Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Real Madrid Also Paid For Neymar

Real Madrid made Neymar their No.1 target in 2011 but missed out on the deal and ended up paying a world-record fee for Gareth Bale.

Red tape ruled out a deal for the 13-year-old Neymar in 2005 as part of the move which brought Robinho to Madrid from Santos. Neymar, back then, travelled to Spain and was even registered as a Madrid player for a short time.

Club president Florentino Perez (above) kept in touch and later paid money to Neymar's agent, Wagner Ribeiro, in order to ensure his club would have first option on the forward. Ribeiro was keen to push through a deal in 2011, as were Santos, but Perez upset Neymar on two conference calls, when he told the player he would need to start off in Madrid's youth team and earn his place. Real, he said, were the world's greatest club and he wouldn't be able to walk into the team.

By this time, Neymar was already a superstar in Brazil and this stance is said to have let in Barcelona, with Sandro Rosell, their president, saying all the right things to win over the youngster and his father.

Madrid also paid for Neymar to undergo a medical in Brazil in 2011, but the player was by now keen on Barcelona. From the age of around 17, he was set on joining the Catalan club and longed to play alongside Lionel Messi.

Real remained interested right until the end and offered more money than Barca, with Perez prepared to pay virtually whatever it took to get his man.

Santos told Neymar they would rather he joined Madrid, but the forward's mind was made up even though the player's father kept Real in the loop.

With his son in such high demand from two of the world's biggest clubs (and eternal enemies), Neymar Sr could virtually name his price.

Courtesy: Ben Hayward | Spanish Football Writer
Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/2292/editorials/2013/12/18/4487482/commission-impossible-neymar-his-father-and-barcelonas

Commission impossible: Neymar, his father and Barcelona's millions

Goal Transfer List 2013: Santos say they were paid only €17.1m, the Catalans claim they spent €57m on the Brazilian. And nobody wants to explain where the rest ended up...

It has been described as the least transparent transfer in the history of football. Neymar's sensational move from Santos to Barcelona remains, some seven months later, about as clear as mud.

How much did he cost? Who got what? Where did the money go? Were there additional payments? The official figure released by Barcelona is €57 million, yet Santos say they only received €17.1m, third-party owners are annoyed by feeling short-changed and then there's an unusual first-option payment for three of the Brazilian side's youngsters, plus a couple of friendly fixtures between the two teams thrown in for good measure.

Deals involving South American sides and third-party ownership are always complicated. Nothing new there; even going back to the days of Diego Maradona, such deals took time, intense negotiations and plenty of patience as the money is dished out to all of the parties involved.

The real cost of this transfer, including the three Santos starlets who will probably never end up at the Catalan club (Victor Andrade, Gabriel Barbosa and Giva), plus the two friendly fixtures, means the total transfer fee alone for the Neymar deal could stand at around €69.5m, not €57m.

The sum officially received by Santos seems surprisingly low for a player who has been described, after Pele, as the finest footballer to grace the Brazilian club. It is worth remembering that Santos closed down their futsal and female football teams just to pay out a lucrative new contract and keep Neymar in a controversial deal back in 2011.

Meanwhile, supermarket chain DIS - who paid €2.8m for 40 per cent of Neymar's rights some years ago - want to know what they are owed. According to Santos, the fee was €17.1m (meaning DIS take €6.84m), but Barca's claim that the deal cost €57m means the supermarket chain would be entitled to €22.8m and even €27.8m if the three young players and two friendlies are included (which, of course, they weren't - not officially anyway).

A source close to the deal in Brazil claims Santos and Barca agreed an unusual structure for the cash to be paid. "Santos believe they are owed money by DIS (something DIS are thought to dispute) and the relationship is anything but good. They decided, along with Barcelona, for the money to be paid in different concepts and therefore reduced the amount owed to DIS."

That explains how Santos may have recouped extra funds from the deal, but still leaves the question of the remaining €40m. DIS received none of that, either, with just a quarter of it accounted for by Barca. The club revealed paying an initial €10m payment to Neymar's father in 2012 to ensure the player would ultimately choose the Catalans and not rivals Real Madrid. That figure appeared in Barca's accounts for last year and was confirmed by vice-president Josep Maria Bartomeu on the day of Neymar's unveiling at Camp Nou back in June. "Negotiations with Santos began back in 2011," he said. "And that's why there is, in last year's budget, a payment of €10m, as a contingency fund."

Santos claim Neymar's father did not take that €10m, yet the club cannot explain where the money did go.

But what about the other €30m? That money was never seen by Santos, nor DIS. "We saw on the television that Barca said the deal was €57m but here [in Brazil], Santos speak of €17m. We feel cheated," said DIS CEO Roberto Moreno in a radio interview in the summer.

DIS is also unhappy about the €10m down-payment made by the Catalan club. "Barca admitted making a previous payment of €10m when Neymar was at Santos," Moreno added. "And that, in Fifa regulations, is seen as a serious infringement when a player is under contract with another club."

