÁRGON TACRANZA
The big news at Argón in the off-season was the loss of star youth player Emmanuel París, 18, one of the brightest prospects in Liga-TQ; having impressed so highly in the last Under-18 World Championship as Tequilo reached the final in Chromatika, he was snapped up by Euran talent developers Hornchurch. To replace him Argón have poached Gustavo Alguacil, 21, from Haïtiens who saw out his contract and left on a free, while yet another from their academy production line, Felip Noves, will join the senior team.

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ATLÁS CIUREDOR
An extra-quiet transfer window at Atlás saw coach Xerman Figueredo fail to strengthen in the market, with winger Teo Montemayor, 23, sold to Ocozoxhuatla for ₸1.2m the only movement out of the club; while back up keeper Xeronimo Ravelo, 34, signs on a free from Asociación Olaya. Youth defender Diogo Junco, 18, is promoted from the academy team but Atlás are largely banking on the same team to improve on their Pequeña division qualification last season.

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FÁBRICA TAPALUPÉ
Two notable signings for Fábrica suggest coach Francisco Javier Sandoval has been backed by the board to get Fábrica up amongst the challengers now they have a newly rich rival in town in the form of Haïtiens. Francisco has gone for two young talents, highly rated, in the form of rightback Biel Lloris, 19, from Independiencia for just shy of ₸1m, and lower league prospect Puma, 21, the midfielder a club record signing of ₸2m from Florés Pasito. Attacking midfielder Benito Venegas, 21, returns from a successful loan at Cimarrones hoping to make an impression.

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FLORENTINO
With a total outlay of ₸9.4m Los Violetas broke not only the domestic transfer record on Mâártën Âllámbâlár but also the record for total spend in a transfer window as they decided a little retail therapy might help them get over the tragic loss of winger Esâ Neá, drowned after a Kip infection. Their biggest other spend was attacking midfielder Inozentzio, ₸2.2m from Peru Urzagui, while they also signed his backup Quetzoma Tepeca, 20, from lower league Ganzábal and 24 year old Audioslav defensive midfielder Les Jawallawalla from Shamrock Cathair.

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CF FRANTXIZKO-A
For The Golds, it's a sign of the times - unhappy ones, perhaps - that the main transfer news out of Estadio Mesperuza is the loss of Mâártën Âllámbâlár for the type of cash the club couldn't afford to turn down. Some of that was recycled back into the team with the capture of highly-rated defensive midfielder Lorenzo Pero, 21, from El Quetan for ₸1.8m, while the much anticipated Tamarindian defender Jayme Toxenes, 21, is named in the first XI after a great season out on loan at Atléta Idal.

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SC PEDREGAL
The reigning champions unusually were big movers in the transfer market just before head coach Ramiro Paredo left to take up the head coach role for the national team, making two big signings to strengthen their bid for a title defence. Unuiĝinta's star rightback Eolo Sorazar, 28, was signed for a club record ₸2.7m and having signed him but not coached him, the national team manager has called him up to the Tequilo squad. Meanwhile The Whistlers also swooped for leftback Nufro de Çaldibar, 21, the top signing from the lower leagues, coming in from Cartagenova for ₸2.3m, instigated by new management duo, the brothers Armando & Aaron Garrido, in from Independiente.

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PITXI-PITXI 77
The most active team in last season's transfer window, the 77o were financially much more conservative this season but for all that, they have picked up the bargain of the window with the free transfer signing of experienced national team defender Noxochinoch, 30, who called time on his years at Xicoa to see out his contract. Chased by several of the big teams, and expected possibly to go abroad, the 77o convinced him to join the most successful Tequiloan club of all time. Meanwhile they have gambled on young striker Baudilio Parga, 20, from Alianza Iparra for a modest ₸1m.

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REAL GARDARESSO
Two headline moves will make the Real board very happy as they see their usual press coverage diminished by the ever-hungry attention seeking at Motozintla and the press fascination with new money at Haïtiens. But recouping their ₸2m layout for Rinko Nazahn, off back home to Emerald Coast, puts an end to that sorry chapter of mistaken identity, while Real are the first to move for sacked national team manager Isaac Martí, fresh from the disaster of the IAC Kipolalia scandal. Controversy aside, this could be a real coup for Real.

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RESPLENDIENTE
Veteran leftback Aaron Palau, 34, ended his one-club legacy at The Crows, requesting a move for one final adventure elsewhere which the club were sure to grant, and he was picked up by Isaac Martí at Real for ₸875k with plenty still to offer. Former junior international Christopher Morterero sees out his contract and signs for Independiencia whilst another favourite vet, Tomas Campany, 35, moves down the tiers for his swansong. The club strengthen from within with Aleixo Salgado and highly-rated keeper Bisa stepping up from the academy.
::: FORGOTTEN BUT NOT GONE :::
BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE

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Tequilo
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Founded: Dec 04, 2018
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

Cálculo-4 RP#1 Young Guns

Postby Tequilo » Wed Feb 17, 2021 11:32 pm

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Welcome to the fourth annual edition of ¡TQ!, brought to you by your favourite pitxi newspaper, GOLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL-a!. With the first edition already completely sold out and follow-ups looking like collector's items in the making, perhaps you should leave your shiny new Edition Four in it's clearfilm wrap to maintain value - but if you are reading this, it's probably too late!

This year we are running new installments of some of your favourite sagas, and we'll be adding a couple of new items to the stable.

Our regular features in this edition: more spends at insanely rich Grupo Taxhavn's multiversal football project featuring our very own underachievers of gigantic scale, Haïtiens; join Boney spittalninny Mosey Ackanard, the wheeler-dealer wideboy manager who recently moved to Socrates and is working at becoming a legend in his own life time, not to mention his long-suffering wife Skela; we've all watched flamboyant billionaire Gedeó Dosrius on teevee with his 'Make Moto Great Again' fly-on-the-wall, but can you ever have enough power? Gedeó is going to try to find out. At the other end of the financial spectrum - and the pyramid system - are cult club Sardíneros - we check in with CEO, maintenance man and bar keep Xose Ron and the infamous half-blind matriarch Dolores who runs The Sardine Can catering van, with their new cult hero - 159 year Old Man Jenkins. Finally, you may have seen MiCF on the internet, you may even have joined - but can a few thousand internet fanatics really buy and run a Tequiloan football club from the comfort of their own WiFi? And Hipopótamo-Joaxha... seriously?

We carry on with our Trace and Track Special, focusing on infamous club mascot Posídon of Nómada Club, and The Man Behind The Mask - or underneath the costume - Joan-Obiko Sorarrainarte. Clearly our system isn't up to scratch as we've already lost touch with 'Biko' and we had to send our best investigative reporter out to track him down again. This is the story of one man's rise and fall within the strict regimen of the cult-like mascot's union, Número Extraordinario. Read our Trace & Track Special, Posídon The Earth-Shaker, to find out more.

New for Edition Four! We were all gripped - and a little frightened - by the horror and tragedy of the Kipolalia outbreak in the IAC squad that went to Gibberwylde and came back talking Gibberish. Down at Florentino, and across the archipelago of Antivador, they are still feeling the impact of the infectious auto-imitation virus - we follow how everyone is coping in the aftermath of 'turning gibbernese'.

But first, some talent spotting: who are the new kids on the block? With the much-vaunted Ciudad de Pitxi development centre still apparently a million miles away from being open, as anyone can testify if they drive the Tonorobos Rápido expressway out of Tapalupé City and take a passing glance at the great big hole in the ground that once was the lively suburb of Quezaldad, there is still no central pool of wonderful young players learning to play 'the Tequilo Way'... in fact, without a development centre, there surely is no 'Tequilo Way' just yet. But there are still plenty of juniors coming through at the big clubs - and perhaps some small ones - and we're eager to find the next cult heroes - the next Ixtub Tüns, the next Niño Pintos, and the next Jaïr Isclas. Although Jaïr Iscla is not quite a thing yet, is he?


THE NEXT XÍXÌ ÊNS
YOUNG GUNS ABOUT TO EXPLODE - OTHER METAPHORS ARE AVAILABLE


As is our prerogative, we have selected three emerging youth players who may take their Liga-TQ bows this season having been promoted to their senior teams from the various academies, predict greatness and ask ourselves, is this the next Xíxì Êns? Of course, so early in their careers, it's hard to predict what the outcome will be for such young guns, and many fall by the wayside, but if even one of these turns out to be a superstar, how good will the ¡TQ! Annual staff team look? We'll be dining out on that for years - so consider this an investment.

In a sobering season where we were forced to reflect back on the tragic loss of one of the nation’s bright stars in Florentino midfielder Esâ Neá to the deadly Kipolalia outbreak, we have yet more bad news following the cataclismic termination event that destroyed the nation of Glazgo and took three of our young players with it, as they were plying their trade in the dangerous backwater at the time of the catastrophe, and so far as we know, didn’t make it out alive. As Ruberte Castellano’s mother recently said, it’s not like we didn’t warn them about Glazgo - it was always a bit of a (worm) hole… they knew what they were signing up for, and sure enough, it looks like they got it. In memorium, we present what we sincerely hope won’t be a regular feature: The Next Esâ Neá - our obituary of fallen pitxileros.

But first, to keep things chipper and in no particular order, our prediction of rising stars is as follows:

FELIP NOVÉS
Leftback, 20, Argón Tacranza

Winner of the Liga-J national youth league player of the season last year for the famous Argón Academy, Felip has won two national titles with that youth team in three seasons, captaining the last one, and looks a superb prospect for the first team where he is ostensibly set to play back up to another graduate from a couple years back, Oossó Niní - but the truth is Oossó is not in the same class and he was less than inspiring last season: who can forget a hatrick of own goals in the embarrassing flatliner defeat at Fábrica in the big rivalry, or Cálculo, known as El Térifico? Or smacking himself in the face and knocking himself briefly unconscious when trying to manufacture a free kick from a patent dive against Ténis Club? Expect their relative positions to swap fairly rapidly if Felip makes a strong start to life in the seniors. The surprising thing is Felip has fallen through the cracks in selection for the national team junior age brackets so far and hasn’t won a single call-up for his country in the youth teams, though he is being spoken about for the under-21s. A good season in Liga-TQ should see him spring to the attention of that set up and it will be no more than he deserves - perhaps even a slot in the next IAC squad. Hailing from the town of Perçe in upstate Ocotapa, he does have some sporting heritage - his mother Graciela Toca and her sister Mita are famed throughout the country as former champion wrestling tag team The Toca Twins, later The Sisters of Perçe, while his grandfather is the late Guillermo Toca, who every fan of Bravo Cuahjaluca will tell you was the best player ever to pull on the famous old olive & indigo jersey.

AIKER TÊA
Left midfield, 18, Florentino

It is going to be a tough early career for Aiker Têa. At Florentino, they are still getting over the loss of one of their favourite sons - a young and dynamic winger Esâ Neá had come through the academy at Los Violetas with the long term aim to have him succeed Altar de Alcala, the ageing club legend. So highly thought-of was Esâ, that the club let Xaime Medal leave on a free - the ‘other’ left winger now first choice starter at 1830 Cathair - because they were convinced Esâ was the natural successor. But now Esâ is gone and yet another bright prospect has been promoted from an academy recently named for the lost son of Florentino. Aiker Têa may not have the weight of the world on his shoulders, but he will have the weight of Esâ Neá on them, and it is going to take some skilled background management by coach Huey Wight and his staff to look after the boy. That is not to say Aiker is not his own man. He is different to the tricky, technical Altar de Alcala - more direct. He is different to Xaime Medal, who only now is playing as good a game as the one he talked for years - he is a quiet, intense kind of guy. And he is different too to the late Esâ Neá, who was unpredictable, hard to read and hard to track. Aiker is about as hard to read as a steam train - and as hard to stop. He could easily fill a role in the back four, and will be the perfect cover when club fullbacks like Salazar de Alagon and Ixinio de Arcas press forward. His strength and size make him a surprising prospect on the wing, but he will bulldoze past defenders and has an eye for the perfect cross. Off the field, he carries that quiet intensity and the club feel he is ready to take the place of their lost son, mentally and emotionally. No doubt he will have to get used to endless comparison, but he has undeniably broad shoulders - enough to carry the weight of young heroes past.

KIM DENSULENE (WGT)
Centrehalf, 16, Haïtiens

A mighty tug of war is going on at the football associations of Tequilo (El Unión Pitxi) and Wight (the Haphazard Foundation) for the loyalty of Kim Densulene, nicknamed the Chaotic Kid at his first club, Haïtiens in Wight. When the club owners Grupo Taxhavn flashed their not inconsiderable cash and bought Haïtiens of Tequilo, founded a century ago by enthusiastic Wightling cultural colonialists who were executives of the original Haïtiens, and turned tradition on its head by making the Tequilo version of the club the senior sibling in the partnership, one of the first things they did was relocate the wonderkid from Haïtiens (WGT) youth team to Haïtiens (TEQ) youth team - and one year later, he’s won his place in the seniors at the tender age of 16. The rather convenient discovery by geneaologists at the Unión that he has a Tequiloan grandmother means they would quite like him to declare for the country and abandon his native Wight, since he is, by all accounts, a future world beater. As you can imagine, the uncanny folks back home in the dark country are not taking this lying down, but the leverage they lack is the potential to compete in World Cups - the winning of which by Wight is now but a slightly unbelievable footnote in the history of the competition. This season we may find out what all the fuss is about with the Chaotic Kid - a footballer with two left feet and crooked legs who plays like he’s done twenty-three spins around the dizzy stick and yet, for all that, and probably because of that, confounds every opponent he comes up against. He’s quite something to behold, so they say.

BISA
Goalkeeper, 17, Resplendiente

Bíssé Cuchi Picchina might turn out to be one of the great goalkeepers of Tequilo. He might turn out to be one of the great concert pianists of all the Wide Enness Ocean. Then again, he’s quite good at graffiti too, if you like that sort of thing. Those who do prefer to call it ‘urban art’ and those who make it ‘artists’ - whereas I always thought they were mostly vandals. But whatever your personal thoughts on the matter, he is undeniably proficient, and his ‘Bisa’ tags are all over the better renditions across the mountain city of La Conon, where in his spare time when not painting the town red or filling the halls with sweet music, he plays a bit of football. Being very tall and good at catching and leaping, he also turns out for the city’s main basketball club, the La Conon Spice; or did - now he’s graduated to the first team, his club would very much like him to buckle down and make a decision about his future career. It would seem, having signed a four year deal with The Crows, he’s at least willing to give pitxi his first shot. The skateboarders and taggers, the concert-goers and hoop-watchers will be terribly disappointed. The boy is an artist and destined for great things, and it seems leaping about and catching things looks like his chosen way to express himself, for now. He will be third choice at the club this season, behind national team stand-in Tepin Mecatl-Rubió and veteran Camilo Maroto, so fans may have a bit of a wait to see this young virtuoso in action. But by all accounts, and according to our prediction, it will be well worth the wait.


THE NEXT ESÂ NEÁs
OBITUARY: THE GLAZGO THREE


REST IN SHAMBLES
Ruberte Castellano, 21, DMC, formerly of Florentino, moved to Scotstounhill United; died in a Catastrophic Termination Event
Imran González, 21, AMC, formerly of Telmo Léao, moved to Kelvindale Town; died in a Catastrophic Termination Event
Serxio Andrada, 37, GK, formerly of Ocozoxhuatla, moved to Carntyne Wanderers; died in a Catastrophic Termination Event


What happened in Glazgo? No-one knows for sure, although there is plenty of speculation in the local taverns and cantinas. In my local, The Discord Bar, when they aren’t scratching each others eyes out about the statistical improbabilities of winning ten consecutive home matches whilst deploying the ’NSFS’ tactic, they talk about a giant methane belch that poisoned the whole country, followed by a fluid time reactor exploding in a reality generation plant, punching the nation into the middle of next week, where it was immediately engulfed and drowned by a volcanic lava tsunami. I’m not sure if that is very realistic, but something bad happened, and then Glazgo was no more. Ruberte, Imran and Serxio didn’t, so far as we know, make it out alive.

It would be disingenuous to say these were the greatest three footballers in the history of Tequiloan football - or even very good. At all. They went to Glazgo because, well, there probably weren’t many options left - I’m sorry, but that’s the long and short of it. That is also why they don’t get their own paragraphs in the obituary, and why there probably won’t be any statues of them outside their former clubs. None of us know much about them. Ruberte’s mother said he was a kindly sort of fellow, a bit dim, and easily led. When we asked her if that is how she wanted him to be remembered, she said it was better than picturing him running screaming from a stampede of giant glowing pyroclastic farting pigs; and we couldn’t agree more. A postman who used to deliver Orinoco boxes to Imran said he was always very polite and had a neat signature and a cheeky smile. His girlfriend, according to the postman, was extremely delightful; despite our very best efforts, we couldn’t track her down. At Ocozoxhuatla FC, the club secretary remembers that Serxio was always asking for copies of his pay slip, since he spent much of his life unsuccessfully applying for mortgages to buy ‘that house on the hill’ overlooking the city of Raití. That was never going to happen, she said. But at least he had a dream.
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Cálculo-4 RP#2 Mosey Ackanard

Postby Tequilo » Fri Feb 19, 2021 12:41 am


BONEY MOSEY
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF SPIVVY SPITTALNINNY MOSEY ACKANARD

Season 3
[Mejillones Lipa: The Beginning | Mejillones Lipa: The Promotion]

Join Boney spittalninny Mosey Ackanard, the wheeler-dealer wideboy manager working at becoming a legend in his own life time, in our regular feature from your favourite Pitxi Annual. This edition - Mosey heads to the capital for his new job at Socrates where it all began, and recollects how he and long-suffering Skela pitched up in the wrong country to make a fresh start.

SOCRATES: THE HOMECOMING

"I've told the chairman already," says Mosey, with his usual preseason refrain, “the club is down to the bare bones and he’s going to have to open his chequebook - we need more monkeys.”

Four of his favourite cliches in one sentence. He's the only man in recorded history who can speak Tequiloan with a Spittalninny accent - there have been many imitators, especially of late, but no-one has quite got it right. There is only one Mosey Ackanard; the cheeky fellow who played most of his career as a smooth and admired midfielder at Socrates before a brief swansong at Mejillones Lipa - “I went there for the beaches, Skela had had enough of the city” he says, referring to ‘long-suffering’ Missus Ackanard - and then an apprenticeship in coaching at Hoqué-Coqué and Mejillones, is back at the All-Reds where his long Tequiloan sojourn began. His first big management job will be to get Socrates back to the top flight, and the early signs of his coaching abilities are good, raising Mejillones from the basement to comfortable life in the second tier. Now it’s time for one step beyond - and one thing Mosey is not afraid of is a challenge. He was just eighteen, recently married and about to be released from his youth contract back home in Bonesea, where he had trained since the age of 11 at Florence Boldclub, when the trip to Tequilo came about. Mosey explains: “Skela says to me, ‘Mosey, let’s go somewhere sunny to raise some kids.’ I thought I might do alright if I tried my hand in Tamarindia, and I booked flights to Tapa International Airport with my exit payment from The Rues, for me, Skela and Skela’s cousin Orse. I swear I thought we were all off to Tamarindia and we’d been wandering around Tapalupé city for about a fortnight before Orse realised it was the capital of Tequilo. By then I’d had a trial at Socrates and they offered me a contract. Skela quite liked the culture and Orse had discovered the Piyacoque plant so he was alright. We decided to make a go of it and the rest is history, as they say.”

Cousin Orse settled with the Ackanards and the new family made a home in Tapalupé as the young Mosey began a successful career with the modest top flight outfit Socrates, who enjoyed one of their better periods under long-time manager Raul Sarmiento with the likes of all-time club favourites Marcos Dengra, Saúl Amengual and Simón Barrios in the side and Mosey Ackanard pulling the strings - even winning the State Championship for only the second, and last, time in the club’s history. Today he’s back, 30-something years after first walking in to the training ground and asking for a trial. While Skela is apparently firmly entrenched at their beachside home in Lipa from where Mosey commutes, and Cousin Orse went off to the cloud forests of Guastanenango to become a pharmacognosist, there is still a bit of a family feel to the new management team, with good friend and fellow Bonesman Tim Knute-Grahn joining Mosey as assistant. After a nomadic playing career, taking in Bonesea, Mercedini and Ethane, Tim was signed in the twilight of his career by Motozintla, and after retiring, spent last season as volunteer head coach a Sardíneros, an arrangement brokered by Mosey. Now they have been united at Socrates, and Mosey was quick to bring in veteran defensive midfielder Ira Hamstringsson from Gymnasia Scold back in the old country. “I’ve always admired him,” says Mosey, “he’ll bring plenty of character.” Ira signed as player-coach for the All Reds. To complete his staff, Mosey took retiring Audioslav striker Gabriël Franken from former club Mejillones, where he had convinced the ex-Isle of Kjeligstad FC and Sporting Vinovium player to spend his last playing season before moving with him to Socrates as part of the coaching team.

What might have happened if Mosey had looked at his atlas all those years ago and actually booked flights to Luz del Sol International Airport, in Misión, the capital of Tamarindia instead of ending up by mistake in Tequilo? “Who knows eh? I was going to try out for Atlético Misión but even though they weren’t up to much in Tamarindia, the football over there is a different level, isn’t it? I doubt I would have done as well as I did here. Besides, Skela loves it here, I mean she loves the beaches and islands. I couldn’t see her putting up with the rainforests, little monkeys and tree frogs for long.”

And cousin Orse? “Well if you could get a trip off licking the back of a Tamarindian tree frog, like I’ve heard, then he would have made out just fine, I’m sure. He’s an adaptable fella, cousin Orse.”


Next in ¡TQ! Pitxi Annual - MiCF: from keyboard warriors to championship managers - stories from the web community club, Hipopótamo-Joaxha.
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Cálculo-4 RP#3 MiCF

Postby Tequilo » Sat Feb 20, 2021 12:05 am


MI CLUB DE FÚTBOL
FROM KEYBOARD WARRIORS TO CHAMPIONSHIP MANAGERS

Takeover Season T.+1
[Foundation Season T.-1 | Acquisition Season T.0]

TAKEOVER

What if you could create a multi-user platform like popular Tequiloan football management sim Máximo where everyone worked together to manage a club - and the club was real? Select the team, pick the tactics, hire and fire the manager, design the kit, choose the stadium refreshments and write the matchday programme? Enter Mi Club de Fútbol, or, to keep the keystrokes at a minimum for the less able keyboard warriors, MiCF.

"This could be big," said founder and computer nerd Mauricio Salgado, at the press conference where he and his business partners Benjamí Sellas & Cat Cananga were announcing it was time for the MiCF project to begin acquisition of a football club. "This could be totally massive. Together, we can take a small club to the very top of Tequiloan football. The people will make the club, and the club unite the people. In ten years, we plan to be playing in the Champions League."

There were 103,000 members when Mauricio, Benjamí and Cat announced the members club had made an offer for Hipopótamo-Joaxha. Purely coincidence, they said, that it was a Joaxha-based club, the city where MiCF had their headquarters. Hipopó were a shambolic club in a fairly large city, where they were fifth in line for the locals affections behind San Joaxha, Académico, El Rinoceronte and Indalezio. In fact, it is often said amateur tier-four sides Chicos Rudo and Pompom Joaxha had more about them than The Hippos. They were the butt of every sports joke in every bar in San Joaxha, in Chazapa State, and beyond.

"The club benefits from a strong brand already," claimed Cat Cananga, "one we can build on..."

Though there has been a concerted effort to cover up the specific numbers, citing ‘commercial sensitivity’, it is estimated around 20,000 subscribers cancelled their memberships on hearing the news. A furious debate ensued on the MiCF forums about whether to accept the proposed takeover. A vast majority were against it until it was hinted that if it wasn’t approved, that would be the end of the project. Cooperativa fans, owners of the country’s ‘real’ People’s Club (as proved in a court of law tradmark litigation case) crowed that the dream was over. But given the choice of Hipopó or no-one, a narrow majority voted in favour of the takeover. Mauricio, Benjamí and Cat finally had their club. Err, that is to say, MiCF finally had their club.

The keyboard warriors at home were ready to get their team going, and waited eagerly for the new website to launch in which they would control every aspect of the Hipopós.

Sack The Coach: Other Options Were Available

Image
The project leaders announced an interim plan, one that nobody had thought to ask about before. Who would manage the business on a day to day front? The three founders would become the executive board; and all three installed themselves as joint-CEOs. After a tie-break game of Fantasía MiCF - the cult computer football game designed by the team to keep subscribed members happy during the two year wait to buy a club - Mauricio won a play-off to become Sporting Director, whilst loser Benjamí took the role of Technology Director. Cat Canango, the only one of the three with actual business experience as the son of the owner of Canango’s Fried Lizard Wings fast food chain, was appointed Business Director. The 64,000-strong membership - another 20,000 left when the vote went in favour of Hipopótamo-Joaxha - would be able to direct the Directors via the website, which launched with some contract decisions needing to be made, a recruiting philosophy to be set, and a decision on a new home kit, with various manufacturers tendering for the right to supply the new community club.

Traditional Hipopó fans, and there were probably less than a thousand souls prepared to admit to such a loyalty, protested strongly that they should have more of a say than all these juanitos-come-lately, but everyone ignored them apart from the company throwing them a bone of one year’s free MiCF membership. Their forum, hipopo.fans.teq, was closed down by the club and they were ‘welcomed’ with open arms and a small amount of mockery to the vicious scrum that was the MiCF forum.

Mired in controversy the previous season before they even owned a club with the infamous trademark infringement, and outraging their instant new rivals, Cooperativa, things would get no more comfortable for Mauricio, Benjamí and Cat following a string of arguments with their new fans and owners, the MiCF members. Losing around 40% of their membership through the selection of a club from the far north of an extremely large country, and then on top of that picking one of the nation’s favourite ‘joke clubs’, they were already on rocky ground when they announced the match-selection engine would not be available immediately due to some technical problems. This later turned into a rumour that infact it was a contractual problem - coach Rodolphe Bola surviving an instant ‘sack the coach’ option on the new members website and then producing a successful legal argument as to why he should be entitled to pick the team… an argument mainly focused on his job description and terms of employment - that is to say, it was his job to pick the team. Rodolphe was reportedly furious with Mauricio, Benjamí and Cat for including the ‘sack the coach’ button, and decided rather than quitting in anger, he would bloody-mindedly fight for his place and his right to pick the team. So the members were pretty annoyed too, when the rumours got out that (a) the directors were being economical with the truth, (b) the manager was being bloody-minded and (c) where had the ‘sack the coach’ option gone all of a sudden?

Catgirls, Flying Lizards & Hippo Calves

Image
More unhappiness followed with the announcement that a new club sponsor had been found after the community had voted for the winning kit. Cat Cananga, the business manager, had done a deal with Hinodejin catgirl maid-themed coffee bar chain Coffee Seiren, who would not only be the main shirt sponsor, but more controversially, would also sponsor the ramshackle old stadium, Estadio Avenída Mulleta, more affectionately known as La Piscina Hipopó, or the Hippo Pool. The ‘Coffee Seiren Coliseum’ might have rather a grand ring to it, but have you ever seen the place? The internet almost broke when the announcement was made and already the MiCF membership, who had not had a part to play in accepting the deal, were being labelled ‘long-suffering’. Perhaps more economically significant, Cat Cananga’s father, owner of a massive fast food chain, was furious that he thought he’d had a gentleman’s understanding about the naming rights, and had subsequently been gazumped by a hospitality rival; he fired his son from his corporation. If there was a consolation for long-suffering Hipopó members, it was that the stadium just escaped being called the Cananga Fried Lizard Wings Arena.

It wasn’t all bad news. Some of the older, original Hipopó fans had to admit that reports of new urinals at the Coliseum was a welcome upturn in the club’s fortunes, and it seemed terribly professional to have kits supplied by Natty kit. What’s more the new fans had not used their power to get rid of all the players, and they were relieved club hero Cóna, 35 and well past his best, was being retained on a contract extension. Though they had opted to cash in on goalkeeper prospect Niba Punu, sold to Quebecois club Daedonggang 4.25 for a tidy profit, that was nothing new at a club where no-one worth a peso or two would hang around for long. Perhaps the most interesting, some might say promising, consequence of the takeover, after a heavy vote in favour of ‘developing the youth team’ and ‘bringing in baby galacticos’ was that the executive board were not deterred when they discovered there was no youth team. In short order they managed to swallow up a few youth clubs in the area, and paid for a place in the new third tier of the expanded national youth league. It was just a shame they had to call the team CF Becerros Hipopótamo, because who really wants to be called a hippopotamus calf?


Next in ¡TQ! Pitxi Annual - Sardíneros: life at the bottom of the football food chain - can Don Xose Ron and his half-blind assistant Dolores keep the minnows in business for another season?
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Cálculo-4 RP#4 Sardíneros

Postby Tequilo » Sat Feb 20, 2021 11:38 pm


SARDÍNEROS
LIFE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE FOOTBALL FOOD CHAIN

Season 3
[Don Xose Ron & Dolores | Tim Knute-Grahn]

OLD MAN JENKINS

He can hardly speak a word of Tequiloan. Well, that’s not quite true - he can’t speak a word of Tequiloan. “You can’t teach an old dog new tricks,” says Old Man Jenkins, in his funny Murphish dialect. In Tequilo, where as many as 90% of the population are bi- or multilingual and speak functional Wightling - a language of the same origin as the Old Man’s Murphtannian or Murphish - it’s not a problem communicating with the doddery old fellow who makes club do-it-all Dolores, the CEO’s half-blind assistant and chief caterer of The Sardine Can food outlet among other tasks, look positively sprightly. No-one is quite sure exactly how old he is, though no-one really believes he is 159 as he claims. After all, he also claims to have won 55 Murphtannian Premier league titles, 59 Murphtannian FA cups and 60 Murphtannian League cups with “the Villa”, which he has patently made up, claiming “back in the old days, before the IFCF got their knickers in a twist, they were called Aston Villa.” As everyone knows, Aston Villa are not a real team, but one of the famous old clubs in the world famous comic strip about a fake football universe, Rúi de Los Rovas. Old Man Jenkins is undeniably confused about life in general - back in the old days, the football was made of pig-iron and heading the ball caused blunt force trauma. One too many headers (sometimes just the one header) was enough to knock the sense clean out of you. Perhaps, in his youth, Old Man Jenkins started out as a striker, and everything since has been a blank, filled in with stories garnered from the pages of legendary comicbook kicker Rúi Raza and friends, including his eleven-time World Champion club Blackburn Rovers, johnny-continental superclub and arch enemies The Real Madrid, and, of course, Aston Villa, a small team from ‘The Middle Lands’.

Whatever challenges Old Man Jenkins faces in his life, and they are plenty, he is certainly up for them. There has never been one word of complaint, even when his knees lock up mid match and Dolores has to smack him in the back of his calves with a plank from the shabby terrace bleachers to get them moving again. And however old he actually is, he’s still putting in a shift between the sticks for Sardíneros, where he has become something of a club - and village - legend. There are always free drinks at the bar of La Cantina Rosa, the local pub in Chanco Cóndor, for Old Man Jenkins. He only drinks orange juice, and a single pint of stout before a match on Saturdays, but he will regale the locals with tales of his endless accomplishments and adventures, which may or may not be true and are for the most part verifiably not true but nevertheless entertaining. It is common for him to tell the same tale week in week out with completely contradictory details in each version, and since this process is at the heart of the philosophy of Confusiónism, the shambolic pan-atheist faith of the nation, he is treated with almost priest-like status in Chanco Cóndor, affording him a tremendous amount of respect through the generations. The kids call him OMJ and he is like the grandfather they never had - or an upgrade on the one they do have. When he remembers to turn up, he enjoys mucking in with the youth teams and giving the youngsters the benefit of his not inconsiderable experience - and he is certainly playing his part in developing a very promising young talent they have at the club, Oxo Tlalqui - the object of a cult-like shambolic veneration at the New Church of Chanco Cóndor (a cult-like Confusiónist organisation run, coincidentally, by the boy’s mother and grandmother). OMJ helps keep the boy’s feet on the ground with his hilarious recollections of what it was like for him as a rising young messiah in the Aston Villa youth team, under it’s charismatic coaches Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble. He claims that back in old Murphtannia, Oxo was something you poured on your sausages.

The kids love him - but they are not alone. Is that a whiff of geriatric romance? Apparently, OMJ is an old holiday fling of Dolores’ 103-year old grandmother, so it seems highly inappropriate to even think about it, but… there are rumours… Dolores dating her granny’s ex?!

In the Sardine Can burger van on a Saturday afternoon, an hour before kick-off, Dolores flushes at the mention of it as she flips a sausage patty and browns off the onions. “Neither of them can remember the other one,” says Dolores, in her defence, “so I don’t see the harm in it. He’s such a gentleman - mustard, chico? - and he can rattle off stories until the cows come home. Do you want a little beef dripping on your baps, love?”


Next in ¡TQ! Pitxi Annual - Make Moto Great Again: the inside view on restoring a fallen giant - eccentric billionaire Gedeó Dosrius continues his one man mission at Motozintla, and it's all streamed to the comfort of your living room.
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Cálculo-4 RP#5 Make Moto Great Again

Postby Tequilo » Sun Feb 21, 2021 11:22 pm


MAKE MOTO GREAT AGAIN
THE INSIDE VIEW ON REHABILITATING A FALLEN GIANT

Season 3
[Season 1 - Make Moto Great Again! | Season 2 - The Intercontinental Conspiracy]

CHAIRMAN GEDEÓ

The IFCF administration’s intercontinental bureaucratic maze might not sound like gripping viewing but without doubt, it was the best thing that could happen to Make Moto Great Again, the television show. Early enthusiasm for the show had peaked and audience surveys suggested the appetite for a third season was on the decline. Players like attacking midfielder Garcia de Trueva, one of Moto's great prospects, resented the constant intrusion of the camera and handed in transfer requests. Big money rivals Haïtiens and footballing rivals Pitxi-Pitxi 77 were convincing top quality players like Ciupa Azul’s superstriker Roxelio Toran to avoid signing for Moto and the uncomfortable spotlight of the fly-on-the-wall documentary. Chairman Gedeó Dosrius antics were wearing a little thin, as audiences began question whether this was a show about Moto, or a show about Chairman Gedeó. But then, in season 3, la mierda got real. And it was all about paperwork.

Motozintla versus The Administrators

As the 'apertura' or state championships drew to a close, the big talking point heading into the 'closura' and Liga-TQ was not so much the state double from Moto, nor their succeeding deadly rivals Resplendiente in the Big Ten club, but rather their highly controversial exit from intercontinental football - having reached the brink of qualification to the group stages of the IFCF Challengers Cup, they were forced to replay a winning tie against Chrilsia FC of Ancherion, having already moved on to complete famous victories over Dalton FC and... yes... Turoki Tide in latter rounds. This, they were told, was due to an apparent administration error. Despite their protests, Moto were told to replay the early matches. Defeated at the second attempt by Chrilsia, the subsequent matches were scrubbed from the history books and Moto eliminated two rounds prior to their previous progress. Chairman Gedeó Dosrius was quick to accuse the IFCF of nonchalance in the wake of cataclysmic management when the organisation released a statement in which they "apologised for this and hope you won't be too disappointed if your upset win is now not to be." It was too much for Gedeó who claimed he planned to sue, while the fans, even more reactionary than the chairman, saw this as a direct attack on Moto - who they felt after beating the Tide were set to win the whole damn competition. Fans suggested pressure by Brenencians, Nepharim, Audioslavs, Vanorans and of course dispossessed Vilitans were brought to bear on the IFCF to stop Moto in their tracks. Of course, it is entirely unsubstantiated and not a view shared by the Tequiloan FA, the Unión, who stated that whilst unfortunate, mistakes happen and the fairest way to correct them is to replay matches affected by such peculiar errors.

