Predicciones de la liga inglesa de fútbol

El gran comienzo está sobre nosotros nuevamente y los expertos en el mundo de la televisión y la prensa han estado ocupados diciéndonos cómo termina todo, ¡incluso antes de que haya comenzado! Como de costumbre, Fixed Odds in Focus se unió a través de su servicio de e-zine Tipped at the Post.

En la Premiership, aunque el Liverpool ha gastado mucho, todavía no está del todo allí y, en consecuencia, es probable que no alcance a Man Utd y Chelsea nuevamente. Los Blues estarán ansiosos por recuperar su corona, pero el United todavía parece tener la ventaja. El Arsenal está quizás a una temporada de volver a ser un verdadero retador; sin embargo, en Van Persie tienen un jugador capaz de hacer correr por su dinero a jugadores como Rooney, Ronaldo, Gerrard y Drogba, en lo que respecta al jugador de la temporada. Los Spurs se están acercando a los 4 grandes, pero todavía no están lo suficientemente cerca y es más probable que luchen por los lugares de la UEFA con Portsmouth, Villa, West Ham y Newcastle.

Los gustos de Reading, Everton, Sunderland y quizás sorprendentemente Derby pueden terminar en la mitad de la tabla. La mayoría de la gente tendrá a los Rams como certezas para hacer un regreso instantáneo al Campeonato, pero en Billy Davies tienen a un talentoso manager capaz de mantener la cabeza fuera del agua. En el fondo, Blackburn y Man City pueden mantenerse fuera de problemas, solo; con el resto en una batalla real. Wigan ha fichado a muchos jugadores, pero muchos de ellos tienen mucho que demostrar y Middlesbrough, con algunos fichajes poco inspiradores, podría unirse a ellos entre los dos últimos. De los 3 equipos restantes, Bolton podría tener dificultades para hacer frente a Allardyce y escaparse de la muerte, dejando a Birmingham y Fulham respirando aliviados.

Charlton, con un buen entrenador y mucho dinero en efectivo, es más que capaz de saltar directamente desde el Campeonato y llevarse a los Wolves con ellos. La temporada pasada habrá sido una buena experiencia para el conjunto black country. Sheff U tiene una línea delantera impresionante, pero la defensa es una preocupación y los play-offs parecen una opción más probable junto con Watford, Cardiff y uno de Norwich, Coventry y Southampton. West Brom bien puede sufrir una resaca de Wembley y simplemente perderse. La mitad de la mesa es probablemente el mejor Sheffield Wednesday, Ipswich y Palace; con Leicester, Hull y QPR mejorando en el último período, pero no significativamente. A Colchester le fue notablemente bien en su primer año, pero es probable que le resulte mucho más difícil la segunda vez y es probable que Preston sufra la pérdida de David Nugent. Bristol City y Blackpool son más que capaces de consolidarse, pero los demás parecen vulnerables. Barnsley casi puede sobrevivir, al igual que Plymouth; dejando a Stoke Burnley y Scunthorpe luchando contra la caída.

En League One, Forest es el consejo de todos para la promoción, pero parece destinado a perderse otra vez. Han traído a Neil Lennon, pero es una división muy dura y hay que preguntarse por sus piernas. Apuntados a los dos del Post para la promoción automática están Doncaster y Millwall. El club de Yorkshire es muy ambicioso y James Hayter es un gran fichaje a ese nivel. El lado joven de los Lions terminó bien y Willie Donachie los tendrá en el clavo. Se toman Huddersfield, Oldham y Luton para llenar los lugares de play-off con Forest; justo por delante de Carlisle, Swansea, Yeovil y Southend. Bristol Rovers puede tener una temporada más brillante de lo que muchos sugieren, al igual que Hartlepool y Walsall, los 3 juntos. Brighton, Tranmere, Crewe y Port Vale parecen estar listos para temporadas bastante aburridas; y Gillingham y Leyton Orient parecen estar seguros de ser material de la mitad inferior. Leeds necesita algo de suerte con su apelación contra la penalización de 15 puntos, de lo contrario, podrían pasar directamente. Swindon puede mantenerse a su costa, pero Bournemouth, Northampton y Cheltenham buscan tenerlo todo para evitar la caída.

En League Two, Paul Ince puede superar a Fergie, ¡eso es Darren! MKD puede superar a Peterborough en la cima, con Shrewsbury uniéndose a ellos. El condado de Notts, Darlington y Rotherham se llevan a los play-offs junto con los paquetes sorpresa de Bury. Chesterfield, Bradford y Rochdale deberían estar cerca; Hereford, Wycombe y Mansfield no se quedan atrás. Lincoln probablemente ha perdido sus oportunidades en los últimos 5 años y Terry Butcher no encontrará la vida fácil en Brentford. Los dos recién llegados pueden defenderse, pero el resto podría tener problemas con Chester y Accrington Stanley dando paso al regreso de Torquay y Oxford, quienes son elegidos para hacer sus regresos a la Liga.

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Gummibär – Go For The Goal – Canción de la Copa Mundial de Fútbol Inglés Funny Gummy Bear USA Estados Unidos