The other key claim is that Neymar's father - and his company N&N - may have pocketed the entire €40m. "We paid €17.5m (sic) to Santos and €40m to an association who owned the rights to Neymar," Barca president Sandro Rosell said last week, but the Catalans' chief refused to elaborate on those figures.

Rosell has been reported by Barca socio Jordi Cases for "inappropriate use" of club funds. Cases, who had hoped to go ahead with a censure motion against Rosell but was forced to scrap that plan due to the difficulty of finding sufficient support from fellow socios, says he and others have a right to know how that money was spent. "I would say that in no circumstances should such an important payment as €40m be concealed. As a socioand co-owner of our beloved club, I should have the right to know under which concept those €40m were paid out."

Cases, like many others, also believes the €40m may have been paid to Neymar and his father in the form of a signing-on fee or as wages not included in the official figures. And if that were the case, Barcelona could be liable to pay tax on those funds, propelling the total cost of the transfer fee to in excess of €100m. "If that €40m was a hidden salary for the player, those monies should have been declared to Hacienda [the Spanish tax office]," he said. "And that would have taken the cost of the signing to over €100m."

Including Neymar's (official) wages over five years, plus the fee, the total outlay stands at €124m by Barcelona as it is. Seven months after the deal was closed, however, it remains unclear just where a lot of that money ended up - and whether the Catalan club should in fact have paid more for their brilliant Brazilian in the form of taxes. Just like the forward bamboozles defenders in La Liga, the riddle of his transfer is proving similarly enigmatic.


SPECIAL REPORT
By Ben Hayward | Spanish Football Writer


Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/2292/editorials/2013/12/18/4487482/commission-impossible-neymar-his-father-and-barcelonas

Monday, December 16, 2013

Martino: City won't want to face Barcelona

The Blaugrana boss believes the English giants will not be happy about being drawn against this side in the last 16 of the Champions League.

Barcelona coach Gerardo Martino insists Manchester City will be upset after drawing his side in the last 16 of the Champions League in February.

The Premier League side have been unstoppable on home turf all season, winning all eight of their domestic matches and scoring a total of 16 goals against Manchester United, Arsenal and Tottenham.

Martino will take his side to the Etihad Stadium for the first leg of the tie in February, but still claims that it should be City who should be more concerned.

"There were six outcomes and we drew Manchester City," The Argentinian told reporters

"You've got to play whoever you get but they will not want to play against Barcelona. They are important opponents with very good players, but we will go there to win.

"The most important thing is to arrive at their stadium in good shape and play well."

And Martino also said he was looking forward to pitting his managerial wits against former Real Madrid coach Manuel Pellegrini.

"It will be very interesting to have a game against a Pellegrini side as I think he is one of the best coaches in the world."


Courtesy: John Baines

Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/221/champions-league/2013/12/16/4483399/martino-city-wont-want-to-face-barcelona?ICID=HP_HN_2

Sunday, December 15, 2013

ICC Twenty20 Rankings

Team Matches Points Rating
Sri Lanka 24 2570 129
India 19 1843 123
South Africa 29 2418 123
Pakistan 40 3638 121
West Indies 22 2041 120
England 28 2357 112
Australia 26 2047 102
New Zealand 27 2139 102
Ireland 14 783 87
Bangladesh 15 791 72
Afghanistan 14 908 70
Netherlands 12 508 56
Scotland 13 545 50
Zimbabwe 16 553 46
Kenya 17 633 42
Canada 8 11 2

Friday, December 13, 2013

ICC Test Rankings, 2013

Team Matches Points Rating
South Africa 27 3531 131
India 33 3920 119
England 38 4407 116
Pakistan 25 2538 102
Australia 33 3318 101
West Indies 25 2366 95
Sri Lanka 26 2295 88
New Zealand 30 2243 75
Zimbabwe 11 372 34
Bangladesh 16 285 18

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

ICC ODI Ranking, 2013

Team Matches Points Rating
India 58 6967 120
Australia 42 4808 114
England 42 4671 111
Sri Lanka 51 5605 110
South Africa 44 4825 110
Pakistan 53 5279 100
West Indies 44 3958 90
New Zealand 34 2899 85
Bangladesh 26 2165 83
Zimbabwe 26 1439 55
Ireland 11 423 38
Netherlands 7 88 13
Kenya 4 40 10

Monday, December 9, 2013

Ballon d'Or not important - Ronaldo

The 28-year-old Portuguese says it would not be "the end of the world" if he does not win this year's edition of the award and has voiced his happiness with life in Spain.

Real Madrid attacker Cristiano Ronaldo has claimed that winning the Ballon d'Or is not the most important thing in a footballer's career.

The Portuguese has scooped the award once - in 2008, for his title-winning exploits at Manchester United - but has repeatedly come off second best to Lionel Messi in recent years.

Ronaldo is the favourite to regain the prize this year but the 28-year-old insists that he is not overly concerned with individual accolades.

"The Ballon d'Or is not the most important thing in a footballer's career," the Blancos forward told beIN Sport. "There are many more years.

"It is important for many players and I can understand that, but it's just an individual trophy.

"Of course, it would be nice to win but it would not be the end of the world otherwise. Moreover, great players who deserved it have never won it."

