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Thursday, December 5, 2013

Mourinho: Eden Hazard delivered his best performance of the season

Jose Mourinho believes Eden Hazard delivered his best performance of the season in Chelsea's 4-3 win over Sunderland.

The Belgium international provided the assist for Frank Lampard's equalizer, while two fine strikes enabled Chelsea to remain second in the Premier League, four points behind league leader Arsenal.
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Monday, February 4, 2013

Football (Soccer) History:Top 10 Most Expensive Transfers

Football, or soccer to some, is probably the most popular sport in the world at and, as such, is able to generate a great amount of money. A large percentage of that money is invested in football players by the clubs. For most countries, the periods in which players can be bought and sold are two: from July 1- September 1, and during the month of January.
During these two so-called “transfer windows,” a team which wishes to strengthen its squad, is able to go shopping for players, and can start negotiating with both the athlete and the athlete’s club; if the conditions are agreed upon, the player changes his club affiliation. Here, we will introduce you to the ten footballers who cost interested clubs the biggest chunks of cash.

10. Radamel Falcao: Porto To Atletico Madrid (41.500.000 £ / 47.000.000 €  / $56,250,000)

Radamel-Falcao
Falcao is a Columbian player who grabbed European football by the horns in the last three years. Bought by Porto for 4 million euros, he was sold for 47 million to Atletico Madrid in only two years time, thanks to some very impressive displays domestically and in the European scene. He beat Jurgen Klinsmann’s  record of 15 goals in a single Europa League tournament, scoring 17 goals in the 14 games of the 2010/2011 season. His performance assured that many clubs would be interested in obtaining his services, but Porto were reluctant to sell one of their best players cheaply, and only Atletico was willing to pay the large asking price. Falcao continues to impress in Spain, scoring 36 goals in his first season with the Atleti, becoming top scorer of the Europa League for a second time in a row, and becoming the first player in history to win two consecutive Europa League/Uefa Cup titles with two different teams.

9. Gaizka Mendieta: Valencia To Lazio  (42.000.000 £ /48.000.000 € / $ 60,000,000)

gaizka-mendieta
Mendieta’s football career is one the most disappointing ones in recent football history, given his potential, and the expectations that almost everybody had regarding what he could have become. The Spaniard impressed fans with his magnificent passing and dribbling skills for years at Valencia, during one of the strongest periods in their history, before leaving the Spanish La Liga for the Italian Serie A outfit Lazio. Unfortunately, he wasn’t able to reprise his previous form, and was never able to reach the same form of excellence as before. Only a year after his pricey transfer, Mendieta was loaned out to Barcelona and Middlesbrough, before being sold to the mediocre English club in 2004. He kept playing there for several years and then retired, leaving fans to wonder what went wrong.

8. Gianluigi Buffon: Parma To Juventus (47.500.000 £ /54.200.000 € / $67,750,000)

gianluigi-buffon
The Italian is probably the most consistent goalkeeper in the last 20 years, and has been one of Juventus’s most loyal servants, even sticking with them when they were shamefully indicted for match fixing in 2006. Bought from Parma with part of the money received from Zinedine Zidan’s transfer, Buffon’s short-stopping abilities helped Juventus establish themselves as the dominant force in Italian football in the late 90′s and early 2000′s. Having won numerous Seria A titles, a Champions League, and a World Cup, the most expensive goalie in the world clearly represents a good return of every dollar invested in him. He is still playing actively to this day and, although his reflexes aren’t what they once were, he is still a vital part of his team.

7. Hernan Crespo: Parma To Lazio  (48.500.000 £ / 55.000.000 € / $68,750,000)

Hernan-Crespo
Hernan Crespo is one of the best-known names in Italian football, having played, scored, and impressed for a total of five teams in the Apennines. His star first shined with Parma, where his netted 62 goals in 116 appearances. His performance caught the eye of Lazio, who bought him in 2000 for a then record-breaking fee of  55 million euros. The Argentinian made an immediate impact, becoming Serie A’s top scorer in his first season. Despite numerous injuries, he still maintained a good goal-per-game ratio, and has since become a football nomad, being cherished and respected by fans everywhere he has played. Currently out of contract, this poacher’s adventure appears to be nearing its end.

6. Fernando Torres: Liverpool To Chelsea (51.500.000 £ / 58.500.000 €  / $73,125,000)

Fernando-Torres
When thinking about transfer flops, there is no way that the name Fernando Torres wouldn’t come in mind. When healthy, he was one of the deadliest strikers around, netting 65 goals in just 102 games for Liverpool, earning him an almost God-like stature with Merseyside fans. His ambition has bigger than that of his club though, and he opted to move to Chelsea for the record-breaking fee of 51.5 million pounds. He was finally challenging for titles, having won the FA Cup and Champions League in the 2011/2012 season. However, having scored just 9 goals in 49 appearances, the Spaniard is far away from the performances which ensured the amount of money that was paid for him. Regardless, Chelsea fans are still hopeful that he will return to the form that made him a Liverpool icon.