Go For The Goal USA versión video musical de Gummibär alias Osito Gominola, Ursinho Gummy, Gumimaci, Funny Bear, The Gummy Bear, etc. Descarga desde iTunes – Camisetas y merchandising – Visita Gummibär en línea en www.gummibar.net. Go For The Goal – La canción de fútbol de la Copa Mundial – cantada en inglés para los EE. UU. por el divertido osito de goma animado favorito de todos. Búscalo en muchos otros idiomas también! Suscríbete al canal de YouTube de Gummibär – Visita Gummibär en línea en – Juega el juego Gummibär en – Visita Gummibär en Facebook – Visita Gummibär en MySpace – Envía una tarjeta electrónica de Gummibär a tus amigos – Sigue a Gummibär en Twitter – Compra Gummibär en Zazzle – Compra Gummibär en Cafepress – Gummibär Game App: Más información sobre Gummibär Gummibär, un divertido y adorable personaje de dibujos animados, es un osito de goma verde animado con multitud de talentos. Ya sea que esté cantando, bailando break dance o tocando su tuba, tanto los niños como los adultos no se cansan de sus divertidas travesuras gomosas. Sus habilidades multilingües lo han llevado a un gran número de seguidores internacionales y le permiten cantar en 20 idiomas diferentes, incluidos inglés, húngaro, francés, alemán, español, sueco, portugués, checo, eslovaco, ruso y hebreo, con más por seguir. Con cerca de mil millones de reproducciones y contando, el video de «I Am A Gummy Bear» (La canción de Gummy Bear) de Gummibär ha capturado los corazones y las mentes de los usuarios de Internet de todo el mundo. Los espectadores de videos en YouTube, MySpace y otros sitios web de redes sociales han hecho de este corto animado uno de los videos más vistos, discutidos y favoritos en Internet. Inicialmente un éxito regional en Hungría, no pasó mucho tiempo antes de que el pequeño y pegadizo clip animado de 30 segundos llegara a los sitios de redes sociales. En cuestión de meses, decenas, luego cientos y ahora miles de publicaciones del video original han aparecido en todo MySpace, YouTube, Facebook y en casi todas las comunidades en línea que se te ocurran. Además, miles de personas han creado y publicado videos generados por usuarios de ellos mismos cantando y bailando The Gummy Bear Song. Acerca de la Copa del Mundo: La Copa del Mundo de la FIFA, también llamada Copa del Mundo de Fútbol o Copa del Mundo de Fútbol, ​​pero generalmente denominada simplemente Copa del Mundo, es una competición de fútbol de asociación internacional disputada por las selecciones nacionales masculinas de los miembros de la Fédération Internationale. de Football Association (FIFA), el organismo rector mundial del deporte. El campeonato se ha otorgado cada cuatro años desde el primer torneo en 1930, excepto en 1942 y 1946 cuando no se disputó debido a la Segunda Guerra Mundial. El formato actual del torneo involucra a 32 equipos compitiendo por el título en sedes dentro de la(s) nación(es) anfitriona(s) durante un período de aproximadamente un mes; esta fase a menudo se denomina Finales de la Copa del Mundo. Se utiliza una fase de clasificación, que actualmente tiene lugar durante los tres años anteriores, para determinar qué equipos se clasifican para el torneo junto con la(s) nación(es) anfitriona(s). Durante los 18 torneos que se han disputado, siete naciones han conquistado el título. Brasil ha ganado la Copa del Mundo un récord de cinco veces, y es el único equipo que ha jugado en todos los torneos. Italia, los actuales campeones, han ganado cuatro títulos, y Alemania les sigue con tres títulos. Los otros ex campeones son Uruguay, ganadores del torneo inaugural, y Argentina, con dos títulos cada uno, e Inglaterra y Francia, con un título cada una. La Copa del Mundo es el evento deportivo más visto del mundo; Se estima que 715,1 millones de personas vieron el partido final de la Copa del Mundo de 2006 celebrada en Alemania. La próxima Copa del Mundo se llevará a cabo en Sudáfrica, entre el 11 de junio y el 11 de julio de 2010, y la Copa del Mundo de 2014 se llevará a cabo en Brasil. coupe du monde, penalti, domenech, córner, golpe franco, mondial, pie, ballon rond, pero, thierry henry, ΔΕΝ ΣΤΑΜΑΤΩ (IR POR EL GOL), DEN STAMATO, Δεν Σταματώ, copa mundial, copa mondial, coupe de monde,

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10 Players Who Failed To Reach Their Full Potential

Playing football in today’s game is incredibly demanding. Yes, they may get paid millions and millions playing their favourite sport week in, week out, which most of us would happily do for free, yet many would argue it doesn’t come without difficulty. The constant media surrounding players can take its toll, where even the smallest step out of line can be blown way up in a player’s face. With the constant temptation that must surround them, be it wanting to live a ‘normal’ life (wanting to have a drink and go out clubbing) or the ‘perks’ of being rich and famous (the women, lads… ?) a God given talent is not enough to secure your place in history as a top player. Of course, it helps, but it is also necessary to work incredibly hard at training, stay out of the headlines for the wrong reasons, and have a bit of luck.

Yet sometimes, a player who seems to show so much promise fails to reach his potential. Could it be the pitfalls of living the footballer lifestyle that takes them off the rails? Were they unlucky with injuries that blighted their career? Or was it just too much, too soon; being built too high up a pedestal they were never going to reach. Of course, the saying goes that the bigger they are, the harder they fall. So why do some players fade so much, when their star seemed destined to shine so bright? The Football Writer has picked his top 10 players who have failed to truly fulfil their potential…

10. Kerlon, 24, Brazil (currently playing for Brazilian side Nacional-NS).

Brazilians are famed for their flashy technique and dribbling ability, something which certainly wasn’t lacked by Kerlon. An incredible natural talent, he became famous all across the world as millions watched on Youtube his unbelievable ‘seal dribble’; bouncing the ball on his head repeatedly while running down the pitch. This would often force opposition players to foul him and become frustrated, which although must have been difficult for himself, could only be of benefit to the team.

Perhaps inevitably due to his trademark dribble he picked up a serious knee injury which limited his appearances. A transfer to Inter Milan via Chievo had Kerlon seemingly destined for a career at the top, yet he continued to suffer from knee injuries which prevented him from making an impact. A loan move to Ajax to gain first team fitness and experience in Europe was tarnished by another knee injury, before he escaped his Italian hell with successive loans and an eventual permanent move back to Brazil. He ended four years in Serie A with only four appearances, all for Chievo. Now featuring for Brazilian side Nacional-NS, one can only wonder just how good he could have been had he been able to replicate his early natural ability onto the European stage, yet this is a tale of injuries really getting the better of a player before he’d been given the chance to start.

9. Michael Owen, 32, England (currently a free agent having been released by Manchester United).

Having successfully graduated through their youth system and making his debut for Liverpool (in which he scored) on the penultimate game of the 96-97 season, Owen’s first season in the Premier League saw him named the PFA Young Player of the Year, finishing joint top goalscorer in the league with 18 goals. Enthusiastic, pacy and a knack for hitting the back of the net, Owen announced himself as a world class ‘wonderkid’ with a brilliant solo goal against Argentina at the 1998 World Cup.

Owen continued this excellence by being Liverpool’s top scorer for every season that followed until leaving for Real Madrid, and thus began his downfall. Failing to start with a bang meant he regularly had to settle for a place on the bench, and so he ended his single season with a move to Newcastle in order to gain match fitness in time for the World Cup in 2006. While he began to get back on track, a serious knee injury at said World Cup gave him a huge setback. It seems that since that injury he has lost some of his pace that was so devastating and such a huge part of the way he plays. Several other injuries and setbacks began to blight his career and so it was a surprise when he was signed by Sir Alex at Manchester United. Yet just five league goals in his three seasons at the club before his release show just how far he has fallen since his Liverpool days. Not only has he lost some of his brilliance he had as a youngster, he is now far too unreliable due to injuries (this was indicative from his pay-as-you-play deal he signed for the Red Devils). In a time when England could really have done with a world class striker to win their first tournament since 1966, Owen’s ill fated career is a sorry sight to behold, and shows just how much of a difference a few unlucky years can have on a whole life.

8. Denilson, 34, Brazil (retired).

When a club really breaks the bank to sign a player, you expect something in return. So when a club smashes the world transfer fee? Despite the extortionate amounts paid, Cristiano Ronaldo’s £80m transfer to Real Madrid can be classed as value for money, while I doubt there is a Newcastle fan who would regret Alan Shearer’s 1995 cost of £15m. Zidane, Ronaldo (the Brazilian one), Maradona and Cruyff are also amongst those who hold a world transfer record. And while these players all lived up to their pricetag, Denilson will surely go down in history as the most expensive flop ever signed.

After impressing at club level, Denilson enjoyed a successful start to his national career, winning both the Copa America and Confederations Cup in 1997, before playing in every game for the 1998 World Cup runners up. This prompted Real Betis to surprisingly smash the world record transfer fee, overtaking the previous record holder (his international compatriot Ronaldo) and becoming the first player to surpass the £20m mark. Unfortunately for Betis fans, that is as high as it got with regards to Denilson’s career. After two uninspired seasons which saw the club relegated, Denilson, after a brief return to his homeland on loan, became a bit part player in his remaining five years, never shining even close to how bright he was supposed to. Following a solitary season in France, Denilson continued this disappointment as he travelled the globe, unimpressively it must be said, before his retirement in 2010.