Ronaldo pledged his future to Madrid earlier this season by signing a contract that runs until 2018 and he says he very comfortable in the Spanish capital, though he stopped short of saying he would definitely retire at the Santiago Bernabeu.

"This is my house, my home, I feel good. I love the fans, I love the staff and I have everything I need here," he continued.

"That's why I signed a new contract. I don't know where I'll end my career but I am happy here for now."


Courtesy: Enis Koylu

Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/3870/fifa-ballon-dor/2013/12/09/4465910/ballon-dor-not-the-most-important-thing-ronaldo?ICID=HP_HN_2

A cricket ground's song

What makes a special cricket place special? At Adelaide Oval, part of it is that going to the cricket is about not having to watch the cricket

 Rinsed in light, near a river, beside the church, was a beautiful cricket ground. At least, who is to say there was not?

The ground appears in a Patrick Eagar photo - a left-handed batsman in blue cap waiting, a fielder in a red cap posted forward of square. It is a tour match. Rising from the bottom of the photo are the backs and sun-hatted heads of three spectators in fold-out chairs. One (a man) has binoculars trained. Next to him someone (a woman) is not watching, the pages of a book or possibly magazine just visible on her lap. The third spectator, who's taken off a white button-up coat and draped it over the fence pickets, has to cock her head and tilt it 45 degrees to see the play, which she does. Eagar must have been crouched behind them when he pointed and clicked. Except some years ago I sent him a short description of the photo, asking permission to reprint it in a book with other cricket photos in it, and he emailed back.

"Cannot. Before my time. Not my photo."

A day later, a second email.

"Found it."


 Test cricket came to Adelaide Oval in 1884 and when dust storms stopped play anyone standing on close-by Montefiore Hill was able to see the suffocating players lying on the ground, gulping air.

Moreton Bay fig trees were planted, and slowly grew, and later the view wasn't as good. But still, barely squinting, in the crack between a grandstand and the trees, you could make out the 22 yards of the pitch. For a century and a quarter and more, fathers took their sons there.

Then last Friday, when Australia's and England's cricketers gathered themselves in rows for a minute's silence for Nelson Mandela, the view of the players, the field, the silence, was… blankness. You could still hear it, though.

Not every city gives its people a free view of the cricket ground and pitch while an international match is in progress.

Big change sweeps most cricket places eventually. The logic's nearly beyond argument: if you can fit more people in a ground, that means more money. To be there in the week that change arrives is a tearing feeling.

If the play is good, and the refreshments are fine, and the atmosphere is enthusiastic, and your seat is comfortable, and you are guaranteed a toilet within 40 metres of that seat, is that enough? It's not. A special cricket place has something else.

People are anxious.

You don't want to hate it. You want it to be great.


 On TV once I swear I saw John Dyson - square-headed under his helmet, stiff-armed as bat tapped ball - hit straight and slow enough down the ground that he and Kepler Wessels ran five. So close-up and strangely particular is my remembering… Am I misremembering? Except, of course, all-run fives driven to the long straight boundary were common on the old, pre-ropes Adelaide Oval - true?

Charles Davis, the statistician, has 40 full scoresheets of Adelaide Tests between 1911 and 1998. Fives in Adelaide, he says, were more frequent than fives in Melbourne or Brisbane, yes, but outnumbered by Sydney fives. Fives constituted only 0.03% of total runs scored in the Adelaide Tests that Davis knows about. "Maybe it's just another of those myths that get repeated?"

Bruce Laird managed three fives in a single Test here. That was sort of cheating, fives-wise, because overthrows were involved. Jack Ryder in 1925, Bill Brown in 1937, Keith Miller in 1948 - all scored fives, all the result of overthrows.

"There are no fives without overthrows in Adelaide in the era of Cricinfo text commentaries, since 1999."

Davis' 40 Adelaide Test scoresheets before then reveal a mere 16 fives.

"Including the one by Dyson that you mentioned."


 To ancient Graymore by tram, and by foot, and if Adelaide has a second sacred cricket site, it is here: the backyard pitch on which Ian, Greg and Trevor Chappell played 300 days a year.

At 4A Leak Avenue I knock. Garry, who opens, and who has been here ten years, says it's not here. He is "99% sure" that what used to be 4 Leak Avenue - the old Chappell address - is now, thanks to various bulldozings and housing subdivisions, 2 Leak Avenue, where a young bloke moved in a fortnight ago. I go see the young bloke. I tell him the history. He is pretty pleased. But while we are talking, Garry digs out another neighbour, Terry, who isn't young, and Terry says Garry's wrong. Garry's place is the Chappell site. Terry's certain. As a matter of fact, Terry used to chuck the balls back when they landed in his yard.

 Out the front, two low-slung, adjoining, modern-looking homes are separated by a two-car garage.

Out the back is a shed, a patio, a thicket of miniature date palms.

Greg Chappell developed his distinctive hip shot - "There's no name for this shot," wrote old England captain Mike Brearley - by flicking the ball between a citrus tree and an almond tree that have been ripped out, adjacent to a tankstand that's gone, opposite a homemade pitch that isn't anymore there, behind a three-bedroom sandstone house that isn't anymore there, in a suburb that is no longer called Graymore.