5. Luis Figo: Barcelona To Real Madrid (51.500.000 £ / 58.500.000 € / $75,000,000)

Luis-Figo-pigs-head
Luis Figo is one of the most legendary Portuguese players ever, and holds the record for most appearances with the Portugal National Football Team. Bought by Barcelona in 1995 for just about 3 million euros, his career blossomed under coach Johan Cruyff, and his five-year stay with the Catalan club cemented him as one of the best wingers in the game.
In one of the most controversial transfers in football history, due to the severe rivalry between Barcelona and Real Madrind, Figo moved to the Spanish capital for  a reported fee of 58.5 million euros, a record at the time, which earned him the hatred of Barcelona fans, one of whom ended up throwing a pig’s head at him during one of the El Classicos. The Portuguese continued astounding with his performances before eventually retiring with Inter Milan in 2009.

4. Ricardo Izecson dos Santos Leite: Milan To Real Madrid  (57.000.000 £ / 65.000.000 € / $81,250,000)

kaka
The man known as “Kaka” is another footballer who has been disappointing the club that paid great money to acquire his services. Having won one Seria A title, a Champions League, two European Super cups, one Italian Super Cup, a World Club Cup Championship, and even a Ballon d’Or for best player in the 2006/2007 season, the Brasilian was considered a living legend, as far as Milan fans were concerned. Economic troubles forced the club to seek a buyer for one of their most priced assets. Newly-rich Manchester City offered 100 million pounds in the winter of 2009, but the transfer didn’t go through because of fan protests, and the reluctance of Kaka to be sold.
In the summer, another club with immense stature, Real Madrid, came knocking with a much lower offer. However, neither club nor player hesitated before accepting. Due to injuries and inconsistency in form, Kaka was unable to earn a regular starting place, and is very likely to leave the Spanish club in the near future, with Milan being the main contenders for his signature.

3. Zlatan Ibrahimovic: Inter To Barcelona (61.000.000 £ / 69.500.000 € / $86,875,000)

zlatan-ibrahimovic
Zlatan Ibrahimovic is the highest-paid footballer of all-time. The total money spent on the Swede, over the course of his career, now totals 171.1 million euros. The biggest move involving the towering striker was in 2009, when Barcelona paid 45 million euros to have the Swede on their team . He started his adventure in Spain with a bang, with seven goals in seven league matches. Yet, despite a very respectable return of 16 goals in 29 matches, Ibrahimovic was sold to Milan the following season, due to problems with head coach Pep Guardiola. Despite his arrogant nature, or perhaps because of it, the captain of the Swedish National Team has continued to impress for every team on which he has played.

2. Zinedine Zidane: Juventus To Real Madrid (64.500.000 £ / 73.500.000 € / $91,875,000)

Zinedine-Zidane
Rightfully so, many specialists regard the French playmaker as one of the all-time greatest footballers. His incredible vision on the pitch bemused fans for almost 20 years, prior to his retirement in 2006. Having won almost everything that can be won in his illustrious carrier, Zidane caught the eye of Spanish powerhouse Real Madrid in 2001, when they paid a then-world record 73.5 million euros to have him, helping the team win a Champions League, and the La Liga title, during his five-year spell. His most memorable match, though, is probably his last one: the 2006 World Cup Final, in which he famously headbutted Marco Materazzi.

1. Cristiano Ronaldo: Manchester United To Real Madrid (82.500.000 £ / 94.000.000 € /$117,500,000)

Cristiano-Ronaldo
Real Madrid aren’t shy about spending money to obtain the services of a player they want. The “will he or won’t he” Cristiano Ronaldo saga lasted more than two years and, at the end of it, the Spaniards paid a whooping 94 million euros to Manchester United in the summer of 2009. It’s safe to say that he has been worth every penny thus far. The Portuguese player has been an absolute beast, scoring an amazing 112 goals in 103 matches, and the sales of t-shirts containing his name have probably surpassed the fee that was paid for him. His constant goal-scoring rivalry with Lionel Messi has kept football fans on their seats and, after winning the league last season, Ronaldo would be aiming to triumph in the Champions League, and cement his place as one the best footballers that the world has ever seen.