If you can look past his ‘record fee failure’ nametag he will forever live with, Denilson does boast the unbelievable strike rate of a goal every 45 minutes for Vietnamese side Xi Mang Hai Phong. It’s just as shame he only ever played one half of football for the club…

7. Gianluigi Lentini, 43, Italy (retired).

From one world record transfer to another yet upon slightly different circumstances in the shape of Gianluigi Lentini. Lentini was an up and coming winger, whose talented displays whilst playing for Torino earned him his Italy debut at the age of 21. His efforts caught the eye of the prestigious AC Milan, who were somewhat in the process of undergoing a new era and saw this enthusiastic youngster as part of their rebuilding process. A £13m transfer ensued, giving him the highest transfer fee the world had seen. Despite playing well and picking up a Serie A title in his first season he was unable to truly break out as a star player and justify his hefty price tag, yet unlike other failed stars, there became a vital moment in his life that prevented him from doing

so. At the age of 24, Lentini was involved in a car crash which left him not only battling to save his career, but his life. 2 days in a coma ensued having suffered a fractured skull and a damaged eye socket and, although he did make a full recovery off the field, he never quite did on it. Despite picking up two more Scudetto’s and a Champions League, Lentini was never able to make out on his young promise and, after four years in Milan, was sold for just £2m.Lentini’s career continued with relative personal success wherever he went, despite not being at the same level he would’ve hoped to be at. Credit must be given to the fact that he continued playing until the age of 40; it shows that he just wanted to play the sport he loves, regardless of ‘what-might-have-beens’. But you can’t help but wonder what might have been.

6. Javier Saviola, 30, Argentina (currently playing for Portuguese side Benfica).

It’s not that Saviola has been a flop, or even a bad player. In fact, he’s pretty good, in which his career has seen him play at Barcelona, Monaco, Sevilla, Real Madrid and now Benfica since leaving River Plate as a youngster. It was just that he was supposed to be so damn amazing that it is frustrating he is not currently partnering his compatriot Messi for the ‘best in the world’ tag, and that is what puts him on this list.

My earliest memory of Saviola is from the 2000-2001 edition of the Championship Manager series in which this 18 year old was easily one of the most talented players in the game, with incredible potential. This genuine ability led to a £15m transfer to Spanish giants Barcelona, where he scored 17 goals in his first La Liga season, becoming their top scorer and the league’s third. Yet perhaps Saviola was a victim of circumstance. Despite scoring nearly a goal every two games for the club, he was deemed surplus to requirements with the recent arrivals of Ronaldinho, Larsson, Eto’o and an up and coming Messi and subsequently shipped out on loan to Monaco and Sevilla.

Continued effective displays eventually saw Real Madrid snap him up, but he struggled to fit into the team and left for Portugal after two seasons, where he is enjoying a successful time with Benfica. Yet like I said at the beginning, although he has always played well whichever club he has turned out for, he was supposed to be one of the best ever. After all, Pelé named him on his FIFA 100 list at the age of 22. Perhaps the gods decided it wasn’t fair for Argentina to have two ‘out of this world’ players at the same time and, after flipping a coin, decided to wait for Messi instead.

5. Paul Gascoigne, 45, England (retired).

‘Gazza’, as he is affectionately known, is one of the greatest players to pull on a shirt for England. A technically brilliant midfielder, Gascoigne was something different who played with amazing results. He played his best football in his early years at Newcastle and Tottenham, with the great Sir Alex admitting that failure to capture the ’88 Young Player of the Year has been his biggest disappointment of his managerial career; high praise indeed. Yet never being far from controversy, his career was marred and overshadowed by some infamous incidents; driving a tractor into the dressing room, the Euro ’96 dentist chair, and ‘f*ck off, Norway’ amongst many.

Gazza was unfortunate with injuries meaning that his only real success after leaving Tottenham was in the SPL with Rangers; certainly not as high a standard that he should’ve been playing at. But these injuries did take their toll on him, as personal problems with alcoholism further disrupted his career until he retired in 2004 (some personal problems have continued past his footballing career).

I don’t really feel like I have written all that much about Gascoigne on the pitch as I have with the other players in this list, but for anyone who has watched him in his early career will know just how good he was. Along with his undoubted passion; the image of Gascoigne crying after his booking in the 1990 World Cup semi final which would’ve ruled him out of the final is iconic (perhaps second only to that Vinnie Jones picture) – Gazza was one of the most technically brilliant players England has ever produced and should’ve been so much more, but injuries on the field and personal problems off of it got the better of him.

4. Ronaldinho, 32, Brazil (currently playing for Brazilian side Atlético Mineiro)

‘A Champions League and World Cup winner? A multiple time member of the FIFPro World XI? A two time FIFA World Player of the Year? Why oh why have you included Ronaldinho in this list!?’ Let me explain before jumping to criticism. I agree that Ronaldinho was an absolutely class act, and one of the most talented footballers the world has ever seen, but this is an article not about bad footballers, but about those who failed to fulfil their full potential, and I believe that is the case.

Ronaldinho first came to media attention at the age of 13, when his local team won 23-0; he scored all 23 goals. After a successful start to his career at Gremio, he was able to translate his ability into the French league and on the European stage with Paris Saint-Germain, yet his first announcement to the world for many will be that goal past David Seaman in the World Cup and his subsequent sending off. Albeit with a little controversy off the pitch with his passion for the Parisian nightlife, Ronaldinho was fast becoming one of the most sought after players in the world.

Then Barcelona president Joan Laporta has fierce rivals to thank for being able to bring Ronaldinho to the Nou Camp (he had originally promised to sign David Beckham, but following his move to the Bernabeu, targeted Ronaldinho instead) and he quickly turned into a magnificent capture for the club. Scoring regularly was a bonus to his dazzling skills, such as his patented ‘elastico’, he displayed week in, week out; at times he was almost unplayable. Renowned as the world’s best, perhaps the highlight of his career was receiving a standing ovation at the Bernabeu after his incredible display in a 3-0 victory; not something that happens to just anyone. Yet this really is where this ‘unbelievable’ Ronaldinho’s story ends.

In his fifth season at Barcelona, where playing time was unfortunately plagued by injuries, he announced he wanted a new challenge and, at the end of the season, was shipped to Milan. Many will praise Guardiola that selling the talisman was the reason behind Lionel Messi’s emergence as a legend, avoiding him the temptation for the party lifestyle. Yet although Ronaldinho continued to play well at Milan, and since back home in Brazil, he has never reached the dizzy heights he achieved during his five years in Spain. Is it because of his party lifestyle, or did he get lazy? Or did he simply, as he said, fancy a change, and that he for some reason hasn’t been able to produce in his later years elsewhere? We’ll never know, but you can’t help but wonder what Ronaldinho would be like today if he had stayed at Barcelona. Placed in today’s Barcelona side with Messi, Xavi and Iniesta, you can’t help but believe the same gradual downfall would have happened. Ronaldinho’s career, for me, began to unravel at the age of 28. Four years on, for a man with all his talent, he should still be playing at the top.