Top of the fourth-floor escalator in the southern stand, Day 1, nine minutes till start time, his white hair bushy and windswept, making him look more and more as he ages like a koala-tastic Keith Miller, it's Ian Chappell. "The media centre," he says, confused, "it's over where?"



 When Laurie Mayne was a boy in Westonia his father said: "He's got a bat. You've got a ball. He defends three stumps. Knock them over." Later Laurie made the Western Australian team and discovered he could bowl bumpers. Soon after, next to the Adelaide Oval practice nets and behind the main grandstand in December 1964, for 35 minutes Laurie and Don Bradman walked and talked. It was the break between innings of a Sheffield Shield game. Laurie had just dismissed Lloyd, Shiell and Blundell.

"What sticks in my mind," says Laurie, "is Sir Donald politely asked Locky, the captain, for permission. And the long and the short of his advice, as I recall, was 'You've got energy, you've got enthusiasm, you've got the right sorts of qualities. Now you have to make sure you don't bowl too many short balls. Keep them in your armoury but be astute as to when you bowl them and at whom.' And I said, 'Thank you very much, sir.'"

Ten weeks later the squad for the Caribbean was announced. Laurie was in.



 In another Patrick Eagar photo, a landscape shot, it is as if his camera had a slow-motion setting: old hand-turned scoreboard, St Peter's Cathedral, Yardley bowls, umpire and fielders crouch, suspension hangs, Gower leaves the ball…

Sportswriter John Harms calls this "the Adelaide rhythm" - "that point of an Adelaide match when the wicket is so good that a batsman is unlikely to be dismissed unless he makes a mistake".

These past five days at new Adelaide tended to unfold, in sync with the surroundings, at stadium speed. Even so, certain passages resembled old Adelaide, such as Clarke gliding and Haddin heaving run after effortless run on the second morning, and Root and Pietersen detaining the Australians on Day 4, captain Clarke ultimately squeezing dry the runs, preparatory to one of his bowlers claiming the breakthrough.

It is good driving cricket: cricket-on-the-car-radio sort of cricket.

"The leave" is an important Adelaide shot.



 Cricket by its nature consists of long patches of seeming inactivity broken by spells or flurries of wickets, runs and drama, and the dramatic intervals are when matches get decided, again and again it happens like this, yet never in the same two ways, and therefore seldom boringly. The slow-cricket passages, when you smell the imminent epic drama like a wave about to break, can be the most delicious and tense.

"A good thing about Adelaide," someone who flies here specially most Test summers reckons, "is you can wander out the back to the bar for 20 minutes and, when you return, nothing's changed."

You usually only ever hear this said in Adelaide. In Adelaide you hear it said a lot. It is a jarring concept, the idea that an up-side, in Adelaide, about going to the cricket is not having to watch the cricket. But it is something that's felt deeply, and it's real.



 Conversation overheard between churchgoer in tie hurrying towards the steps outside St Peter's and spectator leaving the ground on the first evening -

"What's the score? Any idea?"

"F*** knows. Haven't seen a ball since lunchtime."


 On the car radio is how Don Walker likes to follow cricket. Forty years ago Walker's band Cold Chisel formed in Adelaide.

A half sentence in his memoir, Shots, goes: "… this prim little city on the edge of Next Stop Antarctica."

About his band's first regular venue, the Largs Pier Hotel, he writes: "… the pigdogs are chained up waiting at home and everyone just wants to bash something."

Performing in Roskilde put another songwriter, the late David McComb of The Triffids, in mind of Adelaide: "… In Denmark they treat you like a pop group, which is how it should be. In London they treat you like a uni lecturer. In Adelaide they treat you like shit."

Not much music is happening at the Largs Pier during Adelaide Test week 2013. A DJ is booked for "Funkin' Up Friday", a female folk singer on Sunday afternoon.


 Batting or bowling, you cannot see the cathedral.

In two thirds of the seats round the ground, no longer can you see the cathedral.

In seats that do have a cathedral view, often it is just the tips of two spires.

You know what redevelopment plan I want to see? I want to see a cricket ground spend $535 million redeveloping a cathedral until the cathedral is within clear sight of the cricket ground.

Right of the hand-turned 1911 scoreboard, right of the bucketheaded KFC eaters, is a rectangle of grass sectioned off by steel barricades. It is quiet. People are sitting on rugs. But not many people, though the day is a sellout. This is the view: a sliver of tree between two grandstands, a Toyota ad sightscreen, plastic seats. Mostly plastic seats. And - in front of the seats - cricket. Nothing interesting to look at but the cricket. It is hard to not watch the cricket. The cricket score and replay screen are comfortably visible without craning your neck. It is all about cricket. And reverie.



 John Mosey's mother wrote down his scores the first time he played, a habit she couldn't shake, until John took over, and through their combined devotion we know that from 1954 to 2003, in all forms of South Australian country cricket, JL Mosey of Eudunda-Robertstown amassed 37,283 runs, hit 93 centuries, and took 2750-odd wickets.

