Scans today reveal Tuncay’s injury was not as bad as first feared and he would’ve been ready to face managerless Burnley at the weekend had the game gone ahead. It seems that The Clarets have gotten off lightly.
Scour Wikipedia and you’ll see Tuncay certainly has impressive credentials. His career goal ratio of a goal in every three games is the mark of a true predator; and note, this doesn’t include his credible 22 goals from 72 for his country, which he now captains. These stats are even more impressive when you consider the Turkish superstar can operate anywhere across attack or midfield, and has often been deployed in a wide midfield role by both club and country. That said Tuncay is deadliest when breathing down the necks of weary defenders, where such skill and desire can have more of a devastating impact. Fulham found this out at their own expense on Tuesday.

Tuncay is a superstar in Turkey
He is also known in Turkey for becoming the first Turk to score a hat-trick in the Champions League, the 2nd player ever to do so at the time, scoring a treble for Fenerbahçe against Manchester United.
Leaving Turkey for England, he became an instant hit on Teesside, a shining light through the smog that had descended on Middlesbrough’s PL tenure. Such was his impact both Chelsea and Liverpool were rumoured to be tracking the impetuous attacker.
The first and only match of 2010
As the snow fell from the firmament, Stoke went for the Fulham jugular from the first kick, giving their opponents no time to settle in what were uncompromising conditions. Few teams work as hard as Stoke and they have seldom closed down as hard as they did in that faultless first half. The more the players closed down and harassed the louder the crowd cheered.
There was an ambiance similar to that of a world championship boxing match when the underdog suddenly has his opponent on the back-foot. You sensed something special was about to happen and Stoke did not disappoint.
The excitement was palpable and one that evoked memories of Wayne Rooney’s full debut for England in the Stadium of Light, against none other than Turkey. Tuncay was at the fulcrum of everything that was positive, he embodies everything the Stoke supporters could ever wish for. Stoke fans inhaled a collective breath of optimism.

Tuncay steals in at the back post v Fulham
After a lively start he effortlessly lost his marker and nodded in an Etherington corner. Tuncay, who seemed to be everywhere, then popped up down the right and released Lawrence who was needlessly upended by a bewildered Konchesky: who must’ve thought all his nightmares had come at once. Etherington, now a realistic candidate for South Africa, delivered another delightful ball into the box inviting Faye to slide the ball in at the back post.
Tuncay was in infectious mood and both his teammates and the crowd were responding. A few minutes later and he was at it again, this time down the left, laying off for Etherington who chipped superbly into the box where Delap had made a well timed run. Delap showed awareness he’s not normally renowned for and headed back across goal, where big Mama Sidibe put his poor goal-scoring form behind him to finish things off with aplomb. Who said Stoke don’t play good football.

in-form Matty Etherington, now an England candidate
3-0 up and Stoke looked en-route to giving punch-drunk Fulham a damn good hiding. As it turned out, Stoke stalled in the 2nd period as Tuncay went off injured and the sting seemed to evaporate. The game ended with the home side narrowly holding on for a 3-2 victory. Clint Dempsey’s sweetly struck shot finally giving ff enthusiasts something to cheer about.
A new hope…
When studying Tuncay’s career his impact is perhaps unsurprising. For Stoke fans, however, it has been an agonising wait. Unlike Kitson, Stoke’s previous pre-billed saviour, Pulis refused to throw his star summer signing straight into the fray, opting to bed him in more gently so not to compromise a settled side, and to allow Tuncay time to settle into life at the Britannia. It is proving to be a judicious masterstroke from a shrewd manager who is growing in confidence.
When you hear the church harp on about the real meaning of Christmas being lost it is easy to see what they are getting at. Similarly, fantasy football can sometimes distract us from the beautiful game.
Lovely stuff Tim.
Having been sent home from school, we nipped the local for a couple on tuesday night and it looked a great game.
I always liked the look of Tuncay and was hopeful we might sign him last year… I also agree about Pulis, regardless of who he headbutts!
a great start – let’s make 2010 the best yet for efp
Cheers Jon. Really sorry I’ve been so bad at writing but really enjoyed this one after being inspired by Tuncay on Tuesday. I’m not exaggerating, he was immense!
Felt sorry for Pulis when Mancini mistook Peter Reid for Stoke manager! Massively underated I feel. Gonna get pro-active in 2010 and hopefully persuade a few more contributors!
Apologies think it might’ve been Higgy who set up Sidibe.
All good stuff….I manage to follow stoke on p2p sopcasts nearly always but alias this time was unable to get my dell laptop to stream the game and had to follow the amazing game on this sites live scores http://www.englishfootballpost.com/news/latast-soccer-news/live-scores/
Well hope see a lot more of this quality. We’ll all have to keep this up.