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Showing posts with label Players News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Players News. Show all posts

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Lionel Messi named Fifa's World Player of the Year

Lionel Messi accepts his World Player of the Year award from Fifa president Sepp Blatter
Lionel Messi named Fifa's World Player of the Year
Lionel Messi has been named the Fifa Fifpro World Player of the Year. The Argentina and Barcelona forward won the accolade for the first time for helping his club win an unprecedented six trophies, including the Champions League and the domestic league title.
The 22-year-old beat last year's winner Cristiano Ronaldo, his two club mates Andres Iniesta and Xavi, and Brazil midfielder Kaka. He was presented with the trophy at an awards ceremony in Zurich.
Messi said: "I'm extremely happy. We've just ended a historic year, a perfect year in which we've won every competition we've played in. We just needed to take this last step and everything has worked out how we wanted. It's amazing."
Brazil's Marta was the recipient of the women's award for the fourth consecutive year. England's Kelly Smith, who left Arsenal to play in the new Women's Professional Soccer league for Boston Breakers earlier this year, was named amongst the top five. Smith said: "This is a real honour for me. It was tough for me to leave my home country because I'm very proud and passionate to be English. I just wanted to be amongst the best players in the world and that's certainly the case and I'm now pursuing my dream."
Two England players made it into Fifa's World XI, along with three other Premier League players. The England and Chelsea captain John Terry and Liverpool's Steven Gerrard were among the players named tonight in the Fifa World XI. Manchester United defenders Nemanja Vidic and Patrice Evra and Liverpool striker Fernando Torres also made the team
The XI, voted for by members of the international professional footballers' union FIFPro, were: Iker Casillas (Real Madrid), John Terry (Chelsea), Nemanja Vidic (Man Utd), Patrice Evra (Man Utd), Daniel Alves (Barcelona), Xavi (Barcelona), Andres Iniesta (Barcelona), Steven Gerrard (Liverpool), Lionel Messi (Barcelona), Cristiano Ronaldo (Real Madrid), Fernando Torres (Liverpool).
Terry said: "There is no higher accolade than to be voted for by your fellow professionals so we are all very proud."
Ronaldo won the Fifa Puskas award for the best goal of the 2008/09 season for his long-range effort for Manchester United against Porto in the Champions League in April.
The Fifa Fair Play Award was given posthumously to Sir Bobby Robson for his "outstanding commitment to the values of fair play throughout his career". The award was collected by his widow Elsie.

Lionel Messi tops David Beckham on football's rich list

Lionel Messi
Lionel Messi tops David Beckham on football's rich list
Barcelona's Lionel Messi has deposed David Beckham to top France Football's list of the highest-paid players. The Argentina forward is said to have made £29.7m last year.
Beckham, who has been first or second in each of the last nine years, took home £27.3m in 2009, according to the report.
Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo was third with £27m, while teammate Kaka was a distant fourth with £16.9m. Thierry Henry was fifth with £16.2m. Ronaldinho (£15.5m), Carlos Tevez (£13.8m), Zlatan Ibrahimovic (£13m), Frank Lampard (£12.8m) and Samuel Eto'o (£12.4m) completed the top ten.
France Football, which has ranked the best-paid players since 1999, calculated the figures based on salary and endorsements.

Lionel Messi has all the qualities to take world by storm.

Lionel Messi has all the qualities to take world by storm.