If anyone were wondering how Deportivo Cielo could make their fly-on-the-wall series more interesting, the IFCF obliged by almost giving Gedeó a coronary, and in this case, one which most certainly was not faked. For the entire season Gedeó ranted away in offices of legal advisers who, after studying the whole mess, poring over the IFCF constitution and taking witness statements from grey-suited fax machine operators somewhere in the murky heart of Ao, were forced to conclude there was no recourse. Meanwhile, on the terraces at Arenamoto, anti-IFCF feeling was stoked by the ultras, convinced of a preposterous conspiracy which Gedeó was only too happy to fuel, and angry anti-Ao sentiment began to creep into the chanting. Even Homo Alfus discrimination, a long-time undercurrent of the Asyluumanic psyche, was added to a heady mix of frothing anger and baying hooliganism whenever a continental team came to town. Things were made worse when a simple misprint in the final tables of the Taça das Confederações group stage was issued by the FFI in which Moto, having finished bottom of their group, were indicated to have a huge negative goal difference. To Gedeó and the Moto Ultras, this amounted to aiding and abetting the rotten IFCF by the FFI, and final proof that the whole world was against them. It was so irrational that it made for hit television. Ratings were through the roof - and then things only got more interesting.

Gedeó versus The Administrator

As season three of Liga-TQ drew to a close, and season three of Make Moto Great Again with it, from nowhere Gedeó suddenly announced to the world that he would stand in the off-season Liga-TQ Commissioner’s Election. He had some good ideas to take Liga-TQ to the next level, he said. He had more business experience than anyone in Tequilo, he said. He was the only man for the job, he said.

No-one had seen it coming - the incumbent, Señor Pablo Invocador, had completed a magnificent three years establishing Liga-TQ as the premium football product in Tequilo and indeed much of the Wide Enness Ocean. It had overturned 120 years of State Championship dominance. It was cash rich and highly competitive, and the fans loved it. Appointed internally at the establishment of the league, it was written in the constitution that the commissioner’s role would be subject to an approval vote of the Unión’s 500 member clubs every three years, and should anyone wish to stand against the commissioner, or should the commissioner stand down, this approval vote would become an election. No-one seriously expected, given the stellar success of the league so far, that someone would think it appropriate or realistic to stand against Pablo Invocador. But then, no-one had really given much thought to Gedeó Dosrius in this context. Except, as it turns out, the production team at Deportivo Cielo who were the makers of hit tv show Make Moto Great Again. They knew Gedeó didn’t stand a chance, but that didn’t matter. All they wanted to do was light the blue touchpaper and film what happened. They put the idea to him. Gedeó, of course, was convinced he was the only man for the job and the only one who could win.

How wrong he was.

Make Moto Great Again extended its screening run into the off-season to keep coverage of the election on the screens for a gripped public, desperate to see Gedeó lose and blow a gasket - everyone knew the incumbent commissioner had this in the bag. Against the incendiary backdrop of Gedeó’s smear campaign against Pablo Invocador, and Pablo’s laid back ‘it doesn’t matter I’ve got this in the bag anyway’ approach, it was the grey administrator Martín Escorinato, the lame-duck-in-a-crapshoot candidate, who stunned everyone by coming in off the outside track to sneak an election run-off win. For the production team, it was manna from heaven as Gedeó’s blood pressure levels went almost into the realm of humanly impossible. The extended third season of Make Moto Great Again closed with a fade to black from Gedeó’s office, where he was breaking lamps, overturning desks, throwing chairs at the bullet proof windows and lashing the production team, his secretaries and the audience with verbal barbs delivered in a hail of furious spittle.

Gedeó versus Everyone

Season three of Make Moto Great Again proved, against the pessimism at the start, to be utterly addictive television and a smash hit with audiences once more. No longer was Gedeó faking it - this was unadulterated psychotic narcissim from the billionaire club owner. Yes, the show was all about him now. No, nobody cared. The only problem was how Deportivo Cielo, the show producers, could improve on that for season four. But never fear, escalation is Gedeó Dosrius’ middle name.

So much attention was paid to Gedeó’s increasing fury that the disastrous news of the Kipolalia Scandal, which affected Moto quite directly, had minimal feature time within the show. After the national team returned from the Independent Associations Championship having been exposed to a full dose of the auto-imitation disease Kipolalia - which proved fatal for poor Esâ Neá of Florentino - it emerged that one of the surviving players with the worst impact on his health was Diego Nores, young Moto starlet and son of the manager Mauricio. He would be out for at least a year in rehabilitation and might never make it back to his initial promise. To than fans on the terraces, this was but more confirmation of a ‘dirty multiverse’ and all the unpleasant connotations that brings. To the coaching team, this was a selection headache and a personal worry for Mauricio. But in the boardroom, where all the energy was expended first on the matter of the IFCF conspiracy and trying to overturn the overturned results of the early rounds of the Challengers Cup, and then on winning the Commissioner’s Election, Gedeó barely noticed - or, it seemed, cared - until a new opportunity occured to him: to hell with the Liga-TQ Commissioner job - the Kipolalia Scandal’s far reaching implications included football legend and national treasure Lepe standing down as the President of the Unión. A seamless segue into season four of Make Moto Great Again was on the table: Gedeó Dosrius for the most powerful job in Tequiloan football - and why the hell not?


Next in ¡TQ! Pitxi Annual - Grupo Taxhavn: building an international football empire - the shady funders of Haïtiens begin their multiversal expansion programme.
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Cálculo-4 RP#6 Grupo Taxhavn

Postby Tequilo » Mon Feb 22, 2021 11:48 pm


GRUPO TAXHAVN
BUILDING A CLUB AS AN INTERNATIONAL FOOTBALL EMPIRE

Season 3
[ Promotion | Consolidation ]

EXPANSION

On and off the pitch, it had been a big season for Haïtiens. For the owners, who are not overstating their ambitions like cash-rivals Motozintla but letting their chequebook do the talking, a consolidation season on the pitch was the order of the day and new coach Tomás Cabal gave them that and some. Marquee signings proved to be highly successful if expensive gambles. Teus centreback Frank Kolar was a man mountain at the back for The Wights and instantly won himself the epithet of fan-favourite for his full-blooded defending, while domestic record signing Roxelio Toran was once again banging in the goals for fun as he settled instantly in this hastily rebuilt team. Young Græntfjalli defensive midfielder Valtter Marvinsson and Tikari striker Cody Toa proved to be endorsements for the club's foreign policy as they fixed themselves firmly into Cabal's regular starting XI, while Farv winger Váásîlóénün Jóf had another fine season. Haïtiens finished third in the state championship in their promotion season, qualifying for the the closura and Liga-TQ, where they tore up the Pequeña to finish overall 13th in the national standings, ensuring at least a Proxima place in this season’s Liga-TQ with a shot at intercontinental qualification. It was their best domestic season in almost a generation, and in football terms, the club were ahead of schedule. Comarancho, their state of the art training complex on a converted farm outside the city had been completed in two seasons, while the national team’s state of the art training complex known as the City of Football was still a hole in the ground filled with mud, rocks and the odd bone, eight years after demolition of the old city district of Quezaldad. The club’s home stadium, Estadio Metrópoli, jointly owned and shared with rivals Independiencia, was in tip top condition after two years of dedicated restoration, and impressive plans are afoot to expand with a new grandstand that would increase the capacity from an already impressive 62,000 up to nearly 81,000, ready for season 128 - or Liga-TQ season 6, just two years away. As expected, vast sums of money were being sunk into the Grupo Taxhavn project, and not just in the capital city, Tapalupé.

To Rushmore… And Beyond

The acquisition of Haïtiens in Tequilo was not the first card of the Grupo Taxhavn deck, but certainly had been the ace in the pack so far (some might say the joker), after distant and unheralded purchases of small clubs in the Asyluumanic diaspora that included the other Haïtiens, of Wight; SS Skiveness in Bonesea and Mustardy’s amateur minnows Red Heronne. Installing Haïtiens of Tequilo as one of the main recipients of their vast funding reserve, Grupo Taxhavn had got their first potential intercontinental club, with Liga-TQ sending it’s finest to IFCF and IFF competitions every season. A certain amount of exposure led to the first pronouncements of a wider plan - to acquire clubs all over the football multiverse and put together a family that might, one day, come to rule the sport. If not, then at least to launder some of the more grubby cash reserves of Grupo Taxhavn’s more shady commercial activities through murky corporations like The Oroboros Cooperative and Heavy Products. Though of course, GT are quick to litigate when anyone suggests such a thing. Not everyone believed such a plan could even be initiated, but along with all the spending on players and infrastructure in Tapalupé city this year, Grupo Taxhavn put that speculation to bed with the acquisition of it’s first multiversal club in Rushmore. It was with more subdued fanfare that GT announced, in Græntfjall, that they had taken a controlling stake in Molding. The ‘Gold Shrews’ are an old Háttmark club steeped in tradition, who have, to their supporters frustration, fallen by the wayside a bit and are not on the level of the two leading Háttmark clubs, Gunzlach and Steinaux. Despite being the most decorated team in Græntfjall, it has been hard times at the crumbling Spajoküm Arena - and this is precisely the project Grupo Taxhavn are looking for. Though Haïtiens do not have the silverware in their dusty cabinets that Molding can point to, both are clubs who had fallen into disrepair. Supporters of the Gold Shrews will look at the way in which GT have invested from the ground up at the Metrópoli, and pray for a similar windfall at the Spajoküm.

What - or precisely where - next for GT? They have already stated an aim to at least acquire clubs in all the sporting regions, and that means Ao or Esportiva next. The rumour is that they have already bid for a club in Ao, and that it may be another ‘doer upper’ in a decent league in the region… some say it is a team from the Rainbow League in Chromatika although no-one is prepared to confirm or deny that at present. It has been noted that mid-table mediocre club Lhor, from the fashionable seaside town in the Coastal District, have been put up for sale by owners Lhor Whalewatching Tours and if anyone could afford to buy them, it’s Grupo Taxhavn. Are they the next sibling in the family of clubs that will, apparently, stretch across the multiverse one day?

Domestic Feeder Service

Meanwhile, back at home, Grupo Taxhavn have not finished adding to their port folio yet, as they may put to test a Liga-TQ rule that no two clubs under the same ownership may enter the league. The controversial news in Puezan state that GT have purchased a controlling stake in famous old club Nómada, once one of the state’s giants but now fallen on very hard times indeed, could ultimately cause a conflict of interest if both Haïtiens and Nómada Club were to qualify for Liga-TQ one day. Right now that seems highly unlikely - Nómada recently suffered the ignominy of falling out of the state championships altogether and into the abyss of 4-Sección - the lowest tier of football where all the semi-pro and amateur clubs fight it out on a regional, city and local basis. Though Nómada fans may not like to hear it, the chance of GT having a conflict of interest in Liga-TQ is somewhere approaching zero - but fans will still point to the fact that with Haïtiens as their priority and standard bearer in Tequilo, they will hardly be driven to invest to the same level in Nómada Club and could deliberately hold back their development to avoid such a conflict of interest. Defenders of the acquisition will point out that there was hardly a queue around the block to purchase the struggling club which was facing being wound-up in the high court for lack of funds and insurmountable debt.

Although it is well known that Grupo Taxhavn like a ‘doer upper’, the state of this club is more like an ancient ruined castle than a slightly decrepit old house in a leafy backwater. It would be simpler - and cheaper - to let it tumble down and be forgotten. And yet, clearly, there is one thing Nómada has that no other club in Tequilo can offer, the thing that is at once their pride and joy, and at the same time, the lead weight that will sink them - the famous Nómada Youth Academy. Based in the very large city of Iparra, Juvenómada is a vast network of clubs, working with boys and girls from the age of five under a single united philosophy of learning to play ‘the Nómada way’ - a way that influences every level of Tequiloan pitxi to this day, a way that is played out even within the national team. Thousands of young Iparrans play in Nómada-affiliated teams, and hundreds of them have relocated from around the country to be there. It is an extraordinary, and extraordinarily expensive, system. Nómada were going to have no choice but to close it down, no longer in a financial position to fund such an enterprise and no other club nearby willing to take on the vast logistical and financial enterprise of keeping it going - until Grupo Taxhavn got interested. On the far side of the country from their base at Comarancho outside Tapalupé city, where they have a youth academy that competes in the second tier of Liga-J, the national youth league, the acquisition of the Nómada system allow them the kind of 3,000km reach right across the nation to sift for gold and mine for diamonds, the kind of reach no other club will match. GT are already talking about making Nómada their multiversal academy, with a department modelled on the lines of the now defunct Project-90 or the Apox School of Excellence.

With surprising charity, Grupo Taxhavn agreed to retain the senior club operations too, where it had been fully expected that Nómada would simply be hived off from the academy and left to fend for themselves, having lost their prize asset. But GT will retain the seniors as a pathway for the youth network graduates, as a feeder to Haïtiens. This has not proven at all popular with Nómada fans, but one has to ask, where would they be without it?


Next in ¡TQ! Pitxi Annual - Posídon The Earth-Shaker: inside the costume - life on the streets with troubled Nómada mascot Posídon, AKA Biko Sorarrainarte.
Last edited by Tequilo on Mon Feb 22, 2021 11:58 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Cálculo-4 RP#7 Posídon

Postby Tequilo » Wed Feb 24, 2021 12:32 am


POSÍDON THE EARTH-SHAKER
INSIDE THE HEAD OF BIKO SORARRAINARTE

[Part 1 - The Legend of Posídon]

POSÍDON DOWN

I tapped my helmet, checked the velcro straps on my flak-jacket and raised my triple-laminated polycarbonate shield. I rang the doorbell again. I couldn't hear any movement, didn't see a flickering of a curtain or a shadow through the frosted window into the hallway. I was considering kicking the door in using my recent militia training, when the neighbouring door opened and a salty fishwife stepped out. "Are you alright, love?" she asked in a thick Iparran accent.

"I'm looking for Biko. Joan-Obika Sorarrainarte. Have you seen him?"

"Sorry love," she said, looking me up and down with amusement, "he'll be at his mother's funeral. I should come back tomorrow if I were you... you'll not be needing that get-up though, he's perfectly harmless these days."

First Nómada Club, and now this. Biko certainly isn't having a good year.


Today, I’m walking the mean streets of Iparra, specifically the wet and windy streets of Distrito Neron where the sun is not shining, figuratively or literally, and a storm blows in off Ipa Bay to create dirty rivers of run-off pouring down the hilly avenues and boulevards of a district fallen on hard times. Nómada supporters club outreach worker Karlo Insaurriaga is with me, offering a little protection from unseen menaces in narrow alleys and anticipated dangers lurking in empty shop doorways, as well as an update on the hard times that Biko has himself fallen upon since the death of his mother.

“He lives in the old abandoned Kernansquillec-Mart,” says Karlo, referring to a chain of long-since bankrupted supermarkets, “there is a community of drifters, grifters, shop-lifters and glue-snifters there - no electricty, holes in the roof, that sort of thing; he has a tent under the second floor escalators - they don’t work of course. He already had pnuemonia once this year and in this weather, it won’t be long before it does for him.”

§


It is a long way from Biko’s glory days as Posídon The Earth-Shaker, the famous mascot of Nómada Club and family-friendly successor to Juan el Bucanero, aka the hooligan Febo Five-Knuckle, who was sent down for 2,600 counts of incitement to violence and affray. Restoring the image of the mascot as a likeable and comic cheerleader to lighten the mood and encourage a more tolerable sort of partisanship, Posídon was the darling of The Encampment, Nómada Club’s home ground; while Biko was the heir apparent of El Número Extraordinario, the fellowship of honourable mascots - a clandestine operation, much like The Magic Circle, committed to preserving and celebrating the ancient art of romping around in a silly suit for the entertainment of pitxi fans. The world was at his giant furry kraken-feet… until it all came apart at the Mascotgate Enquiry.

At the height of Biko’s anonymous celebrity, behind the mask or under the costume, a transformation was taking place. Biko was becoming Posídon. Later, during his brief stay in the psychiatric ward at the Santa Olaya Infirmary, he would explain that the old legend of the sea, a powerful symbol in the culture of a merchant shipping port like Iparra, was communicating with him when he donned the mask. Or at least, he thought Posídon was communicating with him - as his therapy progressed he learned to accept that is wasn’t a mythical sea god from another dimension directing his innermost thoughts; it was just his innermost thoughts. Which he later called Sergio - but that’s a story for a different psychiatrist. Anyway, Biko became such a willing audience for his out-of-control Posídonesque innermost thoughts that he took to wearing the great Krakenmasque around the house, usually when his mother was out because the sight of it terrified her. But as time wore on, and she got used to the Earth-Shaker emerging from the bathroom at 6am and putting on the kettle for a cup of tea, Biko wore it more and more. Neighbours and postal workers became familiar with the sight through the window or at the front door, and those that knew their football realised it was the mascot from The Encampment, and were often pleased to see him - which only encouraged him more. Occasionally, he later confessed, he would sleep in it to receive watery dreams from Pythagoras Jones’ Locker.

Things came to a head after he extended his range, popping to the shops for suppies and snacks in full titanic regalia. One day, a small group of hooligans supporting Nómada’s main rivals, Aliantza, mugged him and attempted to steal the Masque of The Green Kraken away, probably to ransom it back to the club after using it in some less-than-palatable TuTubo fornication videos. Biko had never been a fighter but channelling Posídon - he explained later at the police station - made him strong and vicious and irrepressable. He crushed his enemies, he told the police officers.

“We know,” said Comandante Zatica, “that’s why you are in the nick.”

The muggers had been known undesirables and though they took a beating - and caught the shock of their lives - they would get over it and Comandante Zatica let Biko off with a warning. But El Número Extraordinario were soon to hear of it and the uncanny fellowship were less accommodating, issuing a summons on a charge of disrepute - not only for Posing as a Mascot Outside of One’s Actual Mascot Duties, but for Aggravated Assault of Multiple Members of the Public. For the fervently neutral fellowship of honourable mascots it mattered not one bit they were supporters of a rival team.

By the time of the disciplinary hearing at the fellowship, in what became ever afterwards known as the Mascotgate Enquiry, things had got a lot worse for Biko’s case. Local news reports of the fight had garnered a lot of interest, and Posídon was briefly trending on Twiitur [other antisocial media is available]. Biko was easily tracked down by a student film-maker who proposed to make a short film about his life for his next assignment, and a month later a rather arty interview of Biko in full Green Kraken, but with the enormous krakenmasque proudly perched on his knee, was handed in to the tutors of the Ibarra Community College’s Foundation Media course. How it ended up in the hands of the Enquiry was never explained, but Biko was caught bang to rights on the charges of Revealing Identity and, most heretically of all, Disclosing Mascot Trade Secrets. It was, said the justified and ancient gentlemen of the panel hearing the case, the ultimate betrayal of El Número Extraordinario and all his fellow mascots.

§


We found Biko just in time. Present at the scene by dint of my journalistic mission, I was quickly called upon to demonstrate paramedical skills I wasn’t sure I had as a wizened and wiry grey fellow more or less rolled out of a hole in the wall at the back of the Kernansquillec-Mart spraying blood like some gothic nightmare catherine wheel. Biko had been stabbed twice and unceremoniously evicted from the ‘Kerni’.

“A tent, a tent…” he said, as he sunk into the small stream of the gutter, the light fading from his rheumy eyes, “my kingdom is a tent…”

Later, in the hospital ward at Santa Olaya’s Infirmary, we watched over poor old Biko as he slept through his post-op morphine haze. He was going to be alright, he had just made it out of the Kernansquillec-Mart - and emergency surgery - alive.

“We’re setting up a therapeutic shelter,” says Karlo Insaurriaga of the Nómada supporters club, “a proper house funded by supporters with the help of Grupo Taxhavn [the new owners of Nómada Club]. Warm clean rooms, a proper bed, assisted living, professional help twenty-four seven, a second chance.” While Biko sleeps, Karlo bends to a huge duffel bag at his feet, and from it produces a gift for the poor broken fellow. He places a giant and frankly terrifying kraken head on the bed at Biko’s feet. Posídon The Earth-Shaker.

“We want him back,” says Karlo. I look at the monstrous mask. I’m really not sure that’s a good idea. But what do I know about therapy?



Image

Loved this year's ¡TQ! Pitxi Annual? Look out for our brand new sister publication, the ¡TQ!-Addenda accompaniment to the Annual - on sale at the end of the season: we'll look in on Biko to see how he's enjoying assisted living; we'll keep tabs on moneybags Haïtiens and eccentric billionaire Gedeó Dosrius' election campaign; plus updates from Sardíneros, Hipopótamo-Joaxha and Mosey Ackanard's Socrates. ¡TQ!-Addenda Issue #4.5 - on sale post-season, only ₸3,95 at all good bookstores or online at Primo Orinoco. Order now to avoid the disappointment of having to read a recycled version on some random web forum.
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Cálculo-4 Intercontinental Preliminaries

Postby Tequilo » Wed Feb 24, 2021 11:34 pm

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INTERCONTINENTAL FOOTBALL
PRELIMINARY ROUNDS


Last season's 'difficult second season' in intercontinental football followed a promising debut wity a more disappointing performance across the board. In every competition apart from the Liga-B Champions Trophy, the Tequiloan results were worse than the season before, leaving everyone feeling perhaps a little deflated. And it may all have been so different, if Motozintla hadn't got themselves caught up in an administrative storm that saw them have no less than four famous victories disallowed... and it all made for glorious television.

Coming into this third season of intercontinental football, with Liga-TQ going from strength to strength, there was hope for SC Pedregal to go a step further in the Champions League; perhaps a group showing in the Challengers Cup, maybe an FFI final. How would Motozintla get on with their television project to make themselves great again? Could Florentino improve on a painful season in the intercontinentals?

5th IFCF Champions League

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It was an immediate elimination from the Champions League for a second consecutive season for Liga-TQ's champion, this time The Whistlers finding the going too difficult in the extremely early pre-season preliminary agaist Einherjar of Prinz-Eugens-Land, despite coming in to this tie as the favourite. At least they improved on Florentino's showing by winning the first tie at home in Estadio San Pedro. A mirror-loss away left passage to the next round determined by the dreaded penalty shoot-out, and the home side prevailed. SC would have to drop into the Challenger's Cup second preliminary round to continue their IFCF adventure.


First Preliminary Round

(PEL) Einherjar p 3–3 SC Pedregal (TEQ) 2–1 1–2 (3–2 pen)


5th IFCF Challengers Cup

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Poor old Florentino fell at the first hurdle again as they struggle to find a formula to carry their domestic strength into intercontinental games, but otherwise the Challengers Cup offered clear signs that Tequiloan football is adapting to the demands of the IFCF with a much improved showing in the preliminary rounds, and delight for the 77o as they become the first Tequiloan team to reach the group stage of one of the main intercontinental competitions. Motozintla fans continued their loud anti-IFCF protest, booing the anthem, following last season's administrative errors that eliminated them three rounds before they actually lost - no errors this time and Moto reached the play-off round with fine victories over Vilitan Super Super Extra Super Cup champions Rammissil and Lokomotive Jarnstad before Sporting Iturributa got in their way; while SC Pedregal will savour their play-off round win over Stein-los Turkish, another famous old club, before a disappointing 2-5 qualifying round collapse at home to Algolia AC after setting one foot in the group stage with an initial and impressive 2-0 away win.

But the plaudits go to Pitxi-Pitxi 77 for making Tequiloan history, and having to do it almost from the back-end of last season, having to start in the extra-preliminary round with victory over Tikariot club Oriannor Mountaineers FC. Subsequent wins over Stade St-Joadoc, Parsewi Mengwi and Calamari Wanderers CFC brought them to the play-off round and a tie against a true A-Class giant in Bastion, who they held in Eura before a narrow but cherished 1-0 victory at Estadio 77o. More shocks followed in the qualifying round as they travelled to Kingsgrove in Brenecia and came away with a stunning 3-0 win, enough to see them into the group stage.


Extra-Preliminary Round

(TKT) Oriannor Mountaineers FC 2–3 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 (TEQ) 2–3 0–0

First Preliminary Round

(TEQ) Florentino 3–3 a Eastburg United (WRL) 2–2 1–1
(GVN) Stade St-Joadoc 3–5 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 (TEQ) 2–2 1–3
(TEQ) Motozintla 5–1 Ostholden Town (ACH) 3–1 2–0

Second Preliminary Round

(TEQ) Motozintla 4–1 Rammsissil (VIL) 3–0 1–1
(TEQ) SC Pedregal 1–0 Bruncester United AFC (KOR) 0–0 1–0
(PCU) Parsewi Mengwi 0–4 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 (TEQ) 0–0 0–4

Third Preliminary Round

(TEQ) SC Pedregal 6–1 AC Pomena (JUE) 2–1 4–0
(TEQ) Motozintla 5–2 Lokomotive Jarnstad (SVJ) 3–1 2–1
(TEQ) Pitxi-Pitxi 77 7–1 Calamari Wanderers CFC (SQR) 4–1 3–0

Play-Off Round

(TEQ) Pitxi-Pitxi 77 2–1 Bastion (EUR) 1–0 1–1
(TEQ) Motozintla 3–4 Sporting Iturributa (ASG) 2–2 1–2
(TEQ) SC Pedregal 4–0 Stein-los Turkish (PAS) 2–0 2–0

Qualifying Round

(TEQ) SC Pedregal 4–5 Algolia AC (SRS) 2–5 2–0
(TEQ) Pitxi-Pitxi 77 3–1 Kingsgrove (BRE) 0–1 3–0


53rd Cup Winners Cup

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The Cup Winners Cup has not been a happy hunting ground so far for Tequiloan clubs - El Quetan going out in the 51st Cup preliminary round to Krytenia's Ousevale Borough without scoring a goal in a 0-3 aggregate reverse, and then last year Jaguar Ixtacomitan bashed from pillar to post by Marinos Metropolis in a 1-7 aggregate reverse against the Valladars. Things did not improve this season either, and this time it is Florentino who are on the end of a beating - thrashed in Græntfjall by Gunzlach to crash out at the preliminary stage. In two seasons competing in IFCF football, Florentino have yet to win a match, let alone a tie. Their record in the FFI regional club competitions is marginally better, but at home where they presently have some bragging rights behind Pitxi-Pitxi 77 as the second best team of the modern era, it seems to count for nothing when they face up to intercontinental teams.


Preliminary Round

(GRF) Gunzlach 6–2 Florentino (TEQ) 5–1 1–1


FFI Liga dos Vencedores

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Learning quickly from their early defeat in the Champions League, SC Pedregal set things right with a good run in the Challengers Cup preliminary rounds and progressing to the group stage of the LDV with a solid home win over Bongali United. This will set them on their way to what will be a good run all the way to the final, surpassing the semi-final appearance by Pitxi-Pitxi 77 in their debut season in the FFI. Meanwhile, Los Violetas console themselves for appalling performances in the Challengers Cup and Cup Winners Cup with a narrow aggregate win over Sheridan County to make the LDV group stage for the second consecutive season. They do seem to prefer this competition to anything that starts with IFCF.


Qualifying Round

(TEQ) SC Pedregal 5–2 Bongali United (OTK) 3–0 2–2
(TEQ) Florentino 2–1 Sheridan County (WYO) 1–0 1–1



FFI Taça das Confederações

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As with the IFCF Challengers Cup, Moto fans love to show their disdain for the tournament organisers by booing the Taça Anthem before matches, following last season's 'conspiracy' in which their group stage results were officially published with the wrong goal difference. It made no difference to the outcome and was, by most sensible people's reckoning, simply a typo on the website. But after the debacle of having to replay IFCF matches following administrative errors, to Moto fans (and the club chairman) this was just further proof that the world does not want Moto to be great again. They love a conspiracy at the Arenamoto... More opportunities for booing will come from Motozintla making the group stage for the second consecutive season where they will hope to improve on a third place finish in the group to miss out on the knockout stages.


Qualifying Round

(ULG) Canterford SC 2–3 Motozintla (TEQ) 1–1 1–2


Liga-B Champions Trophy

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With the reorganisation of Liga-TQ this season it will be much harder for the likes of Clazarda Larga to qualify for the Liga-B Trophy, as the administration builds a 'stronger' league with bigger clubs playing in the top three tiers. So it was important for them to enjoy this tournament while they can - they might not be back. While the other two qualifiers, Estudiantes and SC Raití, are those bigger clubs who could well be in contention on a more regular basis, ironically it was the smaller club who enjoyed the best run in this competition, edging close to the groups before falling to those damned Zetans who seem to knock us out of everything.


First Preliminary Round

(QOD) Ippi-ippi-ippi-ippi 2–6 Estudiantes Tacranza (TEQ) 1–3 1–3

Second Preliminary Round

(TEQ) Estudiantes Tacranza 4–4 a Williamsburg SC (OME) 2–3 2–1
(TEQ) SC Raití 4–0 FC Drongosnort (QOD) 3–0 1–0

Third Preliminary Round

(RTS) El Perro United 2–2 a Clazada Larga (TEQ) 2–2 0–0
(TEQ) SC Raití 0–2 Surf Jettica (VIL) 0–1 0–1

Play-Off Round

(TEQ) Clazada Larga 2–3 Preo Team (ZRH) 2–0 0–3



5th IFCF Rising Stars Cup

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Boasting of the best academy in the country right now, Argón were back for their second shot at the Rising Stars Cup in three seasons. An improvement on their first round elimination two years ago, they nevertheless continued the unhappy run of Tequiloan youth teams never having made it to the group stages. One might feel this should change at some point, considering a bronze and then silver medal in the last two under-18 World Championships; but others argue that as bright stars are promoted early into senior teams, it leaves our academies a little lightweight compared to many around the multiverse. But that could also just be a bunch of excuses.


First Round

(MAP) Home United 1–2 Argón Tacranza (TEQ) 1–2 0–0

Second Round

(TEQ) Argón Tacranza 1–2 Academia Marinos (VLD) 0–1 1–1
Last edited by Tequilo on Wed Feb 24, 2021 11:37 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Cálculo-4 Copa Tequilo Early Rounds

Postby Tequilo » Thu Feb 25, 2021 11:53 pm

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COPA SEASON 126
EL GRAN GALLO


El Gran Gallo, The Grand Old Father [Lit: Cockerel; Collq: progenitor, father] of Tequiloan football and national knockout cup competition, the Copa Tequilo is one of the oldest competitions in the Costelloan diaspora, and possibly The Wide Enness Ocean: having surpassed 120 years of organised pitxi, the Copa is at least very old, by Yuman standards. Not only is the Grand Old Father truly ancient, it is extremely difficult to win - with over 600 teams taking part over a two-season cycle, no one team has been truly dominant. The mighty CF Frantxizko-A, commonly CFFA or Los Oros, The Golds, have won the most titles - a meagre six in almost a century and a quarter of competition.

A preliminary competition, La Copa Del Pueblo or commonly Copa Pueblo - The People's Cup - runs every season, providing a stepping stone to the Copa Tequilo the following season. Running strictly for the 4, 5 and 6-Sección amateur tiers, the Copa Peublo does proceed all the way to a final and provides for an overall winner, but perhaps more importantly, the final thirty-two teams of the Copa Peublo automatically qualify for the following season's Copa Tequilo. Beginning with an extra preliminary round to reduce the field from 64 to 32 from the Copa Peublo, the Copa Tequilo includes the lowest ranked 3-Sección semi-pro teams joining in the preliminary round; the majority of 3-Sección and all of 2-Sección starting the first round proper; and the top flight 1-Sección teams joining in the third round. There are a further four rounds leading to the final, known as El Gallo Dorado, The Golden Cock, which is so enthusiastically anticipated and so widely followed in Tequilo that it falls on a national holiday all of its own.


COPA TEQUILO: CAMINO GLORIA
ROAD TO GLORY PART ONE - THE EARLY ROUNDS


In a new feature for this season, we plan to follow a path to the final with a mini-feature for each round. In addition to our usual coverage of the Big Ten - the 10-Nacional - and our regular feature teams Nómada Club, Sardíneros, Hipopótamo-Joaxha and Mejillones Lipa, this year we begin our Camino Gloria road trip with a visit to Puezan State and the city of Polibio to meet the chipper amateurs at Licenzxianeros, and will follow the winner of their first tie and the winner of each subsequent tie right the way to the final. Can 'The Hooligans' - Du Matxinoa - travel the Camino Gloria all the way to El Gallo Dorado? Of course they can't. But perhaps they can at least get into the next round?

LICENZXIANEROS play in the Liga Mendia 5-Sección of the Puezan State Championship, and surprised everyone by reaching last year's quarterfinal of the Copa Pueblo, enough for their first ever entry into the Copa Tequilo this season; and they were delighted to draw a plum home tie against Amanexü Norteño at Avenída Licenzxia, the community sports field. Licenzxia, a district not far from the bustling centre of Polibio city, is a tough place to scrape a living in; and is well known for a burgeoning Licentian migrant community who arrived here during the multiple catastrophic termination events that have beset that country in modern times. Today a vibrant, if rough and ready community, the Licentzxianeros football team has strong ties to the area and has fervent support for a tier-5 team, turning out in their hundreds with the usual rambunctiousness associated with Licentian nationals (hence the nickname, Du Matxinoa). Though Amanexü are not widely known for having any supporters beyond the kitman and a couple of proud parents, if they did, they wouldn't be coming to Avenída Licenzxia.

COPA PRELIMINARIO

In the new Camino Gloria feature, the baton is instantly passed on as Du Matxinoa are dumped out of their first ever Copa Tequilo on penalties following an error-laden but thrilling 3-3 draw. In the next round, we'll be following Amanexü Norteño who held their nerve in frankly terrifying conditions to ease through in the shoot-out. No doubt that caused a number of additional shoot-outs around the district of Licenzxia that night, keeping the Polibio law enforcement officers busy chasing down mischievous hooligans. Meanwhile our regular feature club Nómada, once one of the top clubs in the country and now fallen through the trapdoor to the basement, enjoy a solid win in their first ever appearance at this stage of the competition, now under new management following the takeover by Grupo Taxhavn, owners of Haïtiens. They win at a canter with a 4-0 away victory at Coroma Valientes to advance to the first round proper.

Copa Preliminario
Feature clubs highlighted

Pocosco 3–1 Venezuelencia
Andinistas 2–1 Pumas
El Mazo 4–3 Oinezkoentzat Telmo
Boquepira 2–3 Irola AK
Los Lojanes Bonale 0–0 Atlético Trinidad (0–1 AET)
Laguna de Léon 3–2 Cafeñeros Carlali
Atlético Patoto 3–6 Cartagonova
Sancanos 1–2 von Steteren Germaniká
Unionistas El Quetan 4–4 Guilisagasti (4–6 AET)
Domingo de Balparda 4–2 Chutun-Bueto

Späristas 3–0 Cuero
Urritxe 1–5 Los Pozos de Herrera
Juvenal Macoa 5–3 Braçayda Mexía SC
Escuinzos CF 1–1 Mártires San Anreso (1–1 AET) (3–4 pen.)
Factoría Calzacon 4–3 Alzado
Audaces Engañadores 3–4 Bayona Comitán
Isaba 2–0 Occidente Ciupa
Gurutz Munita 2–3 Corabil-Nadad
Zacapango 1–0 Llaro Marín
Licenzxianeros 3–3 Amanexü Norteño (3–3 AET) (1–3 pen.)

Polaiko 0–0 Eguzki Tiresias (2–0 AET)
Contrabandistas 3–4 Hego Muturra
BA Ibaeta 2–4 Espinosa
Mulareño 3–1 Florés Pasito
Coroma Valientes 0–4 Nómada Club
Cuscacanos 0–0 Burros Selvatíco (1–1 AET) (4–3 pen.)
Palacio Gardaresso 3–2 Deportivo Gironella
Gorrasblancas 4–2 Saco AC
Florencio SM 2–1 Atlético Esteno
Chiatiapa 3–1 San Dielas Strike

Bibliotecarios Maranza 2–2 Criaturas San Josio (3–2 AET)
Deportivo Biosca 1–0 Dolores


CAMINO GLORIA

AMANEXÜ NORTEÑO hail from the small town - almost a village really - of La Bebida Amana on the Antivadorio island of Santiago de Griti. As the only team on the island, they really have a captive audience but even then garner little interest from the locals, despite holding their own in 4-Sección for many years, punching well above their diminutive weight. Turning out in a distinctive kit of white shirt with a green diagonal sash, white socks and white and green hooped socks, they are always dressed better than they can play. Home games are at the Centro Deportivo Bebidoñes (El Bebidoña) and while the facilities leave a lot to be desired, it is always nice to visit the island, across Lipa Bay from Isla Principal - a scenic ferry ride from Lipa docks. A popular leisure destination for the citizens of Lipa, it gets rather crowded on the island's beaches at holiday times and attendances can rise from being in the low 10s in low season to a capacity of 240, mostly made up of curious holiday-makers.