Three times he batted on Adelaide Oval. Never dismissed.

"A batsman's paradise," he remembers. "And the thing that impressed me most was the sightscreens. They were big and wide. They were so good you could see which way the ball was spinning in the air."

Square of the action, in the unopened and still-being-built eastern stand, between the floor and the lip of the bottom concrete tier, you can experience a jolting optical sensation. The players bounce. The field glows. It seems to radiate from underneath, like they are playing on an upturned catwalk.

It is the light. The light's the same.



Courtesy: Christian Ryan, Writer based in Melbourne. Author of Golden Boy: Kim Hughes and the Bad Old Days of Australian Cricket


Source: http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/698717.html

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Ribery deserves Ballon d'Or more than Messi - Guardiola


The Bayern boss backs the winger to win the prestigious award, believing that his exploits last season put him ahead of the Barca star he once coached.

Bayern Munich boss Pep Guardiola has hailed Franck Ribery, suggesting that he ought to win the Ballon d'Or ahead of his former player Lionel Messi.

The Bavarians stretched their unbeaten run in the Bundesliga to 40 games after a 7-0 win over Werder Bremen on Saturday, with the France winger scoring twice on his return from a rib injury.

Guardiola, speaking after the match, revelled in the ability of the forward and stressed that he felt he was the most deserving person to be named the best player on the planet - even more so than his former charge at Barcelona, Messi.

"We have been talking about this topic for a long time now," the 42-year-old told reporters.

"Franck had an incredible season last year. His career is incredible. This year Franck is one of the reasons why we are where we are.

"Obviously lots of other players too but especially Franck. Naturally, he deserves to win the title [Ballon d'Or], this personal title, but the most important thing is he is happy with his performances last year and what he is doing now.

"Whether he loses or not is not gonna change his life, his career or our opinion about him.

"He and his team last year with Jupp [Heynckes] won everything and obviously he deserves it. But the other players are amazing too. Lionel Messi, or Cristiano Ronaldo, or another player.

"But last season for him was, without a doubt, amazing."

Guardiola also enthused about the entire Bayern side after the thrashing of Bremen, declaring himself privileged to coach such a talented group.

"It was the first game this season where we kept our positions well," the former Barcelona trainer continued.

"Every player stuck to his position and after having the ball, they want back to that same position. I want to congratulate my players, it was a very strong game from us.

"Thank you to the club for bringing these amazing players. It's an honour for me to coach them."

Bayern sit top of the Bundesliga with 41 points from 15 games, four clear or Bayer Leverkusen.


Courtesy: Andrew Wychrij

Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/3870/fifa-ballon-dor/2013/12/08/4463736/guardiola-ribery-deserves-ballon-dor-more-than-messi


India have a weakness in the middle order - Steyn



Brazil will reach the World Cup final - Pele

Cristiano Ronaldo VS Messi

 

Tiger Woods takes World Challenge lead

 

 Zidane Said 'Ronaldo is monstrous'


India have a weakness in the middle order - Steyn


Steyn said that 'India have a weakness in the middle order'. After taking retirement of Sachin Tendukar and off form of Yuvraj Sing India just unable to survive well their team by the middle order.

Still India in South Africa and against South Africa they have been beaten by 141 runs in their first match. South African bowler Steyn said "India have a weakness in the middle order".

MS Dhoni said that they lost the match because of their bowler. Now India team trying to adopt them with the South Africa environment to play well cricket.

May be India go for lose this series against South Africa.

Brazil will reach the World Cup final - Pele

Cristiano Ronaldo VS Messi

 

Tiger Woods takes World Challenge lead

 

 Zidane Said 'Ronaldo is monstrous'



  Pele VS Maradona

Brazil will reach the World Cup final - Pele


The Selecao legend believes Felipao's men will be one of the teams competing for the trophy at the Maracana on July 13 and is praying the Canarinho go one better than they in 1950
Brazil legend Pele has predicted the Selecao will reach the final of the 2014 World Cup.

Friday's draw in Bahia saw Luiz Felipe Scolari’s men matched with Croatia, Mexico and Cameroon in Group A.

The hosts will open the tournament against Croatia in Sao Paulo on June 12 and Pele is confident that the Confederations Cup winners will go all the way.

"I think we will be in the final,” he said.

"I can always remember my father crying after we lost the World Cup final to Uruguay in 1950, so I don't want my kids to see me crying. I hope we will win."

Meanwhile, Brazil Technical Director Carlos Alberto Parreira, who won the tournament as coach in 1994, warned the players that their World Cup starts now.

"The World Cup starts when you know who you are up against,” he said following the draw. “So the World Cup starts now.”

"The opening game generates enormous pressure. Win the first match and you are well on the way to making it through.”

Brazil will continue their preparations ahead of the tournament when they meet up in March for the next leg of the Gillette Brasil Global Tour.


Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/3832/2014-world-cup/2013/12/07/4461712/pele-brazil-will-reach-the-world-cup-final?ICID=HP_TS_8


Cristiano Ronaldo VS Messi

 

Tiger Woods takes World Challenge lead

 

 Zidane Said 'Ronaldo is monstrous'



  Pele VS Maradona

Fifa asks World Cup protesters for calm

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Cristiano Ronaldo VS Messi


This is a very complicated things to compare Messi and Ronaldo. One is from Portugal and another one is from Argentina. Ronaldo is the super start of Real Madrid and Messi is the super star of Barcelona.

In this year Ronaldo is ahead a step than Messi. In 2013 Messi got injured and unable to serve Barcelona like his previous time when he received Ballon'Dr 4 times for consecutive years from 2009 to 2012. But this may Ranaldo will get the Ballon'Dr.

There has another things when i going to compare between Messi and Ronaldo. Ronaldo already proved he can play well for his country and good striker for Portugal. But Messi still unable to prof that he can play for country and good for his country.
Because of in Barcelona  Iniesta pass the ball to the Messi to keep doing goal but in Argentina there has no Iniesta for reason Messi unable to play well Football for his country.

In that finally we can say Ronaldo is a player both for Portugal and Real Madrid whereas Messi only player of Barcelona not for Argentina.




Tiger Woods takes World Challenge lead

 

 Zidane Said 'Ronaldo is monstrous'



  Pele VS Maradona

Fifa asks World Cup protesters for calm

Hoeness: Ronaldo can't beat Ribery to Ballon d'Or over 'one game'



Tiger Woods takes World Challenge lead


Northwestern Mutual World Challenge, California, second-round leaderboard (US unless stated)

    -11: T Woods
    -9: Z Johnson
    -8: M Kuchar
    -5: G McDowell (NI)
    -4: B Watson
    Selected others: -1 I Poulter (Eng); +5 L Westwood (Eng); +6 R McIlroy (NI)

World number one Tiger Woods struck a brilliant 10-under-par 62 in the second round of the World Challenge to eke a two-stroke lead at the halfway stage. Woods hit 10 birdies in a blemish-free round to finish 11 under overall.

Zach Johnson trailed Woods on nine under after a four-under-par 68, while fellow American Matt Kuchar was third in California on eight under.

Elsewhere, Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell was fourth on five under after a five-under-par 67. England's Ian Poulter was tied for eighth, an impressive five-under-par 67 took him into the red on one under.

Poulter's compatriot Lee Westwood was some distance behind, tied for 13th on five over after two rounds, while Rory McIlroy was a shot behind in 16th. Woods, who had shot a one-under-par round on the opening day, collected five birdies over the first nine holes to reach the turn in 31.

His superb form continued on the back nine and he eventually overtook overnight leader Johnson, who had mirrored Wood's efforts over his first six holes but could not keep pace with his compatriot.

Source: http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/golf/25271207



                                                   Zidane Said 'Ronaldo is monstrous'



  Pele VS Maradona

Fifa asks World Cup protesters for calm

Hoeness: Ronaldo can't beat Ribery to Ballon d'Or over 'one game'

Ronaldo threatens to boycott Ballon d'Or

Friday, December 6, 2013

Zidane Said 'Ronaldo is monstrous'



The Real Madrid assistant coach has acclaimed the Portugal star ahead of Friday's World Cup draw and says he hopes France are to face some hard teams previously on.
Zinedine Zidane has branded Cristiano Ronaldo "monstrous" for the way he has been performing for Real Madrid and Portugal this year.

The forward, 28, scored four times in the Seleccao's two-legged World Cup play-off in contradiction of Sweden to secure a place in Brazil and has been in exclusive goalscoring form for the Blancos this season.

"Cristiano Ronaldo has shown what he can do for Portugal and Real Madrid," Zidane, who is part of the coaching staff at Santiago Bernabeu, told reporters in Brazil ahead of the World Cup 2014 group stage draw on Friday.

"He does not need to talk much. Much has been said of him, but what he does on the pitch is monstrous. The way he won the match against Sweden, when many people thought Portugal would not qualify... he carried the team on his back.

"He has shown that he is an excellent player. I'm proud to stand beside him [at Madrid], to see him in training, participating in everything.

"He's a great professional, arriving an hour before training. What he has done on the pitch is the result of his hard work. He's an example and really carries and drives the team."

Zidane won the World Cup with France in 1998 and hopes that les Bleus are handed the chance to pit themselves against the best from the outset when the eight groups are allocated on Friday.

"I would love it if France could get put in a difficult group," he added. "I want us to play against the best and achieve something more. I'm not afraid for us to tackle tough teams."


Courtesy: Miles Chambers

Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/138/spain/2013/12/06/4457699/ronaldo-is-monstrous-zidane?ICID=HP_HN_3



                                                      Pele VS Maradona

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Pele VS Maradona

This is very complicated things to compare between Pele and Maradona. Because of Pele is the player who taken 3 world cups and done maximum goals to opposite teams than any player of the Football world. Where Argentina whole team taken only 2 world cups in the Football history where 1 is for the Maradona by hand of football God.

Maradona is the player who is the worlds most popular football player regarding her incense behavior. Where Pele is not like that. So this is totally immature work to compare Maradona with Pele.