3. Adriano, 30, Brazil (currently a free agent having been released by Corinthians).

What ever happened to Adriano? Let’s go back to the beginning of his career, where after just a season and a half in the first team for Flamengo, Inter Milan picked up the promising striker and brought him to Serie A. After a brief loan stint with Fiorentina, Adriano began lighting up the league playing for Parma (who had agreed a co-ownership deal with Inter) scoring over a goal every two games. Inter Milan, seeing a world class player in the making, brought him back to the San Siro in 2004, and the 22 year old became their star striker. The gold Nike boots he wore emphasised that he was joining the elite, with comparisons being made to a young Ronaldo thanks to his power, pace, incredible technique and ability to find the back of the net with ease. Adriano was set to become the best of his generation, and Inter tied him down to a new, bumper contract in September 2005. And this is where we can now ask; what ever happened to Adriano?

Seemingly content that his talent alone would get him by, sweetened with his hefty contract, Adriano began to disappoint on the field with a string of poor performances. Questions were raised about his personal life, where he seemed partial to the nightlife, concerns about his weight and his work ethic; skipping training was one of the final straws at Inter. He was sent back to Brazil to regain fitness and form, and while this idea started promisingly, it ended in a return to Italy to avoid unsettling the Sao Paulo team, according to the sporting director.

Eventually leaving Inter Milan saw Adriano begin to get his career back on track at his first club, Flamengo, where he did enough to convince Roma to give him a second chance in Serie A. Unfortunately for Roma, the only noticeable thing he did in his seven months stint was to pick up his third Bidone d’Oro (the ‘Golden Bin’ awarded to the worst player in Serie A). Bear in mind no other player has won it more than once; that takes some beating. Admittedly he suffered injuries at both Roma and then Corinthians, whom he joined from Roma, yet the same concerns from his Inter Milan days arose and left no option but for the latter to terminate his contract after a year.

A 30 year old, over weight footballer who shows little effort for the clubs he plays for as he enjoys the party lifestyle. Who would want to sign him now? And yet he so easily could still be on top of the world, in his prime, after an illustrious career wherever in the world he wanted to play.

2. Freddy Adu, 23, USA (currently playing for Philadelphia Union).

It’s quite hard to believe that Freddy Adu, who first shot to worldwide fame over eight years ago, is still only 23 years old. And thus of all the players on this list, he still has the greatest chance to fulfil that early promise he showed during the remainder of his career. Whether or not he will is another question.

Adu is most definitely the victim of too much, too soon. Hugely impressive as a youngster, he became the youngest American athlete in over 100 years to sign a professional contract in any team sport, was the number one draft pick in the 2004 MLS Draft and made his MLS debut; all at the tender age of 14. In any European league in the world this would not happen, but it can be argued that the bosses of the MLS saw an opportunity to exploit a youngster as a marketing gimmick; boost the popularity of the league by getting him to perform rather than to learn how to play.

Appearing in an advert with Pelé aside, while Adu performed considerably for a child amongst men, the hype that had surrounded him meant that nothing less than excellence would be considered good enough, and thus he didn’t make quite the impact that was expected of him. Yet a move to Real Salt Lake at 17 showed that, although he wasn’t yet at the standard of the Brazilian icon, he was nonetheless an exciting talent. This was proved after an impressive showing at the under-20 World Cup, before he was eventually taken to Europe with Portuguese giants Benfica. With his first start for the national team following shortly after, Adu looked back on track to become that much heralded star. Unfortunately, things didn’t quite turn out that way.

After failing to take Europe by storm as was hoped, his misery was compounded with a series of loan spells at increasingly obscure clubs, trying to find some form to add to his undoubted talent; but he never did. Yet a surprise call up to the national side for the 2011 Gold Cup saw Adu perform admirably, and he soon after returned to his country to sign for Philadelphia Union.

For the first time in several years, he seems to be getting fairly regular game time at a respectable level, along with some enjoyable performances, and people are beginning to talk about him again in the States. And so as I said at the beginning, perhaps he can still make a name for himself; time is on his side. But for now he will still be known as one of the youngest ‘wonderkids’ who had it all far too soon. Expected for greatness, but nearly washed up before he left his teens.

1. Nii Lamptey, 37, Ghana (retired).

Uhm, who? Many of you might have said this when reading that Nii Lamptey is number one on this list of players who failed to reach their full potential, so I guess that response justifies this position. Indeed, I had never heard of him until reading an article several years ago about his unfortunate career. Before Adu was a 13 year old sensation, there was Lamptey, who looked destined for greatness.

With undoubted quality, he came to the world’s attention in 1989 at the under-16 World Championship with some mesmerising displays. Making the step up to the under-17 World Championship in 1991, he won the player of the tournament ahead of a young Juan Sebastian Veron and Alessandro del Piero, of Argentina and Italy respectively. But perhaps the highlight over these achievements was to be named as the successor to the great Pelé, by none other than the man himself. Pelé naming his own successor who was non-Brazilian? That just confirmed the height of his ability.

After being sought after by many clubs, he signed his first professional contract with Anderlecht after leaving Ghana, and began to sparkle in the league. Despite an injury, his incredible performances convinced PSV to take him for a season on loan as a replacement for Barcelona bound Romario. Some big boots to fill, but fill them he did as he continued expertly and became their joint top scorer for the season. However, after PSV failed to match Anderlecht’s asking price, Aston Villa swooped in and signed the talented Ghanaian, who was still only 19 at the time. Yet this unfortunately became the beginning of his downfall. Along with the demands from the national team, who saw Lamptey as their future but were still unhappy about him leaving the country at such a young age, he struggled to adapt to the physical nature of the English game before failing to renew his work permit at Coventry, having played just 16 games during his two years in England. Travelling around the globe, he plied his trade in Italy, Argentina, Turkey, Portugal, Germany, China and Dubai before returning to Ghana, a broken man with a broken career.

What is so sad about Nii Lamptey’s career however is the battles that he had to deal with alongside the pressures of expectation from being named Pelé’s successor. Abusive parents who divorced at eight, he was beaten by his alcoholic father and moved to Muslim accommodation, converting from Christianity. He then had to sneak out of the country to obtain his first professional contract after his passport was confiscated by the Ghanaian FA in a bid to keep the squad together, who then made it difficult for him when he was selected for the national team (Lamptey believes witch doctors were punishing him for deserting the country). His agent cheated him out of thousands, if not millions, from contracts and signing on fees, while his marriage was frowned upon by his parents. The death of his father, an incident at the 1996 African Cup of Nations after his semi final sending off that all but sealed his exile from the national team, and the death of not one but two of his children all sums up a heartbreaking life Lamptey has had to suffer.

Nii Lamptey should have been a star. Individually he could have been up there with Pelé, Maradona, Di Stefano, Cruyff. And from a wider view, he could have helped spark African football. But unfortunately with all the difficulties he faced, it all crumbled down before him. From the man himself: «I know if people had left me alone, the way God created me and wanted me to be, for sure I should have been playing for Madrid… Sometimes I will be in my room and I will cry… that thing has been taken away from you. It’s really, really painful.»

So there you have it, the Football Writer’s top 10 unfulfilled talents in world football. Do you agree with the selections, or is there anyone in particular you feel I have missed out on?