COPA-1

Nómada Club add to their impressive goal-scoring tally with a gripping 6–3 victory over amateurs Isaba and they look distinctly on track for a potential jackpot third round tie, young striker Teziña getting a hatrick in the big win that sends them through to the second round. Our two other featured teams, Mejillones Lipa - not far away from Amanexü - and Sardíneros join at this stage along the new people's club Hipopótamo-Jaoxha, and of course Mosey Ackanard's new team Socrates; as we love to follow Mosey wherever he goes we were there to cover another 6-3, this time Mosey's 'Philosophers' cruising past Cuidad Senzapa. His old team Mejillones Lipa, The Mussels, pulled off something of a surprise win at Irregulares Quetodino, showing he has left them in good shape, while Sardíneros are out at the first time of asking, losing 1-2 at Grupo Capybara. The community-owned Hipopó ease through with a 2-1 win at the newly-named Coffee Seiren Coliseum (same old Avenída Mulletta, shiny new name). But what about the Camino Gloria? Amanexü Norteño progress to the second round, and pray for that big third round payout, beating Florencio SM 2-0 at the Bebidoña. We'll be back with them again for another round.

Copa-1

Extremo Norte Sezalco 3–4 Coyotes
SC Metetí 3–1 Recreativo Cuara
Arma de Fuego 2–1 Langile Konplexua
AC Simón Paravar 5–4 Eslavosonidos
El Mazo 2–3 SC Horcontitos
Llamas Texidor 1–4 SC Tescoa
RCD La Constancia 3–1 Taíno
El Mizona 0–1 Venustianos
Deportivo Requexón 2–1 CF Siervo
Laguna de Léon 1–4 Bastardos de Toyan

Pelóta San Mérito 0–0 Los Anasticios (1–0 AET)
Mondragon 3–2 Tumuloa Xico
Pirillos 2–0 AS Colquehuanca
Chiapula de Corzo AC 4–4 Deportivo Torente (4–4 AET) (4–5 pen.)
Bocas del Toro 4–3 Reconquista
El Rinoceronte 1–3 Unión Cuara
Distrito Roldán 2–2 Los Murciélagos (3–2 AET)
Ciudad Cuahtémoc 3–1 Helmántico
SC Bravo Cuahjuluca 5–2 Irola AK
Nómada Club 6–3 Isaba

Retenaiko 2–2 Ciudad Yaya (2–2 AET) (2–1 pen.)
Sociedad Ciuredor 3–6 AS Tonalá
Batasuna Telmo 2–2 El Soportante (3–3 AET) (6–5 pen.)
Hipopótamo-Joaxha 2–1 Espainiako Urzagui
CF Arradura 5–3 Sindicato Torente
CF Guanarillo 2–2 Cebra Cebras (3–2 AET)
Galaxía 4–2 Castaliá Guadatral
SC Reten 2–5 Asociación Hueyac
Urzagui CF-72 5–2 Sporta Oroboro
Académico 2–3 Orkak

Real Notario 1–4 Edicto de Fe
Corabil-Nadad 3–7 FK Alaiz
Elkarte Iragartze 3–2 Unión Tapa
Deportivo Biosca 2–8 Telégrafo
Bibliotecarios Maranza 5–2 Guilisagasti
Equipo Muna 1–2 Espartanos
Pelóta San Anreso 4–3 Chapulineros
Sociedad Santos 2–0 Villa Guadratal
Albarracín 4–0 Ciclistas Aticenta
Bezala 2–4 Ganzábal

Compañónes 2–1 Sorcia
Racing Azéma 3–1 KA Iparra
Atléta Iragartze 1–2 Argentinako
RCD Calzacon 2–1 Arcángel
Siete Onze Espato 3–2 Buruzagia
Los Índices 2–3 Atléta Reten
Santutxoa 0–2 Unión Zamolaco
Naranja 3–1 10 AS Cuahjuluca
Astillero Ciuredor 6–2 Factoría Calzacon
Comuna Cailon 4–3 Indigo Huayna

Tequiloa 3–3 Cultúra Calzacon (4–3 AET)
Zacapango 2–3 Los Pozos de Herrera
Partisanos 3–0 Rápido Raití
Urbo Ibaeta 3–1 Goya Tacranza
Albaviedo 6–3 Deportivo Tapa
Sarrazenos 2–3 Conviviencia
Boca Cielo 3–4 PK Xicocomitán
Cáfunda 5–3 Chiatiapa
Excepcionales 2–1 Correcaminos
Golondrinas 1–0 Cancho Quillahuaman

SC Aguaprofunda 1–1 1492 Carranza (1–1 AET) (2–3 pen.)
Costello Raití 4–1 Palacio Gardaresso
Tamarindica Muna 1–0 Nacionál SP
Polaiko 0–1 Serpentina
Errefuxiatu 2–2 FT Istaso (3–3 AET) (4–2 pen.)
Intramura 0–0 Qiwa Tulan (0–1 AET)
Erresistentzia 4–4 Wanderers AK (5–4 AET)
La Conon CF 3–2 San Joaxha
Hoqué-Coqué 2–1 CF Lipa
Barrachina-Itxa 2–1 Bayona Comitán

498.Desafito 4–5 SC Alcaraiso
Hondureños 5–5 Lertxun Iparra (5–6 AET)
JS Solistahuacan 3–2 Cortadores Margarita
La Milega AC 2–2 Unión Esteno (3–2 AET)
Entenza AS 3–3 Luis de Lunar IX (3–3 AET) (11–10 pen.)
Combinar Toyan 3–1 Cuscacanos
Hércules Ciupa 0–1 Arsenál Ciupa
SC Cañazas 5–4 Reyes Católicos
Merenciano 1–1 Colegio Nísa (1–2 AET)
Flamencos 5–2 Villa Comaltitlán

Jugadores Florenio 2–1 Huayna Colombino
Unuio Reten 0–1 Progresso CF
Skelinga Santa Clares 0–0 Farvedilos (0–2 AET)
AC de Galvas 2–2 Lotsagarria (2–2 AET) (2–3 pen.)
Olano 0–1 Urugaiko
Ciudad Senzapa 3–6 Socrates
Las Navas de Talosa 4–1 Rebelión Hernandados
Unión Argain 5–2 Distrito Atela
San Masón 1–1 SC Hormigas (2–1 AET)
Cimarrones Desatas 4–4 SC Kukalayos (5–4 AET)

Finca Cailon 3–2 Atlético Trinidad
Hego Muturra 0–2 Proyecto Gotán
San Jonito 3–4 Dinamo Iragartze
Yugo Arradura 1–4 Deportivo Sixtus IV
SC Marcapira 1–1 Antigüaya (1–1 AET) (3–1 pen.)
Espinosa 0–4 Ciuredor Orden
Comitán Argente 3–2 Unuio Alaiz
Mecánicos 2–3 Montañeros
Aliantza Iparra 1–0 Aserrío de Garriché
Polideportivo 4–2 Späristas

Blanco Horizonte 1–2 Fénix AC
Constitución Yaya 2–2 Juvenal Macoa (2–3 AET)
Ballenas Alcaraiso 2–3 Esqueletos
Alumbrados 4–5 Chile-33
SC Bozoa 1–2 Txibia Orazun
Tortugas Linio 1–1 Merkatondoa (1–1 AET) (3–5 pen.)
Capitán Belmoro 3–3 Bolivaro (3–3 AET) (2–3 pen.)
Flechas Azules 0–2 Chimpancés Guayabal
Grupo Capybara 2–1 Sardíneros
Hielo Permanante 4–3 Urbo Polibio

Cartagonova 4–3 Gil de Roblado
Caballero AC 4–3 Polo Sur
Domingo de Balparda 1–4 Zamalakarregi
El Ejército 3–0 Mártires San Anreso
Iberamericano 2–4 Masvidal Toyan
Mulareño 0–1 Itaete-Orazun
La Visa 2–4 Gladiadores
Atlético Riba 8–1 Andinistas
RC Olentzaro 1–2 Racing Guadatral
Irregulares Quetodino 2–3 Mejillones Lipa

Lope de Salmeron 2–2 CF Blay de Sant Roman (2–3 AET)
Daring Monvador 0–1 Escolásticos
SC Torre Espinaquer 1–0 Gorilas Tapalupé
Alianza Tirinto 3–4 AC Sezalco
Internacional CF 2–0 Búfalo-66
Amanexü Norteño 2–0 Florencio SM
von Steteren Germaniká 2–0 El Chilamatos
Olimpika 2–3 Pateadores Torente
Insurgentes Nísa 3–2 Pocosco
Astogaiko AK 1–1 Elkarte Reten (2–2 AET) (4–3 pen.)

Gorrasblancas 4–3 Gimnasio Calcazon
Guardabosques 2–3 Poliziaren
611 Rosado 3–2 Indalezio
Camp Esportiu 2–1 Senzapa de Oro
Escandinavos 2–2 SC Azcarreta (2–2 AET) (3–1 pen.)
Toro Reyes 1–2 AS Ferrocarril


CAMINO GLORIA

AMANEXÜ NORTEÑO had their best ever cup run when they reached the fourth round of the 76th Copa Tequilo, which means this is the 50th anniversary year of that famous - on Isla Santiago de Griti - cup run. Sadly, despite the unlikely progress, the most remarkable things about the run were the fact they reached those heady heights without being drawn against any team in a higher tier than themselves until the fourth round, and the manner of their exit. Back in those days when replays were a thing, it took six games including two replays to reach the fourth round, when they pulled a plum tie against the team that went on to win the competition that year - Cóndor Sezalco, who were also on the way to a double of Copa and Chazapa State Championship. Drawn to play at home, the interest in the match meant the game was moved across the bay to Lipa city, where it was hosted at La Avenída, home of Atlético Lipa. Hoping to pull off a shock, just about the whole island population went over on the ferry to witness Amanexü's official record defeat, and Cóndor's official record victory: Amanexü Norteño 1-17 Cóndor Sezalco. The one goal credited to them was an own goal by Cóndor keeper Conte Barbolini, who always denied that his accidental backheel into an empty net in the 88th minute was a consolation for the sorry home team. The referee, feeling less charitable, reported him for foul play and he served a six-match ban; though he returned in time to captain his team in the 2-0 final win over SC Marcapira. Subsequently he was appointed honorary president of Amanexü and still makes the occasional pitchside appearance when he's on holiday nearby.

COPA-2

Drawn against Cóndor's cross-town neighbours AC Sezalco for the 50th anniversary match, there was neither progress nor an humiliation to report on as the islanders were comfortably but not dishonourably beaten, 2-4, at home in the Bebidoña to mark the end of their journey for another year. We will take up the baton with AC next, and with the big third round coming, everyone is looking for the rare glamour tie. And AC have pulled a plum one at that - Big Ten team Acacoyagua at home. This one has 'magic of the cup' written all over it. For Nómada Club, there will be no third round glamour tie - remember there was a time when they were the ones who provided the glamour - as they went out at SC Cañazas. The Mussels, Mejillones Lipa, fought out an epic penalty shoot-out with The Army Club, El Ejercito, after a 3-3 draw, losing 7-8 in the end. Our coverage of the regulars is almost at an end with Mosey Ackanard spitting bullets as his new team Socrates, starting so well in the league, miss out on a potential payout as they slip on the proverbial banana skin, going down 5-4 at Venustianos. Only Los Hipopós remain, the San Joaxha 'virtual' club, owned by internet fans, get a comfortable 5-2 away win at Gladiadores and are drawn away to Arsenál Ciupa in the next round, and given their impressive early form under new ownership, surely a fixture they will fancy themselves for.

Copa-2

Combinar Toyan 3–3 Urzagui CF-72 (4–3 AET)
La Milega AC 0–3 Siete Onze Espato
Argentinako 2–0 von Steteren Germaniká
Pelóta San Anreso 3–2 Errefuxiatu
Urbo Ibaeta 1–3 Finca Cailon
Deportivo Sixtus IV 3–3 Albarracín (4–4 AET) (3–1 pen.)
Dinamo Iragartze 6–0 Unión Cuara
Pirillos 2–3 Arsenál Ciupa
Partisanos 2–4 Las Navas de Talosa

CF Arradura 4–2 Distrito Roldán
Amanexü Norteño 2–4 AC Sezalco
Escolásticos 2–2 Elkarte Iragartze (3–2 AET)
Chimpancés Guayabal 3–4 Costello Raití
Asociación Hueyac 1–3 Galaxía
AS Tonalá 1–1 Poliziaren (3–1 AET)
Bibliotecarios Maranza 3–1 Serpentina
CF Blay de Sant Roman 2–4 San Masón
Deportivo Requexón 1–0 FK Alaiz

Compañónes 3–1 Atlético Riba
Racing Guadatral 3–3 Cáfunda (3–3 AET) (0–3 pen.)
Edicto de Fe 3–0 Txibia Orazun
Batasuna Telmo 1–1 Racing Azéma (1–2 AET)
Tequiloa 3–0 Lertxun Iparra
Retenaiko 5–4 AC Simón Paravar
Aliantza Iparra 1–0 Farvedilos
Proyecto Gotán 1–2 Camp Esportiu
Hoqué-Coqué 2–0 Ciuredor Orden

Comitán Argente 3–2 Coyotes
SC Marcapira 4–2 Barrachina-Itxa
Mejillones Lipa 3–3 El Ejército (3–3 AET) (7–8 pen.)
Comuna Cailon 4–4 SC Torre Espinaquer (4–4 AET) (4–2 pen.)
Hielo Permanante 3–1 PK Xicocomitán
SC Horcontitos 2–4 Arma de Fuego
Astogaiko AK 3–2 La Conon CF
SC Cañazas 2–1 Nómada Club
Los Pozos de Herrera 5–3 Pateadores Torente

Itaete-Orazun 2–0 RCD Calzacon
Zamalakarregi 4–4 Esqueletos (4–4 AET) (4–2 pen.)
AS Ferrocarril 1–1 Fénix AC (1–1 AET) (4–3 pen.)
Atléta Reten 3–3 Conviviencia (5–4 AET)
Cimarrones Desatas 2–2 Polideportivo (2–2 AET) (3–4 pen.)
SC Tescoa 2–0 Qiwa Tulan
Bolivaro 2–5 Orkak
Tamarindica Muna 2–4 Albaviedo
Entenza AS 4–6 Ganzábal
Internacional CF 3–0 Juvenal Macoa

RCD La Constancia 2–1 Astillero Ciuredor
Erresistentzia 2–0 Gorrasblancas
Urugaiko 1–1 Excepcionales (1–2 AET)
Cartagonova 1–3 1492 Carranza
Insurgentes Nísa 2–3 Ciudad Cuahtémoc
Bastardos de Toyan 1–0 Espartanos
Gladiadores 2–5 Hipopótamo-Joaxha
Chile-33 1–2 Golondrinas
Escandinavos 0–2 SC Bravo Cuahjuluca
Pelóta San Mérito 5–5 Mondragon (5–5 AET) (3–2 pen.)

SC Alcaraiso 0–1 Unión Zamolaco
Unión Argain 3–1 Merkatondoa
CF Guanarillo 2–3 Lotsagarria
Naranja 4–1 Grupo Capybara
Progresso CF 6–1 Sociedad Santos
Masvidal Toyan 2–3 Deportivo Torente
Colegio Nísa 4–2 SC Metetí
JS Solistahuacan 3–3 Flamencos (4–3 AET)
Venustianos 5–4 Socrates

Caballero AC 3–1 Bocas del Toro
Montañeros 4–1 Jugadores Florenio
611 Rosado 3–4 Telégrafo
Last edited by Tequilo on Thu Feb 25, 2021 11:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Founded: Dec 04, 2018
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Cálculo-4 Apertura

Postby Tequilo » Sat Feb 27, 2021 12:51 am

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STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS SEASON 126
1-SECCIÓN FINAL STANDINGS

The impact of the new commercial Liga-TQ has never been more strongly felt at state level than this year, as the major restructure of the Carolina Plan reduces the top tier to it's smallest ever size, each of the six state championships now reduced to ten teams and an 18-round season which ends while the rest of the state competitions, from 2-Sección downward, are still only half way through their seasons. While the bottom team in each 1-Sección will be automatically relegated, the second bottom team will face an end-of-season play-off once the 2-Sección has finished. That means quite a wait to learn their fate for next season, but in the meantime, there is still all to play for as the season turns to the Closura, which means Liga-TQ for half the teams in 1-Sección, and the consolation interstate championship, Liga-IS, for the rest. Who goes where? Let the tables decide...

1-ANTIVADOR
LAS VIOLETAS LOOK FLAWLESS FOR THIRD STRAIGHT

With the highest points tally across 1-Sección, Florentino win their third consecutive state title in some style and look imperious coming into Liga-TQ where they will be hoping to regain the title conceded to SC Pedregal last season. Who would bet against them? Real Gardaresso look revived under former national team coach Isaac Martí and seal a place in the Primera since Florentino already qualify as Copa holders and last season's Primera runners-up. Atlás win their third appearance in Liga-TQ with Atlético back on song for a second post-season, having competed in the now defunct Liga-TQ Eliminatorio two seasons ago.

1-Antivador             Pld    W   D   L    GF   GA   GD   Pts 
1 Florentino 18 15 1 2 50 32 +18 46 Liga-TQ Primera
2 Real Gardaresso 18 12 2 4 54 35 +19 38 Liga-TQ Primera
3 Atlás Ciuredor 18 11 1 6 41 33 +8 34 Liga-TQ Proxima
4 Atlético Lipa 18 7 5 6 37 33 +4 26 Liga-TQ Pequeña
5 Errentes Monvador 18 6 4 8 44 50 −6 22 IS-4
6 Juventoyan 18 6 3 9 40 45 −5 21 IS-4
7 Páramos 18 5 5 8 39 45 −6 20 IS-5
8 Humberto 18 5 4 9 38 39 −1 19 IS-5
9 Gallandaires 18 5 3 10 36 46 −10 18 IS-6; Relegation Play-Off
10 Racquette-22 18 3 2 13 30 51 −21 11 IS-6; Relegation


1-CHAZAPA
77o COMPLETE THE FAMOUS FOUR

The green-and-whites join a very special club as they become only the third team in history to win four consecutive state titles, and in doing so, remove one more argument from rivals CF Frantxizko-A about who is the all-time greatest club, as The Golds were one of those elite two, along with 'The Invincibles' of Cooperativa, who held the four-in-a-row record. All eyes are now on whether they can go a step further next season and become the first to make it five. Like Atlético, Cisne claim their second post-season spot with the other being the Eliminatorio after a fine season where they nearly took the title of the 77o; Jaguares make their second consecutive appearance while Los Miñeros will take their bow in a maiden Liga-TQ campaign.

1-Chazapa               Pld    W   D   L    GF   GA   GD   Pts 
1 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 18 10 5 3 46 30 +16 35 Liga-TQ Primera
2 Cisne Senzapa 18 10 3 5 42 32 +10 33 Liga-TQ Proxima
3 Jaguar Ixtacomitán 18 9 3 6 51 45 +6 30 Liga-TQ Proxima
4 Los Miñeros 18 8 3 7 49 46 +3 27 Liga-TQ Pequeña
5 Juniors Chazapa 18 7 2 9 38 39 −1 23 IS-4
6 Benemérito 18 6 5 7 40 42 −2 23 IS-4
7 Chazapañol 18 5 6 7 29 37 −8 21 IS-4
8 Pingüinos 18 5 5 8 31 36 −5 20 IS-5
9 Cóndor Sezalco 18 5 5 8 27 37 −10 20 IS-5; Relegation Play-Off
10 Asociación Olaya 18 4 5 9 31 40 −9 17 IS-6; Relegation


1-GUASTENANGO
LA ABUELA RETURNS FROM THE GRAVE

On the brink of financial ruin and relegated to the second tier for the first time in their history just two seasons ago, SC Raití, the old grandmother of Tequiloan pitxi, has returned with an astonishing tenth state title and their first in 56 years - is this the beginning of a pitxi revival in the great city of Raití where it has been slim pickings for the big clubs SC and Inter? Reigning national champions SC Pedregal meanwhile had a disappointing season without their long-standing coach Ramiro Paredo, gone off to manage the national team, but they were at least assured of a TQ Primera place by dint of last season's title. There is a shock at the bottom as recent Copa winners and state champions Ciupa Azul entered a dramatic decline to drop into the second tier for the first time in 25 years.

1-Guastenango           Pld    W   D   L    GF   GA   GD   Pts 
1 SC Raití 18 11 6 1 61 40 +21 39 Liga-TQ Primera
2 El Quetan CF 18 10 5 3 51 39 +12 35 Liga-TQ Primera
3 SC Pedregal 18 8 5 5 46 35 +11 29 Liga-TQ Primera
4 Acacoyagua 18 7 6 5 45 37 +8 27 Liga-TQ Proxima
5 Petrolero 18 8 0 10 35 42 −7 24 Liga-TQ Pequeña
6 Equipo Caimán 18 7 3 8 34 41 −7 24 IS-4
7 Inter Raití 18 6 5 7 37 39 −2 23 IS-4
8 Ocozoxhuatla 18 6 1 11 32 39 −7 19 IS-5
9 Gimnástico Chichiguina 18 3 6 9 31 46 −15 15 IS-6; Relegation Play-Off
10 Ciupa Azul 18 3 5 10 35 49 −14 14 IS-6; Relegation


1-MARANCO
MOTO MAKE IT LOOK EASY

Gedeó Dosrius' project looks well on track as Moto took their third consecutive state title, ahead of perennial rivals Xicoa and Resplendiente - The Crows finishing a disappointing third after showing so much promise, but certain of a TQ Primera place following their Proxima title last season. The predictable top 3 aside, the Maranco State looks a little weak right now with no-one really stepping up from the pack to demand their place in Liga-TQ; AS Matiguás and Universitario will make their debuts but two more defeats for either would have put them in relegation trouble so it was hardly a decisive outcome. As it is, former giants Oriente will face a relagation play-off at the end of the season and Continente, another big side, drop straight through the trap door to 2-Sección.

1-Maranco               Pld    W   D   L    GF   GA   GD   Pts 
1 Motozintla 18 13 2 3 43 23 +20 41 Liga-TQ Primera
2 Xicoa 18 10 5 3 41 29 +12 35 Liga-TQ Proxima
3 Resplendiente 18 9 3 6 43 33 +10 30 Liga-TQ Primera
4 AS Matiguás 18 8 3 7 43 39 +4 27 Liga-TQ Pequeña
5 Universitario 18 7 3 8 39 44 −5 24 Liga-TQ Pequeña
6 Fortuna Tulan 18 5 5 8 43 42 +1 20 IS-4
7 Clazada Larga 18 6 2 10 29 35 −6 20 IS-5
8 Macarada Gaona 18 5 5 8 33 42 −9 20 IS-5
9 Las Guías Oriente 18 5 5 8 35 45 −10 20 IS-5; Relegation Play-Off
10 Continente Tulan 18 4 3 11 30 47 −17 15 IS-6; Relegation


1-OCOTAPA
ASCENSION WIN FIRST EVER STATE TITLE

Los Angeles upset the established order of things to stun everyone in Ocotapa state with a classy run to their first title triumph and first appearance in Liga-TQ to come, edging out the chasing Argón Tacranza in a season where both reigning state champions Fábrica Tapalupé and big-money favourites Haïtiens had very disappointing seasons indeed. Incredibly, both still made it into Liga-TQ which will please the organisers - all they want are the big teams involved regardless of their actual on-field quality, and this is proof they can have a poor season and still be in with a shout of making the Closura. Hats off to Carolina Ruiz, the brains behind the restructure and, ironically, an employee of Fábrica.

1-Ocotapa               Pld    W   D   L    GF   GA   GD   Pts 
1 Ascension San Pasito 18 11 3 4 47 34 +13 36 Liga-TQ Primera
2 Argón Tacranza 18 9 6 3 42 33 +9 33 Liga-TQ Proxima
3 Pelotón 18 9 4 5 36 27 +9 31 Liga-TQ Proxima
4 Independiencia 18 8 5 5 51 39 +12 29 Liga-TQ Pequeña
5 Haïtiens 18 7 6 5 49 40 +9 27 Liga-TQ Proxima
6 Fábrica Tapalupé 18 7 5 6 45 46 −1 26 Liga-TQ Pequeña
7 Estudiantes Tacranza 18 6 4 8 30 44 −14 22 IS-4
8 Cooperativa 18 3 7 8 38 45 −7 16 IS-5
9 Tenís de Tacranza 18 3 7 8 41 50 −9 16 IS-6; Relegation Play-Off
10 Cuba Tapalupé 18 1 5 12 29 50 −21 8 IS-6; Relegation


1-PUEZAN
RED LIONS BACK ON TOP

No-one is pretending there is not a crisis of quality in Puezan state right now, the country that brought such giants of the game as CF Frantxizko-A, Unuiĝinta and Nómada Club - big names of old who are long since past their best (and in the case of the latter, decidely post-mortem). Still, it was the Red Lions who won their 13th state title to qualify for Liga-TQ for the first time, after flirting with relegation last season. Twenty years ago it would be barely conceivable that Unuiĝinta would be outside of the top three for three consecutive seasons and have to wait so long for their first shot at the national title. Even now, no serious sports hack gives them a hope in hell of getting near to that in the Closura - the Red Lions as rank outsiders? Something needs to be done in Puezan, always considered the most fertile ground for pitxi talent in Tequilo, but for now, even the mighty CFFA are practically onlookers in the Liga-TQ era.

1-Puezan                Pld    W   D   L    GF   GA   GD   Pts 
1 Unuiĝinta 18 12 2 4 43 32 +11 38 Liga-TQ Primera
2 Erreal Tiresias 18 9 5 4 41 31 +10 32 Liga-TQ Proxima
3 CF Frantxizko-A 18 9 5 4 49 43 +6 32 Liga-TQ Proxima
4 Sporta Ibaeta 18 8 5 5 42 35 +7 29 Liga-TQ Pequeña
5 Peru Urzagui 18 8 3 7 37 34 +3 27 Liga-TQ Pequeña
6 FT Orazun 18 7 3 8 42 44 −2 24 Liga-TQ Pequeña
7 Polibio 18 5 4 9 41 46 −5 19 IS-4
8 Demokrito 18 5 4 9 40 48 −8 19 IS-5
9 KKA Bixintxo 18 4 4 10 36 48 −12 16 IS-6; Relegation Play-Off
10 Atléta Idal 18 2 7 9 47 57 −10 13 IS-6; Relegation
Last edited by Tequilo on Sat Feb 27, 2021 12:56 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Cálculo-4 Liga-TQ Preview

Postby Tequilo » Sun Feb 28, 2021 1:49 am

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LIGA-TQ PRIMERA
MORE OF EVERYTHING


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SC Pedregal * Florentino * Pitxi-Pitxi 77 * Motozintla * SC Raití
Resplendiente * Unuiĝinta * Ascension San Pasito * Real Gardaresso * El Quetan CF


There is clear evidence that the desire of the big clubs to stay perennially relevant is being well served by the new domestic league system now, which detractors will argue could increase the gap between the haves and the have-mores. Six of the top eight ranked sides from the previous editions of Liga-TQ, including the three previous champions, all line up for the new expanded closura in the top division the Primera, where they, along with the second tier Proxima and third tier Pequeña, play an 18-game double round robin to decide the next national champion of Tequiloan pitxi. The top two, of course, will be assured of a place in the Primera the following season, while Liga-TQ sends four teams into the promised land of intercontinental football - one to the Champions League and three to the Challengers Cup; plus the top two to the FFI Liga and third place to the Taça. In the two previous seasons the league also nominated it's fifth place team for the Vilitan Cove jamboree, but has agreed between clubs that there will be no further entries to the VCI, to avoid unnecessary fixture pile-up according to the Unión. But that aside, the whole machine is neatly geared up to further build the wealth and fame of the top clubs, and the restructure of the Carolina Plan means there is even less chance of missing out on the closura, even if, like Haïtiens, you have a disappointing season in the state championships. The big boys want more of everything, and they mostly look like they are getting it.

The three previous champions come into season 4 of the closura with different concerns. For reigning champions SC Pedregal, having failed to reach the IFCF group stages and posting a disappointing third place finish in their state championship, life is proving a little transistional under the new management team of brothers Armando and Aaron Garrido. Though highly rated and with the confidence of the club to provide great times to come, The Whistlers are distinctly missing former manager Ramiro Paredo, gone off to manage the national team after winning last season's title. He is possibly missing them too as he struggles in World Cup Qualifying to compete for qualification*. No such worries for the inaugural champion, Pitxi-Pitxi 77, who won a record-equalling fourth state championship in a row, something only completed twice before in 126 years of state championships to ensure a place in the history books for this bright team. But they didn't have it all their own way, with Cisne Senzapa and local rivals Jaguar Ixtacomitán pushing them hard, to give warning that they can yet be overcome. The 77o are one of only six teams to compete in all four Liga-TQ closuras so far, and the only one to appear in all Primera division campaigns, making them by far and away the best ranked side of the TQ era. Since winning the title though in season 1, they have slipped lower in each subsequent season, finishing fourth last time and only just making the IFCF cut-off. They will be aiming to return to the top but looking ominously good in opposition are Florentino: despite being beset with problems following the loss of players, both permanently and temporarily, to the Kipolalia outbreak, Los Violetas thoroughly smashed the Antivador State Championship to win a third title in a row and ensure they come into this closura as the favourite - they look rather unstoppable. Having missed out on the first ever Liga-TQ, they have come in strong and if the TQ rankings were calculated by averages rather than totals, they would be number one - ahead of the 77o.

Motozintla have looked a good bet for a title challenge in each of the last two seasons, but on both occasions fell short from winning positions into third place, and they will want to turn that around this time. Certainly they were strong in the state championships, winning for a third consecutive season well ahead of the pack, and come in as second best performing team behind Florentino. But if their tendency to implode is a direct reflection of their chairman, Gedeó Dosrius, then the signs are not good - in the television saga Make Moto Great Again, at the half-way point of the season, Don Gedeó has gone completely stark raving mad following his election defeats for the Liga-TQ Commissioner role and just now - you heard it here first - the President of the Unión to replace Señor Lepe. Fans will hope his loose screw won't rattle down to the changing room and affect their Primera division campaign. Meanwhile rivals Resplendiente, quietly being tipped for great things this season, have not had a good apertura. One of the six teams ever present in Liga-TQ, they now join Real Gardaresso and CF Frantxizko-A as the only teams to have competed in all three divisions - and they could make some history this season. After consecutive Pequeña and Proxima first place finishes, they are hoping for a three-in-a-row, to become the first team to win all three divisions. And there were many who fancied them for that at the start of the season, but their state championship didn't go to plan and their third place finish was a long way behind champions Moto. They'll have some improving to do if they want that national title, which seems far less likely now than it did at the start of the season.

SC Raití will debut in the Primera this season after making a little bit of history themselves, being one of the four teams that have previously competed in the 2-Sección closura, the now defunct Eliminatorio, and have since appeared in the senior Liga-TQ season. While Cisne Senzapa and Atlético Lipa took two seasons to get from the Eliminatorio to the main event, only Asociación Olaya and SC have managed to appear in Liga-TQ the year after the Eliminatorio, the quickest rise possible. And of the two, only SC have gone from Eliminatorio to Primera - both the fastest and highest rise. With the Eliminatorio scrapped, the record won't be matched. Both Unuiĝinta and Ascension San Pasito will make their first appearance in the closura, and go straight in at the top level. For the Red Lions, the all-time second best team in Puezan state after the mighty CFFA, this debut is long overdue. 13 state titles puts them very close to the Big Ten clubs overall, and they have great history including being the first ever winners of the Copa Tequilo, but recent struggles means they are come late to the TQ party. For Ascension - Los Angeles - the whole closura comes somewhat out of the blue; this represents the first time a first-time state champion has appeared in Liga-TQ, since they stunned everyone in Ocotapa state by defying both odds and expectations to finish ahead of a host of more decorated teams. In fact, just about everyone in Ocotapa is more decorated.


LIGA-TQ PROXIMA
THE DEPRESSED PRETENDERS


Haïtiens * Xicoa * Atlás Ciuredor * Cisne Senzapa * Argón Tacranza *
Erreal Tiresias * CF Frantxizko-A * Pelotón * Jaguar Ixtacomitán * Acacoyagua


A division of also-rans? There are teams in the Proxima who will resent that characterisation, including the second-most decorated club of all time in CF Frantxizko-A; The Golds being the only other team after Pitxi-Pitxi 77 with more than 20 state titles, and the most successful Copa team with 6 wins. But what is distinct in this group is the number of clubs who have fallen behind in their state pecking order, the way The Golds are so far behind the 77o, a team they were considered equal, perhaps even superior to, before the Liga-TQ era. Xicoa have to watch Motozintla sweep all before them in Maranco as well as taking 99% of the press coverage; Atlás and Acacoyagua are presently some way short in Antivador and Guastenango states respectively where they used to dominate; Jaguar have that CFFA feeling of looking into the distance wondering if they can still see the 77o tail-lights. Pelotón would consider themselves contenders every year in the past, but now feel way down on their luck, especially with the rise of state rivals Haïtiens. That is one team who are moving more generally in an upward direction, and yet it has been a very disappointing season for the money club on the state front, dropping from last year's impressive third to an unremarkable 5th of ten. In Puezan, they feel a general lack of quality in the pitxi across the state, so Erreal have cause to celebrate earning their debut in the closura, and finishing ahead of The Golds in the state championship, and yet the good times of three titles in five seasons not so long ago seem distant memories already. Matches in this division may well be watched by some of the most depressed supporters in all of Tequilo.

Club directors may not feel quite so despondent - bank balances will be very much improved from appearing in the second tier of Liga-TQ, where the Proxima does promise some fairly decent rewards. The winner will be assured of a place in the Primera next season, a huge incentive to stay focused and enjoy the competition this time around, while the runner-up will at least secure another season in the Proxima, irrespective of what happens in next season's state championship - that's how Haïtiens ended up here this time around. And of course, a key driver for the reorganisation of the league was for bigger teams to ensure they got a piece of the intercontinental pie - and under the new system, the Proxima offers the top three teams a place in the IFCF Liga-B Champions Trophy. Unless you are Motozintla, that is not something to be sniffed at.

The appearance of Cisne Senzapa means at least one club have something more to be cheerful about, the Chazapan club distinctly on the rise and finishing a close second behind Pitxi-Pitxi 77 in the state championships this season, only two seasons after winning promotion from the second tier. They join SC Raití and Atlético Lipa this season as teams who have previously appeared in the old 2-Sección closura, the Eliminatorio, and gone on to appear in Liga-TQ proper. Two teams in the division are maintaining perfect records of having appeared in all four Liga-TQ seasons - CF Frantxizko-A and Argón Tacranza, two of only six teams with that record. Argón have the dubious record of being the least successful of those six, their best result finishing fifth of six in the Proxima last season. The Golds however are presently ranked fourth overall of the Liga-TQ era, more for their consistency in qualifying out of a poor state than setting the closura alight; they are also one of only three teams, with Real Gardaresso and Respelendiente, to have appeared in all three divisions of Primera, Proxima and Pequeña.

That experience will make CFFA one of the favourites for this division, along with Argón, and it would be crazy to rule out moneybags Haïtiens who have enough quality to turn their poor season around and sweep all before them, as they did last season in the Pequeña. Atlás and Acacoyagua will want to make a statement but it is Xicoa who come into the closura on the best form and are worth the punt as contenders.


LIGA-TQ PEQUEÑA
A DISTANT THIRD


Independiencia * Sporta Ibaeta * AS Matiguás * Los Miñeros * Peru Urzagui
Atlético Lipa * Fábrica Tapalupé * FT Orazun * Universitario * Petrolero


The expanded Liga-TQ provides for an additional twelve places and it's in the third tier of the new structure where we find most of the beneficiaries, with AS Matiguás, Los Miñeros, Universitario and Petrolero all making their debuts in the closura. Of the debutants, AS looked the strongest in the state championship, while Los Miñeros hope this is the beginning of a revival for the 12-time state champion, who last won a title nearly a decade ago and have had to watch as Pitxi-Pitxi 77 have taken their historic hold on the state of Chazapa with an ever-tightening grip.