Also Brazil VS Argentina. There has no record except Copa America Argentina can reach near Brazil. Brazil is Brazil because of A British Journalist said that "A team will not be a Big team until or unless playing against Brazil".

Fifa asks World Cup protesters for calm

Fifa general secretary Jerome Valcke has appealed to Brazilians to support next summer's World Cup, saying it would be the 'wrong time' to protest.

Fifa is concerned that civil dissent over the cost of staging the showpiece event could overshadow the tournament.

"It is a right to demonstrate. For them it's the best time - for me it's the wrong time," Valcke said.

He also told the BBC that delays in construction had made preparations for the tournament harder than expected.

 He said: "[It's] the wrong time [to protest] because it is a time where Brazil should enjoy a unique time, a time they have not enjoyed since 1950.

"A time where they have a national team who won the Confederations Cup - a team that is the potential winner of the World Cup 2014.

"So there should be support from all Brazil for the organisation of the World Cup.

"We are not asking [them] to support Fifa, we are asking [them] to support the World Cup. We are asking [them] to support an event they won five times already and they dream to win for the first time at home."

Many of the protesters say the event is a waste of money at a time when there is a squeeze on living costs in Brazil.

Some believe the public investment in the World Cup - almost £8bn - should have been spent on schools, hospitals and transport improvements.

 Brazil's three-time World Cup winner Pele supported Valcke's call for calm next year, saying: "It is nothing against the football, nothing against the players. This is a political problem but I think this is a good opportunity.

"Brazil has three very important events here - the Confederations Cup, the World Cup and the Olympic Games.

"I think the people should be very quiet and pay attention because this is a great moment for the country. It makes good publicity, investment, tourism. I think we have to be careful because it's a big opportunity."

Protests are not Fifa's only concern. There are also serious doubts about the stadiums.

On Tuesday, Fifa confirmed that three of the hosts - Curitiba, Cuiaba and Sao Paulo - would miss their completion deadline of the end of December. There are also serious doubts over a fourth - Manaus.

The Brazilian sports minister Aldo Rebelo claimed on Wednesday that all the stadiums would be handed over in January.

But in his interview with the BBC, Valcke seemed to contradict him, saying two of the four may not be finished until March.

 He said: "I will say that three stadiums will not be ready by the end of the year. One [will be ready] by the end of January 2014, and the two - between end of February and early March."

Asked whether there was any point in Fifa setting deadlines, he replied: "That's a good question. I agree, that's a good question.

"You are expecting that they understand what we need and that they will play the game by saying 'guys we are together' - and that's the disappointment."

Valcke rejected the suggestion that bringing the World Cup to Brazil had been too much of a risk but added that preparations here had been much tougher than the build-up to South Africa four years ago.

"It has been hard, I agree, and in a way I think that may be because in South Africa you had the feeling from the first minute that South Africa needed to show to the world that they can organise such an event.

"And there was a kind of support and national support and we had not as many problems we face in Brazil."

Pele said about the world cup 2014

"I think the people should be very quiet and pay attention because this is a great moment for the country”

Courtesy: David Bond

Source: http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/25226491


Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Hoeness: Ronaldo can't beat Ribery to Ballon d'Or over 'one game'

The former West Germany international has lamented the fact that there has been a groundswell of support for the Portuguese because of his World Cup play-off heroics
Bayern Munich president Uli Hoeness claims it would be unjust if Cristiano Ronaldo pips Franck Ribery to this year's Ballon d'Or on the back of "one game".

Ribery was considered the clear favourite for the prestigious Fifa award on account of the integral role he played in the Bavarians' historic treble success last season.

However, Hoeness now fears that the groundswell of support that accompanied Ronaldo's hat-trick in Portugal's dramatic World Cup play-off victory over Sweden in Solna in November could - wrongfully, as the 61-year-old sees it - tip the balance in favour of the prolific Real Madrid attacker.

"Ronaldo has, of course, contributed significantly to the fact that Portugal has qualified for the World Cup," the Bayern supremo told Sport Bild.

"But I would have absolutely no understanding of the situation if Franck did not win the Ballon d'Or after being named [Uefa's] Best Player in Europe. There is a whole year to be judged - not just one game.

"I feel that public opinion has shifted. But, in the meantime, for me, nothing has changed. There can be only Ribery as the winner [of the Ballon d'Or]."

Courtesy: Mark Doyle

Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/3753/germany/2013/12/04/4454646/hoeness-ronaldo-cant-beat-ribery-to-ballon-dor-over-one-game

Ronaldo threatens to boycott Ballon d'Or

The Madrid star is unhappy with the Uefa chief's latest remarks, despite them being intended as a joke, and has hinted he will not go to the award ceremony
Cristiano Ronaldo has threatened to boycott the Ballon d'Or after accusing Uefa president Michel Platini of attempting to provoke him.

The European football chief joked that the award's voting deadline was extended for the sake of the Real Madrid forward, but some Spanish outlets claimed that the Frenchman was being serious with his remarks.

Either way, Ronaldo has taken the comments to heart and refused to respond to Platini, while suggesting he may not go to the ceremony on January 13 in Zurich and instead stay in Madrid or go to Portugal.