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Estados Unidos W vs Mexico W Resumen | Partido completo | Campeonato Femenino CONCACAF 2022 | 7.11.2022



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Within A Budding Grove – In Search of Lost Time 2 by Marcel Proust

There is a genre in modern fiction called «Coming of age», designed presumably to appeal to the «Young adult» whose type ought to feature among such a tale´s characters. But, like most genres, authors who regularly tread the potentially formulaic tramlines of readers´ expectations are themselves usually somewhat beyond the age of consent and are therefore transporting themselves via imagination or memory into an experience they may have experienced in their own past, had related to them or simply imagined as an ideal of a type, itself possibly even dysfunctional, since not every ending is happy.

We all fall in love. Even ugly people fall in love, often successfully and rewardingly. Socially perfected beauty often languishes in regretful unhappiness, having made a false or compromised choice. Imagined «young adults» can relive the irony of wrong decisions and false assumptions, but only when directed from a distance of years that have taught by experience. At the time, a whirlwind of experience and emotion, a cake-batter of hard and soft, liquid and solid awaits mixing, let alone baking, and it has generally been licked and gobbled by eager fingers well before it ever approached an oven. It is only after the event that we can reassess how much of each ingredient we actually added and whether, had the mix ever been properly prepared, it might have been eventually tasty.

What is often lacking from tales of «Coming of age» is any truthful assessment of how the first person is externally perceived. Perhaps we all possess enough arrogance to think we can judge others from a position of permanent personal neutrality, from a vantage where we ourselves are exempt from the processes we apply to the rest of humanity. But not so Marcel Proust, whose second volume of «A la recherche de temps perdu» – «In search of lost time» is essentially a stream of consciousness «coming of age», a tale of long adolescent summer holidays at the coast in Balbec, of chance encounters along Paris boulevards and of contractual sex to pass the time. This is fiction of its time. A modern reader, to partake of any experience on offer, must be willing to cast off the shackles of contemporary mores, to ignore the imposed correctness of our age and be willing to enter into both the culture and the values of its author, as he flits and flirts from one potential assignation to the next, equally convinced, each time, that this one will be for real, but forever replete with doubt and question as to whether anything might ever come of anything. At least Marcel Proust, from the privilege of his own maturity, is under no illusions of how his own first person may have appeared to those young women, maidens perhaps, whom he pursued.

In my case, what was physically evident might equally well have been due to nervous spasms, to the first stages of tuberculosis, to asthma, to a toxi-alimentary dyspnoea with renal insufficiency, to chronic bronchitis, or to a complex state into which more than one of these factors entered. Now, nervous spasms required to be treated firmly, and discouraged, tuberculosis with infinite care and with a ‘feeding-up’ process which would have been bad for an arthritic condition such as asthma, and might indeed have been dangerous in a case of toxi-alimentary dyspnoea, this last calling for a strict diet which, in return, would be fatal to a tuberculous patient. But Cottard’s hesitations were brief and his prescriptions imperious. «Purges; violent and drastic purges; milk for some days, nothing but milk. No meat. No alcohol.» My mother murmured that I needed, all the same, to be ‘built up,’ that my nerves were already weak, that drenching me like a horse and restricting my diet would make me worse.

The author is hardly the epitome of physical perfection, but he is nonetheless undeterred in his pursuit of young ladies. It´s not every teenage youth, however, who can always call on the services of a full-time maid for support. And not many of the contemporary variety would admit the need for that support.

Sometimes my mother would stroke my forehead with her hand, saying: «So little boys don’t tell Mamma their troubles any more?» And Françoise used to come up to me every day with: «What a face, to be sure! If you could just see yourself! Anyone would think there was a corpse in the house.» It is true that, if I had simply had a cold in the head, Françoise would have assumed the same funereal air. These lamentations pertained rather to her ‘class’ than to the state of my health. I could not at the time discover whether this pessimism was due to sorrow or to satisfaction. I decided provisionally that it was social and professional.

And did it matter what the first person actually looked like, whether health, bodily attributes or even integrity were in adequate supply? There were, after all, copious examples of birth-right being sufficient in itself in order to secure a man´s desired married bliss alongside desirable beauty.

(This man’s wife, incidentally, had married him against everyone’s wishes and advice because he was a ‘charming creature.’ He had, what may be sufficient to constitute a rare and delicate whole, a fair, silky beard, good features, a nasal voice, powerful lungs and a glass eye.)

And I ask you, what in the world can he see in her? He must be a bit of a chump, when all’s said and done. She’s got feet like boats, whiskers like an American, and her undies are filthy. I can tell you, a little shop girl would be ashamed to be seen in her knickers.

In speaking, Albertine kept her head motionless, her nostrils closed, allowing only the corners of her lips to move. The result of this was a drawling, nasal sound, into the composition of which there entered perhaps a provincial descent, a juvenile affectation of British phlegm, the teaching of a foreign governess and a congestive hypertrophy of the mucus of the nose

An age with different values and assumptions is what we must enter. We may not always feel at home. In fact, given the rarefied upper strata of society that we the readers are expected to inhabit, we may rarely even feel we belong and be constantly aware of a desire to head for the exit. The experience is always challenging, not because it questions our presence, but merely because it takes us to places we feel we ought not to be. But there is complexity in this culture that a casual glance will not reveal. It is only when we engage with this shared experience that we begin to feel that the assumptions of our own age are not in the end very new.

«I’ve no intention of making fun, I assure you. Well, to continue, she went up to one of these black fellows with ‘Good morning, nigger!’… » «Oh, it’s too absurd!» «Anyhow, this classification seems to have displeased the black. ‘Me nigger,’ he shouted (quite furious, don’t you know), to Mme. Blatin, ‘me nigger; you, old cow!'» «I do think that’s so delightful! I adore that story. Do say it’s a good one. Can’t you see old Blatin standing there, and hearing him: ‘Me nigger; you, old cow’?» I expressed an intense desire to go there and see these Cingalese, one of whom had called Mme. Blatin an old cow. They did not interest me in the least.

And it is not only the ideological baggage of the age that surrounds us. It is also the physical reality of stuff, stuff we accumulate, stuff we assemble as definition of our personality, as adjunct to personal history. And we are all prisoners of fashion, locked in cupboards of clothes we never wear, perhaps should never have bought, garage shelves of redundant gadgets, now rusting or moulding until we attempt to salve a guilty conscience and cart them off to a charity shop where someone not of our own social or economic class might patronisingly «make use of them». And it is our age, not that of Marcel Proust, that claims to be «aware» of threats to the planet’s resources. And we assume it is our own age that seeks something deeper, more abstract, more refined, more lasting… Are any of us willing to admit how utterly materialistic we are?

However it may be, always when I think of that drawing-room which Swann (not that the criticism implied on his part any intention to find fault with his wife’s taste) found so incongruous – because, while it was still planned and carried out in the style, half conservatory, half studio, which had been that of the rooms in which he had first known Odette, she had, none the less, begun to replace in its medley a quantity of the Chinese ornaments, which she now felt to be rather gimcrack, a trifle dowdy, by a swarm of little chairs and stools and things upholstered in old Louis XIV silks; not to mention the works of art brought by Swann himself from his house on the Quai d’Orléans – it has kept in my memory, on the contrary, that composite, heterogeneous room, a cohesion, a unity, an individual charm never possessed even by the most complete, the least spoiled of such collections that the past has bequeathed to us, or the most modern, alive and stamped with the imprint of a living personality; for we alone can, by our belief that they have an existence of their own, give to certain of the things that we see a soul which they afterwards keep, which they develop in our minds.