Sporta Ibaeta come into this with an interesting and unwanted reputation as the worst of all big teams in Tequilo - this was largely earned by having the worst Copa Tequilo finals record of five defeats in five finals, something most other club supporters are keen to celebrate. But they are now quickly reinforcing that reputation in Liga-TQ, having competed in the last two series and finished bottom of both the Primera last season and the Pequeña the season before. They are the only team to finish bottom more than once; and for good measure, they hold the record for the worst closura season, excluding the now disbanded 2-Sección Eliminatorio, finishing with just two points from a possible thirty last season.

Atlético Lipa join SC Raití and Cisne Senzapa this season as teams who made an appearance in the Eliminatorio, and have now graduated to the full-fat Liga-TQ of 1-Sección teams. Four teams in the Pequeña this season have previously competed at the top level in the Primera, with Sporta and Fábrica both competing for the national title last season - though in both cases, and especially in Sporta's case, you could hardly call it competing, with them filling the bottom two places in the six team division. Independiencia finished bottom of the Primera in season two, while Peru ran the 77o all the way for the inaugural title in season 1, but fell at the last post to finish runner-up. A bright future was predicted for Los Peruaños, but in fact they fell away dramatically, and make their first appearance in Liga-TQ since almost winning the whole thing.

The prizes in this division still make for good competition - from a club perspective, there is still money to be had even in the lower reaches of Liga-TQ, and each placing is a little more valuable the higher you finish. And there are two guaranteed slots for next season's closura - winning this division provides a 'promotion' spot in the Proxima next year, while the runner-up will be guaranteed another place in the Pequeña come what may in next season's State Championships. Independiencia and Sporta Ibaeta come into the closura with the best state records, don't bet much past Fábrica Tapalupé as setting right an otherwise disappointing season.


*Time-slip alert: this season is happening concurrently with WC-87 qualifying.
Last edited by Tequilo on Sun Feb 28, 2021 1:56 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Cálculo-4 Liga-TQ MD1-6

Postby Tequilo » Sun Feb 28, 2021 11:50 pm

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LIGA-TQ SEASON 4
PRIMERA DIVISION MATCHDAYS 1-6

We are underway for season four!

MATCH DAY ONE
.
Florentino 4–2 SC Pedregal
Resplendiente 3–1 SC Raití
Motozintla 3–3 El Quetan CF
Unuiĝinta 2–2 Real Gardaresso
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 0–0 Ascension San Pasito

Purely by the chance machinations of the fixture machine, the season kicks off with an almost Super-Cup style match as the reigning champions visit the reigning Copa winners in Florenio, where Farv Mâártën Âllámbâlár hits a brace and creates the other two as Los Violetas storm past SC Pedregal, putting the whole Primera on notice: Huey Wight's team are in it to win it. Moto, Real and the 77o all fail to win their openers, with new boys Ascension frustrating the Green and Whites at Estadio 77o - an impressive first point for them in Liga-TQ. Resplendiente are the only other winners on the opening day, The Crows hoping for a famous treble of titles, having bagged the Pequeña and the Proxima in the last two seasons. They have too much for new boys SC Raití, Reçeucian defensive midfielder Laurent Lapix in impressive form to dominate proceedings.

MATCH DAY TWO
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SC Pedregal 1–0 Ascension San Pasito
Real Gardaresso 2–3 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
El Quetan CF 2–2 Unuiĝinta
SC Raití 2–0 Motozintla
Florentino 1–1 Resplendiente

Match of the day is in Antivador for the second weekend in a row, this time at the Palacios Cristal where Real find themselves in a ding-dong battle with Pitxi-Pitxi 77; new manager Isaac Martí, former national team head coach, will have enjoyed his teams attacking intent over the last two games with Ecuador and Manuel Cañero looking sharp, but at the other end there is a lot still to improve upon, as the 77o frequently overran Los Corrintos. Tlacolotl and Tesco Zuniga are the foward partnership there, and after firing blanks last time out, they came back to form with some canny link up play, with evergreen attacking midfielder Ot Camazotz Roca, 38, still the master in behind them. SC Raití will be delighted with their first home game in Liga-TQ as they disposed of Motozintla, who have made a poor start in this competition.

MATCH DAY THREE
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Resplendiente 1–2 SC Pedregal
Motozintla 5–2 Florentino
Unuiĝinta 2–2 SC Raití
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 2–3 El Quetan CF
Ascension San Pasito 1–4 Real Gardaresso

Unuiĝinta get their third 2-2 draw in a row, the first time that has happened in Liga-TQ, as they demonstrate some determined character in what will undoubtedly be a tough season for them, while fellow debutants Ascension at least got their first goal, all be it they are well beaten by Real. The big game is at Arenamoto where Florentino are outgunned by a well organised Motozintla, finally firing on all cylinders and posting an impressive 5-2 victory with the old man Gunna Calhoun, 41, becoming the oldest player to score in Liga-TQ with his brace, as he fights back against rumours of impending retirement. Playboy Farv Vâásk Çêwé gets one and creates two in the win, as Florentino, pre-season favourites for the title, are thoroughly outclassed in their biggest defeat in domestic football for three years. SC Pedregal seem to be hitting form with a good win at Resplendiente, and El Quetan CF pull off the shock of the round with a win in Ixtacomitán, and will savour the honour of being the last team to preserve an unbeaten record in the Primera division.

MATCH DAY FOUR
.
SC Pedregal 3–0 Real Gardaresso
El Quetan CF 2–3 Ascension San Pasito
SC Raití 2–4 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Florentino 4–0 Unuiĝinta
Resplendiente 1–0 Motozintla

SC Pedregal go clear at the top with an impressive victory over Real, with young winger Urbano Noboa and fullback Eolo Sorazar combining gloriously down the right flank to give Los Corrintos all sorts of problems. After a difficult season in the state championships, it seems the Garrido brothers' philosophy is beginning to sink in and their players are impressing at last. Ascension can celebrate their first win, at El Quetan, while the match of the day is the cálculo, or derby match, known as El Resentimiento - Resplendiente vs. Motozintla, one of fiercest rivalries in Tequiloan football. The Crows win the day with Farv striker Kâásîmîró hitting the winner. Elsewhere both Florentino and Pitxi-Pitxi 77 posted impressive wins to keep hard on the tail of The Whistlers.

MATCH DAY FIVE
.
Motozintla 4–2 SC Pedregal
Unuiĝinta 2–4 Resplendiente
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 3–3 Florentino
Ascension San Pasito 0–4 SC Raití
Real Gardaresso 3–3 El Quetan CF

It's a big match double header with the top four rated teams in the competition coming together; the 77o and Florentino battle out a titanic 3-3 draw to edge nearer to leaders SC Pedregal, who go down 4-2 at Motozintla. Resplendiente take advantage with a win at Unuiĝinta to go top, and the triple crown campaign of Primera, Proxima and Pequeña titles looks well and truly on now. SC Raití are the big winners on the day with four goals at struggling Ascension, and will feel they have settled well into this tournament, producing some good football from their young team in which 21-year old striker Puma Caldeira is emerging as something of a star. Unuiĝinta's defeat leaves the Red Lions bottom of the table and still looking for a first win.

MATCH DAY SIX
.
SC Pedregal 6–2 El Quetan CF
SC Raití 2–1 Real Gardaresso
Florentino 4–6 Ascension San Pasito
Resplendiente 2–3 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Motozintla 0–0 Unuiĝinta

As we hit the first third of the new format Liga-TQ, SC Pedregal regain the top spot in a crazy weekend of football with an impressive 6-2 win over El Quetan, K'antu hitting the first hattrick of this season's competition. Shortly afterward Audioslav Tesco Zuniga got the second as Pitxi-Pitxi 77 took all the points in a fascinating game at The Crows Nest, knocking Resplendiente off the top almost as soon as they got there. But we weren't finished with hattricks yet, in an extraordinary game at Villa Lego where all sense seem to desert Florentino, going in at half time an incredible 1-6 down to strugglers Ascension San Pasito. Los Angeles couldn't believe the luck they were having, where every touch seemed to end up in the net in their favour. Mâártën Âllámbâlár hit a second half hattrick to restore some sort of pride but with the gap too big to close, he becomes the first player to score a hattrick in Liga-TQ and end up on the losing side. It is also the first time where three hattricks were scored in the same matchday round.

No-one has yet managed to assert full dominance in the very early stages of this season's Liga-TQ, where all unbeaten records were gone by the fourth matchday when El Quetan CF lost at home to Ascension. SC Raití have enjoyed a strong start to reach third place but the top two are familiar sights, and in Pitxi-Pitxi 77 we have, not surprisingly, the team that so far has proven the hardest to beat, with just the one defeat in six. Real Gardaresso's early promise quickly dimmed and they look like they could be in for a difficult season, while favourites Florentino will have to pick themselves up from that bizarre battering they took at the hands of Ascension - a team who must be pleased with the return they have so far, although they proved in the state championship that they were never a team to settle for a good effort and a pat on the back.

INTERIM TABLE: MATCHDAY SIX
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Liga-TQ Primera Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 SC Pedregal 6 4 0 2 16 11 +5 12
2 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 6 3 2 1 15 12 +3 11
3 SC Raití 6 3 1 2 13 10 +3 10
4 Resplendiente 6 3 1 2 12 9 +3 10
5 Motozintla 6 2 2 2 12 10 +2 8
6 Florentino 6 2 2 2 18 17 +1 8
7 Ascension San Pasito 6 2 1 3 10 15 −5 7
8 El Quetan CF 6 1 3 2 15 19 −4 6
9 Real Gardaresso 6 1 2 3 12 14 −2 5
10 Unuiĝinta 6 0 4 2 8 14 −6 4
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Cálculo-4 Liga-TQ MD7-12

Postby Tequilo » Tue Mar 02, 2021 12:08 am

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LIGA-TQ SEASON 4
PRIMERA DIVISION MATCHDAYS 7-12


Reigning champions SC Pedregal were fastest out of the blocks, but can they maintain momentum?

MATCH DAY SEVEN
.
Unuiĝinta 3–5 SC Pedregal
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 3–1 Motozintla
Ascension San Pasito 1–0 Resplendiente
Real Gardaresso 4–2 Florentino
El Quetan CF 0–0 SC Raití

The top two put some daylight between them and the chasing pack as SC Pedregal win a thriller at Unuiĝinta, while the fixture that has been a championship decider in the last two seasons at Estadio 77o sees Nepharim Con Hatzileftheriou running the show for Pitxi-Pitxi 77 as they dismantle Motozintla. But the match of the day is the cálculo in Antivador, El Spectáculario, where Real Gardaresson send their fans home with the bragging rights after a spectacular 4-2 win; the bad new being that key defender Anton Lascares is out for six weeks following injury. Ascension continued their rise and rise, Quita Pizanquit hitting the winner over Resplendiente to put them in the top five.

MATCH DAY EIGHT
.
SC Pedregal 2–1 SC Raití
Florentino 3–0 El Quetan CF
Resplendiente 1–2 Real Gardaresso
Motozintla 1–2 Ascension San Pasito
Unuiĝinta 2–6 Pitxi-Pitxi 77

The early struggle continues for two fancied sides in Resplendiente and Motozintla as they both lose at home to leave them in real trouble of seeing title hopes drift away so soon - and Real's revival continues as they bag the points at The Crows Nest. It's headlines again for Ascension, with their win at the Arenamoto, Ahuac Rihu and Ilan Cusaca with the goals to move Los Angeles into third place, best of the rest behind the leading two. Florentino recover from two heavy defeats to settle the ship at Villa Lego with a comfortable win over El Quetan, ensuring they just about stay in touch with the top two, six points adrift of the 77o who smashed Unuiĝinta - The Red Lions playing out an aggregate 5-11 over the last two home games - a great watch for the neutral but probably not for manager Horazio Urruticoechea.

MATCH DAY NINE
.
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 1–0 SC Pedregal
Ascension San Pasito 0–1 Unuiĝinta
Real Gardaresso 2–1 Motozintla
El Quetan CF 2–1 Resplendiente
SC Raití 2–3 Florentino

Was this the title decider? Almost certainly not, but it was most certainly a championship six pointer and advantage to the 77o as young superstar midfielder Çenturion hit the winner for Pitxi-Pitxi 77 over SC Pedregal. The green-and-whites hit the top spot at the half-way point of the season with a win over the reigning champions and with the team going well in intercontinental football too, it looks like it could be a big season for Tequilo's finest. The return match is on the last day of the season - could that be the actual title decider? Ascension undo all their hard work as they lose at home to strugglers Unuiĝinta, and are overtaken by resurgent Florentino, who fight it out for a tough win at the San Raí. The season is turning into a disaster for Moto though, now second bottom after defeat to Isaac Martí's Real.

MATCH DAY TEN
.
SC Pedregal 3–4 Florentino
SC Raití 1–1 Resplendiente
El Quetan CF 1–3 Motozintla
Real Gardaresso 1–2 Unuiĝinta
Ascension San Pasito 0–1 Pitxi-Pitxi 77

Match of the day is at Estadio San Pedro in Cuara where The Whistlers are undone again, this time by Los Violetas who move to within a point of second place with their crazy 4-3 victory, achieved with 10 men for most of the game after Inozentzio saw straight red in the 20th minute. A penalty and an Eolo Sorazar own goal subsequently gave Florentino a 4-1 lead which they nearly relinquished in the last ten minutes, just about holding on for a memorable victory. Pitxi-Pitxi 77 extend their lead at the top to 5 points with a narrow win in San Pasito, Audioslav Tesco Zuniga with the all-important winner. Moto are still only a point off the bottom despite their win over El Quetan, as a concurrent revival of fortunes at Unuiĝinta sees them stay in touch with the low-flyers at the bottom.

MATCH DAY ELEVEN
.
Ascension San Pasito 3–4 SC Pedregal
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 5–3 Real Gardaresso
Unuiĝinta 0–4 El Quetan CF
Motozintla 2–0 SC Raití
Resplendiente 1–2 Florentino

There is no other word but 'banger' for the game at Estadio 77 where Pitxi-Pitxi 77 maintain their lead at the top by edging a full-blooded eight-goal cálculo, El Bânga, against Real Gardaresso. 77o strikers Tlacolotl and Tesco Zuniga demonstrated their telepathic powers, combining for four of the five goals with Çenturion and Roca behind them in a forward diamond arrangement that bedazzled and baffled in equal measure. The Whistlers recovered some composure to win at Ascension in another high-scoring game, just about keeping pace with the leaders and fending off Florentino, winners at struggling Resplendiente. The top three are pulling away from the pack now, with Moto moving up to fourth but seemingly miles off the pace - or 12 points at least.

MATCH DAY TWELVE
.
SC Pedregal 5–6 Resplendiente
Florentino 2–3 Motozintla
SC Raití 3–3 Unuiĝinta
El Quetan CF 1–3 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Real Gardaresso 6–4 Ascension San Pasito

What an advert for the 'ataqataqataq'-lovers of Liga-TQ as the competition reaches the two-thirds stage with five fixtures producing an extraordinary 36 goals, averaging over 7 goals per game. Some more conservative puritans will be shaking their heads in horror at the defensive displays, but for the rest of us, its bânga after bânga over the weekend, including the biggest of them all, the opening match of the round a shocking 5-6 defeat for SC Pedregal which really makes it look an uphill task to catch the 77o. Florentino also obliged the green-and-white champions elect with a narrow defeat at home to Moto, which puts Pitxi-Pitxi eight points clear with six games to play following their win at El Quetan. At 1-3, that result seems positively dull by comparison to the rest of the round - Real Gardaresso closed a bonkers weekend off with a fine 6-4 win over Ascension, who have lost four straight to plummet from an unlikely title challenge to fending off a bottom-placed finish.

As the teams head into the final third with the end in sight, this title now looks like the 77o's to lose; with Florentino and SC Pedregal still to play, albeit both games on the road. Avoid losing them, and you can't see where else this title could go. At the bottom end, it looks too much for the debutants who fill three of the bottom four positions - early promise from first SC Raití and then Ascension San Pasito quickly fading as they find themselves in a dogfight with Puezaños Unuiĝinta - the Red Lions have been at the bottom of the pile for most of the Liga-TQ season but will fight to escape the wooden spoon if they can. For the likes of Moto, Real and Resplendiente, hopes of a title challenge are all but gone, and yet they remain in range of the IFCF places; it remains all to play for.

INTERIM TABLE: MATCHDAY TWELVE
.
Liga-TQ Primera Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 12 9 2 1 34 19 +15 29
2 SC Pedregal 12 7 0 5 35 29 +6 21
3 Florentino 12 6 2 4 34 30 +4 20
4 Motozintla 12 5 2 5 23 20 +3 17
5 Real Gardaresso 12 5 2 5 30 29 +1 17
6 Resplendiente 12 4 2 6 22 22 0 14
7 SC Raití 12 3 4 5 20 21 −1 13
8 El Quetan CF 12 3 4 5 23 29 −6 13
9 Ascension San Pasito 12 4 1 7 20 28 −8 13
10 Unuiĝinta 12 2 5 5 19 33 −14 11
::: FORGOTTEN BUT NOT GONE :::
BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE

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Cálculo-4 Liga-J

Postby Tequilo » Tue Mar 02, 2021 11:23 pm

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NATIONAL YOUTH LEAGUE
SEASON 4

The national youth league system reaches it's fourth season alongside the Unión's prize senior competition, Liga-TQ, and like it's grown-up version Liga-J has undergone a series of expansions; this season being no different in that respect. But where the TQ gets more layered complexity seemingly with each iteration, the youth league just gets bigger - three divisions remain, now expanded from ten team groups to fourteen - providing for twelve extra places in Liga-J3, the third tier. Among those joining are community-owned Becerro Hipopótamo, from San Joaxha, part of the MiCF project; and Nómada Club u20 - somewhat belatedly, considering it is the biggest and in many eyes the most important development programme in the country. The administration at Argón Academy will be quick to disagree - they have won two of the first three championships, are reigning champions, and were expected to mount another serious challenge for a place in the IFCF Rising Stars Cup.


Liga-J Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Acacoyagua Juniors 26 16 4 6 75 62 +13 52 IFCF Rising Stars Cup
2 Resplendiente Juniors 26 15 5 6 59 46 +13 50
3 Atlás Academy 26 14 5 7 74 57 +17 47
4 Moto Academy 26 14 5 7 62 47 +15 47
5 Pelotón u20 26 14 4 8 65 51 +14 46
6 CF Frantxizko-J 26 14 3 9 60 51 +9 45
7 Serpentina Academy 26 13 4 9 64 59 +5 43
8 Florentino Academy 26 10 10 6 68 66 +2 40
9 Fábrica Academy 26 10 5 11 61 58 +3 35
10 Argón Academy 26 10 5 11 50 51 −1 35
11 Xico Juniors 26 6 4 16 48 71 −23 22
12 Peru Urzagui u20 26 6 3 17 50 67 −17 21 Relegated
13 Real Gardaresso u20 26 5 4 17 55 83 −28 19 Relegated
14 Unuiĝuinta u20 26 2 5 19 38 60 −22 11 Relegated

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Liga-J has it's third national youth champion in four years as The Lilywhites attack-attack-attack to the title, flaunting the defensive duties at every opportunity. They were, apparently, thrilling to watch; many in the business of scouting felt that the hottest talent to emerge from the Acaco youth team had already graduated - watch out for more talk of attacking midfield prodigy Orpinton, 20, the Ipanema-Tequilo dual national who is out on loan at Inter Raití this season and really impressing. So much for missing him though - Acacoyagua continued their upward trend to fufill promise that has been around from the start of this league, finishing third last time and this season holding off perennial challengers Resplendiente, the Young Crows looking for their second title to match Argón, but just falling short. As for the mighty Argón Academy, it was a season to forget as they lost more games than they won for the first time in this league, finishing outside the top two for the first time and a long, long way short of their usual standard. Having promoted heavily for the last three seasons, is this the end of a golden generation in their youth ranks, or just a blip?

Liga-J Awards

Player of the season: Pedro Ramo (ML, Acocoyagua)
Golden Boot: Paulo Laza (ST, Acacoyagua)
Golden Glove: Sebastià Barrull (GK, Resplendiente)

Acacoyagua Juniors - Names to watch out for...

Captain: Xoán de Brito, 19 (MR)
Player of the season: Pedro Ramo, 18 (ML)
Golden Boot: Paulo Laza, 19 (ST)
Golden Blanket: Qoya Llancay Mallqui, 19 (MR)
Golden Brick: Théo Bah, (ZEN) 19 (DR)
Golden Glove: Xacinto Lemos, 16 (GK)
Golden Boy: Paul Cray, (BSE) 15 (DC)

Liga-J2


Liga-J2 Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Caimán Juniors 26 18 3 5 71 37 +34 57 Promoted
2 SC Raití Academy 26 16 4 6 72 55 +17 52 Promoted
3 Pitxi-Pitxi 19 26 15 6 5 74 50 +24 51 Promoted
4 Haïtiens u20 26 14 6 6 71 41 +30 48
5 Sporta Ibaeta u20 26 15 3 8 61 42 +19 48
6 SC Pedregal u20 26 13 6 7 65 49 +16 45
7 Urbo Ibaeta u20 26 11 7 8 54 48 +6 40
8 Juventoyan u20 26 9 4 13 60 64 −4 31
9 Cooperativa Juniors 26 8 6 12 53 62 −9 30
10 Indigo Huayna u20 26 8 5 13 58 75 −17 29
11 Inter Raití u20 26 9 2 15 50 69 −19 29
12 Jaguares u20 26 6 4 16 40 70 −30 22 Relegated
13 Galaxía u20 26 5 4 17 47 72 −25 19 Relegated
14 Benemérito u20 26 2 6 18 40 82 −42 12 Relegated


Liga-J3


Liga-J3 Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Ocozoxhuatla u20 26 17 5 4 83 47 +36 56 Promoted
2 Becerro Hipopótamo 26 17 5 4 87 58 +29 56 Promoted
3 Estudiantes Juniors 26 17 5 4 71 44 +27 56 Promoted
4 Independiencia u20 26 12 6 8 72 68 +4 42
5 Nómada Club u20 26 10 8 8 66 59 +7 38
6 El Quetan CF u20 26 10 8 8 53 52 +1 38
7 Atlético Lipa u20 26 10 5 11 58 69 −11 35
8 Cisne Senzapa u20 26 8 9 9 61 62 −1 33
9 Asociación Olaya u20 26 8 7 11 58 57 +1 31
10 Polibio u20 26 7 6 13 53 70 −17 27
11 Telégrafo u20 26 6 7 13 50 64 −14 25
12 Gimnástico Juven 26 5 7 14 48 63 −15 22
13 Pingüinos Juniors 26 4 9 13 48 71 −23 21
14 Azules Juniors 26 4 7 15 42 66 −24 19 Re-elected
::: FORGOTTEN BUT NOT GONE :::
BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE

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Cálculo-4 Intercontinental Main

Postby Tequilo » Wed Mar 03, 2021 11:02 pm

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INTERCONTINENTAL FOOTBALL
GROUP STAGES

The third season in intercontinental football has marked progress for Tequiloan clubs with a record of four teams making the group stages of different competitions, a record three making it to the knockout rounds beyond, a first appearance of a Tequiloan club in the IFCF knockouts and the first Tequiloan side to reach an intercontinental final. Previous outings may have had the feel of a foreign adventure holiday about them, but this time around, it looks more like a business trip.

5th IFCF Challengers Cup

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The 77o made history for domestic clubs in the IFCF by becoming the first team to reach the later stages of the Challengers Cup, in what is proving to be a fine season for the Green-and-Whites. Drawn in what looked like an impossible group, and starting with a home hammering by Sabrefell Moths and then defeat to the Old Boys, it looked like the inevitable would happen and bottom place would follow. A shock win in Farfadillis against Avenida Leal turned things around though, starting with a famous thrashing of the same team at Estadio 77o to give the Tequiloans a fighting chance. Defeat in Sabrefell, by the narrowest of margins and despite a decent performance, put it all on the last game in Bassabook. A stunning 4-2 away victory was enough to leapfrog the Old Boys and sneak into the knockout rounds behind the Moths.

.   
Group A Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts SFM PIX BOB AVL

1 Sabrefell Moths NPH 6 3 1 2 10 7 3 10 - 1-0 2-2 0-1
2 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 TEQ 6 3 0 3 11 10 1 9 0-3 - 1-2 4-1

3 Bassabook Old Boys ZWZ 6 2 2 2 12 11 1 8 1-2 2-4 - 2-2
4 Avenida Leal FFD 6 2 1 3 8 13 -5 7 3-2 1-2 0-3 -

FFI Liga dos Vencedores

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While the intercontinental woes continued for Los Violetas, finishing bottom of their group in a tight finish with two wins and four defeats, their domestic rivals SC Pedregal navigated through group H undefeated to finish second and earn themselves a place in the last sixteen of the LdV. The highlight undoubtedly was a superb 5-1 away win to Kota Jembal and The Whistlers looked well equipped under brothers Armando and Aaron Garrido for a deep run in the competition; early season struggles at home and abroad - including that heartbreaking Extra Preliminary round Champions League exit way back almost before the season began - look to be well behind them as they challenge for silverware on all fronts.

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Group D Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts SCT GmM Alt Flt

1 SCUT NLA 6 3 2 1 15 8 7 11 - 2-1 1-1 6-1
2 Greschmeier Mountain SC QOD 6 2 2 2 11 9 2 8 1-1 - 1-0 5-2

3 Arlington City ZWZ 6 2 2 2 10 10 0 8 2-4 2-2 - 3-1

4 Florentino TEQ 6 2 0 4 9 18 -9 6 2-1 2-1 1-2 -

Group H Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts RwU SCP KJb LFC
1 Riuwiee United AFT 6 4 2 0 8 4 4 14 - 2-2 1-0 2-1
2 SC Pedregal TEQ 6 3 3 0 14 8 6 12 1-1 - 2-2 2-1

3 Kota Jembal SHT 6 1 1 4 8 11 -3 4 0-1 1-5 - 4-0

4 Lincolnpoole FC ULG 6 1 0 5 5 12 -7 3 0-1 1-2 2-1 -

FFI Taça das Confederações

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With the fans still angrily jeering during the FFI anthem at the beginning of the game, this season's intercontinental matches at Arenamoto are all grudge matches so far as supporters are concerned, and despite the somethimes extra pressure from the terraces this seems to have spurred the team on, as they won a tight group as the only Tequiloan team to finish top of their section this season, ahead even of Poafmersians Dury FC despite losing both legs to them during this campaign. They won't mind though - they still head into the final sixteen of the Taça feeling like they have something to prove.

.
Group C Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Mtz Dry AHg MtT

1 Motozintla TEQ 6 3 1 2 9 7 2 10 - 1-3 3-0 1-1
2 Dury FC PFA 6 2 3 1 13 12 1 9 1-0 - 2-2 2-2

3 Alor Hangor FC OTK 6 1 3 2 11 14 -3 6 1-2 5-5 - 2-2
4 Melty Town UPS 6 1 3 2 8 8 0 6 1-2 2-0 0-1 -


INTERCONTINENTAL FOOTBALL
FINAL STAGES

Pitxi-Pitxi 77, SC Pedregal and Motozintla all head into the final stages of intercontinental competitions whilst having plenty to play for back at home - it's going to be a squad game for any club that has pretensions to intercontinental glory...

5th IFCF Challengers Cup

Round of 32
(TEQ) Pitxi-Pitxi 77 4–5 Kirkenes FC (KSK) 2–2 2–3

For the 77o, it's now a matter of 'concentrate on the league' and while at home they are closing in on another title, it all proved a little too tough against Kirkenes FC, despite two battling performances home and away. The Kelssekis will know they have been in a game though, and with more intercontinental football next season looking most likely, this will have been a valuable experience for the Green-and-Whites, as they build up their reputation - and club coëfficients - across the multiverse. Can they come back stronger, faster and harder next time around? Coach Eskaminzim certainly plans to, and he'll have money to back it up thanks to this run into the last 32 of the second best club competition in the multiverse.

FFI Liga dos Vencedores

Round of 16
(SQR) Real Squidroid CF 2–3 SC Pedregal (TEQ) 1–2 1–1

Quarterfinal
(TEQ) SC Pedregal 5–2 Keppal Cosmos (ZWZ) 2–1 3–1

Semi-final
(NLA) SCUT 0–4 SC Pedregal (TEQ) 0–3 0–1

The Whistlers improve on the previous record of Pitxi-Pitxi 77 who had held the record for the best run in an intercontinental competition, when they reached the semi-final of this tournament two years ago. Five wins and a draw in the knockouts have put SC Pedregal on the brink of glory, as they chase the honour of becoming the first Tequiloan side to conquer one corner of the multiverse. Heading to the Squornshelan Remnant States for a final tie against Squidroidian side Calamari Wanderers, having already eliminated their rivals Real Squidroid on the way, coaches Garrido & Garrido have won themselves a lot of friends in the city of Cuara thanks to this impressive run. One more game will decide whether they win over a few hundred thousand more.

FFI Taça das Confederações

Round of 16
(PFA) Dalaris City 2–5 Motozintla (TEQ) 2–3 0–2

Quarterfinal
(ZWZ) Arlington City 3–2 Motozintla (TEQ) 3–1 0–1

It's a creditable quarterfinal finish for Moto, who had started believing they could go all the way even though most of them would tell you that some murky power or other would never let that happen. A fine double over Poafmersians Dalaris City set them up with a quarterfinal tie against Zwangzug opposition, in a double-header since over in the LdV SC Pedregal would also be lining up against a fine bunch of Zwangers at the same stage. But while The Whistlers impressively dispatched Keppal Cosmos on their way to the LdV final, Arlington City was the end of the road for Moto. They put Florentino out of the LdV last season at this stage, while Bassabook Old Boys, bested by Pitxi-Pitxi 77 in this years Challengers Cup, eliminated Moto last year in the group stage of the Taça. Clearly, Margaret or the meddling wights of the cup draw have a desire to match-make the ZZ with the TQ, and for Moto, that did not end well.


FFI LIGA DOS VENCEDORES
FINAL

(SQR) Calamari Wanderers CFC p0-0 SC Pedregal (TEQ)Pens 4-3
@ Bridger Lane, Damogran, Squornshelan Remnant States


Whistlers Undone In Shootout St-Inker
Penalty Takers Kraken Under Pressure In LdV Deadlock Finale


From the moment the Tequilo national team went out of the Baptism of Fire semi-final on penalties having gone through the whole competition undefeated, the one thing sure to ruin a good party in the country is a penalty shoot-out decider. When you look back through old issues of the famous comic strip Rúi de Los Rovas, set in the fantasy world called 'RL', there is an ongoing story of his nation's eternal failure in penalty shootouts, starting with the storyline 'Oh no Gareth, What Have You Done?!' that cursed Rúi's national team, England to one hundred and ten years of missing penalties. It was a slightly unbelievable story - to say the least - and many Rúi fans wrote in to the publishers to complain that it was pushing the bounds of enjoyment, even for a silly comic strip. Well, since captain Mateo Tafalla and midfielder Callañuapa missed their shots against the Zetans, it feels like the national team has that same unreal curse. Only this time, it has spread to the domestic teams, as The Whistlers suffer heartbreak in Damogran at the hands of Calamari Wanderers.

When the dust settles they can surely be proud of their run to the final and of the performance they put in against some cagey suckers in the Wanderers, and yet now it will be hurting, especially for Xusto Padron and Aleixo Claver, the two players who missed their spot kicks to condemn their team to the runner-up entry in the annals of the Idiot Project database. The wait for an intercontinental winner goes on, but to be fair, with a finalist in only the third season of competing, progress has been remarkable. Just try telling that to Xusto and Aleixo.
Last edited by Tequilo on Wed Mar 03, 2021 11:11 pm, edited 4 times in total.
::: FORGOTTEN BUT NOT GONE :::
BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE

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Cálculo-4 Copa Tequilo Latter Rounds

Postby Tequilo » Fri Mar 05, 2021 12:59 am

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COPA SEASON 126
ROAD TO GLORY PART TWO - THE LATTER ROUNDS

It's time for the big boys of top tier football to get involved as the Copa reaches the third round proper, and sixty 1-Sección teams, including the twelve 'Big Ten', are in the hat. Meanwhile, AC Sezalco are our representative 'Road To Glory' team after disposing of Amanexü Norteño in the second round, and have pulled a plum tie at home to Acacoyagua, while internet club Hipopótamo-Joaxha are the last of our feature clubs still standing - they travel to Arsenál Ciupa.

CAMINO GLORIA

AC SEZALCO might be the oldest team in Chazapa - might be. In the town where I once lived, a quaint little place by the name of Villamoco, there are two very old cantinas, dating back to the original Costelloan conquests. One is called La Vacación A Jeruselem and claims to be the oldest pub in the multiverse, certified by the town council. The other is called El Saludo - The Salutation - and is certified by the town council as the oldest pub in Tequilo. (A third, La Campana - The Bell - is certified by the town council as the oldest pub in the town1). Tequiloans have no problem with this rather shambolic view of history - and in Chazapa state, they seem to have comfortably squared the circle of Chazapa's Pitxi-Pitxi 77 being the oldest team in the country and AC Sezalco being the oldest team in the state, simply by accepting it as written. When pressed on the contradiction, the people of Sezalco city will shrug. "I don't know," they will say, and raise a glass to the complexities of history. What any correct-minded sports historian can be quite certain of is that the Athletic Club of Sezalco is certainly a very old institution, and almost certainly the oldest football club in the city. Only the even older amateur club Jacobino Sezalco would raise an eyebrow, secure in the knowledge they are the oldest club in all the Wide Enness Ocean. But of AC - the most important thing, so far as they are concerned, is that they are verifiably older than their great city rivals, Cóndor. There is no dispute on that matter. That their younger neighbours are by far the more successful, and more widely known, is hardly here nor there. One of the first teams to win the Copa Tequilo, and a founder member and early winner of the Chazapa State Championship, AC Sezalco have history. It more or less stopped a hundred and ten years ago, but, say their fans, that's neither here nor there either.

COPA-3
Three of the Big Ten fall at the first hurdle and it's our very own 'Road to Glory' club AC Sezalco who pick up one of the biggest shocks of the round as they unceremoniously dump Acaco out of the Copa with a thumping 4-1 victory; veteran Zenegalese attacking midfielder Mafany Buzitu - known as El Buzza by the fans - winning the man of the match award for his two assists and a goal. Holders Florentino are also on the end of a shock as they are given a slap in the face at Villa Lego by 2-Sección minnows Comitán Argente, left back Salazar de Alagon sent off to leave the home side at a disadvantage and Comitán happy to reap the benefit of a man over. Fábrica were the third of the Big Ten out, following defeat at Erreal Tiresias. Our last standing feature club are Hipopó, the MiCF internet club enjoying their best season ever in the Chazapa State second division, and they are convincingly through to the fourth round of the Copa, equalling their best ever record, following a dominant 4-1 win at Arsenál. That brings two of our feature teams together as AC are drawn at home to Hipopó in the next round - the two teams are competing for promotion out of the same division and it was advantage AC at this point, having won the corresponding 2-Sección fixture away at The Coffee Seiren Coliseum in Joaxha 2-1.