"I think that [Platini] was trying to provoke me," the 28-year-old told reporters in Madeira, where he is enjoying a few days' rest and preparing for the opening of his own personal museum. "I will not respond.

"On the day of the Ballon d'Or ceremony I may be in Spain or in Zurich... or in Madeira."

The Portuguese winger has missed the last two games for his club having picked up a thigh injury in November, after starting each of the Blancos' opening 18 games this season.

He is currently the bookmakers' favourite to win the upcoming Ballon d'Or, ahead of fellow frontrunners Franck Ribery and Lionel Messi.


Courtesy: Miles Chambers

Source: http://www.goal.com/en-india/news/3870/fifa-ballon-dor/2013/12/04/4453621/platini-tried-to-provoke-me-ronaldo-threatens-to-boycott

BCCI discusses restructure in sharing of ICC revenue

A changed revenue-distribution model for the ICC was one of several issues discussed between Cricket Australia chairman Wally Edwards and BCCI president N Srinivasan in Singapore last week. Edwards is also head of the ICC governance committee and his meeting with Srinivasan happened to be part of his regular rounds of talks with ICC executive board members. The BCCI is understood to be in favour of a sharing of ICC revenue that better reflects the size of its financial contribution to the game, rather than an equal split among all Full Member nations.

The Singapore discussions were said to have taken place over a middle ground between current practice and BCCI's informal stand on the subject.

Srinivasan was in Singapore for an IPL franchise-owners workshop. Along with being BCCI president and therefore member of the IPL governing council, he is also owner of the Chennai Super Kings IPL franchise.

Neither CA nor the BCCI made any formal statement about their stand on the subject of ICC revenue distribution until Tuesday. At the sidelines of the ICC awards announcement function in Mumbai, BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel said the issue was the "legitimate right" of the BCCI and was still under discussion. "This legitimate right issue has been put up before the Full Members of ICC. It is nothing but a just and fair right that we are asking for. It is not any muscle flexing." Patel told PTI. Srinivasan had put up the issue for the "first time in the history of the BCCI as a Full Member of the ICC. He has worked out very good details and very good options," Patel said.

"President Srinivasan, since last year, was looking into the financial details of ICC. He has made a private study about what could be the contribution of the BCCI into the revenue stream of ICC. On the basis of that, some formulae have been discussed among us. His own acumen as a businessman has also helped us." On the home front, the BCCI hands out 70% of its annual revenue to 27 of its affiliates in equal proportions.

Cricket Australia's own views on the subjects are not yet known in the public domain. It has however changed its own financial-revenue distribution in 2012 as part of a raft of governance changes including the move towards a fully independent board of directors. From each state receiving an equal share, revenue is now distributed on a basis of need, as decided by CA's board.

The discussion between Edwards and Srinivasan also covered matters including the vast disparity between dividends received by lower ranked Full Member countries and the top Associate nations like Ireland and Afghanistan.


Courtesy: Daniel Brettig

Source: http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci-icc/content/current/story/696059.html

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Alastair Cook, MS Dhoni lead ICC Test, ODI teams


Alastair Cook and MS Dhoni have been named captains of the ICC's Test and ODI Teams of the Year. Dale Steyn was included in the Test side for the sixth successive year, while Dhoni made the ODI line-up for the sixth consecutive year as well. Performances between August 7, 2012 and August 25, 2013 were considered by a panel chaired by former India captain Anil Kumble, also the ICC cricket committee chairman.

 ICC Test Team of the Year (in batting order)
Alastair Cook (capt), Cheteshwar Pujara, Hashim Amla, Michael Clarke, Michael Hussey, AB de Villiers, MS Dhoni (wk), Graeme Swann, Dale Steyn, James Anderson, Vernon Philander, R Ashwin (12th man)

ICC ODI Team of the Year (in batting order)

Tillakaratne Dilshan, Shikhar Dhawan, Hashim Amla, Kumar Sangakkara, AB de Villiers, MS Dhoni (capt & wk), Ravindra Jadeja, Saeed Ajmal, Mitchell Starc, James Anderson, Lasith Malinga, Mitchell McClenaghan (12th man)

Hashim Amla was named in the Test side for the fourth straight year, while Cook made an appearance for the third year on the trot.

"It is always tough to decide on the Test and ODI teams of the year, with so many worthy candidates to consider based on the players' performances between 7 August 2012 and 25 August 2013," Kumble said. "The selection panel had a lengthy debate on all the top performers during the performance period and a number of combinations were considered.

"The selectors did utilise a vast amount of statistics from the period under observation, but we also took into account other factors like the opposition, pitch conditions, match situation and the like. But when you have only 12 places to fill from a big group of world-class players, there will always be a few who will miss out. In the panel's expert opinion, it has selected the best Test and ODI teams based on performances over the past 12 months."

The other members of the panel were former Pakistan captain Waqar Younis, former England captain Alec Stewart, former South Africa batsman Graeme Pollock, and former New Zealand women's player Catherine Campbell.

Courtesy: ICC news, ESPNcricinfo

Source: http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci-icc/content/current/story/695999.html