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Friday, February 1, 2013

Formular 1: New Ferrari 2013

Ferrari F138: New car for 2013
Ferrari have unveiled their new Formula 1 car admitting that they have to change their recent trend and perform from the start of the season.
Fernando Alonso's 2012 title campaign was hindered by a car that started the season 1.5 seconds off the pace. He lost out on the title by three points.
Team boss Stefano Domenicali said: "The key objective we have is of immediately delivering a competitive car."
Alonso said the big teams will dominate and Ferrari "have to be one of them".
The Spaniard, 31, said he did not expect a repeat of last season, when seven drivers from seven different teams won the first seven races.
"It will be very difficult to repeat what we saw last year with seven winners in the first seven races," he said.
"I think it was a one-off as a result of the regulation changes [banning exhaust-blown diffusers]. Now, with things a bit more stabilised, we saw at the end of the season the top teams emerge and so I think it will be highly unlikely we will have seven races and seven winners.
"There will be three teams who win all the races and we have to be one of those teams."
Alonso lost out last year in an intense battle with Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel, the second time in three years he and Ferrari had narrowly been beaten by the German.
Ferrari have restructured the team and changed their approach to aerodynamic design work in the wake of problems last year.
The wind tunnel at the Maranello factory gave confusing results and this has been taken off line for improvement. The new F138 car has been designed exclusively using the former Toyota F1 tunnel in Cologne.
Domenicali said: "Unfortunately in recent years we have at the beginning of the winter unfortunately not been able to be right on top of what we are doing.
"We have tried to look at our organisation to be much more effective in the preparations over the coming week."
"We have come from a season that has been intense to say the least. To come second at the last race is always difficult.
"But we have already forgotten those things which left us with regret last year and we have started improving on the positive aspects of 2012, such as reliability and strategy during the races.
"There are plenty of things that allow us to look forward to the new season."
He said the first pre-season test in Jerez, Spain, next week would "not be to get performance immediately but to check out the things we have developed in our offices".
Alonso is skipping that test and leaving the work to team-mate Felipe Massa and development driver Pedro de la Rosa before starting his pre-season driving work at the second four-day pre-season test in Barcelona, which starts on 19 February.
"I will follow the tests with great interest and all the information that comes back from Jerez of course I will be looking at," Alonso said. "In these next few weeks I will certainly be concentrating on preparing for the championship.
"I think it is right to step back and prepare a bit so I am 100% from [the first race in] Australia right through to [the last in] Brazil.
"We are lucky in this team to have a really good entente - we trust each other implicitly. Pedro and Felipe [and me], we are one person and the same." StumbleUpon

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Bayer munich: Guardiola new move as coach


Bayern Munich's announcement on Wednesday that Pep Guardiola is set to become their new manager took many by surprise, not just in England but the rest of Europe too.
Chelsea and Manchester City were just two of the clubs seen as possible destinations for the most wanted manager on the planet  when he ends his season-long sabbatical this coming summer, speculation which heightened this week when Guardiola said he wanted the "challenge" of managing in the Premier League.
Instead the 41-year-old is Bundesliga-bound, and hoping to follow his trophy-laden spell as Barcelona coach by building a similarly spectacular era at German giants Bayern.
Guardiola's old Barcelona team-mate and current coaching confidant, Ajax manager Frank de Boer, was shocked when he heard the news, telling BBC Sport: "I thought he wanted to come to the Premier League."
So, why exactly is Guardiola going to Germany and, other than the fact that he is joining a team that are four-time European champions, how did the Allianz Arena appeal?
"I think it will be down to the structure of the club," De Boer told BBC Sport.
"I speak to former Bayern coach Louis van Gaal and he always says it is a very professional club, a well-run club, with the same kind of philosophy as Barcelona. So they will understand what Pep will be trying to do.
"As far as the Bundesliga goes, it is a very interesting league and definitely on the up. Maybe it is passing La Liga, and it passed Serie A a long time ago.
"I think maybe with the crowds they get, it is up with the Premier League. The atmosphere in the stadiums is best in England, but in Germany it is similar."
If Bayern does prove to be like Barca, then Guardiola will be right at home.
The Catalan spent the first 18 years of his playing career at the Nou Camp, joining at the age of 13, learning his trade under former Dutch international and Barca legend Johan Cruyff and taking more inspiration from Van Gaal, whose pressing and passing Ajax team of the mid-90s provided Pep with much of his coaching model.
But Guardiola picked up more from those Dutch masters than a propensity for possession football and enough pretty passing to take your breath away.
De Boer, who began discussing coaching with Guardiola when they were team-mates at Barca from 1998 to 2001, refers to his friend's approach as 'the hand of Guardiola', by which he means a focus on discipline as well as individual skill.
Another key element of Guardiola's make-up is his vision for his club, perpetuated by his belief in Barcelona's La Masia academy, which provided seven of the starting XI in the team which beat Manchester United in the 2009 Champions League.