Long before the young man turned Stamford Bridge into his own personal theatre this week, Jose Mourinho knew all about Leo Messi. In 2003 the floppy-haired 16-year-old made his first senior appearance for Barcelona on the night the Catalan squad travelled to Porto, where they provided the opposition at the ceremonial opening of the spectacular new Dragao Stadium. Mourinho, who had just led the Portuguese club to the first of two consecutive league championships, received at close quarters a glimpse of a talent that would come back to plague him.
And it only takes a glimpse to see what makes Messi so remarkable. He may look like the missing fifth member of the Monkees but, as with all great players, his signature is in his silhouette and his movement. Even when he stands still, he is leaning forward. His head is always up, like a gun dog on the scent. He covers the ground fast, a low centre of gravity making him hard to knock off the ball, angling his runs to take him towards goal by the shortest route. Only three minutes had gone on Wednesday night when he cut inside Claude Makelele and hit a left-footed drive that forced a fumble from Petr Cech. And already, at 18, he possesses the tradecraft that enabled him to turn Asier del Horno's stupid foul into a fatal error.
A year after his trip to Porto, Messi became the third-youngest player to represent Barcelona when he was given his competitive debut in the local derby against Espanyol. After that, things happened fast. Against Albacete on May 1 2005 he became the youngest player to score a goal for the club. That June, wearing Argentina's colours, he was voted player of the tournament, ahead of Jon Obi Mikel, in the under-20 World Cup, after his pair of penalties had secured a win in the final over Mikel's Nigeria.
When he got back to Barcelona it was to sign a deal extending his contract to 2014, with a sell-on clause valuing him at an astonishing €150m (£102m). And that August he was given his first senior international cap by José Pekerman, his national team manager, who sent him on as a substitute in a friendly against Hungary in Budapest and saw the boy dismissed after only three minutes for reacting to a clumsy challenge with a swing of an arm.
Diego Maradona, too, had made his international debut against Hungary, and already comparisons were being made between the two. They were reinforced on Wednesday when an English audience saw for itself how Messi, only 5ft 7in tall but sturdily built, has a similar gift for what Argentinians called the gambeta: that sinuous high-speed dribble that carried Maradona to his famous second goal against England in Mexico 20 years ago.
If Maradona inherited the technique from the great Omar Sivori, he appears to have passed it on to a teenager who may well steal the headlines from Wayne Rooney, Robinho and other prodigies in Germany this summer. And after Wednesday night, few can remain unaware of how perfectly that gift is being blended with Ronaldinho's unpredictability, Samuel Eto'o's cool finishing and Deco's tireless construction work as Barcelona head for a second consecutive title in La Liga.
Lionel Andres Messi was born in the city of Rosario in Sante Fe province, the birthplace of Che Guevara. At the age of five he was playing for his first club, Grandoli, coached by his father, Jorge. In 1995 he joined Newell's Old Boys, Rosario's second club, where Maradona himself had briefly played a year earlier while getting himself fit for his final ill-starred appearance in a World Cup.
Maradona had been turned from a slender child into a young bull through the early administration of steroids. The young Messi, similarly, was considered too small, but his lack of growth was attributed to a hormonal deficiency in his bones, a condition requiring treatment costing more than £500 a month. River Plate, one of Argentina's great clubs, showed a persistent interest in his progress, but this was a time when the country's economy was collapsing and it was Barcelona who offered to take care of the medical bills if the 13-year-old would agree to start a new life across the Atlantic.
For three years Barcelona nurtured the boy as he progressed through their junior teams at record speed, and now they are benefiting from their foresight. Off the pitch Messi is said to be a quiet, placid character who shows no interest in acquiring the kind of dangerous habits that so frequently derailed the career of the last of his compatriots to have been acclaimed as the world's greatest player. If it is Messi's destiny to achieve a comparable pre-eminence, it looks as though he will greet it with an enviable serenity.

Lionel Messi has Magic in his feet.