Copa-3
Big Ten & feature clubs highlighted

Deportivo Sixtus IV 6–2 Camp Esportiu
Ciupa Azul 3–5 Unuiĝinta
Naranja 3–3 AS Ferrocarril (3–4 AET)
Florentino 1–2 Comitán Argente
SC Raití 3–3 Caballero AC (3–3 AET) (0–3 pen.)
Cooperativa 3–5 Argón Tacranza
Internacional CF 3–1 Bibliotecarios Maranza
Pingüinos 6–2 Erresistentzia

Tequiloa 2–4 RCD La Constancia
Atlás Ciuredor 4–4 Cáfunda (4–4 AET) (3–2 pen.)
Pelotón 0–4 Motozintla
Combinar Toyan 2–4 Humberto
Progresso CF 3–4 Cisne Senzapa
FT Orazun 0–2 CF Frantxizko-A
AS Matiguás 1–2 Las Navas de Talosa
Aliantza Iparra 1–0 Dinamo Iragartze

Macarada Gaona 4–4 Golondrinas (5–4 AET)
Hielo Permanante 3–0 Siete Onze Espato
Edicto de Fe 2–4 Zamalakarregi
AC Sezalco 4–1 Acacoyagua
Ciudad Cuahtémoc 3–2 Escolásticos
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 6–2 Deportivo Requexón
Los Pozos de Herrera 2–2 JS Solistahuacan (2–2 AET) (5–4 pen.)
Atlético Lipa 1–1 Racing Azéma (3–1 AET)

Montañeros 1–2 Xicoa
Venustianos 0–2 Haïtiens
Albaviedo 0–1 Independiencia
Gallandaires 4–2 Petrolero
Atléta Reten 4–2 Hoqué-Coqué
Páramos 0–2 Chazapañol
Cóndor Sezalco 2–3 Fortuna Tulan
SC Tescoa 1–3 SC Pedregal

Deportivo Torente 2–2 Comuna Cailon (3–3 AET) (4–3 pen.)
Gimnástico Chichiguina 3–3 Errentes Monvador (3–4 AET)
Estudiantes Tacranza 2–4 CF Arradura
Atléta Idal 1–0 Bastardos de Toyan
Sporta Ibaeta 3–1 AS Tonalá
Cuba Tapalupé 4–3 Clazada Larga
Real Gardaresso 2–1 El Quetan CF
Las Guías Oriente 5–3 Orkak

Costello Raití 2–4 Juniors Chazapa
Inter Raití 3–4 Juventoyan
Arsenál Ciupa 1–4 Hipopótamo-Joaxha
Peru Urzagui 4–1 Compañónes
Pelóta San Anreso 4–4 Polibio (4–4 AET) (5–4 pen.)
Finca Cailon 1–0 Itaete-Orazun
Lotsagarria 3–6 Benemérito
Erreal Tiresias 2–0 Fábrica Tapalupé

SC Marcapira 1–1 SC Cañazas (2–1 AET)
Astogaiko AK 3–2 Continente Tulan
Arma de Fuego 2–3 Resplendiente
Retenaiko 2–2 Pelóta San Mérito (2–3 AET)
Unión Argain 2–2 Colegio Nísa (2–3 AET)
Jaguar Ixtacomitán 1–2 Telégrafo
Ocozoxhuatla 3–1 Asociación Olaya
Excepcionales 2–3 Tenís de Tacranza

Racquette-22 0–1 Demokrito
Universitario 2–1 Polideportivo
Argentinako 4–0 1492 Carranza
San Masón 1–1 Ganzábal (3–1 AET)
KKA Bixintxo 5–2 Equipo Caimán
El Ejército 1–2 Ascension San Pasito
Galaxía 4–0 SC Bravo Cuahjuluca
Unión Zamolaco 0–1 Los Miñeros

CAMINO GLORIA

AC SEZALCO are one half of the Cálculo Sezalco: the grudge match between the two city rivals, AC and Cóndor. Better known as El Smaxja [Pron. / ˈsmæʃ ər / 'smasher'], it pits Sezalco's most successful team, Cóndor, against it's oldest... allegedly. In many towns and cities across Tequilo, rivalries are dominated by clubs across the heritage divide - two local clubs, one supported by the indiginous Indigo community, the other by the immigrant Costelloan-native community. In Huayna, for example, that would be Indigo Huayna vs. Acacoyagua. In Maranco state, take Xicoa vs. Tumuloa, or Resplendiente vs. La Conon. Pelota vs. Mártires in San Anreso. Thus it is in Sezalco, a northerly outpost of the Ixta peoples, where Cóndor is the team representative of the Indigo state, whilst AC represent the incoming Tequiloan population. In Tequilo of course, these heritage divides in modern society are not matters of distasteful conflict or sectarian hatred, but rather the celebration of alternative cultures in an integrated society where multiculturalism is a foundation of the united confusiónism of the modern state. For 90 minutes at El Smaxja, the Indigo and the Costelloa go head to head in a carnival of colour and noise, and the great desire for their representative teams to taste victory on the pitxi field. That is not to say there is not the odd punch-up or rumble in the local pub. That is not to say some of the chanting doesn't get a little fruity. But what motivates is not a desire for superiority of race. What motivates is the desire for superiority of songs, of costumes, of drumming, and of football skills. And at the end of the match, the chance to join with friends and fellows of the opposing set of supporters, get a pint in at the local, and find a way to agree that, as usual, Cóndor were the better team.

COPA-4
Four more of the Big Ten are out, and Comitán Argente are at it again having beaten Florentino on the road in the last round. This time they go to La Conon to earn another famous win in extra time over Resplendiente. Goalkeeper Simón Martínez was the hero of the hour in the mountain city, saving a penalty and denying The Crows on numerous occasions to practically serve up the banana skin for Resplendiente to trip over. Last years other finalist SC Pedregal fall in the fourth round, going down at the talented Cisne Senzapa, who are winning over a lot of admirers with their year-on-year improvement under young coach Roderic Corominas. Argón go out at Juventoyan whilst Haïtiens, in the midst of an entirely underwhelming season, are the losers in the round's only 'Cálculo Grande' - between two Big Ten sides - as they are beaten at home by an Amatu Larregain winner for Atlás, with The Wights' favourite Teus defender Frank Kolar sent off. In the Camino Gloria feature match, AC Sezalco take the plaudits in a terrific clash with Hipopótamo-Joaxha, a goal and a hattrick of assists for striker and man of the match Cilipo Penyafort too much for the internet club. AC draw another mouthwatering fixture for the fifth round, at home to Juventoyan. The best win of the round had to be CF Frantxizko-A's thrashing of Atlético Lipa, 5-1, as The Golds were keen to remind everyone that they remain the competition's most successful team, with six Copa wins, and perhaps on this display might be thinking about a seventh. They have to do something to stop the march of the country's most successful team, Pitxi-Pitxi 77, with whom they were recently considered their only peers. Much has changed in the Liga-TQ era - the 77o march on in every competition, including the Copa with a highly watchable 5-3 home win over Los Pozos.

Copa-4

Pingüinos 1–1 Unuiĝinta (1–1 AET) (4–2 pen.)
SC Marcapira 0–3 Demokrito
Sporta Ibaeta 5–3 Humberto
Ciudad Cuahtémoc 2–4 Argentinako
Atléta Reten 0–2 Deportivo Sixtus IV
Juniors Chazapa 4–0 Internacional CF
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 5–3 Los Pozos de Herrera
Real Gardaresso 3–2 Atléta Idal

Zamalakarregi 4–3 Tenís de Tacranza
Finca Cailon 1–2 Gallandaires
Deportivo Torente 1–2 Peru Urzagui
Cisne Senzapa 2–1 SC Pedregal
Telégrafo 2–3 Universitario
Pelóta San Mérito 3–0 Galaxía
Ocozoxhuatla 1–1 CF Arradura (3–2 AET)
Xicoa 2–3 Ascension San Pasito

Las Navas de Talosa 2–3 Pelóta San Anreso
Chazapañol 0–2 Colegio Nísa
Fortuna Tulan 3–3 Aliantza Iparra (4–3 AET)
RCD La Constancia 3–2 AS Ferrocarril
Macarada Gaona 0–2 Errentes Monvador
Las Guías Oriente 2–1 Hielo Permanante
AC Sezalco 4–2 Hipopótamo-Joaxha
KKA Bixintxo 2–1 Independiencia

Astogaiko AK 3–4 Los Miñeros
Resplendiente 1–1 Comitán Argente (2–3 AET)
Juventoyan 3–2 Argón Tacranza
Cuba Tapalupé 1–4 Benemérito
Haïtiens 0–1 Atlás Ciuredor
Erreal Tiresias 3–1 San Masón
Caballero AC 0–3 Motozintla
CF Frantxizko-A 5–1 Atlético Lipa

CAMINO GLORIA

AC SEZALCO once held the record of being the equal-secondmost successful team in the Chazapa State Championship, back in their 'Glory Decade'. It tells you a lot about that glory when you understand that they only won the Championship once, in season 9, and at that time, only Pingüinos of the city of Chiapulas had more titles to their name having won three of the first five. AC can boast being on a par with Pitxi-Pitxi back in the day - or better, since they had also won a Copa Tequilo in the first decade of organised football. If Pingüinos were one of the first powers of that new era, along with Unuiĝinta, then AC Sezalco were in the chasing pack. The Glory Decade was 115 years ago now, and long since passed from living memory. Mateu Bermund is the team's young attacking midfielder, a local lad with long ties to the club: "my grandfather used to tell me that his grandfather used to tell him that his father used to go along to the matches at Campo Soldado to watch AC teach the world how to play pitxi," he says. Whether that actually happened is up for research and debate, but managed by a charismatic 'Gáfa' in Lop de Quiroga, and with the apparent wizardly skills [contemporaneous reports in the Sezalco Daily Times] of trickster winger Marçal de Maella, AC had a magnificent year in season 9 of the state championship, having already bagged the Copa a couple seasons before. Finishing ahead of the first power team in Pingüinos and the future all-star Pitxi-Pitxi 77, 'Los Soldados' - The Soldiers - looked to have the world of Tequiloan football at their feet. But they failed to build on a spectacular start to pitxi history, and quickly faded from view. Rivals Cóndor emerged nearly 40 years later and soon surpassed them, having won 8 state championships to date. "Ah, the good old days," says Mateu, dreamily - reminisences supplied by old black and white photos in the club's official history book - 'Once Upon A Time In Sezalco'.

COPA-5
After a promising 5th round victory, Copa kings CFFA undid all the good work with a disastrous defeat at Ocozoxhuatla, where they were well beaten 3-0 to become the eighth of the twelve Big Ten to exit the competition. That leaves four remaining into the sixth round, and joining them is our Road To Glory team AC Sezalco with another win to be proud of at Campo Soldero, over Juventoyan - who will see another year pass with Juven mired in a mediocrity they can't seem to escape. It's anything but mediocre for The Soldiers though, at least in the Copa, with Gomes La Judia hitting the winner which ensures he gets free drinks at every bar in Senzapa at least until the end of the season. As for his team, they pull another home tie against higher opposition, this time against Liga-TQ regulars Sporta Ibaeta who like to get to finals and lose (zero for five is the worst record in the country). In their current form, AC would fancy themselves for that one.

Copa-5

Ascension San Pasito 4–1 Cisne Senzapa
Juniors Chazapa 3–3 Pelóta San Mérito (5–4 AET)
Erreal Tiresias 2–1 Demokrito
Pelóta San Anreso 0–1 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Colegio Nísa 0–1 Motozintla
AC Sezalco 1–0 Juventoyan
Gallandaires 2–1 RCD La Constancia
Real Gardaresso 3–0 Universitario

Zamalakarregi 1–3 Los Miñeros
Errentes Monvador 4–4 KKA Bixintxo (4–4 AET) (2–4 pen.)
Peru Urzagui 1–1 Benemérito (1–1 AET) (3–4 pen.)
Comitán Argente 1–3 Pingüinos
Fortuna Tulan 1–1 Argentinako (1–1 AET) (4–3 pen.)
Atlás Ciuredor 3–1 Las Guías Oriente
Deportivo Sixtus IV 2–3 Sporta Ibaeta
Ocozoxhuatla 3–0 CF Frantxizko-A

CAMINO GLORIA

AC SEZALCO count themselves as one of the sixty-nine greatest clubs in Copa Tequilo history, having won it once, a very long time ago. As such, they are only five titles behind all-time greatest Copa team CF Frantxizko-A, and can put themselves on a par with Big Ten teams Real Gardaresso and Argón Tacranza. Unfortunately city rivals Cóndor have won three, but that, as they frequently say in 'The Soldier' public house at the corner of the old ground Campo Soldado, is neither here nor there. That famous victory came in season 7 of the Copa; no team had won the competition more than once and AC, who would go on to win a state championship soon after, were certainly considered one of the best teams of the day. Early controversies in the Cup which had prevented many top sides from participating in the early days were now behind it, and the competition was considered the path to the 'national title' - the winners being nominated the unofficial best team in Tequilo - so there was a time, briefly, when AC were that team, thanks to a spectacular 5-3 victory over Fortuna Tulan. This was the Glory Decade for Los Soldados; under Lop de Quiroga they had already reached a semi-final in season 5 and that season would be runners-up in the state championship to Benemérito, coming close to matching Unuiĝinta and CFFA who had already won state and copa doubles. But while Bene denied them the state title, Fortuna could not resist Marçal de Maella et al. as the team in amber and white quartered shirts ran riot. Jayme de Sepulveda, Dieguito Romero, Pero Malon, Lorenzo Gutierres and Escobar Sanchez are on the roll of honour as scorers that day, whilst reports of the time have de Maella, predictably, as the man of the match. It was perhaps - no, it was certainly - the high point for the club. In season 10, the year after their state title, they would reach the semi-final again, and that would be the end of the Glory Decade. One more semi-final, 74 years later and over forty years ago, would be the best they could manage.

COPA-6
Four inevitably become three as Atlás and the 77o went head to head in the all-Big Ten clash at Estadio Titánico in Ciuredor; a raucous fullhouse saw the game go to extra time before that man Tesco Zuniga, the Audioslav striker proving such a smart investment for the green-and-whites, hit a 103rd minute winner, keeping hopes alive of a rare cup win for Pitxi-Pitxi 77 and potentially the first triple slam of State Championship, Liga-TQ and Copa Tequilo. SC Pedregal came close last season and who would bet against the 77o with Tlacolotl and Tesco up front? They look almost unbeatable, though The Hoops ran them close in this game after twice taking the lead in the first half, only to be pegged back. Real Gardaresso don't make the same mistakes CFFA did in the last round and comfortably navigate past Ocozoxhuatla, and Moto make up for a poor showing so far in Liga-TQ with a win over Erreal to maintain a good run on the Copa. And what of our plucky heroes from Campo Soldero? AC Sezalco take another senior scalp in a magnificent run, with a magnificent hearts-in-mouth 5-4 home win over Sporta; supersub Mateu Bermund hit the winner for The Soldiers with half an hour to go, and it was backs to the wall all the way to the quarter final and another cash-generator away at the massive Palacios Cristal to face mighty Real Gardaresso. Is it time to dream? In other news, Ascension San Pasito, shock Ocotapa state champions for the first time in their history and turning a few heads in their debut Liga-TQ Primera campaign, aren't doing too shabbily in the Copa either, following a 4-3 win at Benemérito that puts them into the last 8. Long-serving manager Ivan Pozo has become hot property with the construction of this fine side playing attractive football, and the gossip has already started - Haïtiens miserable season, with all that money at their disposal, could be in for him soon.

Copa-6

KKA Bixintxo 0–1 Fortuna Tulan
Benemérito 3–4 Ascension San Pasito
Juniors Chazapa 2–2 Pingüinos (2–3 AET)
Los Miñeros 3–3 Gallandaires (4–4 AET) (5–6 pen.)
Ocozoxhuatla 2–4 Real Gardaresso
Motozintla 1–0 Erreal Tiresias
AC Sezalco 5–4 Sporta Ibaeta
Atlás Ciuredor 2–2 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 (2–3 AET)

CAMINO GLORIA

AC SEZALCO continue to play their pitxi at the now rather delapidated Campo Soldado, a fitting stage for their rather delapidated modern history. Not for The Soldiers the apocalyptic crash of your Nómada Club - now playing in the semi-professional 4-Sección - but rather bouncing around the second and third tiers, not making much imporession on anybody, and occasionally bumping up to the lower reaches of the top tier as they had been for three seasons at the dawn of this new era with the introduction of Liga-TQ. But hopes of glory and cash in the new league were faint at best, and those three seasons ended in relegation to the second tier, their natural environment, last year. Under young manager Balandín Ramírez though, they are enjoying a moderately good season. Their best Copa performance in a generation, competing for promotion in the league, and hoping rivals Cóndor fulfill their part of a happy bargain by being relegated in their place - it would be the first time they would play in a higher division for some sixty years. Fans drinking watery pints at The Soldier are enjoying themselves for a change. The thought of being better than Cóndor is uppermost in their minds, as it was for their grandfathers, and their grandfathers' grandfathers. They probably know the Copa is beyond them. They probably accept that Liga-TQ is off-limits and they are never going to be a Pitxi-Pitxi 77, or even a Jaguar Ixtacomitán. But to be better than Cóndor... life would be sweet.

COPA CUARTO
The game is up for The Soldiers, our Road To Glory team for the last five rounds, as Real Gardaresso take the mantle following their efficient victory at home against the underdogs. Ecuador is man of the match for Isaac Martí's classy side, hitting two goals and generally giving the AC defense more to think about than probably at any time through this fine cup run of theirs. For Real, without a trophy since the state championship three years ago and not doing enough in Liga-TQ, this could be a chance for a little bit of glory. Both the other Big Ten teams progress to make it three of the four semi-finalists, although neither side could claim it was easy. Ivan Pozo's Ascension gave Pitxi-Pitxi as tough a game as they could have wished for, Los Angeles forcing the game to penalties after a battling 3-3 draw through extra time, where the 77o finally got the better of their impressive opponents and keep their Copa hopes alive for longer than usual. Meanwhile it was a penalty win for Motozintla too as Antivadorio small-fry Gallandaires gave Mauricio Nores' Moto side the fright of their lives in this game, defender Afonso Torre putting his side ahead just before the stroke of half time to have 'The Aires' dreaming of a semi-final. Pachakusi equalised in the second half to make sure that didn't happen, though Moto laboured to get anything else past player of the match Torre. In the end, it was the heartbreak/joy of the penalty shoot-out that put the black-and-blues into the last four. In the final tie of the 'Cuarto', two old-school giants fallen on hard times battled to rekindle old glories, with Fortuna edging The Penguins to have them dreaming of a remarkable seventh final. They'll need to improve their fortunas, mind, with a record-equalling five final defeats in their six appearances.

Copa-QF

Pingüinos 2–3 Fortuna Tulan
Real Gardaresso 3–1 AC Sezalco
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 3–3 Ascension San Pasito (3–3 AET) (4–2 pen.)
Gallandaires 1–1 Motozintla (1–1 AET) (2–3 pen.)

CAMINO GLORIA

REAL GARDARESSO become the torch-bearer for the Camino Gloria - The Road To Glory - for this season's semi-finals with a big question mark over their Copa credentials. One of the Big Ten clubs, they have sixteen state championships to their name, and are, bar none, the most glamourous team in Tequiloan pitxi history. But one Copa win in 126 years tells its own story - they have it all to prove in this competition and reaching the semi-final is a start. Without them as regular competitors, the Copa has just a little polish off its decorated history - one percentage point less glamour than it should have, because Real Gardaresso practically invented the concept. The oldest team in Antivador, they are the biggest and best supported club on the islands, and play at the largest domestic stadium in Tequilo, the Crystal Palace; Real’s fortress so named for the large amount of fancy glass used in renovating the stadium which effectively hides a multitude of sins underneath - the old stadium was a vast and shambolic edifice which really hasn’t been renovated so much as camouflaged. Still, it looks great, sounds great, and vibrates on a terrifying frequency if half the ground are jumping up and down - something Real’s ultras enjoy doing to frighten the bejesu out of visiting supporters. Nicknamed the Glaziers after their ground, Real probably have not even won as many state titles as they should have expected, since the Antivador state championship is one of the most competitive. Failing so far to set Liga-TQ alight, they have had to watch rivals Florentino move past them and become the powerhouse on the islands, winning the last three championships in a row, a Liga-TQ national title, and last year's Copa Tequilo. At the jumping, bumping, and worrylingly rocking Palacios Cristal, they are demanding more from their team than ever before.

COPA SEMI
We have another Big Ten final for the second season in a row - they are surprisingly rare, the previous one before SC Pedregal-Florentino last season was, err, SC Pedregal-Florentino, thirty years ago. Even rarer is Real Gardaresso appearing in a Copa final - the last and only one a win against rivals Atlético Lipa nearly seventy years ago - but they have secured their second final berth with an impressive double-victory over triple crown chasers Pitxi-Pitxi 77. A narrow and hardly secure 1-0 victory at the Crystal Palace, courtesy of a Stìssë Ceá winner, was followed by a stunning 5-2 smash and grab raid at Estadio 77o; Ecuador once again the hero for Real with two more goals in a stunning second half of the season. He missed most of the first half with injury but now has 13 goals in his last 11 games for the club, as he presses for a place in August Toset's Cup of Harmony squad.2

Real will face Motozintla in the final, as crazed TV personality and chairman Gedeó Dosrius tries to make good on his promise to Make Moto Great Again. A fascinating duel with Fortuna over two legs saw his team narrowly on top in both games to progress to their fourth final, with two wins in the bag so far - coincidentally, both were 3-1 wins in extra time after ending 0-0 after 90 minutes. The last of those was nearly fifty years ago, so like Real, demand is high to put something back into that section of their trophy cabinet marked 'Copa'.

Copa-SF

Fortuna Tulan 0–1 Motozintla
Real Gardaresso 1–0 Pitxi-Pitxi 77

Motozintla 5–4 Fortuna Tulan Agg. 6-4
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 2–5 Real Gardaresso Agg. 2-6



1OOC: inspired by the true controversies of public house social histories of Nottingham, England
2Time slip alert: the latter stages of Liga-TQ and the Copa coincide with the end of WC'87 qualifying, where Tequilo NT failed to reach the finals and will go to the CoH.
Last edited by Tequilo on Fri Mar 05, 2021 3:09 am, edited 5 times in total.
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Cálculo-4 Liga-TQ MD13-18

Postby Tequilo » Sat Mar 06, 2021 12:16 am

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LIGA-TQ SEASON 4
PRIMERA DIVISION MATCHDAYS 13-18

We move into the final third of the closura, the finishing line is on the horizon: can anyone stop the 77o?

MATCH DAY THIRTEEN
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Real Gardaresso 2–2 SC Pedregal
Ascension San Pasito 3–1 El Quetan CF
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 1–3 SC Raití
Unuiĝinta 3–4 Florentino
Motozintla 1–2 Resplendiente

It was unlucky thirteen for Pitxi-Pitxi 77 as they fell to a surprise home defeat to SC Raití; young starlet Davide Pasos set the hawk amongst the kittens early on to give La Abuela the lead within five minutes, and then defender Quriwayra Qori, 21, another academy product for SC, doubled that from a headed corner with only 12 minutes on the clock. Things had gone horribly wrong for the 77o and they could not find a way back - sub Çenturion's 85th minute penalty sparking hopes of a comeback that lasted only two minutes before Ganiz Courtelarre struck the decisive third for SC to secure a precious win. Florentino took advantage with an exciting win in Iragartze to narrow the gap to a (parhaps) catchable six points. Match of the day was a bitter rivaly derby match, the Cálculo known as El Resentimiento, with Resplendiente winning at Moto to secure a double for the season.

MATCH DAY FOURTEEN
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SC Pedregal 3–3 Motozintla
Resplendiente 3–3 Unuiĝinta
Florentino 2–4 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
SC Raití 4–2 Ascension San Pasito
El Quetan CF 3–3 Real Gardaresso

77o Coach Eskaminzim said before this game that matches against Florentino and SC Pedregal would decide the title this season, and it's advantage to the green-and-whites after this decisive win at the Villa Lego; with SC Pedregal failing to beat Motozintla, it doesn't look like the title will go all the way to the last game of the season, between SC and the 77o, as Eskaminzim's team now sit nine points clear with four games to go - indeed, it could all be over as soon as next week. Three home grown young superstars did for Florentino - winger Xecoto providing two assists, midfielder Çenturion with the other two assists and a goal, while superstar striker Tlacolotl hit two goals himself. Where was Audioslav strike partner Tesco Zuniga in all of this? Just running around being a brilliant distraction, is all.

MATCH DAY FIFTEEN
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El Quetan CF 2–3 SC Pedregal
Real Gardaresso 5–4 SC Raití
Ascension San Pasito 1–3 Florentino
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 4–2 Resplendiente
Unuiĝinta 3–3 Motozintla

The title race is all but over, and only quantum mathematics will change the outcome now as Pitxi-Pitxi 77 place one hand, four fingers and half a thumb on the trophy following the defeat of Resplendiente. SC Pedregal's narrow win at El Quetan means they are technically still in it but a single point from any of the next three games sends the title to Ixta-Comitán for the second time since the inauguration of Liga-TQ. Florentino also have the faintest of faint mathematical chances but let's face it, the whole thing is as good as over. Motozintla, a distant and disappointing sixth at this stage, will not want the 77o to win the championship on their home turf next weekend, but for Pitxi-Pitxi 77 this will be the chance to avenge Liga-TQ season 2 when they lost the title on the final day with defeat at home to Moto, whilst Florentino went on to take their crown off them. Real Gardaresso's high-scoring win over SC Raití gives them faint hope of breaking into the top three, with Motozintla now looking a long shot for intercontinental football - that won't impress Chairman Gedeó Dosrius much. They think it's all over:

MATCH DAY SIXTEEN
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SC Pedregal 2–3 Unuiĝinta
Motozintla 1–1 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 *Championship
Resplendiente 5–0 Ascension San Pasito
Florentino 4–3 Real Gardaresso
SC Raití 3–2 El Quetan CF

...it is now. Farv striker Vâásk Çêwé goes on a weaving run to poke home a superb solo effort in the 22nd minute to give Motozintla the lead over Pitxi-Pitxi 77. At this point both SC Pedregal and Florentino are leading in their games and the inevitable 77o title win looks like it could be delayed from happening at the Arenamoto. Two minutes before half time, as news filters in that SC Pedregal have surrendered their lead at home to struggling Unuiĝinta, young 77o defensive midfield Axó gets on the end of a Con Hatzileftheriou corner, and powers past national team goalkeeper Oscar Bienvenida. Pitxi-Pitxi 77 are level, and the visiting fans are jumping up and down celebrating a Liga-TQ title win. In the second half, a deflated Moto can't find a way past the green-and-whites; SC Pedregal lose at home to Unuiĝinta while Florentino hold on to win in the El Spectáculario over Real Gardaresso, but it doesn't matter a jot as the single point confirms Pitxi-Pitxi as the new two-time champions of Liga-TQ. Gedeó Dosrius leaves the director's box early, no doubt getting a head start to "avoid the traffic".

MATCH DAY SEVENTEEN
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SC Raití 1–2 SC Pedregal
El Quetan CF 1–2 Florentino
Real Gardaresso 2–1 Resplendiente
Ascension San Pasito 0–2 Motozintla
Pitxi-Pitxi 77 4–3 Unuiĝinta

The 77o celebrate the league championship in their final home game of the season, and it's an engaging 4-3 win over The Red Lions to put the icing on top of the trophy, lifted at the end of this match by Nepharim captain Con Hatzileftheriou in front of 60,000 rapturous supporters. Florentino's win at El Quetan keeps a three-point gap ahead of deposed champions SC Pedregal, themselves winning at SC Raití to end any hope La Abuela had of qualifying for intercontinental football. Los Violetas look favourite for their third second runner-up spot in a row, needing just a point at home to SC Raití next weekend to secure that second place. Moto's timely win at Ascension, and Real Gardaresso's victory over Resplendiente, means they go into the final weekend vying for the final spot, and they will face off against each other. For The Crows, intercontinental qualification is off the cards now in what turned out to be a tough first season in the Primera division, where they had been tipped by quite a few smart punters for a title challenge.

MATCH DAY EIGHTEEN
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SC Pedregal 3–3 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Unuiĝinta 2–2 Ascension San Pasito
Motozintla 3–2 Real Gardaresso
Resplendiente 0–1 El Quetan CF
Florentino 1–1 SC Raití

With the title already awarded, perhaps the most interesting - and significant - match is at the Arenamoto, where Motozintla and Real Gardaresso play off for the final IFCF qualification spot, in a precursor to the season's ultimate match - the Copa Tequilo also to be contested between these two teams. Winner takes all in this game, and coming up on the outside is Motozintla, who have struggled all season to make an impression and yet somehow, with this hard-fought 3-2 home win, sneak into the intercontinental positions for their fourth consecutive IFCF appearance next season. The black-and-blues raced into a surprise 3-0 lead in the first quarter of the game, Vâásk Çêwé, Mendo Davila and Zaquiel Goris seemingly putting the home side out of site, but by half time, Real were well back in it. Coach Isaac Martí, once understudy to Mauricio Nores here at Moto, saw his team pull back to 3-2 by the interval, and pressured hard for the vital equaliser which would have been enough to secure fourth and the IFCF position. It was not to be. Former Real defender Brandon Nyassa cleared off the line in injury time to preserve Moto's lead, and the win gives them an unlikely - some might say damn lucky - fourth place.


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LIGA-TQ CHAMPIONS
PITXI-PITXI 77


Pitxi-Pitxi 77 become the first team to win a second Liga-TQ and national title in a thoroughly entertaining season that saw the abandonment of defences across the competition in favour of out-and-out outscoring ataqataqataq-a tactics - new Liga-TQ Commissioner Martín Escorinato, the seemingly grey administrator, talking a lot of undecipherable stuff about the XK OpTeq data, SGIS ratios and additive modifiers producing the most exciting season yet. It was enough to make us all yawn - quite in contrast with a brilliant season from the green-and-whites finishing seven points clear at the top and sweeping up all the superlatives as they increased their grip on the sobriquet of Tequilo's All Time Finest. With a diamond front four of Çenturion, Tlacolotl, Tesco Zuniga and the evergreen 38-year old superman Ot Camazotz Roca, with asymmetrical offensive pivoting by wingers Con Hatzileftheriou and Xecoto, master tactical coach Eskaminzim confounded just about everyone this season. And let's not forget a defense including internationals Chicchan and Noxochinoch in front of the goalkeeper king, as they call him at Estadio 77o, the Wightling Orm Hinnisser. Last season, with a fourth place finish, you wondered if the 77o were a fading star. Well, they just seem to have exploded again back to full luminosity.


FINAL TABLE: MATCHDAY EIGHTEEN
.
Liga-TQ Primera Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Pitxi-Pitxi 77 18 12 4 2 51 33 +18 40 IFCF Champions League; FFI Liga dos Vencedores; Liga-TQ5 Primera
2 Florentino 18 10 3 5 50 43 +7 33 IFCF Challengers Cup; FFI Liga dos Vencedores; Liga-TQ5 Primera
3 SC Pedregal 18 9 3 6 50 43 +7 30 IFCF Challengers Cup; FFI Taça das Confederações
4 Motozintla 18 7 5 6 36 31 +5 26 IFCF Challengers Cup; Liga-TQ5 Primera
5 Real Gardaresso 18 7 4 7 47 46 +1 25
6 SC Raití 18 6 5 7 36 34 +2 23
7 Resplendiente 18 6 3 9 35 33 +2 21
8 El Quetan CF 18 4 5 9 33 43 −10 17
9 Unuiĝinta 18 3 8 7 36 51 −15 17
10 Ascension San Pasito 18 5 2 11 28 45 −17 17
Last edited by Tequilo on Sat Mar 06, 2021 2:19 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Cálculo-4 Liga-TQ Closura

Postby Tequilo » Sat Mar 06, 2021 2:09 am

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LIGA-TQ PROXIMA DIVISION
HOOPS UPSTAGE THE WIGHTS SAY HOOPS UPSTAGE THE WIGHTS

Atlás Ciuredor battled to the first Proxima title of the new expanded era of Liga-TQ and a debut in intercontinental football where they will surely be the strongest team the Tequilo FA, El Unión, have ever sent to the Liga-B Champions Trophy. Whether that will improve the nations chances of having an IFCF winner remains to be seen: of course, it is precisely the aim of Haïtiens to win in the intercontinentals and on that ambition this season would be measured as a dismal failure - a poor state championship in which, if not for the previous season, would have left them outside of Liga-TQ qualification was followed by a disastrous run in the Proxima, particularly in the closing stages where they lost six in a row to drop from an IFCF place to third bottom. Two-year coach Tomás Cabal has paid the price and has already been sacked as the team move in to the off-season. But Liga-TQ Proxima was not all about how badly The Wights did - it was all about just how well Los Aros, The Hoops, did; Atlás Ciuredor prevailing in a three-way battle with Argón and Pelotón for the title and the right to compete in the Primera division next season. Coach Xerman Figueredo has presided over a period of transition for Atlás, in which they have had to rebuild from scratch with very restricted finances after nearly going under just before the beginning of the Liga-TQ era. Despite the challenges Atlás have qualified for three of four closuras, twice finishing third in the Peqeuña and now taking top spot in the Proxima - a marked progress which now means that next season, with auto-qualification to the Primera, Atlas will join a small band of four teams to have played at every level of the TQ; and only the second, after Resplendiente, to do it the 'right' way - moving up at each stage from Pequeña to Proxima to Primera.

Captained by young Græntfjaller defensive midfielder Tinni Grímólfursson, signed from Steinaux to the youth team and emerging quickly as the rock around which to build a team, Atlás have plenty of young homegrown products in the first team now - not necessarily a matter of choice, with finances being so difficult over the last decade, but certainly not without a great deal of promise. Defenders Oscar Rivera, Goio Vigo, Diogo Junco and José Tavia, wingers Tomás de Raya, Amatu Larregain and Martin Colon, and keeper Mimnermo Ocamica have all played at national team youth levels and are emerging into this exciting first team squad. José Tavia of course made his breakthrough into the NT seniors during World Cup qualifying where he joined the more experienced leftback Llösë Lea from his home team. Add into the mix some very experienced and quality offensive players in Gavriel de Astudillo, Uccû-Yccû and the Tamarindian attacking midfielder Salazar Girao, and what you have is a squad quietly built to rise and rise - where next for Atlás?

Joining The Hoops in the Liga-B Champions Trophy next season will be Argón Tacranza, like Atlás enjoying the fruits of their own harvest as the dominant Liga-J youth team of recent seasons begins to emerge into this first team, although they are still smarting from losing prodigy Emmanuel París to Eurans Hornchurch. In third place and taking the final slot was Pelotón, one of Ocotapa state's former greats who have found themselves a little in the wilderness in recent seasons. But they'll be delighted with this season and will hope to build on it with a financially-appealing run in next year's Champions Trophy.

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Liga-TQ Proxima Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Atlás Ciuredor 18 9 6 3 44 39 +5 33 IFCF Liga-B Champions Trophy; Liga-TQ5 Primera
2 Argón Tacranza 18 9 4 5 47 33 +14 31 IFCF Liga-B Champions Trophy; Liga-TQ5 Proxima
3 Pelotón 18 8 4 6 35 33 +2 28 IFCF Liga-B Champions Trophy
4 Jaguar Ixtacomitán 18 7 5 6 39 37 +2 26
5 Erreal Tiresias 18 8 2 8 34 37 −3 26
6 CF Frantxizko-A 18 7 4 7 39 38 +1 25
7 Xicoa 18 7 3 8 41 39 +2 24
8 Haïtiens 18 5 6 7 39 41 −2 21
9 Acacoyagua 18 6 3 9 34 38 −4 21
10 Cisne Senzapa 18 4 3 11 29 46 −17 15


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LIGA-TQ PEQUEÑA DIVISION
FÁBRICA MAKE THINGS HAPPEN

As the season drew to a close, Fábrica Tapalupé, battling in a two-way fight at the top of the Pequeña with Atlético Lipa, made a stunning announcement. Thanks to the stellar work of their former shopkeeper Carolina Ruiz, who had previous reknown for accidentally suggesting the Cosmopolitas Amendment to allow Juanito Foreigner to play in Liga-TQ, and then accidentally suggesting the Carolina Plan to expand the league, Fábrica would be moving to a new home. Put in charge of the eight-year old failing City of Football construction project, Carolina turned the whole disaster around to have the place nearly completed inside of a single season, allegedly thanks to some contacts she had at the Fluid Time Refinery in Bonesea. The 83,000-seater Estadio Nacional at the heart of the project was ready to host, and somehow, Carolina had managed to convince El Unión that her old employers Fábrica should become tenants. "Foul!" cried several angry club rivals, and embittered Moto chairman Gedeó Dosrius. But happy to have the monthly rent, the Unión pressed ahead with plans and from next season, that is where Fábrica will play their home games - in the biggest football stadium in the country, surpassing Real Gardaresso's Palacios Cristal and taking that proud record away from them. "Foul!" cried Real, but the Unión wasn't listening. To cap an exciting season for Fábrica, they secured at least Proxima football for next season, by finally getting out in front of Atlético to win Liga-TQ's third tier Pequeña.