Alas, what he was saying, how little, I felt, did it apply to myself, whom all reasoning, however exalted it might be, left cold, who was happy only in moments of pure idleness, when I was comfortable and well; I felt how purely material was everything that I desired in life, and how easily I could dispense with the intellect.

A recurring theme in Proust is reference to art and music. Likening characters to faces in paintings gives physical form to the words that inhabit the page and musical harmonies may give clue to personality.

… in Luini’s fresco, the charming Mage with the arched nose and fair hair, to whom, it appeared, Swann had at one time been thought to bear a striking resemblance.

or in piano-playing, which she did not like to be too finicking, too laboured, having indeed had a special weakness for the discords, the wrong notes of Rubinstein.

… and when the narrator offers an assumption of is age, we realise how particularistic are all assumptions of any age. Personally, I have little time for the idea that scientific knowledge is a mere social construct subject to change. Researched and documented «laws of nature» are always incomplete and always specific to the conditions that apply to their relevance. Gravity was not contradicted by relativity, but the ranges of its applicability were more fully appreciated. If we read pre-relativistic science that might assume gravity’s concept to be universal, we suffer contradictions similar to those we experience when we read a different work written in a time when the workings of mass-attraction were not quantified. How we apply this knowledge, our appreciation of its relevance to our lives, this is perhaps always governed by a combination of fashion and our personal misunderstanding of the concept. In a different age, however, such adherence to social or personal norms might be quite confusing, certainly surprising.

In view of the dampness of the air I had taken rather more caffeine than usual.

But back at the plot, if such a diversion might be admitted to the detail of such a life, this coming-of-age young-adult is really hot on chat-up lines. He is utterly smitten by M. Swann´s daughter, Giberte. He seeks out her company, diverts from his route through Paris just to walk the street she has trod, cranes his neck at the promise of the merest glimpse of her presence. And then, when presented with a drawing-room audience with the heart-racing object of his desire, issues the hottest chat-up line that Hollywood might ever have dreamed up.

«I thought, the other day, that the clock was slow, if anything.»

His affections move on, eventually, his ardour unrequited, his memory perhaps scarred for its entire adulthood. One learns to live with such disappointment, to cope with the imperfection of reality. But memory is permanent, even if the events that created its existence never actually happened. And when they did, the power of memory to transform the future is immense.

… the mother whose son has gone to sea on some perilous voyage of discovery sees him in imagination every moment, long after the fact of his having perished has been established, striding into the room, saved by a miracle and in the best of health. And this strain of waiting, according to the strength of her memory and the resistance of her bodily organs, either helps her on her journey through the years, at the end of which she will be able to endure the knowledge that her son is no more, to forget gradually and to survive his loss, or else it kills her.

And without doubt we are conscious of this process by which the formation of future-determining memory via experience comes about as it actually happens, as it chips away at the as yet unmade block that is our forming self. We can change. We often do. We can take things for granted. We can shift our allegiances. We can ignore certain consequences, whilst being obsessed with others, just like here when our narrator appears to be thoroughly concerned with the effects that affection transfer might have in relation to Giberte, but not even to consider the consequences of his actions upon the lives of those he says he does not love.

for when evening came I was always too wretched to stay in the house and used to go and pour out my sorrows upon the bosoms of women whom I did not love. As for seeking to give any sort of pleasure to Gilberte, I no longer thought of that; to visit her house again now could only have added to my sufferings. Even the sight of Gilberte, which would have been so exquisite a pleasure only yesterday, would no longer have sufficed me. For I should have been miserable all the time that I was not actually with her. That is how a woman, by every fresh torture that she inflicts on us, increases, often quite unconsciously, her power over us and at the same time our demands upon her. With each injury that she does us, she encircles us more and more completely, doubles our chains – but halves the strength of those which hitherto we had thought adequate to bind her in order that we might retain our own peace of mind.

But then, we find him truly conscious of that which surrounds him. Its reality, or perhaps its invented memory, is both vivid and permanent. There is no doubt here that the detail comes via later reflection, since the teenager´s ability to apply musical notation to sensory input was probably developed long after this particular journey, years after music became comfortable under the fingers and some time after reflection revealed the detail of exactly how it worked.

I was surrounded by the soothing activity of all those movements of the train which kept me company, offered to stay and converse with me if I could not sleep, lulled me with their sounds which I wedded – as I had often wedded the chime of the Cambray bells now to one rhythm, now to another (hearing as the whim took me first four level and equivalent semi-quavers, then one semi-quaver furiously dashing against a crotchet); they neutralised the centrifugal force of my insomnia by exercising upon it a contrary pressure which kept me in equilibrium and on which my immobility and presently my drowsiness felt themselves to be borne with the same sense of refreshment that I should have had, had I been resting under the protecting vigilance of powerful forces, on the breast of nature and of life, had I been able for a moment to incarnate myself in a fish that sleeps in the sea, driven unheeding by the currents and the tides, or in an eagle outstretched upon the air, with no support but the storm.

And such is the power of this process of filtration and reinterpretation of experience by memory that when it clearly expresses the views of later years, it appears to be in the mind of the teenager at the heart of the story. It is a context in which we appreciate, via reflection in later solitude, what became of the life, how it came about, how it was formed.

Nine tenths of the men of the Faubourg Saint-Germain appear to the average man of the middle class simply as alcoholic wasters (which, individually, they not infrequently are) whom, therefore, no respectable person would dream of asking to dinner. The middle class fixes its standard, in this respect, too high, for the feelings of these men would never prevent their being received with every mark of esteem in houses which it, the middle class, may never enter.

«After all,» I said to myself, «possibly the pleasure that its author has found in writing it is not the infallible test of the literary value of a page; it may be only an accessory, one that is often to be found superadded to that value, but the want of which can have no prejudicial effect on it. Perhaps some of the greatest masterpieces were written yawning.»

Pleasure in this respect is like photography. What we take, in the presence of the beloved object, is merely a negative film; we develop it later, when we are at home, and have once again found at our disposal that inner darkroom, the entrance to which is barred to us so long as we are with other people.

That our words are, as a general rule, filled, by the person to whom we address them, with a meaning which that person derives from her own substance, a meaning widely different from that which we had put into the same words when we uttered them, is a fact which the daily round of life is perpetually demonstrating. But if we find ourselves as well in the company of a person whose education (as Albertine’s was to me) is inconceivable, her tastes, her reading, her principles unknown, we cannot tell whether our words have aroused in her anything that resembles their meaning, any more than in an animal, although there are things that even an animal may be made to understand.

And so we are condemned to live the only life we have, largely unaware of how it is perceived by others, eternally ignorant except by speculation of what it might have meant to ourselves. We do not choose our self. Neither do we choose our place or time of birth, though for some the details of death are an option. Transporting ourselves into another mind, in another place, inhabiting a different time reminds us of the minimal control we have over our destiny, of the very events that might befall even the most ordered existence. But certainly what does happen forms experience which we can either ignore, hoping the next is what we always wanted, or we can store it in a file of memory, so that later in life we can revisit that place and perhaps reinvent it, thus transforming our existence into the life we thought we deserved. Only then, perhaps, has that young adult truly come of age.

