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Subject: [U21] World Cup , by Krzysztof/
It's coming home!! It's coming home!!
Let's go Türkiye!
Or ARGENTINA! Didn't realize they won their game!
(edited)
Let's go Türkiye!
Or ARGENTINA! Didn't realize they won their game!
(edited)
România U21 - Türkiye U21 2:1
Türkiye U21 - România U21 1:0
These results show how good a coach Tayfun is. In the first match, Romania had a dominant advantage, but the game ended 2-1.
Now it's the complete opposite; a dominant Turkish advantage, and the score remains 1-0.
There's a great saying: "He who laughs last, laughs best."
I teased Petru a bit in the forum, but he's a coach with experience. Today, Türkiye was in great form, and there wasn't much they could do.
Brazil and Italy are formidable forces. Poland is eliminated, but I don't think anyone is the favorite in the tournament; the chances are 25%.
(edited)
Türkiye U21 - România U21 1:0
These results show how good a coach Tayfun is. In the first match, Romania had a dominant advantage, but the game ended 2-1.
Now it's the complete opposite; a dominant Turkish advantage, and the score remains 1-0.
There's a great saying: "He who laughs last, laughs best."
I teased Petru a bit in the forum, but he's a coach with experience. Today, Türkiye was in great form, and there wasn't much they could do.
Brazil and Italy are formidable forces. Poland is eliminated, but I don't think anyone is the favorite in the tournament; the chances are 25%.
(edited)
Congratulations also to Türkiye U21 and Argentina U21, bravo, bravo, bravo...
I want Türkiye U-21 to win U-21 World Cup .But my favorite is Italy U-21.
Good luck to everyone!
Good luck to everyone!
If you're talking about the Poland-Brazil match, then yes, that's right. It was very unfortunate.
23 shots and so many posts / crossbars / missed penalty etc. Terribly unlucky. I wonder if anyone had as many shots during this World Cup.
There's really no point dwelling on it, because what matters is the final result. Soon, nkit won't remember what the match looked like, but he'll only remember the result and a medal for Brazil and coach Gordo. Maybe Norbert will have time for revenge in the Druids Cup or at the next World Cup.
that's why football is a excting game... is not who controls the pace or create more chances that won the match... is who scores more....
I see that gordo likes a lot some things of ''Woodyrianism'', striker in MID order, 6 players on DEF order.... very nice....
23 shots against 8? Fair... Poland is the better team, but is not possible to be protagonist all the time, smart vision by gordo on focusing in extract the best of his squad.
I see that gordo likes a lot some things of ''Woodyrianism'', striker in MID order, 6 players on DEF order.... very nice....
23 shots against 8? Fair... Poland is the better team, but is not possible to be protagonist all the time, smart vision by gordo on focusing in extract the best of his squad.
Next round:
Brasil U21 - Italia U21
Türkiye U21 - Argentina U21
Sokker is not a perfect game. And that’s exactly why it needs us.
Let’s be honest with ourselves. Sokker has its flaws, and everyone who has been here long enough knows them well. The biggest one is the match engine. You can prepare your team perfectly, win the tactical battle, dominate the statistics with 20+ shots on goal, and still lose to an opponent who had one chance. That hurts. It frustrates even the most experienced managers, and sometimes it makes you ask: why am I even doing this?
But here’s the truth we can’t change the engine. It’s been like this for years and it will probably stay that way. What we can change is how we approach the game.
Sokker is a niche game with a relatively small global community. In many countries, national teams struggle because there are only a few active users managing clubs. Most of us are veterans players who grew up with this game and new users join very rarely. That makes every active manager extremely valuable, especially those willing to take responsibility for national teams.
Despite all its weaknesses, Sokker still offers something special.
Every season, someone becomes World Champion. Someone wins silver or bronze. And every time, a different group of managers celebrates together. Beyond national teams, we build our own clubs from the ground up. We shape our squads, develop youth players in junior schools, plan long-term strategies, and compete against other real users in our domestic leagues and now also in international club competitions.
We have national forums and a global forum. We can talk, argue, help each other, share knowledge, and support one another. That sense of community is something many modern games simply don’t have anymore.
Yes, the game develops slowly. Very slowly. But it does develop. New features are coming, step by step. Something is being done for us not fast, not perfectly but consistently. And that matters.
Sokker is not about perfect realism. It’s about passion, patience, and enjoying the journey with others who love football management as much as you do. If you accept the flaws and focus on the fun, the rivalry, and the community, Sokker still has a lot to offer.
If you’re still here it means something pulled you back.
And maybe that something is worth staying for.
Let’s be honest with ourselves. Sokker has its flaws, and everyone who has been here long enough knows them well. The biggest one is the match engine. You can prepare your team perfectly, win the tactical battle, dominate the statistics with 20+ shots on goal, and still lose to an opponent who had one chance. That hurts. It frustrates even the most experienced managers, and sometimes it makes you ask: why am I even doing this?
But here’s the truth we can’t change the engine. It’s been like this for years and it will probably stay that way. What we can change is how we approach the game.
Sokker is a niche game with a relatively small global community. In many countries, national teams struggle because there are only a few active users managing clubs. Most of us are veterans players who grew up with this game and new users join very rarely. That makes every active manager extremely valuable, especially those willing to take responsibility for national teams.
Despite all its weaknesses, Sokker still offers something special.
Every season, someone becomes World Champion. Someone wins silver or bronze. And every time, a different group of managers celebrates together. Beyond national teams, we build our own clubs from the ground up. We shape our squads, develop youth players in junior schools, plan long-term strategies, and compete against other real users in our domestic leagues and now also in international club competitions.
We have national forums and a global forum. We can talk, argue, help each other, share knowledge, and support one another. That sense of community is something many modern games simply don’t have anymore.
Yes, the game develops slowly. Very slowly. But it does develop. New features are coming, step by step. Something is being done for us not fast, not perfectly but consistently. And that matters.
Sokker is not about perfect realism. It’s about passion, patience, and enjoying the journey with others who love football management as much as you do. If you accept the flaws and focus on the fun, the rivalry, and the community, Sokker still has a lot to offer.
If you’re still here it means something pulled you back.
And maybe that something is worth staying for.