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Liga-TQ Pequeña Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Fábrica Tapalupé 18 11 2 5 42 40 +2 35 Liga-TQ5 Proxima
2 Atlético Lipa 18 9 5 4 46 38 +8 32 Liga-TQ5 Pequeña
3 Independiencia 18 7 7 4 41 34 +7 28
4 Peru Urzagui 18 7 5 6 30 28 +2 26
5 Petrolero 18 7 4 7 41 37 +4 25
6 AS Matiguás 18 5 7 6 38 37 +1 22
7 Universitario 18 5 6 7 41 49 −8 21
8 FT Orazun 18 6 2 10 35 40 −5 20
9 Sporta Ibaeta 18 4 7 7 43 50 −7 19
10 Los Miñeros 18 4 5 9 35 39 −4 17


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LIGA-IS CLOSURA
ONE LAST CHANCE TO EKE SOMETHING OUT OF THE SEASON

Exactly one half of the teams in the various state championships top divisions, the 1-Sección, qualify for the various tiers of Liga-TQ and go on to fulfill the closura in Tequilo's most important, most celebrated and (most importantly) most lucrative league. But what happens to the 30 teams who don't qualify for Liga-TQ under the new expanded division? Do they just sit at home for half a season twiddling their thumbs and playing the latest Máximo football management strategy game on their TEQpox consoles? Of course not! They regroup into three tiers of national divisions, and go again, if not to win anything made of silver, at least to win back a little pride after a disappointing or downright awful season. There is one prize - the winner of the top division guarantees themselves a place in Liga-TQ next season, at least in the Pequeña. That is worth a bit of money of course and could even lead to a place in the Proxima the season after... even more money! So Juventoyan will at least have something to be pleased with as they break off for the end of season holidays. It wasn't an altogether convincing first Liga-IS title for Juven, finishing just ahead of Estudiantes and Equipo Caimán - but if you were a convincing team, you wouldn't be down at this level. Ealy feedback from the Unión fansurveys suggests that Liga-IS did prove to be overwhelmingly popular, in a consolation sort of way, for most fans, and matches were well attended as supporters got the opportunity to watch visitors from all over Tequilo come to their home stadium - something generally reserved for the odd Copa home tie.

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Liga-IS 1-División Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Juventoyan 18 8 6 4 58 50 +8 30 Liga-TQ5 Pequeña
2 Estudiantes Tacranza 18 7 7 4 53 49 +4 28
3 Equipo Caimán 18 8 4 6 41 41 0 28
4 Errentes Monvador 18 7 4 7 45 46 −1 25
5 Juniors Chazapa 18 6 6 6 37 39 −2 24
6 Fortuna Tulan 18 5 7 6 48 44 +4 22
7 Inter Raití 18 5 7 6 41 43 −2 22
8 Chazapañol 18 6 4 8 38 45 −7 22
9 Benemérito 18 6 3 9 49 51 −2 21
10 Polibio 18 5 6 7 39 41 −2 21

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Liga-IS 2-División Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Páramos 18 10 3 5 39 40 −1 33
2 Las Guías Oriente 18 9 4 5 51 40 +11 31
3 Humberto 18 9 2 7 40 35 +5 29
4 Pingüinos 18 8 3 7 41 34 +7 27
5 Cóndor Sezalco 18 7 6 5 45 43 +2 27
6 Ocozoxhuatla 18 7 3 8 40 39 +1 24
7 Demokrito 18 7 3 8 39 38 +1 24
8 Cooperativa 18 6 6 6 40 43 −3 24
9 Macarada Gaona 18 5 4 9 37 51 −14 19
10 Clazada Larga 18 3 4 11 41 50 −9 13

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Liga-IS 3-División Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Cuba Tapalupé 18 11 3 4 59 46 +13 36
2 Continente Tulan 18 9 4 5 43 39 +4 31
3 Gallandaires 18 7 6 5 46 45 +1 27
4 Atléta Idal 18 7 4 7 54 49 +5 25
5 Asociación Olaya 18 7 4 7 42 46 −4 25
6 Tenís de Tacranza 18 7 2 9 48 47 +1 23
7 Ciupa Azul 18 6 5 7 44 49 −5 23
8 Gimnástico Chichiguina 18 6 4 8 48 48 0 22
9 KKA Bixintxo 18 6 4 8 37 41 −4 22
10 Racquette-22 18 4 4 10 30 41 −11 16
Last edited by Tequilo on Sat Mar 06, 2021 2:17 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Cálculo-4 State Championship Closura

Postby Tequilo » Sun Mar 07, 2021 3:14 am

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ANTIVADOR STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
LOWER TIER FINAL STANDINGS: TRANSCENDENT PRIESTS

Along with Deportivo Sixtus IV, Daring Monvador and Racquette-22, Edicto de Fe, the club from the city of La Palestina, are one of the Founding Four who contested the earliest competitive organised pitxi in the state of Antivador; none of the four have been spectacularly successful since the foundation of the State Championships, with Los Sacerdotes - The Priests - the least successful of the four, having never won a state title nor reached a Copa final. But they have won half a dozen 2-Sección titles in the last 126 years and can proudly add a seventh to their long and unimpressive history. How long they can survive at the highest level remains to be seen, but perhaps their proudest record is once having a 36-year run in 1-Sección that ended back in the mid-seventies... the glory years, as they say at Estadio Palestina. Blanco Horizonte, two-time state champion, will be joining them after a penalty victory over Gallandaires in the play-off final - a new format with the restructure in which the eighth-placed 1-Sección struggler must defend their place in the top flight against the team that emerges victorious from the 2-Sección play-offs.

Mejillones Lipa, now under the management of Viçente de Velasquillo, Mosey Ackanard's old assistant, settled down to the quiet life of their post-Mosey era and proved to be perfectly mediocre, and not actually that far away from a play-off place; something pleasing for Mussells fans who feared they would not cope without the genius of their favourite adopted son.

1-Sección Play-Off Final

Gallandaires 4–4 Blanco Horizonte (4–4 AET) (5–6 pen.)

Antivador 2-Seccíon Standings
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2-Antivador Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Edicto de Fe 38 19 14 5 102 80 +22 71 Promoted
2 Entenza AS 38 20 6 12 85 73 +12 66 Play-Off
3 CF Arradura 38 18 10 10 105 76 +29 64 Play-Off
4 Conviviencia 38 17 10 11 90 81 +9 61 Play-Off
5 Blanco Horizonte 38 16 10 12 86 74 +12 58 Play-Off Winner
6 Comuna Cailon 38 16 10 12 89 88 +1 58
7 Polo Sur 38 16 9 13 81 69 +12 57
8 Reconquista 38 15 12 11 76 73 +3 57
9 Daring Monvador 38 16 8 14 94 87 +7 56
10 Mejillones Lipa 38 14 12 12 92 83 +9 54
11 Combinar Toyan 38 15 9 14 81 84 −3 54
12 Sorcia 38 15 8 15 84 97 −13 53
13 Deportivo Sixtus IV 38 14 10 14 90 90 0 52
14 Finca Cailon 38 13 9 16 83 94 −11 48
15 RCD La Constancia 38 14 6 18 83 96 −13 48
16 Ciuredor Orden 38 12 7 19 90 92 −2 43 Relegated
17 Golondrinas 38 8 13 17 77 95 −18 37 Relegated
18 Intramura 38 8 12 18 69 89 −20 36 Relegated
19 Pelóta San Anreso 38 8 11 19 69 84 −15 35 Relegated
20 Los Anasticios 38 9 8 21 76 97 −21 35 Relegated

Antivador 3-Seccíon Standings
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3-Antivador Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Masvidal Toyan 38 21 7 10 94 76 +18 70 Promoted
2 CF Lipa 38 19 9 10 102 81 +21 66 Promoted
3 Excepcionales 38 18 9 11 90 81 +9 63 Promoted
4 Gladiadores 38 18 8 12 86 79 +7 62 Promoted
5 Partisanos 38 17 10 11 94 77 +17 61 Play-Off
6 Eslavosonidos 38 15 13 10 92 82 +10 58 Play-Off
7 Yugo Arradura 38 15 13 10 83 80 +3 58 Play-Off Winner
8 Aserrío de Garriché 38 16 8 14 91 87 +4 56 Play-Off
9 Sociedad Ciuredor 38 15 7 16 79 78 +1 52
10 Astillero Ciuredor 38 13 12 13 92 87 +5 51
11 Mecánicos 38 14 8 16 83 88 −5 50
12 Bastardos de Toyan 38 11 15 12 78 78 0 48
13 Guardabosques 38 13 9 16 81 91 −10 48
14 Unión Argain 38 13 8 17 73 84 −11 47
15 Hoqué-Coqué 38 13 7 18 82 91 −9 46
16 Jugadores Florenio 38 12 8 18 82 87 −5 44
17 Espartanos 38 12 8 18 96 106 −10 44
18 Cortadores Margarita 38 11 10 17 84 93 −9 43
19 El Soportante 38 13 4 21 77 96 −19 43
20 Albaviedo 38 9 11 18 85 102 −17 38 Relegated

4-Sección Promoted: Burros Selvatico



CHAZAPA STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
LOWER TIER FINAL STANDINGS: SNAKES ALIVE!

Serpentina were a class apart in 2-Sección this season, one of those teams who fell the wrong side of the mass-relegation last season to significantly reduce the top flight and had enough about them to demonstrate their superiority from start to finish, ending with the highest points tally in the country for any team in 2- or indeed 3-Sección. It was entirely a one-horse race, and they have set a new national record for points in a twenty-team second tier, second overall only behind Wanderers AK's record of 88 points achieved in the third tier in season 124. Behind 'The Serpents' it was internet community club Hipopótamo-Joaxha, for a century the butt of all pitxi jokes, who stunned their doubters and mockers into silence with their best ever season by a Tequilo mile, to finish second overall and win through to the play-off final and a date with Cóndor Sezalco. The Condors had too much for the Hippos, but by any standards, this was a spectacular first season for the internet project, and a warning to us all - perhaps invented internet football role play is the future. I can't see it myself, but what do I know?

1-Sección Play-Off Final

Cóndor Sezalco 4–2 Hipopótamo-Joaxha

Chazapa 2-Seccíon Standings
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2-Chazapa Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Serpentina 38 27 5 6 92 52 +40 86 Promoted
2 Hipopótamo-Joaxha 38 21 6 11 95 73 +22 69 Play-Off Finalist
3 Albarracín 38 18 10 10 91 80 +11 64 Play-Off
4 AC Sezalco 38 18 9 11 90 77 +13 63 Play-Off
5 San Joaxha 38 15 12 11 91 80 +11 57 Play-Off
6 Taíno 38 15 12 11 80 78 +2 57
7 Las Navas de Talosa 38 15 10 13 101 98 +3 55
8 Chiapula de Corzo AC 38 15 10 13 86 84 +2 55
9 Cultúra Calzacon 38 16 6 16 84 81 +3 54
10 Flechas Azules 38 13 15 10 81 80 +1 54
11 Rebelión Hernandados 38 14 12 12 87 91 −4 54
12 Zamalakarregi 38 13 11 14 86 84 +2 50
13 Gimnasio Calcazon 38 14 7 17 78 85 −7 49
14 Los Índices 38 12 10 16 80 86 −6 46
15 Pelóta San Mérito 38 11 12 15 65 76 −11 45
16 Unión Esteno 38 12 8 18 71 84 −13 44 Relegated
17 AS Tonalá 38 11 9 18 93 100 −7 42 Relegated
18 Académico 38 10 10 18 89 104 −15 40 Relegated
19 Hielo Permanante 38 10 6 22 65 83 −18 36 Relegated
20 Llamas Texidor 38 6 8 24 65 94 −29 26 Relegated

Chazapa 3-Seccíon Standings
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3-Chazapa Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 El Rinoceronte 38 20 8 10 103 83 +20 68 Promoted
2 Senzapa de Oro 38 19 9 10 102 75 +27 66 Promoted
3 CF Siervo 38 19 8 11 80 63 +17 65 Promoted
4 Búfalo-66 38 16 10 12 93 84 +9 58 Promoted
5 AC Simón Paravar 38 15 13 10 84 75 +9 58 Play-Off
6 Cebra Cebras 38 15 9 14 76 70 +6 54 Play-Off Winner
7 RCD Calzacon 38 14 12 12 103 99 +4 54 Play-Off
8 Ciudad Senzapa 38 15 9 14 92 89 +3 54 Play-Off
9 Unión Zamolaco 38 15 9 14 85 82 +3 54
10 Ballenas Alcaraiso 38 14 11 13 86 91 −5 53
11 Merenciano 38 13 11 14 87 82 +5 50
12 Indalezio 38 13 11 14 91 100 −9 50
13 Real Notario 38 13 10 15 79 80 −1 49
14 Barrachina-Itxa 38 15 4 19 87 95 −8 49
15 San Masón 38 13 9 16 79 90 −11 48
16 Distrito Roldán 38 12 11 15 82 94 −12 47
17 Extremo Norte Sezalco 38 11 10 17 76 88 −12 43
18 SC Alcaraiso 38 10 12 16 75 80 −5 42
19 Luis de Lunar IX 38 11 9 18 75 89 −14 42
20 Atlético Riba 38 13 3 22 72 98 −26 42 Relegated

4-Sección Promoted: Florencio SM



GUASTENANGO STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
LOWER TIER FINAL STANDINGS: INDIGO DAZE

Indogo return to the top flight after a brief and traumatic sojourn to the lower reaches, and whilst not in the same class as Serpentina, they certainly won promotion in style after hitting over a century of goals, young attacking midfield superstar Niño Pinto winning the golden boot and the golden blanket (for most assists) in what surely would have been his last season with the club if they had failed to make it back to the top. It is still questionable whether they can keep him, with allegedly big money being offered already and an off-season of contract talks ahead. If they can't agree a settlement, they are likely to cash in while they can, and they'll have no shortage of takers for the best young midfielder in the Wide Enness Ocean. Gimnástico held off a challenge in the play-off final from fallen giants Tequiloa - 9 state titles, 4 Copas - who will be feeling bleak about their prospects as yet another season of Liga-TQ will go by without them having any chance of an invite. "We used to be good" is the sarcastic - and slightly despairing - cry from the terraces. Their Cuara city neighbours, SC Pedregal, are more than happy to join in.

1-Sección Play-Off Final

Gimnástico Chichiguina 2–1 Tequiloa

Guastenango 2-Seccíon Standings
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2-Guastenango Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Indigo Huayna 38 23 8 7 102 62 +40 77 Promoted
2 Tequiloa 38 21 6 11 83 71 +12 69 Play-Off Finalist
3 Correcaminos 38 20 7 11 93 80 +13 67 Play-Off
4 SC Bozoa 38 17 9 12 95 86 +9 60 Play-Off
5 RC Olentzaro 38 17 7 14 85 84 +1 58 Play-Off
6 Racing Guadatral 38 16 9 13 73 58 +15 57
7 SC Horcontitos 38 15 12 11 69 67 +2 57
8 Esqueletos 38 17 6 15 97 97 0 57
9 Iberamericano 38 16 8 14 93 97 −4 56
10 Arsenál Ciupa 38 14 11 13 77 77 0 53
11 Hércules Ciupa 38 13 12 13 81 85 −4 51
12 Bocas del Toro 38 16 3 19 75 82 −7 51
13 Insurgentes Nísa 38 14 6 18 68 72 −4 48
14 Caballero AC 38 9 17 12 86 89 −3 44
15 Ganzábal 38 11 11 16 73 82 −9 44
16 Ciudad Cuahtémoc 38 11 10 17 87 93 −6 43 Relegated
17 Sporta Oroboro 38 11 8 19 86 96 −10 41 Relegated
18 Deportivo Requexón 38 12 5 21 83 100 −17 41 Relegated
19 Colegio Nísa 38 10 10 18 83 96 −13 40 Relegated
20 Venustianos 38 8 13 17 72 87 −15 37 Relegated

Guastenango 3-Seccíon Standings
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3-Guastenango Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 CF Blay de Sant Roman 38 20 11 7 107 81 +26 71 Promoted
2 JS Solistahuacan 38 21 7 10 107 83 +24 70 Promoted
3 Costello Raití 38 19 11 8 96 82 +14 68 Promoted
4 Camp Esportiu 38 19 8 11 87 76 +11 65 Promoted
5 El Chilamatos 38 18 9 11 86 80 +6 63 Play-Off
6 Recreativo Cuara 38 16 10 12 86 87 −1 58 Play-Off
7 Rápido Raití 38 15 12 11 82 73 +9 57 Play-Off Winner
8 Compañónes 38 15 11 12 79 76 +3 56 Play-Off
9 Merkatondoa 38 16 5 17 86 83 +3 53
10 Unión Cuara 38 13 11 14 89 87 +2 50
11 Ciudad Yaya 38 15 5 18 99 102 −3 50
12 Castaliá Guadatral 38 13 9 16 80 88 −8 48
13 Helmántico 38 12 11 15 82 85 −3 47
14 Arcángel 38 12 10 16 81 90 −9 46
15 CF Guanarillo 38 11 12 15 93 103 −10 45
16 Constitución Yaya 38 11 10 17 88 94 −6 43
17 Sardíneros 38 12 7 19 86 98 −12 43
18 Huayna Colombino 38 10 10 18 91 104 −13 40
19 Polideportivo 38 10 7 21 80 94 −14 37
20 Villa Guadratal 38 8 12 18 74 93 −19 36 Relegated

4-Sección Promoted: Bayona Comitán



MARANCO STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
LOWER TIER FINAL STANDINGS: ALIANZA PREVAIL

Alianza, like Serpentina and Indigo, are quick to restore their status as an historic top flight team as they snatched the Maranco 2-Sección title from Comitán Argente on the last day of regular season, after a blistering run-in. Their city neighbours Motozintla may be getting all the press right now, and that will be killing the Alianza faithful where, until bigmouth Gedeo Dosrius got involved and lifted Moto to another level, Alianza were considered full equals to their deadly rivals of the Grandísimo Tirinto derby. They have some catching up to do now, and that wasn't going to happen from the depths of the second tier, so this narrow promotion was the least their fans expected.

Comitán Argente had quite the run in the Copa, with several giant-killing feats against top 1-Sección sides including an away win at Copa holders Florentino in the third round, and were ahead in the Maranco state second tier with promotion in their sights, when suddenly it all went pear-shaped. Missing out on the automatic spot by a single point as Alianza came from nowhere with a burst of end-of-season form and six straight wins to pip them on the last day, they negotiated the play-offs only to come up short in extra time in what would have been a famous win to relegate one of the true greats of Maranco, Las Guías Oriente. Oriente survived to fight another day in the top flight, and it's back to the drawing board for The Whites.

1-Sección Play-Off Final

Las Guías Oriente 3–3 Comitán Argente (5–4 AET)

Maranco 2-Seccíon Standings
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2-Maranco Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Alianza Tirinto 38 22 9 7 101 79 +22 75 Promoted
2 Comitán Argente 38 22 8 8 94 65 +29 74 Play-Off Finalist
3 Internacional CF 38 21 8 9 112 98 +14 71 Play-Off
4 PK Xicocomitán 38 19 6 13 80 67 +13 63 Play-Off
5 Deportivo Torente 38 18 8 12 94 82 +12 62 Play-Off
6 Tumuloa Xico 38 16 8 14 107 100 +7 56
7 SC Tescoa 38 14 13 11 85 72 +13 55
8 SC Torre Espinaquer 38 13 14 11 97 92 +5 53
9 Flamencos 38 14 10 14 95 92 +3 52
10 La Conon CF 38 14 8 16 83 89 −6 50
11 Toro Reyes 38 12 13 13 87 91 −4 49
12 Farvedilos 38 13 9 16 78 81 −3 48
13 Escolásticos 38 13 9 16 83 87 −4 48
14 Villa Comaltitlán 38 14 6 18 85 92 −7 48
15 Antigüaya 38 12 12 14 79 88 −9 48
16 Progresso CF 38 12 11 15 85 90 −5 47 Relegated
17 1492 Carranza 38 12 9 17 86 97 −11 45 Relegated
18 Equipo Muna 38 12 5 21 78 97 −19 41 Relegated
19 Arma de Fuego 38 9 7 22 77 99 −22 34 Relegated
20 Capitán Belmoro 38 5 13 20 75 103 −28 28 Relegated

Maranco 3-Seccíon Standings
.
3-Maranco Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Sindicato Torente 38 24 8 6 100 68 +32 80 Promoted
2 SC Kukalayos 38 18 9 11 87 65 +22 63 Promoted
3 Pateadores Torente 38 18 6 14 96 85 +11 60 Promoted
4 Lope de Salmeron 38 16 10 12 97 88 +9 58 Promoted
5 Cancho Quillahuaman 38 16 9 13 81 79 +2 57 Play-Off
6 SC Metetí 38 15 9 14 105 102 +3 54 Play-Off
7 Chile-33 38 14 11 13 94 88 +6 53 Play-Off Winner
8 Montañeros 38 14 11 13 100 99 +1 53 Play-Off
9 El Mizona 38 14 10 14 97 88 +9 52
10 Chimpancés Guayabal 38 15 7 16 95 95 0 52
11 Los Murciélagos 38 15 7 16 86 86 0 52
12 Alumbrados 38 14 9 15 78 79 −1 51
13 Qiwa Tulan 38 15 6 17 77 82 −5 51
14 Proyecto Gotán 38 14 8 16 91 98 −7 50
15 La Milega AC 38 13 10 15 80 85 −5 49
16 Ciclistas Aticenta 38 10 16 12 83 90 −7 46
17 Tamarindica Muna 38 12 9 17 83 93 −10 45
18 Olano 38 11 11 16 87 100 −13 44
19 Racing Azéma 38 12 5 21 70 94 −24 41
20 AS Colquehuanca 38 11 7 20 73 96 −23 40 Relegated

4-Sección Promoted: Atlético Patoto



OCOTAPA STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
LOWER TIER FINAL STANDINGS: MOSEY'S THE MAN

It was a match made in heaven - Mosey Ackanard, the rising coach, back to the place where he made his name as a player, for a team that had fallen out of the top flight in their seemingly eternal bounce between first and second tiers of Ocotapa state football. They were the best they had ever been during Mosey's days as a player there, winning the last of only two state championships in their long history, and there seemed only one coach who could possibly take them back to those glory days - their very own adopted Boney son, Mosey Ackanard. In his first season back he did not sell them short, and supporters of The Philosophers from the capital will be delighted with his early return. A season long battle with city rivals Galaxía was perhaps the most exciting season they can recall for many years, full of goals with Mosey's attacking play - the highest goal return in all of the 2-Sección tiers across the country - and in the end, the divisional title and a place back in the top flight for next season. Mosey will get the chance to try out against the best teams in the state, and a shot at Liga-TQ qualification. He'll be so busy, we expect to lose his witty insights as he cuts back on his media appearances. "No chance," says Mosey, reassuringly, "I'll always find time to give you my opinion."

Tapalupé city rivals Galaxía, in the doldrums for four years and missing what they see as their rightful place in the top division, finally return to fulfill their potential after defeating Tenís Club in the play-off final.

1-Sección Play-Off Final

Tenís de Tacranza 1–1 Galaxía (1–1 AET) (1–3 pen.)

Ocotapa 2-Seccíon Standings
.
2-Ocotapa Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Socrates 38 22 9 7 108 70 +38 75 Promoted
2 Galaxía 38 21 10 7 102 77 +25 73 Play-Off Winner
3 Nacionál SP 38 19 9 10 89 76 +13 66 Play-Off
4 Cimarrones Desatas 38 18 10 10 99 90 +9 64 Play-Off
5 Siete Onze Espato 38 16 14 8 79 62 +17 62 Play-Off
6 SC Marcapira 38 18 8 12 91 83 +8 62
7 SC Bravo Cuahjuluca 38 17 8 13 89 89 0 59
8 Deportivo Tapa 38 15 13 10 79 74 +5 58
9 Reyes Católicos 38 15 9 14 88 78 +10 54
10 Boca Cielo 38 15 7 16 76 75 +1 52
11 Irregulares Quetodino 38 14 6 18 87 90 −3 48
12 El Ejército 38 12 11 15 74 77 −3 47
13 Naranja 38 11 14 13 73 83 −10 47
14 Sociedad Santos 38 11 12 15 71 78 −7 45
15 AS Ferrocarril 38 11 10 17 72 83 −11 43
16 611 Rosado 38 9 15 14 77 94 −17 42 Relegated
17 Chapulineros 38 10 9 19 73 83 −10 39 Relegated
18 Asociación Hueyac 38 10 9 19 75 90 −15 39 Relegated
19 SC Cañazas 38 9 11 18 79 95 −16 38 Relegated
20 SC Hormigas 38 6 8 24 69 103 −34 26 Relegated

Ocotapa 3-Seccíon Standings
.
3-Ocotapa Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Distrito Atela 38 21 8 9 118 95 +23 71 Promoted
2 Pirillos 38 21 7 10 109 88 +21 70 Promoted
3 Goya Tacranza 38 19 5 14 91 79 +12 62 Promoted
4 SC Aguaprofunda 38 18 6 14 95 90 +5 60 Promoted
5 Grupo Capybara 38 17 9 12 94 89 +5 60 Play-Off Winner
6 498.Desafito 38 16 9 13 86 76 +10 57 Play-Off
7 Skelinga Santa Clares 38 15 11 12 89 85 +4 56 Play-Off
8 Gil de Roblado 38 16 8 14 84 86 −2 56 Play-Off
9 Hondureños 38 16 7 15 76 73 +3 55
10 Fénix AC 38 16 7 15 94 94 0 55
11 Gorilas Tapalupé 38 16 6 16 72 75 −3 54
12 Mondragon 38 15 9 14 87 99 −12 54
13 Unión Tapa 38 14 11 13 79 76 +3 53
14 San Jonito 38 14 10 14 98 90 +8 52
15 10 AS Cuahjuluca 38 14 8 16 80 82 −2 50
16 La Visa 38 13 9 16 90 86 +4 48
17 AC de Galvas 38 11 11 16 76 95 −19 44
18 Coyotes 38 12 6 20 86 95 −9 42
19 Escandinavos 38 8 11 19 88 97 −9 35
20 Tortugas Linio 38 4 10 24 73 115 −42 22 Relegated

4-Sección Promoted: Florés Pasito



PUEZAN STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
LOWER TIER FINAL STANDINGS: ARGENTINE SUMMER

There are plenty of teams in the doldrums in Puezan state, where football is said to be of it's lowest standard in a generation. Even at the top, the once-immortal CF Frantxizko-A are presently in a state of mundaneity, and nobody is afraid of Unuiĝinta or Peru Urzagui. Nómada Club aren't even in the league any more. And in 2-Sección there are plenty of formerly decent clubs twiddling their thumbs not looking very decent at all. Telégrafo (who became Telmo-Léal, but that didn't work out), Urbo Ibaeta, Batasuna, Aliantza Iparra - all clubs that at one time, would have struck fear and trepidation into the hearts of their opponents, now lost to The Average in the new pitxi order. At least for Argentinako, some level of hope has been restored after a splendid season saw them dominate the division to book their place back in the top flight; and Urbo Ibaeta will be there with them after winning a play-off final against another team who are the made in the image of Puezan's footballing decline - KKA Bixintxo. There was a time when Tequiloans actually thought KKA must very probably be the best team in the multiverse. Now we know that was formed of a highly Teq-centric world view back in the day, but it did reflect the esteem in which the nation held KKA - and today reflects just how sorry has been theirs, and the state's, decline from the pinnacle of national football. "Something should be done!" - says just about everyone in Puezan.

1-Sección Play-Off Final

KKA Bixintxo 2–3 Urbo Ibaeta

Puezan 2-Seccíon Standings
.
2-Puezan Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Argentinako 38 25 5 8 91 55 +36 80 Promoted
2 Urbo Ibaeta 38 23 6 9 93 72 +21 75 Play-Off Winner
3 Telégrafo 38 21 9 8 104 70 +34 72 Play-Off
4 Urbo Polibio 38 19 13 6 90 67 +23 70 Play-Off
5 Errefuxiatu 38 17 10 11 82 75 +7 61 Play-Off
6 Cáfunda 38 16 10 12 77 73 +4 58
7 Aliantza Iparra 38 17 4 17 90 84 +6 55
8 Batasuna Telmo 38 14 8 16 81 88 −7 50
9 Lotsagarria 38 13 10 15 79 83 −4 49
10 SC Reten 38 14 7 17 68 74 −6 49
11 Atléta Reten 38 15 4 19 70 87 −17 49
12 FT Istaso 38 15 4 19 69 88 −19 49
13 Poliziaren 38 13 8 17 81 80 +1 47
14 SC Azcarreta 38 12 9 17 75 80 −5 45
15 Erresistentzia 38 10 15 13 75 83 −8 45
16 Lertxun Iparra 38 12 9 17 78 87 −9 45 Relegated
17 Dinamo Iragartze 38 10 11 17 72 81 −9 41 Relegated
18 Urugaiko 38 11 8 19 75 94 −19 41 Relegated
19 Orkak 38 9 12 17 71 80 −9 39 Relegated
20 Itaete-Orazun 38 8 10 20 75 95 −20 34 Relegated

Puezan 3-Seccíon Standings
.
3-Puezan Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts

1 Bolivaro 38 18 13 7 99 75 +24 67 Promoted
2 Urzagui CF-72 38 19 8 11 84 69 +15 65 Promoted
3 Retenaiko 38 19 7 12 92 81 +11 64 Promoted
4 Elkarte Iragartze 38 18 7 13 83 79 +4 61 Promoted
5 Olimpika 38 16 11 11 82 67 +15 59 Play-Off Winner
6 Atléta Iragartze 38 17 7 14 62 67 −5 58 Play-Off
7 Elkarte Reten 38 17 6 15 85 80 +5 57 Play-Off
8 Astogaiko AK 38 14 13 11 79 72 +7 55 Play-Off
9 Sarrazenos 38 17 4 17 79 80 −1 55
10 Bezala 38 15 9 14 93 91 +2 54
11 Langile Konplexua 38 15 8 15 76 76 0 53
12 Buruzagia 38 14 10 14 76 82 −6 52
13 Unuio Alaiz 38 15 6 17 90 91 −1 51
14 Wanderers AK 38 13 8 17 79 82 −3 47
15 Espainiako Urzagui 38 13 7 18 85 87 −2 46
16 Santutxoa 38 14 4 20 77 91 −14 46
17 Txibia Orazun 38 11 10 17 78 87 −9 43
18 KA Iparra 38 12 7 19 82 95 −13 43
19 Unuio Reten 38 11 9 18 78 96 −18 42
20 FK Alaiz 38 11 8 19 82 93 −11 41 Relegated

4-Sección Promoted: Nómada Club
Last edited by Tequilo on Sun Mar 07, 2021 3:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Cálculo-4 Copa Tequilo Final

Postby Tequilo » Mon Mar 08, 2021 3:19 am

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EL GALLO DORADO
COPA TEQUILO FINAL

Motozintla 1-0 Real GardaressoH/T 1-0
@ Estadio Florentzio Mesperuza (El Mesperuza), Iragartze, Puezan. Attendance 76,505


Moto Moderately Great Again
Black-And-Blues On Song To Take Copa


Goals: Vâásk Çêwé 44'
Assists: Pachakusi 44'

Player of the match: Pachakusi (Motozintla)
Booked: Tomau Barbe, Gunna Calhoun | Froitoso Bellón, Lukabor Ilić, Raimi Dokunanga
Sent-Off: Sesä Dió, Lukabor Ilić

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Playboy Farv striker Vâásk Çêwé made it up to his chairman Gedeó Dosrius after the sextape scandal with the chairman's ex-partner by delivering him the first Copa of his reign and creating spectacular television for the fly-on-the-wall serial Make Moto Great Again. No doubt in the process of doing so he has also cheered Chairman Gedeó up a little after losing two election campaigns, first as Liga-TQ Commissioner and then as the Tequiloan FA - El Unión - president. Amazing what a little silver will do to smooth the mood. In the opposing dressing room the mood would have been less cheery as Real finished the game with nine men following the two yellow cards for Lukabor Ilić and a straight red for Sesä Dió in injury time put paid to any hope they had of a recovery. This was the final that pitted the master, Mauricio Nores, against the grasshopper in Isaac Martí - who was assistant to Mauricio here at Moto back in the day, and for the National Team in the Baptism of Fire before Mauricio surprisingly stepped down, and Isaac Martí took control of Los Pitxileros for the next two World Cup cycles. The controversy of the IAC Kipolalia Outbreak cost him his national team position and he was eagerly snapped up by Real, recovering from their own controversy after spending ₸2m on an ineligible female striker from the Squorns, Rinko Nazahn, thinking she was a man. As with the national team, coach Isaac had shown he is a fine coach, able to improve any player, and he has Real moving in the right direction following a good season. But in a replay of the closing match of Liga-TQ, he was not able to overcome the powers of his former mentor, Mauricio Nores guiding his team to a 3-2 win in the league match and following up with a more cagey 1-0 victory here at El Mesperuza, home of the Copa's most successful team CF Frantxizko-A.

Vâásk Çêwé's goal just before half time brought a deserved victory for Moto in this final after having the best of the game overall, though it was far from easy against Isaac Martí's well-drilled side - until the last few minutes when discipline failed them as they chased the game, and they lost two players to red cards. Pulling the strings for Moto was their exciting young midfield prospect Pachakusi, 22, and the attacking widemen alongside and ahead of him, Isidoro Artechevarria and Zaquiel Goris. That inverted arrowhead has really gelled over the last season with the addition of Isidoro and the growth in confidence of Pachakusi behind the two forwards, Vâásk Çêwé and Mendo Davila. The high press really neutralised the disruptive game of Real's defensive midfielder Beza Tilmidja, usually so dominant when Real are on form but here pulled all over the place by the trio's dynamic and fluid movement. Overlapping full back Blêxu, a growing presence in the national team, also had a fine game with the freedom to make dangerous raids that kept Real's Stìssë Ceá busy and prevented them from pushing on in wide areas. Two veterans made substitute appearances in the final as their final bows for the club. Bonesman Gunna Calhoun, a positively geriatric 41, came on late in the game to help see out the victory for Moto and he is rumoured to be off to coach for fellow countryman Mosey Ackanard at Socrates after this game. Meanwhile, captain and one-club legend Raimi Dokunanga, 38, made his final appearance for Real before retiring, and was unfortunate to pick up both a yellow card and a runners-up medal for his last game. Raimi is allegedly as fine an administrator as he was scorer of goals back in the day, and is disappearing into the arcane cube offices of El Unión to learn his trade before planning to emerge as a chief of football at some point in his later career.

Player Ratings

MOTOZINTLA				REAL GARDARESSO
Oscar Bienvenida [8.3] Froitoso Bellón [7.1] YY Match Statistics
Blêxu [9.0] Peter von Krjker [7.9]
Brandon Nyassa [7.7] Lukabor Ilić [7.9] YYRR Poss (%): 49/51
Boualem Ghannouchi [7.1] Antón Lascares [7.4] Shots: 16-9
Kiyabu Shunko [7.3] Stìssë Ceá [6.3] On Target: 7-3
Tomau Barbe [7.4] YY (sub) Beza Tilmidja [7.6] (sub) Pass Comp(%): 78-70
Isidoro Artechevarria [8.3] Arximiro Valdovinos [7.4] Corners: 8-4
Pachakusi [9.1] Rüí Lütáò [6.3] (sub) Fouls: 11-6
Vâásk Çêwé [8.1] (1) Ecuador [6.2] Yellow cards: 2-4
Mendo Davila [7.4] (sub) Manuel Cañero [7.1] (sub) Reds: 0-2
Zaquiel Goris [8.8] (sub) Sesä Dió [6.8] RR

Subs Used Subs Used
Johnny Grendahl [6.7] Claudio Arca [6.4]
Gunna Calhoun [6.2] YY Nicolas Cano [6.7]
Lleó Faig [7.6] Raimi Dokunanga [5.5] YY






Last edited by Tequilo on Mon Mar 08, 2021 3:28 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Cálculo-4 Intercontinental Qualifiers Directory

Postby Tequilo » Tue Mar 09, 2021 3:25 am

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INTERCONTINENTAL QUALIFIERS


NATIONAL CHAMPIONS
ENTRANTS TO THE IFCF CHAMPIONS LEAGUE & FFI LIGA DOS VENCEDORES


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PITXI-PITXI 77

Liga-TQ: Champions; TQ-1, TQ-4 (seasons 123, 126)
State Championships: Chazapa State Champions: 25 times - highest nationally; most recent season 126 (four in a row)
Copa Tequila: Winners - 2 times including one double; most recent win in season 116

Stadium: Estadio '77o, Ixta-Comitán, ChazapaCapacity: 66,309
Nicknames: ’77o
Colours: Green & white striped shirts, white shorts & socks
Alternate: All black with green & white trim
Rivals: CF Frantxizko-A (El Splendído), Jaguar Ixtacomitán (El Spectaculotl), Xicoa (El Cálculotl)
Legend: Eskaminzim, former DMC, coach, now head coach

Current Manager: Eskaminzim
Team Captain: Chicchan (DR)
Player of the Season: Tlacolotl (ST)
Young PoS: Çenturion (AMC)

Here is one of the superpowers of football in Tequilo - perhaps the superpower - at the heart of one of the country's most extraordinary cities. Like Huayna-Comitán in Guastenango, Ixta-Comitán has been beautifully preserved as a great Indigo city state, although unlike it’s rival city, it is surrounded by a much less interesting and more heavily industrialised region; it’s borders are now more or less the end of traditional Ixta cultural identity. The city itself supports three top flight or 1-Sección clubs, with Jaguars and Serpentina both strong clubs in the state championship. But there is only one club in the state - and arguably the nation - that all others must merely follow, the mighty Pitxi-Pitxi 77. Formed nearly 150 years ago they are one of the oldest clubs in the country, and are the most favoured by the strong Ixta population throughout Chazapa and the nation. Rivalled only by Puezan states’ CF Frantzixko-A for overall silverware haul, they have the most state titles and are surely the widest supported - CFFA are popular of course, but also the team everyone loves to hate: not so the ’77o, who really are just about everyone’s second favourite team.