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Los fanáticos del fútbol más locos del mundo: ¡EE. UU.!



¡Prepárate para la cola, JEFE porque Am-uri-cah irá a la Copa del Mundo! Traiga sus tazas individuales y puntas de barbacoa porque estos fanáticos patrióticos van por la victoria. Más videos de fútbol en theFlama.com

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El Mundial de Clubes ha perdido su propósito

La Copa Mundial de Clubes de la FIFA ya no es una medida adecuada para decidir el mejor equipo de clubes del mundo.

Debido a las enormes inversiones en el fútbol europeo en la última década, los clubes europeos (UEFA) tienen una gran ventaja económica sobre el resto del mundo y pueden comprar a los mejores jugadores, lo que les da una gran ventaja sobre las demás confederaciones. Además, el formato del torneo favorece a la UEFA y Sudamérica (Conmebol), lo que es injusto para los otros equipos.

El problema es que la competencia no ha podido mantenerse al día con los cambios en el juego y, por lo tanto, ha perdido su relevancia y propósito.

OBJETIVO DEL TORNEO

La competencia se inició en 2000 (cuando absorbió a su predecesora, la Copa Intercontinental) y se formó como una competencia anual para mostrar el mejor talento local de las distintas confederaciones. La idea era que los ganadores de cada torneo continental compitieran entre sí y el ganador se coronara como el mejor equipo de clubes del mundo. Esta era la teoría pero en la práctica ha resultado diferente.

Anteriormente, los mejores jugadores no europeos seguían sus carreras en sus países de origen y eran desconocidos para el público extranjero. La Copa Mundial de Clubes les dio a estos jugadores la oportunidad de mostrar sus habilidades en el escenario mundial y en ese momento había paridad entre los clubes de Europa y América del Sur.

Los equipos de Conmebol ganaron el trofeo en los primeros tres años de la competencia, pero después de eso, los equipos europeos dominaron y el equilibrio de poder se desplazó hacia Europa.

DAVID contra GOLIAT

El comienzo de la dominación europea coincidió a principios del siglo actual con una afluencia masiva de inversiones en el fútbol de la UEFA a nivel de clubes. La consecuencia de esto es que hoy en día existe una gran disparidad de ingresos entre los clubes europeos y las demás confederaciones.

El ganador de la Liga de Campeones de Europa gana mucho más dinero que los demás torneos continentales combinados. El Real Madrid ganó 70,1 millones de dólares la temporada pasada por ganar la UEFA Champions League. En contraste, San Lorenzo ganó $6.1 millones por ganar la Copa Libertadores (Conmebol), ES Setie ganó $1.8 millones por ganar la Liga de Campeones Africana (CAF) y en Asia, Western Sydney Wanderers ganó casi lo mismo por derrotar al Al Hilal de Arabia Saudita a dos partidos (YAHOO DEPORTES – ¿Por qué el Mundial de Clubes sigue luchando por su relevancia?; por Peter Staunton, 12 de diciembre de 2014).

Con tanto dinero disponible, el mejor talento que el dinero puede comprar está en las grandes ligas de Europa, atraído por los lucrativos contratos que estas ligas tienen para ofrecer. Esto significa que Europa tiene a su disposición su propio talento y el que tiene el resto del mundo.

Los mayores perdedores en el éxodo de talento futbolístico hacia Europa son Brasil y Argentina, que son los principales exportadores de jugadores, por lo que lo que gana Europa es lo que pierde Sudamérica.

En consecuencia, todos los demás equipos en la Copa Mundial de Clubes están en desventaja en comparación con el campeón de la Liga de Campeones de Europa. El torneo ha pasado de ser una rivalidad a una batalla de David contra Goliat, entre clubes europeos representados por lo que equivale a un once mundial compuesto en su mayoría por los mejores jugadores internacionales y los pececillos, que comprende lo que queda después de lo mejor de sus el talento ha sido desviado por los grandes clubes de la UEFA.

El actual campeón, el Real Madrid, es una combinación de algunos de los mejores y más caros jugadores internacionales provenientes de España (Casillas y Sergio Ramos), Francia (Benzema y Varane), Portugal (Ronaldo y Pepe), Alemania (Kroos), Brasil (Marcelo), Colombia (Rodríquez), Gales (Bale) y México (Chicharito). Esta asamblea de jugadores es poco representativa del juego local en España. Por tres jugadores, a saber, Cristiano Ronaldo, Gareth Bale y James Rodríguez, el club pagó 367,8 millones de dólares. Solo doce clubes en el mundo poseen una plantilla de jugadores cuyo valor de mercado es superior al coste total de estos tres.

Compare eso con el Auckland City FC, uno de sus competidores en la Copa Mundial de Clubes de este año, que es un equipo de meros aficionados que tienen ocupaciones de tiempo completo fuera del fútbol.

Una mirada a algunos de los campeones anteriores revela el fuerte componente extranjero de sus escuadrones. En 2010, cuando el Inter de Milán (Italia) ganó la copa, solo 5 jugadores de su plantel de 23 eran italianos, mientras que el resto eran en su mayoría sudamericanos. Incluso los comentaristas de televisión no se mantuvieron al tanto de los cambios, ya que todavía se referían al equipo del Inter como ‘los italianos’.

En 2011, el Barcelona ganó la copa y 10 de su plantel de 23 hombres eran extranjeros.

FORMATO BIZARRO

Otro gran problema del torneo es que los equipos de la UEFA y de América del Sur tienen acceso directo a las semifinales y comienzan a jugar incluso después de que algunos de los equipos hayan sido eliminados. Esto se hace intencionalmente para que solo los clubes más grandes se enfrenten en la final. Hasta ahora, solo han ganado equipos de esos dos continentes y solo un equipo de fuera ha llegado a la final, a saber, el sorpresivo finalista del año pasado, el TP Mazembe, un equipo congoleño.

Dada la ventaja económica de la que disfruta la UEFA y el extraño formato que está en vigor actualmente, la Copa Mundial de Clubes difícilmente puede llamarse la más justa de las competiciones y el ganador no puede llamarse legítimamente ‘el mejor del mundo’ más que los ganadores de la primera. Copa Intercontinental que se limitó a la UEFA y la Conmebol. El torneo ha perdido su importancia y apenas es digno de alardear. Hace algunos años gané un concurso de baile, pero los demás participantes no sabían bailar, entonces, ¿era mi victoria algo de lo que jactarme?

Cierta paridad necesita ser restaurada a la competencia. Brasil y Argentina han comenzado a aumentar los salarios en sus ligas locales para atraer a sus jugadores a quedarse en casa. Eso es un comienzo, pero además de eso, la FIFA debe limitar la cantidad de jugadores extranjeros disponibles para cada equipo a, digamos, dos y cambiar el formato para que todos los equipos que compiten jueguen la misma cantidad de partidos de clasificación. De lo contrario, no tiene sentido continuar la competencia en su forma actual.

