While most of us were still questioning how Jack Rodwell got a red card in the Merseyside derby while deciding which Manchester match to watch, Eren Derdiyok scored one of the best goals you may ever see in Bayer Leverkusen’s 3-1 win over Wolfsburg.
You don’t see that everyday!
Posted by Brendan Dunlop under Bundesliga, Golazo!, Score Video on Oct 01, 2011
Related Posts
Previous post
How do you define a game changer?
Comments (3)
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
Counter Attack
Editor
Contributors
Paolo Bandini, Ben Lyttleton, Jerrad Peters, Michael Cox, Ethan Dean-Richards, James Horncastle, Duane Rollins, Devang Desai
Recent Updates
- A cool Groundhog Day-esque experiment illustrates that league titles don’t always make a team “better”
- Football Finance: So if the Bundesliga model is so great, how exactly to implement it in England?
- Lyttleton: Is Lewandowski the perfect forward? Or is he the perfect forward for Dortmund?
- Horncastle: Imitation may flatter, but it can also lead to failure in football
- The Story So Far – May 23rd European domestic season ends, so here are the remaining news scraps…
- Apparently the “Wenger Looks Like an Eagle” thing is still going strong
- Lang: Sit down, tuck in, and enjoy your stay at the Restaurante Campeonato Brasileiro
- The bored non-fan’s viewing guide to the Champions League Final
- Captain America Claudio Reyna takes the reins as NYCFC’s newest director of football ops
- Mario Goetze to miss out on politically awkward Champions League final, zoo animals say it won’t affect Dortmund
Archives
Blogroll
- A More Splendid Life
- Brotherly Game
- Canadian Geordie
- Canadian Soccer News
- Declan Hill’s Blog
- Inside Soccer
- Kristian Jack’s 2010/11 EPL season review
- Kristian Jack’s Top 100 Premier League Players
- Major League Soccer Talk
- Mistake by the Lake (TFC blog)
- Nuke Soccer
- Out of Touch
- Partially Obstructed View
- Paul James on Soccer
- Plain Soccer
- Pompey Canuck’s Blog
- Posts By Panos
- Red Nation Online
- Serie A Weekly
- Soccer Montreal
- Steven Goff – Soccer Insider
- Support Local Soccer
- The Classical
- The Football Express
- The Football Project
- The Subs Bench
- The View From The South Stands (TFC blog)
- The Yorkies (TFC blog)
- Top 10 Underappreciated EPL Players
- Top 50 Serie A players of the season
- Twisted Blood
- Waking the Red
- We Call It Soccer


A first touch worthy of Bergkamp, and the rest reminded me of Ronaldinho. Good for Derdiyok!
Witchcraft, in historical, anthropological, religious, and mythological contexts, is the alleged use of supernatural or magical powers. A witch (from Old English wicca masculine, wicce feminine) is a practitioner of witchcraft. Historically, it was widely believed in early modern Christian Europe that witches were in league with the Devil and used their powers to harm people and property. Particularly, since the mid-20th century, “bad” and “good” witchcraft are sometimes distinguished, the latter often involving healing. The concept of witchcraft as harmful is normally treated as a cultural ideology, a means of explaining human misfortune by blaming it either on a supernatural entity or a known person in the community.
Beliefs in witchcraft, and resulting witch-hunts, are both found in many cultures worldwide, today mostly in Sub-Saharan Africa (e.g., in the witch smellers in Bantu culture), and historically notably in Early Modern Europe of the 14th to 18th century, where witchcraft came to be seen as a vast diabolical conspiracy against Christianity, and accusations of witchcraft led to large-scale witch-hunts, especially in Germanic Europe.
The “witch-cult hypothesis”, a controversial theory that European witchcraft was a suppressed pagan religion, was popular in the 19th and 20th centuries. Since the mid-20th century, Witchcraft has become the self-designation of a branch of neopaganism, especially in the Wicca tradition following Gerald Gardner, who claimed a religious tradition of Witchcraft with pre-Christian roots.
So…. yeah. Witchcraft.
SB
what a Golasso!!!