Even by their own standards this was a superb season, as the green-and-whites stormed to a record-equalling four state championships in a row, knocking down one of the few records CFFA could hold against them. In the Copa Tequilo, traditionally their weakest hand, they reached the semi-final, and in intercontinental football impressed to reach the knockout stages of the Challengers Cup, the first Tequiloan team to go so deep in IFCF competition. And then, almost inevitably, they became the first team to win Liga-TQ on more than one occasion, storming to the national title in almost unstoppable fashion. Last season, as they limped to fourth place in Liga-TQ and very nearly missed out on intercontinental qualification, they looked a team in need of transformation. But it was small changes and some canny, not headliner, signings, including national team stalwart utility man Noxochinoch signed on a free at the end of his contract that transformed them. The question now is, who can stop them from even greater things?

SQUAD

# Name Age Pos Rating Apps Gls/CS

1 Orm Hinisser (WGT) 28 GK 8.73 41 20
2 Ebardo Feliu 31 DL 10.86 37 4
3 Chicchan 33 DR 8.64 19 1
4 Erick Ruiz 27 DC 7.98 31 1
5 Noxochinoch 30 DC 7.68 18 1
6 Axó 21 DMC 7.21 17 4
7 Xecoto 23 ML 9.85 33 12
8 Ot Camazotz Roca 38 AMC 10.42 44 6
9 Tlacolotl 22 ST 10.86 47 23
10 Tesco Zuniga (AUD) 24 ST 10.04 17 20
11 Con Hatzileftheriou (NPH) 25 AMR 10.06 41 12
12 Chenaro Bermund 31 DL 9.45 13 1
13 Léon Londo (ZEN) 34 DR 8.93 15 1
14 Andre Naron 22 DC 6.12 25 2
15 Simón Cheauka Agustín 22 DC 9.53 8 0
16 Noah Vergara 25 DMC 8.08 9 2
17 Çè Êf (FFD) 23 AML 5.05 11 0
18 Çenturion 19 AMC 7.80 22 2
19 Beturián Planas 21 ST 7.85 1 0
20 Ladislau Aragonés 32 ST 5.36 23 13
21 Vicente Sabater 22 GK 3.84 6 1
22 Nocenci Goy 35 MR 4.00 21 0
23 Lión Gualba-Itzamna 21 DC 8.44 2 0
24 Baudilio Parga 20 ST 7.73 5 1
25 Camaxtli Zyanya Papan 31 ST 7.62 2 1



LIGA-TQ RUNNER-UP
ENTRANTS TO THE IFCF CHALLENGERS CUP & FFI LIGA DOS VENCEDORES


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FLORENTINO

Liga-TQ: Champions; TQ-2 (s124)
State Championships: Antivador State Champions 18 times; most recent season 126
Copa Tequila: Winners - 4 times; most recent season 125

Stadium: Estadio Gianfrancesco Lego (Villa Lego), FlorenioCapacity: 47,980
Nicknames: Las Violetas
Colours: Violet shirts, shorts & socks
Alternate: Red & white halved shirts, white shorts, black socks
Rivals: Real Gardaresso (El Spectáculario), Humberto (El Cinematíco), Atlético Lipa (El Gran Kika), Atlás Ciuredor (El Brillantíno), Juventoyan (El Rangél)
Legend: Humberto Bustamante

Current Manager: Huey Wight (Aueioeay W'ight-a)
Team Captain: Dieguito Florentin (DR)
Player of the Season: Mâártën Âllámbâlár (FFD) (ST)
Young PoS: Braçayda de Valbuena (DC)

In the glamour stakes, there really is only one team in all Tequilo who do not stand in the sparkling shadow of Real Gardaresso, and that is their Antivadorio rivals, Florentino, the famous Violets. They may not have the wider appeal that Real have achieved but certainly a club with flair and attacking creativity at the heart of their playing philosophy over so many decades of success means Los Violetas are naturally associated with the more glamorous side of the game. Many of the greats of antiquity have played here in Florenio, including legendary fatty, footballer, circus strongman and cinema superstar Humberto Bustamante, El Lechero or ‘The Milkman’; Wightling World Cup winners Mardellion Hummingbird and Marriner Friend-Forsaken along with fellow countryman and progenitor of the famous Bonesea Jones’ dynasty - Asbo Jones; local legends here in these parts Hernando de la Nata, Gavriel Carrión and Sansón, and of course El Ladrillo - The Brick - colourful defender Gianfrancesco Lego, the first galloping fullback for whom the stadium is named.

Los Violetas have been, along with the 77o, one of the first great teams of the early Liga-TQ era - a time when they have come back into their own - but this season they were expected to struggle by their own standards, having been the club hardest hit by the Kipolalia outbreak. Despite the disappointment of going out of the Copa in the third round, they stormed to a third consecutive Antivadorio state title against all odds with the highest points tally in the country, and came into Liga-TQ in fine form. Disastrous appearances in intercontinental football followed as their continued inability to make an impression on multiversal football had an impact on early TQ form, and their much-anticipated start to the domestic league was hampered by the sudden blip. Though they got over that hump to battle to their second consecutive runner-up spot, they had fallen too far short of Pitxi-Pitxi 77 in the early stages to catch up with them, and must settle for another silver medal.

SQUAD

# Name Age Pos Rating Apps Gls/CS

1 Baltasar Ares 30 GK 5.92 43 7
2 Salazar de Alagon 26 DL 9.85 17 2
3 Leon Carreño 30 DC 9.96 8 0
4 Antton Machinena 27 DC 6.19 15 1
5 Scredda Smith (BSE) 30 DR 6.73 13 0
6 Les Jawallawalla (AUD) 24 DMC 8.47 36 2
7 Altar de Alcala 35 ML 10.57 50 1
8 Inozentzio 26 AMC 7.22 39 13
9 Mâártën Âllámbâlár (FFD)30 ST 10.62 43 29
10 Venâncio Paiva (AUD) 36 ST 9.26 30 18
11 Iessö Taû 36 MR 4.72 15 0
12 Ixinio de Arcas 32 DL 8.15 8 0
13 Braçayda de Valbuena 20 DC 7.03 9 1
14 Frenando Escalera 24 DC 5.75 13 2
15 Dieguito Florentin 34 DR 6.47 14 0
16 Siveri Bellvehí 31 DMC 5.77 14 2
27 Aiker Têa 18 ML 6.09 5 1
18 Clemenzo Cora 28 AMC 5.01 4 2
19 Frodo March 19 ST 5.95 6 4
20 Julio Velázquez 30 ST 9.93 9 5
21 Arnao Roche 22 GK 4.07 2 0
22 Mafany Atangana (ZEN) 27 MR 8.81 13 1
23 Quetzoma Tepeca 20 AMC 7.01 5 0
24 Virxilio Sion 22 ST 3.77 3 0
25 Trixí 19 GK 4.39 7 2



LIGA-TQ THIRD PLACE
ENTRANTS TO THE IFCF CHALLENGERS CUP & FFI TAÇA DAS CONFEDERAÇÕES


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SC PEDREGAL

Liga-TQ: Champions; TQ-3 (season 125)
State Championships: Guastenango State Champions 19 times; most recent season 125
Copa Tequila: Winners - 3 times including one double; most recent win in season 94

Stadium: Estadio San Pedro, Cuara.Capacity: 42,000
Nicknames: Los Silbadores - The Whistlers; Los Caballeros - The Gentlemen
Colours: Yellow shirts, white shorts, black socks
Alternate: Black shirts & shorts, white socks
Rivals: Acacoyagua (El Gigantico), Equipo Caimán (El Snappa), Tequiloa (El Scaldera), SC Raití (El Originario)
Legend: 'Gentilhombre' Gento Pollanijo

Current Manager: Armando Garrido & Aaron Garrido
Team Captain: Aleixo Claver (DMC)
Player of the Season: Aleixo Claver
Young PoS: Urbano Naboa (MR)

In the state capital of Cuara (pop. 1.3m for the whole metropolitan district), two teams vie for supremacy of the city, and of the state championships - one is the upstart, brash, new money noisy neighbour Sporting Club of Tequilo, commonly Tequiloa, whilst the other is pitxi royalty - old school, old money, old manners: SC Pedregal, the oldest club in Guastenango and arguably the first pitxi club in all Tequilo. They are a popular club throughout the country for their heritage, although they are also the club many love to hate, considered like all aristocratic types to be a bit arrogant and a bit fancy. Their fame is uncontested though, and throughout the Wide Enness Ocean they are well known - not just for some ancient ideal of the good old days, and of how the game used to be played; they are equally famous for being pretty damned successful too - vying with Acacoyagua for most titles in the state and some considerable distance ahead of the chasing pack where Equipo Caimán are the best of the rest.

This season they could point to having been the victims of their own success last year, winning Liga-TQ and reaching the Copa final with a young and brash team under the management of Ramiro Paredo. He was immediately snaffled up by the national team to replace Isaac Martí, and left their youthful charges without their paternal leader. The Whistlers did some good business though in recruiting the highly-rated Garrido brothers, Armando and Aaron, from Independiencia where they had attracted a lot of attention for their early success. Coming into the reigning champions was a big ask and they were some way off the pace to finish third in the state championship, only getting a place in the TQ Primera by dint of their previous season glory. But things certainly picked up as the brothers got used to the place, and the place got used to them, steering the team to a promising third place finish in Liga-TQ and a famous run to the final of the FFI LdV - the first Tequiloan team to appear in an intercontinental final. Keeping the youngsters on track to defend their miraculous TQ title was too big an ask in their first season in charge, but the Garrido brothers have shown remarkable potential: watch the Whistlers go next season.

SQUAD

# Name Age Pos Rating Apps Gls/CS

1 Kai Sidiki 31 GK 6.95 21 7
2 Léo Mambila 22 DL 8.73 33 0
3 Eolo Sorazar 28 DR 7.68 40 5
4 Nícer Pero 26 DC 4.68 17 1
5 Quelka Ticllacuri 37 DC 8.58 44 0
6 Aleixo Claver 32 DMC 10.18 36 9
7 Nufro de Çaldibar 21 ML 4.23 7 0
8 Tuta 28 AMC 8.93 41 16
9 K'antu 22 ST 8.38 37 27
10 Roibén Caldeira 22 ST 6.14 23 0
11 Urbano Noboa 18 MR 9.91 18 7
12 Bernat Calbet 21 DL 7.17 4 0
13 Quisuyu Padin 21 DR 5.71 2 0
14 Keltur 20 DC 5.53 3 0
15 Hugo Reza 33 DC 3.98 20 0
16 Xusto Padron 32 DMC 8.23 13 1
17 Moises Noboa 32 ML 6.69 12 1
18 Milan Lucio 22 AMC 8.83 2 0
19 Narciso Cora 36 ST 4.73 8 5
20 Exidio Grana 23 ST 7.33 2 1
21 Nuno de Soto 21 GK 9.85 25 4
22 Narciso Pineiro 17 MR 8.24 14 5
23 Xerome Mira 22 AMC 5.93 8 1
24 Xaquin 21 MR 4.64 8 2
25 Allauca 36 GK 3.19 3 0



LIGA-TQ FOURTH PLACE & COPA TEQUILO WINNERS
ENTRANTS TO THE IFCF CHALLENGERS CUP & CUP WINNERS CUP


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MOTOZINTLA

Liga-TQ: Best finish - 3rd, (TQ-2, TQ-3; seasons 124, 125)
State Championships: Maranco State Champions 16 times; most recent season 126
Copa Tequila: Winners - 3 times; most recent season 126

Stadium: Arenamoto, TirintoCapacity: 77,200
Nicknames: Moto
Colours: Royal blue shirts with black & white trim, white shorts, black socks
Alternate: Silver shirt with light blue chevron; silver shorts and socks with light blue trim
Rivals: Resplendiente (El Resentimiento), Alianxa Tirinto (El Grandísimo), Universitario (El Stramajz), Las Guías Oriente (La Granbatalla)
Legend: Mateo Tafalla - still playing

Current Manager: Mauricio Nores
Team Captain: Oscar Bienvenida (GK)
Player of the Season: Vâásk Çêwé (FFD) (ST)
Young PoS: Anacle Mutanda (ZEN) (ML)

At Motozintla, so it is said, they never stop going on about how big they are. And what they are going to do next to prove they are the greatest. To be fair, they are big. Very big. No-one outside of Moto likes to admit it, but they rival CFFA and Pitxi-Pitxi 77 for support across the country. They have spent much of their history inside the 10-Nacional, the country's best ten clubs by state championships, but their best days are a long way behind them. Hence all the talk about what they are going to do next. With the resources they have, the backing they can rely on, the time will surely come when Motozintla are great again - but many both inside and outside of the supporter base also hint darkly at the Curse of Moto - that the Wights of Pitxi (mythical demons of Confusionism) are against them for rumoured transgressions that offended the spirits. It's all tosh of course, but makes for great content. And there definitely is something wrong when a club the size of Moto just can't win anything any more.

Well, that's not entirely true of course. They have just won three state championships in a row, no mean feat. And they have just added their third ever Copa Tequilo to the trophy cabinet - and that is almost as big as they come. Almost: nowawadays, it's all about Liga-TQ and deciding the national champion. After missing out in the first season, they have quickly established themselves as a power, but with no win on the board so far, this was going to be an important one. It was, by recent standards, something of a disappointment. Though they qualified in style, once they got there it was a stuttering campaign, at one point I might go so far as to say embarrassing. Only a late surge and a final matchday win at home to Real Gardaresso snuck them into the top four and intercontinental qualification. The chairman's on-screen antics and political machinations proved something of a distraction at the club, and they will want to do better next time around.

SQUAD

# Name Age Pos Rating Apps Gls/CS

1 Oscar Bienvenida 21 GK 8.30 24 16
2 Blêxu 26 DL 7.79 49 0
3 Brandon Nyassa (ZEN) 32 DR 9.21 45 5
4 Amosa Kum (ZEN) 24 DC 6.44 43 6
5 Kiyabu Shunko (SQR) 27 DC 7.50 40 4
6 Tomau Barbe 30 DMC 8.09 37 0
7 Isidoro Artechevarria 23 ML 8.32 40 4
8 Pachakusi 22 AMC 5.95 25 5
9 Vâásk Çêwé (FFD) 20 ST 10.07 37 18
10 Mendo Davila 30 ST 5.66 40 6
11 Zaquiel Goris 31 MR 8.59 13 0
12 Enrrique de Çigales 37 DL 6.29 6 1
13 Huacaloya 21 DR 4.24 6 1
14 Zacarías Aguayo 18 DC 7.21 3 0
15 Boualem Ghannouchi (AUD)36 DRC 6.26 13 1
16 Johnny Grendahl (BEO) 20 DMC 7.13 12 1
17 Anacle Mutanda (ZEN) 21 ML 8.58 22 4
18 Sebastián 19 AMC 6.43 10 0
19 Gunna Calhoun (BSE) 41 ST 6.64 19 10
20 Mani Quita 19 ST 8.83 4 2
21 Aris Vilca 30 GK 4.77 18 5
22 Lleó Faig 22 MR 9.28 20 1
23 Pontiff Annan (BSE) 42 DMC 6.44 2 0
24 Alesander Bequea 21 DL 8.87 2 0
25 Pere Mases 37 GK 5.79 8 2



LIGA-TQ PROXIMA
ENTRANTS TO THE IFCF LIGA-B CHAMPIONS TROPHY



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ATLÁS CIUREDOR

Liga-TQ: Best finish - TQ Proxima winners; TQ-4 (season 126)
State Championships: Antivador State Champions 16 times; most recent season 121
Copa Tequila: Winners - 2 times including one state & cup double; most recent win in season 75

Stadium: Estadio Atlás, CiuredorCapacity: 68,350
Nicknames: Atlás, Los Aros - The Hoops
Colours: Red & black hooped shirts, white shorts & socks
Alternate: All green
Rivals: Atlético Lipa (El Destructo), Florentino (El Brillantíno), Laguna de Léon (El Bombón)
Legend: Aiayia V-shy'ui (current DC)

Current Manager: Xerman Figueredo
Team Captain: Tinni Grímólfursson (GRF) (DMC)
Player of the Season: Goio Vigo (DC)
Young PoS: Amatu Larregain (ML)

Antivador has more than it’s fair share of glamour clubs - but the recently most successful Antivadorio club isn’t one of them. An antidote to the glitz and glamour of football in general in the state, Atlás Ciuredor are the ‘spit and sawdust’ sleeves-rolled-up no-nonsense grafters (and other working class stereotypes) who get things done and have won more than their fare share of state titles. More even than perhaps two of the most well known Antivadorio clubs across the Wide Enness Ocean - your Real Gardaresso and Florentino wonderclubs. Do Atlás have a chip on their shoulder? Not a bit of it - they love being the unfancied and stoic workhorses that frequently upstage the fancy-pants neighbours. The problem is, they are no longer the most successful club - Florentino have overtaken them to take some of the spit off their spit and sawdust. Can they get it back? Of course they can.

A first bit of TQ silverware comes the way of Atlás via this young team that is building a head of steam and could one day challenge at the very top if coach Figueredo can keep his young charges together. Græntfjaller youngster Tinni Grímólfursson, only two years out of the Atlás academy, was given the captain's armband and though he had a bit of a patchy season with injury, on his day he looks a natural who could take this team places. In defender Goio Vigo they have a youngster fulfilling a long held belief that this is a player for all occasions, who can play at the very top level. That will include the TQ Primera next season, reward for this year's second tier title a guaranteed place in the top division as well as an appearance in intercontinental football for the first time.

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ARGÓN TACRANZA

Liga-TQ: Best finish - TQ Proxima runners-up; TQ-4 (season 126)
State Championships: Ocotapa State Champions 17 times; most recent season 121
Copa Tequila: Winners - 1 time, season 30

Stadium: Estadio Argonautas, TacranzaCapacity: 48,000
Nicknames: The Argonauts, Los Argonautas; The Squids, Los Calamares
Colours: Violet & black striped shirts, black shorts & socks
Alternate: All white with violet trim
Rivals: Estudiantes (El Juicio), AS Ferrocarril (El Elemento), Fábrica Tapalupé (El Térifico)
Legend: Râmón Tüjânger (FFD)

Current Manager: Luis Tenorio
Team Captain: Máximo San Martín (TAM) (MC)
Player of the Season: Juan Manuel Notario (AMC)
Young PoS: Fernando Tarinaco (TAM) (DC)

Argón might be considered another of the glamour sides in Tequilo; a strong tradition of flamboyant pitxi, a draw for the glitterati of national society, a fancy new stadium, and always a healthy sprinkling of the most exciting and extrovert players in all the state championships. Blessed it seems with eternal wealth thanks to their connection to the Ixtal farming industry - whether that is all above board and regular is open to scrutiny - the club have always had a big budget by Tequiloan standards and have never been afraid of more exotic and experimental signings. The Tamarindian influence is clear, including the team captain and regular hero in these parts, Máximo San Martín - and Argón are well underway with their Atlético Refugiados project, which on the one hand is an admirable lower league club to support under-pressure influx populations - previously Tamarindia during the Fall, and more recently Farfadillis as it descends into anarchy - and on the other hand is a good way to scout for new talent. Everyone remembers Râmón Tüjânger as one of Argón’s favourite foreigners, and he paved the way for modern Farves who, like Tamarindians and Ipañemos in these parts, are considered inherently better at the pitxi than the locals.

Current coach Luis Tenorio has been rather more conservative in the transfer market than the administration usually encourages, but then again, he does have the famous Argón Academy production line to draw on, and this season it was some of those fantastic youngsters who have dominated youth football in recent years given their head of steam in the seniors for this campaign, and they rewarded richly. Player of the season Juan Manuel Notario is only two seasons out of the Academy, one of ten recent graduates in the squad that took a close second place behind Atlás in the second tier. They will appear again in this division next season, at minimum, thanks to a good showing - but the club will be looking for a state title and TQ Primera division football sooner rather than later - it has been five seasons since they won their 17th state title, and by their standards, that makes them well overdue.

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PELOTÓN

Liga-TQ: Best finish - 4th; TQ-1 (season 123)
State Championships: Ocotapa State Champions 11 times; most recent season 123
Copa Tequila: Winners - 2 times; most recent season 113

Stadium: El Velódromo, Santa ClaresCapacity: 36,665
Nicknames: Las Bicicletas - The Bikes
Colours: Lime shirts with blue chevron; blue shorts, white socks
Alternate: All yellow with lime & blue trim
Rivals: Chapulineros (El Momento), Naranja (El Choque), Cooperativa (La Disputa Larga)
Legend: Carpintero, ex-AMC, seasons 105-120 (now coaching staff)

Current Manager: Juan Esteban Quesada
Team Captain: Max Seco (DR)
Player of the Season: Ixtolotl (AMC)
Young PoS: Isaías Gallo (ST)

The big team in Santa Clares, The Bikes attract a rabid following at The Velodrome for their state championship matches, where they have been in the shadow of Argón, Fábrica and Cooperativa throughout pitxi history. But they are not without their own successes - eleven state titles tells a story all it's own - the team that formed out of a cycle club have their day in the sun and are always competitive. Club Pelotón Santa Clares are the country's biggest and most successful competitive cycling association with widespread following nationally, and their sister club for football benefit from their profile, sharing club colours and even the 'chélin-doublon' logo; the chélin-doublon being one of the earliest styles of bicycle when it was new technology. Pelotón's early promise, finishing 4th in the inaugural Liga-TQ and becoming one of the first teams to play in intercontinental football, was not sustained and this marks their return to the Closura; one thing they can at least boast about is a 100% track record of qualification to IFCF, albeit the Liga-B Champions Trophy this time around. But it all counts, right?
::: FORGOTTEN BUT NOT GONE :::
BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE

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Tequilo
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Founded: Dec 04, 2018
Inoffensive Centrist Democracy

Cálculo-4 RP#24 Annual Addenda

Postby Tequilo » Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:21 am

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Loved this year's ¡TQ! Pitxi Annual? Well, why not try this, our brand new sister publication, the ¡TQ!-Addenda accompaniment to the Annual - we're looking in on Biko to see how he's enjoying assisted living; we keep tabs on moneybags Haïtiens and eccentric billionaire Gedeó Dosrius' election campaign; plus updates from Sardíneros, Hipopótamo-Joaxha and Mosey Ackanard's Socrates. ¡TQ!-Addenda Issue #4.5 - on sale now, only ₸3,95 at all good bookstores or online at Primo Orinoco. Order now to avoid the disappointment of having to read a recycled version on some random web forum.


BONEY MOSEY
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF SPIVVY SPITTALNINNY MOSEY ACKANARD

It was a big welcome back for club hero Mosey Ackanard as he won the 2-Sección title in a tight battle with Galaxía and promotion back to the top flight for Socrates, a championship won in style as Mosey garnered a great deal of admirers for his attractive style of fluid attacking football. After taking Mejillones Lipa out of the basement division three seasons ago this represents his second career promotion as well as his first title as a coach. They weren’t too impressed at former club Mejillones from where he poached young Audioslav striker Waylon Caskie and left winger Hermes Kripto, now stateless following the catastrophic termination event back in his home country of Springmont - not long after Mosey had been there to visit Hermes and get his signature to play for The Mussels. “Skela had a fit when she found out,” says Mosey, “because when she checked it all out she found my travel insurance didn’t compensate for catastrophic terminations. ‘What about the house, Mosey?!’ she yelled at me, when she finished reading the small print, ‘it would have been all lost!’ Anyway she’s put herself in charge of my travel insurance now and next time I’m off scouting the multiverse, she’ll be covered if I drop into a fuming volcano.”

And when will he be off scouting the multiverse again - is that a clue to future transfer plans? “I’ve told the chairman already," says Mosey, with his inevitable post-season refrain, “the club is down to the bare bones and he’s going to have to open his chequebook - we’ll need more monkeys.”


MI CLUB DE FÚTBOL
THE FIRST SEASON

Away from the comedy of the MiCF takeover, Hipopótamo-Joaxha had been enjoying, by their own standards, something of a halcyon daze - promoted from the third tier in a play-off win two seasons ago, and then finishing mid-table in the second tier last season. For Hipopó that is as good as it has ever got - until now. Whatever the old fans might have felt about their crappy team being stolen out from under them, and whatever the new community felt about their new crappy team being directed by a board who weren’t listening as much as they promised they would, things turned out pretty nice at the Coffee Seiren Coliseum. Things had gone according to plan - according to the plan of the board and the membership - and it was the best season on record for the crappiest team from San Joaxha, who were decidedly not the crappiest team any more.

Chazapa State 2-Sección was always likely to be a one-horse race and so it proved to be, with Serpentina bashing everyone about for fun. But behind them, it was Hipopó who turned out to be the best of the rest, finishing in second place, being the only team to win at The Serpent’s Lair and qualifying for the post-season play-offs. First up - cross-town rivals and traditional best-team-in-San-Joaxha: San Joaxha. During regular season it had been business as usual - The Saints had won both ties, home and away. In the neutral venue for the post-season mini-tournament in Senzapa, Hipopó rose to the occasion, a stunning 3-0 victory putting them into the next round, and victory over AC Sezalco. An unprecedented first ever season in the top flight loomed and jokers all over the country were silenced ahead of the tie against Cóndor Sezalco. It was a step too far though, Cóndor on top in a gripping 4-2 victory to preserve their own top flight status. But MiCF and Hipopó had arrived - they were contenders now. Champions League in ten - now nine - years? Certainly not. But was it such an hilarious joke any more? No. No it wasn’t.

More glory, and perhaps more significant to the long term, was had by the youth team, Becceros, competing for the first time in the national youth league, at tier 3. The season was a hard-fought three way tie at the top of the division between the baby hippos, Ocozoxhuatla and Estudiantes Juniors, with Hipopó finishing second and all three promoted with the same points tally, separated only by goal difference. Next season the kids would be in with the likes of Haïtiens, SC Pedregal and deadly rivals for the affections of the people, Cooperativa. The Becceros team was full of young talent from across the globe, with stand-out performances from Mor Riorghain-Stokes of Brenecia, Gochi Mito of Squidroidia and a fine young Astograthi by the name of Kusko Belakorta… you heard it here first. They are very excited by this young fellow who looks distinctly just above average: exciting times at the Coffee Seiren Coliseum.


SARDÍNEROS
LIFE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE FOOTBALL FOOD CHAIN

Sardíneros 4–4 CF Guanarillo

An hour before kick-off, on the last day of the season, at La Lata Sardina football ground, Chanco Cóndor: An exuberantly decorated bus formerly of the Guanarillo City Metro, co-opted as the team bus for CF Guanarillo (nickname: Los Murcielagos, The Bats), disgorges it’s inventory of lower league semi-pro footballers, kit bags and assorted boxes of food and equipment. The tracksuit headcoach coming down off the bus, one Señor Afonso Torre, is met at the player’s entrance by Alexis Magrina, his contemporary for the host club, Sardíneros, and they head off with their assistants to Alexis’ rather delapidated office for a quick cup of coffee and a polite chat, wishing each other well and agreeing to reconvene after the match for a nice glass of wine. Don Xose Ron, the club chairman, terrace sweeper and general handyman, has finished putting industrial sanitising cakes in the men’s urinals around the ground, and has handed over the freshly pressed corner flags - in Sardine pink & silver, the club colours - to the young ballboy Oxo Tlalqui, star of the junior teams, who will stick them where they are supposed to be stuck before heading off to get changed ready for the match. Don Xose himself is about to change into his best suit to have lunch with Bats’ CEO Don Xerome de Castro. As owner-servants of their respective clubs, Dons Xose and Xerome have been friends and rivals for many years in the basement of football - they will exchange notes on such business as how to reduce electricity bills during the off-season, including the best way to scam the utility suppliers.

Don Xose’s PA, programme editor and catering manager Dolores has the griddle warming up in the club’s static burger van, The Sardine Can, and she’ll shortly be giving the ball boys a motivational team talk while they buff up their balls. Don Xose likes the club balls to be nice and shiny before kick-off and will sometimes inspect them if he’s at a loose end or run out of conversation with the visiting club dignitaries. By now team coach Alexis Magrina has joined his team in the changing room. As he’s the player manager, he gets changed into his kit while he delivers a final reminder about the tactics they have been practising up at the community recreation ground all week. He’s decided, since it is the end of season dead-rubber and the opponents have as little to fight for as his team, that he will give full debuts to three sixteen-year olds from the youth team. Partly this was Don Xose’s idea, because it will save on appearance and goal bonuses among more senior players who in any case will appreciate being able to jet off early on their holidays. Jacob (Kono), Artur (Olivares) and Fulgencio (de Luque, aka Sortudo, his chosen mononym) are trying very hard not to get overexcited as they inspect their shiny new pink shirts, with their names across the back. Dolores has left little gifts for them in their lockers - small carved idols of footballing wights who will bring good luck and help them to be the best they can be. Allegedly. She’s been looking after Jacob, Artur and ‘Cio’ since they were grasshoppers in the baby team - this is a big day for them.

The game is delayed for 15 minutes because in her eagerness to celebrate the debutants, Dolores has completely forgotten to send a taxi to the bus station to pick up the match officiating team, and they arrive after a flurry of phone calls with only a few minutes to spare. The referee, Señor Laza, is far from impressed. He gives the away team two soft penalties during the course of a surprisingly competitive tie, and the home supporters are as far from impressed with him, as he is with Dolores. The banter from the terraces borders on disrespectful, and if it wasn’t for the pleasant weather and the general holiday feel of the place, it could have gotten downright rude. The officials elect not to take an end-of-season lap of honour, but both home and away teams do enjoy the applause of an impressed audience who rather enjoyed themselves. Old Man Jenkins joins them, driven in a golf cart by Dolores since, after 90 minutes of goalkeeping in which he was quite busy, the 160-year old Murphtannian is entirely incapacitated untill his next deepwater massage therapy (the diver-massuese is already at the community pool, waiting). Young Fulgencio is carrying around the matchball as if it were a trophy - and why not? He did score a goal on his debut after all. “Well done, Cio,” call out the supporters, most of whom know him as a family friend. They are impressed with him. Outside of Chanco Cóndor, he might make a bit of a name for himself. Sortudo.

“That’s a decent kid you have there, Alexis,” says The Bats coach Afonso Torre as he enjoys a post-match vino with his opposite number. Alexis Magrina agrees.

“I should like to build a team around him, I think he’s the future of this club.”

In the directors’ lounge, Dons Xose Ron and Xerome de Castro are having a little buffet. “That’s a decent kid you have there, Don Xose.”

“We’re delighted with him,” says Don Xose, “I think we could pay the electric and water bills for a year on the sort of money we’ll get for him this summer.”

The directors raise a glass to themselves. “See you next year!” they say to each other, with as much confidence as you can have at this level.


MAKE MOTO GREAT AGAIN
THE INSIDE VIEW ON REHABILITATING A FALLEN GIANT

Nobody thought it would be possible to beat the ratings of last season’s MMGA television show, when talented Farv playboy striker Vâásk Çêwé got caught in a compromising position with a burrito and a supermodel who used to be chairman Gedeó Dosrius girlfriend, and the chaos that ensued. It was gripping. Like the overly-tight headlock that Vâásk put his boss in to prevent further injury during a changing room scuffle. The production team at Deportivo Cielo could not have imagined how things would explode - particularly Gedeó’s personality - in season 4 of the monster hit fly-on-the-wall documentary. The background had been the season 3 off-season bonus content, when the show was extended to cover what turned out to be Gedeó’s Liga-TQ Commissioner election defeat to the grey administrator Martín Escorinato, the lame-duck-in-a-crapshoot candidate, who stunned everyone by coming in off the outside track to sneak an election run-off win. The chairman was an incendiary device with an already lit fuse, everyone diving out of his way for cover, until a new opportunity occured to him: to hell with the Liga-TQ Commissioner job - the Kipolalia Scandal’s far reaching implications included football legend and national treasure Lepe standing down as the President of the Unión. A seamless segue into season four of Make Moto Great Again was on the table: Gedeó Dosrius for the most powerful job in Tequiloan football - and why the hell not?

Until the Liga-TQ Election, Gedeó would say he had never lost any project he set his mind to. But then… Martín Escorinato happened. Gedeó did try out the ‘it was fixed’ play, just to see how much attention he could get from it - but then, the television season ended on a different cliff-hanger: The Unión Election. Gedeó didn’t have time to hang around dwelling on or making excuses for his election defeat. He had a new election to lose.

Did I say lose? I meant, he had a new election to win. On a ticket of ‘Make Pitxi Great At Last’ Gedeó planned a campaign to win the top job in Tequiloan football, President of the FA, El Unión. He was going to focus on winning the World Cup and showing elves, yumans, satyrs, sentient toasters and your Nephari types how to play the beautiful game better faster and stronger. His production office meeting with the MMGA team, planning for season 4, was the platform to launch his campaign, and he promised the film team he would go in hard with wild promises he couldn’t possibly keep. He would electioneer the hell out of the season - both the pitxi season and the television series season. He would be sure to say a lot of controversial stuff to stoke debate and drive ratings, he would call his opponents names and behave badly to appeal to the masses. It was manna from heaven for the production team. They knew he was going to lose. I knew it. Everyone knew it. You know he is going to lose. But Gedeó could not imagine a scenario in which he could lose an election, even though he just had. “I just need to make bigger promises, bigger statements and bigger factual errors. I went in too low last time,” was his general philosophy, outlined to the producers of the show. They weren’t going to argue.

And then he lost. All of it on film, through the season. While Motozintla won the Copa Tequilo, the main thrust of the show was how a shopkeeper from the club shop at Fábrica Tapalupé, Carolina Ruiz, built a national stadium in a season, and at the end of it, stood for election as President of El Unión… and won. Calling himself Chairman Gedeó and her Checkout Carolina, or sometimes The Trolley Girl, Gedeó basked for most of the television season in his campaign trail to the pinnacle of his inevitable victory and installment as the Chief Hat at Museo de Pitxi, headquarters of the FA. He flashed his vast fortunes, his enormous corporate portfolio, his little black book of multiversal who’s-whos; why he practically flopped his rollerdex out on the table for everyone to see. “Here I am, The Man,” he said. What he was forgetting was that the public, lapping this all up through the television show and it’s record ratings, weren’t voting for the President of El Unión. A bunch of old blazers at the Museo would be doing that. Now, it’s fair to say they are not rightly keen on breaking from tradition, which is to say, that men are in charge of pitxi. Tequiloan men. At least in Tequilo. But they did employ a foreigner as director of the national team. And they did employ a highly non-traditional foreigner in Ooóoos Skeuri who always wears a wrestling mask these days, even in private meetings. And the woman standing in the election - well she did make them a shed load of money through improvements to the Liga-TQ format; and she did build them a stadium in a year that had been a hole in the ground for the previous eight. And this Gedeó Dosrius - what an offense to the sensibilities of such gentlemen. Carolina Ruiz won the election by a landslide.