Víctor A. Dixon

23 de diciembre de 2014

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"Maleficio" Serie – US Soccer vs. Costa Rica



¿De quién debería preocuparse más Estados Unidos? México o Costa Rica. Así comienza mi serie «hexadecimal» de US Soccer. No olvides ver: vs. Honduras & vs. México

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Datos Curiosos Sobre Liberia – La Segunda República Negra en el Mundo

Historia

¿Sabías que… Liberia y Haití fueron las primeras repúblicas negras del mundo… A principios de la década de 1940, Liberia declaró formalmente la guerra a Japón y Alemania… Mientras que Liberia era una de las repúblicas negras más prósperas a principios de la década de 1950, Corea del Sur era una de las naciones más pobres del mundo…

 

Liberianos de fama mundial

Sabías que… El líder de Sudáfrica, Nelson Mandela -uno de los íconos mundiales- admira a George Weah, quien nació en Liberia. Mandela dijo una vez: «George Weah es el orgullo de África». ¿Quién es Weah? George Weah, cuyo nombre original es Manneh Oppong Weah, fue uno de los jugadores de fútbol más destacados del mundo en la década de 1990. Este ex atleta fue descubierto por Fernando Shitoli, un experto en fútbol brasileño. En 1995 fue elegido el mejor jugador de África, Europa y el mundo. Bajo su liderazgo, AC Milan (Italia) y Paris Saint Germain (Francia) ganaron los campeonatos nacionales en la década de 1990. Durante su carrera deportiva, también jugó en Camerún, Inglaterra y Emiratos Árabes Unidos. De 1997 a 2004, George se convirtió en Embajador de Buena Voluntad de UNICEF.

 

En septiembre de 1969, Angie Elizabeth Brooks se convirtió en presidenta del vigésimo cuarto período de sesiones de la Asamblea General de las Naciones Unidas. Ella dijo: «Las Naciones Unidas pueden y deben seguir siendo el mejor medio de cooperación internacional que ha estado a disposición de la humanidad desde el comienzo de su historia, y tenemos que cuidarlo, cuidarlo y cultivarlo, o de lo contrario algún día pereceremos». y ni la luna ni el conocimiento del espacio nos salvarán».

 

Símbolo nacional

Sabías que… El hipopótamo pigmeo se ha convertido en un símbolo nacional de Liberia…

 

Turismo

Sabías que… El Parque Nacional Sapo ha sido elegido como una de las 261 maravillas naturales del mundo. El paisaje espectacular del Parque lo ha convertido en una de las atracciones más populares del país. Este santuario contiene uno de los ecosistemas más ricos del continente africano y es famoso desde hace mucho tiempo por su hipopótamo pigmeo. Los animales en el parque también incluyen elefantes, mangostas de Liberia, gatos dorados africanos, leopardos, civetas africanas, cebras, loros grises, chimpancés, águilas pescadoras africanas y monos. Este parque -un área del tamaño de Los Ángeles, California- es una de las áreas naturales más grandes e intactas de África Occidental.

 

Poder de las mujeres

¿Sabía que… Lady Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf -la «Madre de la democracia en Liberia»- es la segunda mujer presidenta del país? Esta nación -una de las más pobres del mundo- tiene más mujeres líderes, presidentas o primeras ministras, que Noruega, Suecia y Corea del Sur. La presidenta de Liberia es una conocida defensora de los derechos de la mujer en África. Tiene proyectos ambiciosos para mujeres y niños. La líder liberiana dijo una vez: «Sensibilidad a las necesidades humanas. Tal vez eso proviene de ser madre e interactuar con otras mujeres, muchas de las cuales llevan la mayor carga en tiempos de guerra y paz…»

 

Ruth Perry tuvo la oportunidad de convertirse en la primera mujer presidenta de Liberia en 1996.

 

La democracia

¿Sabías que…? Al igual que Canadá, España e Irlanda, Liberia es un país democrático. Este pequeño país celebró sus primeras elecciones multipartidistas en 2005.

 

Estados Unidos y Liberia

¿Sabías que… Muchas de las personas de Liberia son de origen estadounidense… Washington apoya la democracia en Liberia? En 2008, el presidente estadounidense George Bush llegó a Monrovia, la capital de Liberia, para una visita oficial. Esta visita le dio al gobierno liberiano un aire de respetabilidad. Liberia siempre ha mantenido estrechos lazos diplomáticos con Washington. Varios líderes estadounidenses han visitado Monrovia. En 1943 Franklin Delano Roosevelt fue a Liberia. Por invitación del presidente estadounidense Dwight D. Eisenhower, el presidente William Tubman (1944-1971) visitó los Estados Unidos en 1954…Edwin Barclay, presidente de Liberia, fue el primer presidente negro en pasar una noche en la Casa Blanca…

 

Geografía

¿Sabías que… Liberia (43 000 millas cuadradas) es más grande que Tennessee (42 146 millas cuadradas).

 

Entretenimiento

¿Sabías que… Sebah Esther Tubman era una de las «chicas más hermosas de África» ​​a fines de la década de 1990? Sebah, Miss Liberia, fue tercera finalista en el 49° Miss Mundo en Londres en 1999. Derrotó a 90 delegadas, entre ellas Miss Estados Unidos, Natasha Allas, y Miss Reino Unido, Nicola Willoughby…

 

Desarrollo humano

¿Sabía usted… El desarrollo humano en Liberia hoy es considerablemente mejor que antes de que el gobierno democrático llegara al poder a mediados de la década de 2000…

 

Política contra el apartheid

¿Sabías que…? En el siglo XX, Liberia luchó contra el apartheid en Sudáfrica. En julio de 1976, el gobierno de Liberia apoyó el boicot contra el apartheid en Montreal ’76. Entre 1976 y 1977 Liberia protestó contra la presencia de Miss Sudáfrica en el Miss Mundo…

 

Economía

Sabías que… Más del 70 por ciento del comercio del país es con los Estados Unidos, Bélgica, Japón y Corea del Sur… Esta nación es una de las mayores exportadoras de mineral de hierro en África… Curiosamente Liberia tiene una de las principales flotas mercantes del Tercer Mundo…

 

La ciudad capital

Sabías que…Monrovia, la capital del país, fue nombrada en honor a James Monroe, uno de los primeros presidentes de los Estados Unidos (1817-1825).

 

Reino Unido y Liberia

Sabías que… Su Majestad la Reina Isabel II visitó el país a principios de los años 60…

 

Líderes políticos

¿Sabías que… William Tubman fue uno de los mejores presidentes de África? Durante su gobierno, Liberia se convirtió en uno de los países más estables del Tercer Mundo. Su gobierno apoyó firmemente que las mujeres deberían participar en la vida política… El ex presidente William Tolbert (1971-1980) era un amigo cercano de Billy Graham, un líder evangelista en Estados Unidos.

 

Las Naciones Unidas y Liberia

¿Sabías que… Esta nación africana firmó la Carta de las Naciones Unidas en San Francisco en 1945…

Comprar Camisetas de Futbol Echa un vistazo a nuestra variedad de camisetas de equipos de fútbol. Camisetas de entreno y partido de clubes nacionales y selecciones internacionales.

El equipo nacional femenino de fútbol de EE. UU. baila al ritmo de ‘Uptown Funk’ durante la celebración en el ayuntamiento de la ciudad de Nueva York


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Comprar Camisetas de Futbol Echa un vistazo a nuestra variedad de camisetas de equipos de fútbol. Camisetas de entreno y partido de clubes nacionales y selecciones internacionales.