Can he replicate that at Bayern? The Bavarians already have had some success at bringing stars like Thomas Mueller and Philipp Lam through the ranks but De Boer, who has spoken to Guardiola regularly since he began his own coaching career in 2007, thinks there is room for improvement.
"There is a youth programme there, which is OK, but I think Bayern can still build on it," De Boer, who takes a particularly hands-on approach to working with young players at Ajax, explained.
"If you look at the kind of players who have come from their youth teams and who are playing in their first team then I think they can do more with their programme.
"But we don't know yet what their plans are for the academy or what plans they have got for Pep. He might be overseeing that as well or he might be only concerned with the first team. We will have to wait and see."
One thing De Boer is sure will be the same in Germany that it was in Spain is the way Guardiola's team will play - full of flair going forward, and full of industry tracking back.
"He might adapt it but it will not change much," De Boer said. "I know him well and he is a smart guy so he will always look at what kind of players he has, and from there he will get the best concept to play."
Comparisons with Barca will undoubtedly be drawn, but mainly in terms of trophies won rather than playing style or youth development. Guardiola collected 14 of them in his four seasons at Barca, including three La Liga titles and a double Champions League success.
That lorry-load of silverware still left some claiming that Barca's brilliance is down to Lionel Messi. Certainly, they have not missed Guardiola too much since he left last May - under his successor Tito Vilanova they have built an 11-point lead at the top of La Liga.
But De Boer says those who doubt Guardiola's influence are wrong,
"Of course he had good players at Barcelona but he showed us the 'hand of Guardiola," said De Boer. "I am 100% convinced of it.
"I think he will do the same at Bayern. You can never know for sure if he will succeed and I don't know if he will win as much as he did with Barcelona, but you can already see that there will be a Guardiola team playing to win the Champions League next season." StumbleUpon

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Sahin back to Dortmund: Germany

Nuri Sahin (Getty)
German-born Sahin, who left Dortmund for Real in 2011 after helping them win the Bundesliga title, failed to earn a starting spot in Spain before joining Liverpool in August 2012 on loan. Sahin, whose contract at Real runs to 2017, holds the records for the youngest player to appear in a Bundesliga game and the youngest to score a goal in Germany's top division. It is unclear whether Dortmund have an option to buy him after 2014 although sports director Michael Zorc said the club was in a strong position. "We have taken precautions and have the steering wheel in our own hands," Zorc said.
The hugely gifted Turkey midfielder played for more than a decade at Dortmund, going through the youth ranks, before leaving in 2011. He had played 135 Bundesliga games for the club, scoring 13 goals.
"We had said during the title celebrations in 2011 that Nuri Sahin will always remain a special player for us and that the door would always be open if he had a deep wish to play for the BVB again," said beaming Dortmund CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke.
"He expressed this wish to us a few days ago and we responded."
There was more good news for Dortmund on Friday with Germany defender Marcel Schmelzer signing a three-year contract extension that will keep him at the Ruhr valley club until 2017. Team-mates Sven Bender and Neven Subotic extended their deals earlier this week. Dortmund stand third in the Bundesliga, 12 points behind leaders Bayern Munich, and are through to the Champions League last 16 where they face Shakhtar Donetsk with Sahin eligible to play. They also take on Bayern in the German Cup next month. StumbleUpon

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Los Angeles Lakers: Kobe Bryant has Suspended thier Divorce

NBA star Kobe Bryant and wife Vanessa have called off their divorce proceedings, they announced on social media.
Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant and his wife, Vanessa, say they are calling off their divorce.
And they announced it on social media.
On Friday, Vanessa Bryant's Instagram page had a message reading: "We are pleased to announce that we have reconciled. Our divorce action will be dismissed. We are looking forward to our future together."
Kobe Bryant posted a message on his Facebook page the same day.
"I am happy to say that Vanessa and I are moving on with our lives together as a family," he posted. "When the show ends and the music stops, the journey is made beautiful by having that someone to share it with. Thank you all for your support and prayers."
Vanessa Bryant filed for divorce in December, citing irreconcilable differences.
The divorce filing came nearly 10 years after she famously stuck by him after he admitted to having sex with a woman at a Colorado hotel.
Their marriage was thrust into the spotlight when the desk clerk at a Vail-area resort hotel told police that Kobe Bryant had sexually assaulted her in 2003.
The Eagle County District Attorney filed charges against Bryant shortly after the accusation. At the time, Vanessa Bryant sat by her husband's side as he publicly apologized to her while admitting that he'd had consensual sex with the 19-year-old.
Turning to his wife, Bryant said, "You're a piece of my heart. You're the air I breathe. And you're the strongest person I know. And I'm so sorry for having to put you through this, for having to put our family through this."
Criminal charges against Bryant were later dismissed. He settled a federal lawsuit with his accuser in 2005.
The couple have two daughters together.
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Leo Messi Report Card


FIFA Ballon d'Or 2012 winner







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