Employing further natural disaster metaphors, Gedeó was more of a volcano when he found out. On screen. For the season four cliffhanger finale of Make Moto Great Again. First a volcano, but then a glacier. After a Vesuvian eruption, yelling the unholiest of unholy language, he made a cold and silent exit as the credits rolled. The director yelled cut. Gedeó kept on going, out of the office, out of the building, away to his city apartment block. Not a word was said.

“We could leave it there,” said the director to her crew. It was a natural end to the whole project. But she knew, as we all know, Gedeó most certainly won’t leave it there.


GRUPO TAXHAVN
BUILDING A CLUB AS AN INTERNATIONAL FOOTBALL EMPIRE

The aim of Haïtiens - and their moneybags owners Grupo Taxhavn - is to win in the intercontinental titles and on that ambition, this season can be measured as a dismal failure - a poor state championship in which, if not for the previous season, would have left them outside of Liga-TQ qualification altogether was followed by a disastrous run in the Proxima, particularly in the closing stages where they lost six in a row to drop from an IFCF qualification place to third bottom. Two-year coach Tomás Cabal has paid the price and has already been sacked as the team move in to the off-season. But Liga-TQ Proxima was not all about how badly The Wights did -

- except it is really, isn’t it?

All the stadium renovations in the world, all the new training facilities, all the international marquee signings (we are talking in context here of course - Tequilo standards apply) don’t count for anything if you don’t win anything. Wights fans were hoping for - nay, expecting - world domination, though that was never specifically promised to them by Grupo Taxhavn. As it is, they slipped back a little toward their pre-GT condition of being a big fat not-very-much-of-anything. A lot of fans are seeing the warning signs of slippage, and they are already sounding quite depressed. Some note the good work proceeding at Molding in Græntfjall, a club also owned by GT who do qualify for IFCF competitions and have won a whole lot of domestic trophies, and fear the group will lose interest in a club cursed with mediocre results - mediocre no matter what you put in. Because, after all, they weren’t too badly off before GT: massive support, big stadium, co-tenants to share the cost, decent income. They were alright in every department, except on the field. Now they are super-alright in every department, but it looks like on the field they are the same old rubbish. And this is coming from their own fans.

That is probably a bit of dismal bias though, inherited from generations of disappointment and reignited by overreacting to having so much cash to burn. The infrastructure has improved beyond all reasonable expectation. In the background, at their training complex of Comarancho, they have a facility you might expect to find in Eura or Nephara. It really is a world class facility. But that is easy to build - world class success takes longer. Grupo Taxhavn are in it for the long term, they insist. There is no reason to suspect otherwise - why else invest so heavily? Perhaps the team changed too much too quickly. There is talk of language difficulties in the locker room. Perhaps Tomás Cabal simply wasn’t the right man for the job. Things will need tweaking. Changes will have to be made. Cabal and his assistant Juan David Semprún have had their contracts terminated ‘by mutual agreement’ without too much of a fuss. There are rumours of a big managerial signing next and former Liga-TQ champion and national team coach Ramiro Paredo is available. GT are not giving up on Haïtiens, and they will become a force to be reckoned with. From a Sardíneros fan, I will just say this - Wights’ fans just need to stop whining and shut up.


POSÍDON THE EARTH-SHAKER
INSIDE THE HEAD OF BIKO SORARRAINARTE

When I caught up with Biko at the end of the season, it was under the least dramatic circumstances since my first ever meeting with him. This time, he did not assault me. He wasn’t at his mother’s funeral. He wasn’t laying in a gutter bleeding out after being evicted from an abandoned supermarket he called home. Slowly, Biko was getting his life back together, thanks to the generous support of Nómada Club fans, whom he used to entertain as the club mascot Posídon The Earth-Shaker. The Supporters Club, hearing of his desperate plight, installed him in a managed housing project jointly funded by the new club owners Grupo Taxhavn, and paid for intensive rehabilitation. He used to look after the fans - and now they are looking after him. I would be lying if I said it had all worked out fine and dandy: the hard years have taken a toll on Biko. Not just the death of his mother, or the homeless years, the stabbing or before that the mental health collapse inside of the Masque of the Green Kraken, Posídon. Not even the appalling decline of his once great club, Nómada. But those years, after his breakdown, when he was ex-communicated by the fellowship of honourable mascots, El Número Extraordinario, for giving away secrets of the trade, revealing his identity, assaulting members of the public and other minor indiscretions when his identity collapsed under the weight of the kraken. His years in the wilderness, when the one thing that meant everything to him was denied him - those years had weighed heavily on him. He looked old and worn out.

Despite that, at his new supported home in Iparra, he was pretty chipper when we spoke of the season, and how Nómada Club, aided by the unimaginable wealth of Grupo Taxhavn, had managed to save their famously enormous youth system, and the senior club, and had even won promotion out of the amateur wilderness of ’no-liga’ to return to the state championship third tier. “It’s a start,” he said with a big smile as he made us both a cup of tea. Nómada fans had been deeply unhappy about the acquisition of the club by Grupo Taxhavn, considering they already owned Haïtiens on the other side of the country and clearly intended for the All Greens to be a feeder to their main project. But the complaints died away as Nómada smashed all aside on their return to the league - and it was well known that they had helped poor Biko get back on his feet after his life almost ebbed out of him. Fans could see the upside.

And what about Posídon? I almost dared not to ask what would become of the mascot that had driven him to the edge of reason. I knew the club had now done without it for many seasons, since the ban by El Número Extraordinario, and there had not been much appetite for Posídon to come back. Given the previous pirate mascot, and it’s hooligan incumbent Febo Five-Knuckle, had been sent down for rioting, and then… well, what happened with Posídon… the club had decided maybe a mascot was not absolutely necessary. But it was Biko who raised the prospect of a return.

“I still have Posídon, you know,” he said, quietly and out of ear-shot of his support worker, “he’s bagged up in the basement. Not sure if I want to bring him back yet though - he’s quite a handful!”

I tend to agree with Biko. Now is probably not the right time.
Last edited by Tequilo on Wed Mar 10, 2021 10:49 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Cálculo-4 Round-Up

Postby Tequilo » Sun Mar 14, 2021 1:35 am

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THE ROUND-UP
THAT WAS THE SEASON THAT WAS... WITH MOSEY ACKANARD & THE REST

Liga-TQ Cálculo-4 - that is to say, fourth season - is done, and we've just a few honours to bestow, and a few guest writers to give us their views on the season, before we put this mission to bed and start a new one. The off-season begins now and preparations begin for Cálculo-5 - will the 77o defend their title? Have they stopped laughing at Hipopótamo-Joahxa yet? Will anyone be able to fathom what the wights is going on at Moto? But that's a story for another cut-off - today, we'll be talking to spivvy spittalninny Mosey Ackanard about the season that was; gregarious chairman Gedeó Dosrius reviews his performance in blockbuster fly-on-the-wall Making Moto Great Again; Xose Ron and Dolores give us their round up of life in The Sardine Can, the food outlet at lower-league Sardíneros; and special guest Mardelio Colibrí, front man of Tequilo's international music sensation Ultra-Mariachi, is back with his views on La Liga, following Los Pitxileros, and teaching the Mariachi's dog Basil about the exotic theory of post-Round of 32 in the Cup of Harmony - does it really exist and how does it work? All that and more, coming up after these end-of-season awards.



PLAYER OF THE SEASON
TLACOLOTL - PITXI-PITXI 77

The 23-year old striker wins his second player of the season award staright off the back of an injury-wracked season last time out, showing another dimension to his extraordinary physicality: his powers of recovery. Some may have suspected we had seen the best of a young superstar struck down in his prime and prematurely burned out. Not a bit of it - the warrior is back to his best, even better than the first time. Does it seem like he's been around forever? Well, that's hardly surprising. The faith shown in him by his club manager Eskaminzim, where he had been a regular since just after his 16th birthday, was soon to be matched by the first national team manager Mauricio Nores, who surprisingly selected him as a reserve player for the Baptism of Fire-72 squad, aged only 17. Halfway through that tournament he got his shot at glory with an injury to Roxelio Toran, and grabbed it with both feet and his head. He hasn't looked back, either for club or country, now leading the national team scoring charts (52 goals) as well as being the most capped player (80 caps); and having won four state championships in a row, the inaugural Liga-TQ, and a second one this year too. He is the first player to win the Humberto Bustamonte Golden Watch for player of the season twice and is now, surely, the best player in the country, an unstoppable warhorse who has again had a sublime season, finishing with the highest average rating in Liga-TQ and one of the top scorers, finishing seventh overall.

Boney cocksparrow Mosey Ackanard: "he's a nightmare to play against, a bully who's only going to give you a hard time as a defender, guaranteed. If you're not up for it, he'll walk all over you."

HONOURABLE MENTIONS:Leftback Ebardo Feliu, Tlacolotl's team mate at the green-and-whites, had the season of his career in an all-so-impressive back four; often underrated in a defence with the likes of Chicchan and Noxochinoch grabbing most of the attention, this season he shone brighter than just about everyone. Farv striker Mâártën Âllámbâlár rounds out the top three after his scoring feats at Florentino, to also win both the Golden Boot and the Golden Visa (for best foreigner in the league).


YOUNG PLAYER OF THE SEASON
MANUEL CAÑERO - REAL GARDARESSO

In a season full of top goalscoring action, it was the youth international striker Manuel Cañero who caught the eye for the Young Player award, hitting 19 goals in 45 appearances but more importantly adding highly-rated consistent performances to his armoury. With Isaac Martí now in charge at Real, he's been given his head of steam as the first choice number 10 at The Glaziers, and has taken full advantage of the opportunity to push himself into contention for the next IAC squad which, as usual, focus on selecting the up-and-coming under-23s in preparation for the next World Cup cycle. He has a good side-kick to help improve his game too in full international Ecuador, and has clearly learned a lot from the exciting forward as he has terrorised defences all season. With Real optimistic they are back on the rise and ready to challenge rivals Florentino for the crown of best team in Antivador, Manuel is surely a key player in their thinking already.

"Generally I'm not keen on throwing young strikers in at the deep end," says Mosey Ackanard, "they are confidence players and if the kids take a knock to that they can go right off the boil. But fair play to Isaac, he's had this boy in all season and it has done him the world of good. He's been very consistent. I like him."

HONOURABLE MENTIONS:Puma Caldeira has come from nowhere to lead the recovery of grand old lady SC Raití; a fallen giant with empty pockets, they have had to rely on some exciting young talent to left them back up to where they belong, and none has fulfilled that promise better than Puma, a young striker with bags of potential. Another young striker making waves is Vâásk Çêwé - on and off the pitch. The Farv playboy has been an exciting watch on the pitch, and on the television for his club-under-the-microscope, Motozintla.


GOLDEN BOOT
MÂÁRTËN ÂLLÁMBÂLÁR - FLORENTINO

It's the second half of the last game of the season at Villa Lego, Florenio - home to Florentino. Los Violetas need just a single point at home to SC Raití to secure second place in Liga-TQ Primera division, their second consecutive runner-up spot, ahead of SC Pedregal. They may not even need a point - The Whistlers are up against the champions, Pitxi-Pitxi 77, and are losing at home. As proves to be the case, second place looks in the bag. Liga-TQ's most expensive player, Farv striker Mâártën Âllámbâlár signed from CF Frantxizko-A for ₸4.8m, has put Florentino ahead with his 29th goal of the season - that equals the domestic record of the modern era and puts him two goals ahead of his nearest rivals for the Golden Boot. He will become the first foreigner to win the boot if he holds out. SC Raití hit back late on, Puma Caldeira on target to level the scores. News filters though that SC Pedregal have come from behind to lead at home to the 77o; now they are a single point behind Florentino, with a single goal advantage in goal difference. If SC Raití score again, Los Violetas drop to third. It doesn't happen - and Pitxi-Pitxi 77 get a late equaliser in Cuara to ensure Florentino will hold second place. Going into injury time, there is only one thing left to play for - if Mâártën Âllámbâlár can get another goal, he'll be the first player to score 30 in a domestic Liga-TQ season. With seconds remaining, he beats three players, picks up a lucky deflection, gets clean through on goal where Young Keeper of the Season Matías Caldas faces him. He drops a shoulder, pivots, and rounds Matías all too easily for a tap in - but scuffs the shot for the last kick of the game. But then - video referees are taking a look at the lucky deflection. Handball in the build-up - penalty. Mâártën takes the ball from usual penalty-taker Venâncio Paiva, his Audioslav strike partner, and sets it down for himself... measures his steps back, waits for the whistle, runs, shoots low to the right... saved! The referee blows for a foul - Matías moved too soon on his line, it's a retake. If it hadn't been the last decision of the season, the SC Raití players would have complained bitterly, but they just want to get off on their holidays. Mâártën goes again - and skies it. The referee blows for full time. Mâártën Âllámbâlár wins the golden boot but fails to break the record for most goals in a season.

"Two appalling penalties," says Mosey, "he won't want to look at them again. What a load of rubbish!"

HONOURABLE MENTION:K'antu has been on the mark at SC Pedregal over a number of seasons now and continues to impress under new joint-managers, the Gallardo brothers. At only 22 he has time on his side and could soon be knocking at the door of the national team. At the other end of the scale, veteran Kjetil Rongstad, 34, has never had a better scoring season for Unuiĝinta. The striker from the cold north of Beomark was on fire this season.


GOLDEN GLOVE
ORM HINISSER - PITXI-PITXI 77

Goalkeeper of the season for the second time, the Giant From Wight has become the finest keeper of the early Liga-TQ era and when he plays at his best, which is most of the time, then the 77o win - which is most of the time. Orm comes from a family of that legendary and slightly mythological breed of Wightling: those who are named in the Synaxarion, the 'Unholy Book of Names'; this is where we encounter such characters as Búa, Hassan the Assassin, Headless John, a post-mortal Masvidal, Big John Corfe-Sheviock, Mardellion Hummingbird, Mariner Friend-Forsaken, the kebab shop cannibal Mason Banks and Passago the Goat. Amongst others. Orm is no goat - and he is no sentient bubble universe either, he's positively and mostly human, though less fallible than most. He does have that 'Old Wight' look about him - distant, slightly disconnected, as if he's looking in eleven dimensions at once; his ability to see through defenders can be unnerving at corner kicks and he has a peculiar habit of sniffing the air before defending a set-piece, as if the wind can tell him what is going to happen next. Though he commands complete confidence from his defenders, he manages this mostly without speaking - hit certainly fits the strong and silent type, being hopeless in press conferences and often sent to provide opinion after a defeat, when he discourages cheeky questions from purturbed sports journalists. Off the pitch he is spoken of as the perfect gentleman, extremely private, and supremely intelligent. This last observation is hard to match with his appearance - tall, stocky, sullen and impenetrable are words that come to mind.

"Terrific fella," says Mosey, "a great friend of the family. My boys love him - climb all over him, taking proper liberties with his calm demeanour, if you know what I mean. Orlo [Mosey's Bison Terrier] is the same. Loves wrestling with the big man. Whenever we're up in Ixta-Comitán, we make sure to visit."

HONOURABLE MENTION:Tepin Mecatl-Rubió had another fine season at Resplendiente, where he has emerged over recent seasons as a top-drawer young keeper and has now established himself firmly as Oscar Bienvenida's number two in the national team. He doesn't many caps because, well, Oscar Bienvenido. But domestically he once again turned it on even though his team were a little underwhelming this season.


MANAGER OF THE SEASON
ESKAMINZIM - PITXI-PITXI 77

The former defensive midfielder for his hometown club, who played more than 300 games for the mighty green-and-whites, was already a legend for supporters when he retired from playing eight years ago. A one-club player, he moved into coaching immediately after retiring - first with the 77o and then taking a surprising head coach role at struggling Benemérito. Two seasons arresting a shocking decline was enough to convince Pitxi-Pitxi 77 he was the right man to turn around a long period of being off the pace. Taking charge at the turn of the Liga-TQ era, he has won four straight state championships, and now, his second national title. This season, the green-and-whites have been peerless, as the highly technical manager moves them up to another level that all the rest can only follow. Surely a national captain in his day had such a thing as a national team existed when he was a player, one wonders how long it will be before the national team turn to him - he is a creator of the game, with a vision to change and invent new formations and roles in a time when we all thought that surely everything has already been thought of, changed and invented. A pioneer in the mould of a Masvidal, the Wight World Cup winner, or Pythagoras Jones, who turned a bunch of misfit sailors from Bonesea into world-beaters with his new invented Årganger 1-2-7 formation.

HONOURABLE MENTION:Roibén Ravelo has worked wonders at SC Raití, an old giant fallen on such hard times they very nearly went bust, and certainly have had to rebuild themselves on less than a shoestring. At the lower level, MiCF community club manager Rodolphe Bola survived an insulting 'sack the manager' online vote to bloody-mindedly lead Hipopótamo-Joaxha to the best season in their history, narrowly missing out on promotion to the top flight in a heart-breaking play-off final defeat. But will he stick or twist?


THE WOODEN SPOON
GEDEÓ DOSRIUS - MOTOZINTLA

Only Chairman Gedeó could win a Copa Tequilo and still have a bad season. As his team Motozintla were heading for a third ever win in the Copa, and the first major silverware (apart from the state championships) under Chairman-G, he personally was heading for a second embarrassing election defeat in six months as he was beaten in the race for the Unión Presidency by unfancied dark horse shopkeeper Carolina Ruiz. This followed his embarrassing election defeat in the race for the Liga-TQ commissioner to unfancied dark horse data analyst Martín Escorinato. It wasn't so much the nature of the defeats that was embarrassing as it was the unholy noise he made during the election campaigns via the medium of his fly-on-the-wall documentary Make Moto Great Again, and the unholy - and ungracious - noise he made in the immediate aftermath of each defeat - also on film for the delectation of an hysterical audience who were lapping up his calamitous and ultimately unsuccessful approach to taking control of football.

DISHONOURABLE MENTION:Ramiro Paredo's short unhappy stint in charge of the national team, after winning the national title with SC Pedregal, should not pass without mention even though it is officially unrelated to the Liga-TQ awards; however, he is much fancied to take over at Haïtiens, where poor Tomás Cabal could not get his team performing at any stage of the season, despite - or perhaps because - they were weighed down with so much cash. He's now job hunting and The Wights are eyeing Ramiro's domestic coaching record...


TOP PLAYER RATINGS
Stats by XK-Opteq


Humberto Bustamonte Golden Watch
Player of the Season; Liga-TQ Primera, top 10

1. Tlacolotl 22 ST 10.86 47 23 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
2. Ebardo Feliu 31 DL 10.86 37 4 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
3. Mâártën Âllámbâlár 30 ST FFD 10.82 43 29 Florentino

Kjetil Rongstad 34 ST BEO 10.62 37 27 Unuiĝinta
Altar de Alcala 35 ML 10.57 50 1 Florentino
Manuel Cañero 21 ST 10.42 45 10 Real Gardaresso
Ot Camazotz Roca 38 AMC 10.42 44 6 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Taca 37 ST 10.27 40 17 Resplendiente
Rüí Lütáò 28 AMC FFD 10.25 32 2 Real Gardaresso
Puma Caldeira 21 ST 10.20 44 24 SC Raití

Liga-TQ Proxima, winner
Goio Vigo 21 DC 9.97 42 3 Atlás Ciuredor

Liga-TQ Pequeña, winner
Christopher Romero 30 GK 10.18 46 24 c/s Fábrica Tapalupé

Pablo Invocador Golden Boot
Top Scorers, Liga-TQ Primera

1. Mâártën Âllámbâlár 30 ST FFD 10.62 43 29 Florentino
2. K'antu 22 ST 9.38 37 27 SC Pedregal
3. Kjetil Rongstad 34 ST BEO 10.82 37 27 Unuiĝinta

Danté 19 ST 9.96 30 24 Unuiĝinta
Ilan Cusaca 32 ST 8.90 42 24 Ascension San Pasito
Puma Caldeira 21 ST 10.20 44 24 SC Raití
Tlacolotl 22 ST 10.86 47 23 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Tesco Zuniga 24 ST AUD 10.04 17 20 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Kâásîmîró 20 ST FFD 9.77 40 20 Resplendiente
Nkanya Emade 20 AMC ZEN 9.63 42 20 Ascension San Pasito

Alano Caballero Golden Glove
Top Keepers, Liga-TQ Primera

1. Orm Hinisser 28 GK WGT 9.73 41 20 c/s Pitxi-Pitxi 77
2. Matias Caldas 21 GK 9.54 42 20 c/s SC Raití
3. Tepin Mecatl-Rubió 24 GK 9.17 33 17 c/s Resplendiente

Esâ Neá Golden Badge
Top Young Players, Liga-TQ Primera

1. Manuel Cañero 21 ST 10.42 45 10 Real Gardaresso
2. Puma Caldeira 21 ST 10.20 44 24 SC Raití
3. Vâásk Çêwé 20 ST FFD 10.07 37 18 Motozintla

Pythagoras' Golden Compass
Coach of the Season

1. Eskaminzim 44 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
2. Roibén Ravelo 55 SC Raití
3. Rodolphe Bola 57 Hipopótamo-Joaxha

Selección-TQ Team of the Season

1. Orm Hinisser 28, GK (WGT) Pitxi-Pitxi 77
2. Ebardo Feliu 31, DL Pitxi-Pitxi 77
3. Brandon Nyassa 32, DR (ZEN) Motozintla
4. Leon Carreño 30, DC Florentino
5. Antón Lascares 25, DC Real Gardaresso
6. Aleixo Claver 32, DMC SC Pedregal
7. Altar de Alcala 35, ML Florentino
8. Ot Camazotz Roca 38, AMC Pitxi-Pitxi 77 Veteran of the Season
9. Tlacolotl 22, ST Pitxi-Pitxi 77 Player of the Season
10. Kjetil Rongstad 34, ST (BEO) Unuiĝinta
11. Urbano Noboa 18, MR SC Pedregal

Cosmos Team of the Season

1. Sâálvó Lâegi 20, GK (FFD) Argón Tacranza
2. Peter von Krjker 22, DL (TJU) Real Gardaresso
3. Cygnet Valeri 34, DR (ASU) Resplendiente
4. Wlad Wlad 25, DC (ZRH) Resplendiente
5. Kiyabu Shunko 27, DC (SQR) Motozintla
6. Les Jawallawalla 24, DMC (AUD) Florentino
7. Fiete Tannhaeuser 31, AML (NPH) Fábrica Tapalupé
8. Rüí Lütáò 28, AMC (FFD) Real Gardaresso
9. Mâártën Âllámbâlár 30, ST (FFD) Florentino Cosmo of the Season
10. Vâásk Çêwé 20, ST (FFD) Motozintla
11. Con Hatzileftheriou 24, AMR (NPH) Pitxi-Pitxi 77


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COSMOS PLAYER OF THE SEASON
MÂÁRTËN ÂLLÁMBÂLÁR - FLORENTINO

'Alla', as they have nicknamed him at the Villa Lego stadium, was something of a late developer - 27 when he came to Tequilo, he had been playing in the lower leagues within the anarchy of Farfadillis, where somehow normal life stops for football - where 'normal life' means wearing a tin hat and a flak jacket to the local corner mart in the mean streets of Dögá, and painting the town black of a Saturday night after football. Life does not stop for long enough, however, to publish comprehensive documentation of results and standings for anything but the Farf Freitball Ligá, and thus Mâártën Âllámbâlár arrived in Tequilo with little by way of documentation and only his word for it that he was a pretty good player for various teams below the FFL, "and would've been a contender" higher up if it wasn't for some unfortunate life circumstances. Following a well-travelled path of escaping the chaos for a quieter life in Tequilo, relatively speaking, Mâártën blagged his way into the country on the promise of all that natural Farv footballing talent. And, at his first port of call in Iragartze, he tried out for the once-mighty Golds, CF Frantxizko-A. As it turns out, he wasn't half bad after all. In two seasons with CFFA, the Rülândéán was a near ever-present in the front line, top scorer for the club both times, and stunned the whole multiverse, or at least the whole of Tequilo and some of Rülândéá by getting nominated on the Galacticos long list - the first player based in Tequilo to do so. It was enough for ambitious Florentino to spring him for a domestic record transfer, and unfazed by the pressure of a hefty price tag, he's had a magnificent season off the back of it. The first foreigner to win the Golden Boot, he equalled the modern era record for goals scored in a season with 29, and lining up alongside previous Cosmo winner Venâncio Paiva, he has formed a spectacular partnership with the Audioslav forward.

"He's just getting better with age," says Mosey Ackanard, "like a fine cheese. Have they even heard of him in Farfadillis? I should think he would get a call-up for just about any national team on the back of that season. Can't we naturalise him? I mean, Tlacolotl is the best striker in the country, but 'Alla' up alongside him? Imagine that!"

HONOURABLE MENTION:It's a Farv top three in the Ooóoos Skueri Golden Visa award for the best foreign player, with Real's all-action attacking midfielder Rüí Lütáò in second and Motozintla's young playboy forward Vâásk Çêwé, competing with his chairman Gedeó Dosrius for attention coming in third. Both have had excellent seasons for their clubs as the influence of Farv nationals on the domestic football scene increases exponentially. How long before we turn to Farv managers for some of the 'fallen giant' clubs? There are plenty of teams who consider themselves pitxi royalty in the comfort of their home state, but have yet to prove it in the national league - will the lure of such impressive Farv talent be too much when teams fire their underperforming head coaches?


LOS COSMOPOLITAS RATINGS
Stats by XK-Opteq


All Cosmos are rated apart from those signed to youth ranks, for whom metrics are not available.

Ooóoos Skueri Golden Visa
Cosmo Player of the Season, Liga-TQ Primera

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1. Mâártën Âllámbâlár 30 ST FFD 10.62 43 29 Florentino
2. Rüí Lütáò 28 AMC FFD 10.25 32 2 Real Gardaresso
3. Vâásk Çêwé 20 ST FFD 10.07 37 18 Motozintla

Con Hatzileftheriou 25 AMR NPH 10.06 41 12 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Tesco Zuniga 24 ST AUD 10.04 17 20 Pitxi-Pitxi 77
Kâásîmîró 20 ST FFD 9.77 40 20 Resplendiente
Wlad Wlad 25 DC ZRH 9.27 17 3 Resplendiente
Venâncio Paiva 36 ST AUD 9.26 30 18 Florentino
Les Jawallawalla 24 DMC AUD 8.47 36 2 Florentino
Peter von Krjker 22 DL TJU 8.07 44 2 Real Gardaresso
Yunji Gastanaga 24 DMC HIN 8.06 18 4 Unuiĝinta
Laurent Lapix 20 DMC RCN 7.85 42 6 Resplendiente
Kiyabu Shunko 27 DC SQR 7.50 40 4 Motozintla
Cygnet Valeri 34 DR ASU 6.41 31 0 Resplendiente
Urguz Alzagaray 23 DC ASG 5.54 25 0 Unuiĝinta
<15 games
Lukabor Ilić 23 DC ZRH 8.32 9 1 Real Gardaresso
Boualem Ghannouchi 36 DRC AUD 6.26 13 1 Motozintla
Ésüá Àìûmôr 22 DL FFD 6.24 14 2 Resplendiente
Çè Êf 23 AML FFD 5.05 11 0 Pitxi-Pitxi 77

Liga-TQ Proxima

1. Praxil Law 33 DL NPH 9.36 33 4 Xicoa
2. Prôspër Vílséré 20 DMC FFD 9.29 25 3 Haïtiens
3. Josh Scraff 19 AMC KSK 8.94 22 6 Haïtiens

Cody Toa 24 ST TKT 8.48 42 24 Haïtiens
Sâálvó Lâegi 20 GK FFD 8.38 42 2 c/s Argón Tacranza
John Percovich 19 MR TKT 7.85 15 2 Haïtiens
Adraan Telviir 33 CM MRN 7.48 29 4 Acacoyagua
Rémy Lussier 24 MR RCN 7.04 32 2 CF Frantxizko-A
Frank Kolar 31 DC STL 6.51 46 3 Haïtiens
Váásîlóénün Jóf 21 MR FFD 5.31 32 5 Haïtiens
Drì Ügísanâ 21 DL FFD 4.46 45 2 Haïtiens
Jâsín Wíndândaò 23 MR FFD 4.14 20 5 Acacoyagua
<15 games
Benedict de Leonardo 24 ST AUD 7.44 1 0 Atlás Ciuredor
Timo Blankman 34 DMC NPH 6.97 7 1 Haïtiens
Valtter Marvinsson 20 DMC GRF 6.84 12 2 Haïtiens
Tinni Grímólfursson 21 DMC GRF 6.11 13 0 Atlás Ciuredor
Pier Luigi Vitali 18 ST SOR 5.15 1 0 Haïtiens
Jôk Ônzántolöìra 21 AMC FFD 3.91 6 3 Acacoyagua

Liga-TQ Pequeña

1. Fiete Tannhaeuser 31 AML NPH 7.60 15 5 Fábrica Tapalupé

Zhu Mingxia 22 DC YZH 6.63 19 0 Fábrica Tapalupé
Sâlämão 20 DL FFD 5.71 31 3 Fábrica Tapalupé
Nexev-Savar Fox 23 AML QUS 4.60 24 0 Fábrica Tapalupé
<15 games
Rynyr-Pilta Jan 33 AMC QUS 5.50 4 0 Independiencia
Lídôr Újâk 20 MC FFD 5.06 7 2 Peru Urzagui

Liga-IS

1. Iñigo Mallén 18 DL MVE 8.67 32 3 Juventoyan

Jodi Croena 23 ST TSA 6.98 26 2 Inter Raití
<15 games
Seth Blunt 29 MR NPH 8.62 11 4 Inter Raití
Goran Olazabar 22 DL ASG 8.50 12 1 Inter Raití
Hans Juul 36 DC SVJ 7.00 12 2 Inter Raití

Lower Leagues

1. Hermes Kripto 23 ML SMT(CTE)9.27 43 8 Socrates

Mo Stein 22 ST EFL 8.93 46 15 Serpentina
Nout Ström 21 ST EFL 8.80 43 26 Serpentina
Lamitija Elogosesurá 21 ST FFD 7.62 22 10 Galaxía
Tim Kameda 19 MR KSK 5.90 46 17 Galaxía
Géza 20 DL FFD 5.52 21 2 Galaxía
Samuel Duverger 21 AMC FFD 5.31 20 3 Galaxía
Caémiró Dandeluneí 21 DR FFD 4.69 41 3 Galaxía
<15 games
Émílíâno Kâús 19 DMC FFD 7.40 11 0 Indigo Huayna
Waylon Caskie 21 ST AUD 6.60 10 1 Socrates
Old Man Jenkins 159 GK MUR no data availableSardíneros


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END OF SEASON RUMOUR MILL
A TEQUILOAN SUMMER AHEAD OF CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS, FREE AGENTS AND SECRET DEALS


₸ = Tequiloan Chèlinpeso, the national currency, pegged close to 1:1 to the NS$

THE HEADLINERS

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PLAYBOY AWAY?
Already a legend in Tequilo, party-hard striker Vâásk Çêwé, 20, has stunned Motozintla by handing in a transfer request, following another falling out with the chairman Gedeó Dosrius, with whom he shares a famous and very public love-hate relationship. Not satisfied with the 'burritogate' sex tape incident featuring Vâásk and the chairman's supermodel ex-girlfriend, and the subsequent dressing room punch up, the production team for the Make Moto Great Again insider tv series screened an episode in which 'Chairman G' was seen to perform some less-than-flattering impressions, that any right-thinking person would think unpleasant racial stereotyping of his young Farv prodigy. Vâásk, it seems, has had enough of his loose-cannon employer.
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EL NINO DOUBLES IN VALUE
Tequiloan superstar in the making Niño Pinto, 20, has signed a new four-year contract with boyhood club Indigo. With the team winning promotion back to the top tier for next season after a couple of really poor seasons, this might be considered a huge endorsement of their coming campaign to get into Liga-TQ. But the inside word is that the management do not believe they can fend off interest in the brilliant young midfielder for much longer, and want to ensure they get as much buck for their man as they can possibly leverage. Looking at the money spent on former Indigo team mate and national captain Vilca Hualla (nearly ₸20m over the past two seasons) they are undoubtedly thinking of the cash returns for the club's favourite son.

"I don't think there's a team in Tequilo can afford him now," says Mosey Ackanard, "apart from maybe Moto and Haïtiens. But does he want all the exposure he'll get at Moto? If Vâásk can't put up with it, and let's face it, Vâásk loves a bit of coverage front and back in the rags, then I can't see Niño fancying that much either. I'd bet on an Audioslav side coming in, if I were a betting man. I did mention them both to my chairman but he laughed me out the office."


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ECUADOR NOT REAL
National team striker Ecuador, 25, has put himself on notice after declining a new contract at Real Gardaresso. He has one season left on his present deal and word is he will see that out before deciding on his next move. Real will hope they can still convince him to stay but having missed out once again on IFCF football, that is the very least they will have to offer him at the end of next season when he becomes a free agent. Both parties are open to a deal being struck at the eleven-and-eleven-twelfths hour, so it is by no means a certainty that he will be away when next season finishes - and he does have an excellent relationship with new Real manager Isaac Martí, who brought him through the national team ranks. But without intercontinental qualification there will likely be no contract worth signing from his point of view.
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WLAD WLAD QUITS QUITS
Zetan defender Wlad Wlad, 25, has requested a move abroad after deciding the constant barracking from opposition fans about the Zetan's penalty-shootout victory over Tequilo back in Baptism of Fire '72 is more than he can accept. "They need to get over it," he is quoted as saying, not understanding that it won't happen unless Tequilo win the World Cup anytime soon. Sources close to the impressive defender claim it is much more complicated than the terrace taunts. He hates the food and the disorganisation in general society, apparently - he's a stickler for punctuality and reliability - and there may be a recurring altitude sickness problem, given he plays his home games in the mountain city of La Conon, approximately 3,500m above sea level. Not everyone has been able to adapt to life in The Crows Nest, Resplendiente's cloud-enmeshed arena at the top of the world.

"It's a shame because I think he's a terrific defender," says Mosey, "and I'd have him in my team any day of the week. My old cousin Orse is up that way a lot, since he lives in the Guastanango cloud forests somewhere, and he reckons there are just some people who can't acclimatise. The same way we all get a bit sick when we step foot in Ao. Yuman beans just aren't meant to go there."


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GO WHISTLE - NOBO SAYS NO
Exciting young winger Urbano Noboa, 19, is likely to be available on the transfer market this season after declaring he won't sign another contract at SC Pedregal. It's not clear what has gone wrong at his hometown club where he has won a league title and made an FFI Taça final appearance in this hugely successful young team, where togetherness is almost their trademark. One can speculate that he doesn't fancy his chances up against long-time youth team rival Narciso Pineiro; they have competed for the same position through the youth teams, the Tequilo national team at different levels and now the SC Pedregal first team. There is supposed to be no love lost between them and it may be that Urbano, despite appearing to be ahead of his rival at the moment, doesn't want to spend his career competing with someone he doesn't like much.
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FERNAN CROSS WITH MOSEY
Talking of unhappiness, troubled rightback Fernan Sotolongo, 19, has handed in a transfer request at Socrates after only one season under showy manager Mosey Ackanard. Another of the SC Pedregal youth system who showed immense promise and a startling decline at The Whistlers, Mosey picked him up for a song with the promise of looking after him and nursing him back to his full potential. Despite a moderately successful season in the starting line up of the promotion team, he struck an unhappy picture and it was not much of a surprise that he wants to move on, apparently keen to move back to his native Puezan state, on the far side of the country. Homesickness?

"Some people are only happy when they're moaning," says chipper chappy Mosey Ackanard, about his young charge, "and I'm afraid young Fernan never wanted to allow himself to be happy with us. I did my best, I really did. But he's a right miserable so-and-so. I hope he can find his joy somewhere - there's no doubting his talent, and he'll be a star if he learns how to smile a bit." - That should smooth things over between them, then.
Last edited by Tequilo on Sun Mar 14, 2021 1:40 am, edited 1 time in total.
::: FORGOTTEN BUT NOT GONE :::
BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE

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