Lionel Messi Best Stylish Great Player Of World
Messi: 'Something deep in my character allows me to take the hits and get on with trying to win'
Lionel Messi: Magic in his feet.
The good news for Arsenal fans, whose team face Barcelona next week in the Champions League, is that Leo Messi is human. The bad news is that he isn't always.
We've seen both, man and superman, in the past week. Against Zaragoza last Sunday, as against Stuttgart five days earlier and against Valencia three days before that, there seemed no force on earth capable of stopping him. It seemed unfair; it felt as if, for the good of the game, he should be handicapped, obliged to carry weights in his underpants, or something. Eight goals the Argentinian scored in those three games, half of them works of art that people will be gawping at in museums centuries from now. The upshot was a glut of global babble about whether Messi might now be considered the best player in history, above and beyond his compatriot Diego Maradona.
The best thing about this debate is that it seems to have put to bed the silly question of whether Messi is the best player in the world right now. Anyone who imagines that Cristiano Ronaldo is better is either uninformed or tribally prejudiced. Or just plain football dumb. Ronaldo can make something out of something – a goal from a free kick, a long-distance shot when a gap opens, a towering header in the penalty box – with awesome regularity. Messi makes something out of nothing all the time.
Well, not all the time. In a league game against Osasuna on Wednesday night he was, by his standards, pedestrian. Barcelona won but the headlines in the Spanish newspapers next morning were "Messi didn't score!". Yet the fact that this was the sporting day's news was only further testament to his genius. Yes, genius. That is what Fabio Capello, the England manager, has called him, noting that by contrast Ronaldo (a bit of a lump on the ball, frankly, alongside Messi's watery naturalness) was merely a player "of an extremely high level".
Messi is a creature as biologically adapted to play football as a shark is to smell blood, a salmon to swim upstream, a squirrel to gather nuts. Yet even a shark, a salmon or a squirrel can have a bad day. Einstein had days when the sums didn't add up, Mozart when the tune wouldn't spring to his head. Arsenal may get lucky in one of their two Champions League quarter-finals, but in both – difficult. Look at the statistics: Messi is the top scorer in Spain, with 34 goals in all competitions; he has made the most passes for goal (way more than Ronaldo); and he has the cleanest record of completed passes in the Spanish league.
Talking of squirrels, that is how he moves with the ball at his feet. Startling acceleration from a still position, but tremendous breaking power too. The secret of the embarrassment he causes defenders when he is on a run, performing the classic footballing art of the dribble like no one ever has done before, comes from a combination of blind speed off the mark with the ability to stop dead in his tracks, then turn and accelerate again. He also has the fastest feet in the game and, quite possibly, the fastest brain. For, in a Barcelona team that retains possession far longer than any other team in Europe and that last season won every title they went in for, he is the master of the killer pass.
Messi can be on the ball with three defenders crowded round him (it is a rash manager who puts fewer than three on him) but have the speed of vision to see the team-mate who is free, and then the sheer talent to place the ball with a marksman's accuracy and perfect weight at his feet.
He is best known as a goalscorer now, though when he began in the Barcelona first team aged 16 he was regarded chiefly as a winger. But when eventually he slows down (the Zaragoza coach said the other day that he was "like Maradona, but far faster") he will most likely become the best midfield orchestra conductor in the business.
As if all that were not enough, he is, as his coach Pep Guardiola never tires of reminding people, a team player too. No prima donna, he does not act as Ronaldo or his Barcelona team-mate Thierry Henry do when they lose the ball; he does not sulk, or berate the referee, implying that the only possible way that the ball could have been taken away from him was by foul play, or glance up at the heavens as if to say how, God, could you commit the divine injustice of allowing a player as great as me to be dispossesed. He just gets on with it, tracks back and battles as hard as the doughtiest midfielder to regain possession. Which he does again and again. There must be few out-and-out forwards, if any, who win as many tackles as he does. And he is brave in his willingness always to receive the ball, to help out a team-mate in tough straits. Messi does not hide.
The surprising thing is that there is so little of him. Ronaldo is a born athlete. A tall Greek god with good looks to boot (an accusation never levelled at Messi) who had he been born in New Zealand might today be rugby's finest fly-half. Messi could only have made it in football, the most democratic of games. With him "something out of nothing" is the key thought. Both concerning what he does on the field of play – conjuring goals that ordinarily brilliant players would not dare to imagine – and his life.
A large part of the reason why he fetched up in Barcelona aged 13 was that, in contrast to the Argentinian club he came from, the Catalans were prepared to cough up the money required to pay for years of growth hormone treatment. He stands 5ft 6in and weighs barely 10 stone – one wonders what he would have looked like without the daily injections in the thigh that punctuated his early adolescence.
History is full of people who more than compensated for their small size with big personalities. Messi does not have that either. He comes exuberantly alive when he has a ball nearby (a former Argentinian national manager, Carlos Bilardo, once said that if you did an X-ray of Messi you'd find a round object attached to the end of his left foot), but otherwise he is timid, he slouches, he does not catch the eye. Even those closest to him report that he is shy, and as for journalists who do interviews with him (this one has done it twice), pulling teeth does not begin to explain how excruciatingly frustrating the exercise is.
Yet there is an inner steel there. And he showed it as a young boy on arrival in Barcelona. He had been brought up in Rosario, an unglamorous industrial city 250 miles north of Buenos Aires where he lived with his father, a factory worker, mother, two brothers and a grandmother to whom he was devoted. It was she who took him to play organised football for the first time, aged barely four, convincing the coach to take him though he was far smaller and two years younger than the rest of the boys.
It was tough for him to leave his warm family environment, and the only town he had known, at the age of 13 for a city a day's flight away. But when his parents left it to him to decide whether to take up the Barcelona offer ("Christ, who's that?" exclaimed Charlie Rexach, the club's youth chief, on first seeing him play), he opted to do so, though he knew he'd have to battle his shyness, homesickness and the challenge of being a young little stranger in a strange land. There he revealed a drive and a desire that have never left him, for each season he improves on his last. No discipline is more competitive than that of the football player.
There might be thousands who aspire to be great opera singers or prima ballerinas; hundreds of thousands who would wish to play tennis like Roger Federer or swim like Michael Phelps or write like V S Naipaul. But there are millions upon millions of children and adults who play football and dream of being professional players. And Messi, scrutinised every week by those very same millions with the eye of a scientist studying an insect, is at the very top of the heap, the best player there is.
And when the pressure is on, as in the Champions League final last year in which Barcelona dizzied Manchester United like a matador a bull, he stands up to be counted. Even Real Madrid acknowledge his worth. Had Messi been willing, they would have splashed out far more cash last summer for him than they did in breaking the world transfer record for Ronaldo.
Will he end up being judged alongside Maradona, and the other footballing deity, Pelé? Might he surpass them both? He has a road ahead. But he already has one foot on the pantheon. Which is quite remarkable enough, given that he is only 22.
A life in brief
Born: 24 June 1987, Rosario, Argentina.
Family: His father, Jorge Horacio Messi, was a factory worker, and mother, Celia Maria Messi, a part-time cleaner. Lionel has two older brothers, Rodrigo and Matias, and a sister, Maria Sol.
Early Life: Introduced to football at an early age by his family. His father was a coach at the local club, Grandoli. Diagnosed with a growth deficiency at 11, his treatment was paid for by Barcelona FC after he impressed them at a trial. They facilitated his move to Spain to join the club's youth team.
Career: Made his La Liga debut for Barcelona against Espanyol when he was 17 years old. His breakthrough season came in 2006/07, when he established himself as a first team regular, scoring 14 times in 26 matches. Voted Fifa World Player of the Year in 2009, he made his 200th appearance for Barcelona in a league match against Osasuna last weekend. He will also be a key feature in the Argentinian team for this summer's Fifa World Cup.
He says: "Something deep in my character allows me to take the hits and get on with trying to win."
They say: "I have seen the player who will inherit my place in Argentine football and his name is Messi. Messi is a genius and he can become an even better player." Diego Maradona, former player and Argentina manager

Is Lionel Messi the new Maradona. What Is Your Opinion?

Is Messi the new Maradona? What You Think?

Spanish newspapers have hailed Barcelona's Lionel Messi as the new Diego Maradona after his wonder goal in a 5-2 win against Getafe last night. The 19-year-old ran from his own half beating four Getafe players before rounding goalkeeper Luis Garcia and scoring from a narrow angle in the 29th minute at Nou Camp.
His strike has drawn direct comparisons with Maradona's winner against England in the 1986 World Cup quarter-finals which also featured a long, dribbling run that left numerous England defenders and keeper Peter Shilton in his wake.
Frank Rijkaard, the Barcelona coach, described Messi's goal as "a work of art", while team-mate Deco said it was "the greatest goal I have seen in my life."
But former Argentina international Jorge Valdano, who played with Maradona against England in 1986, disagreed: "Diego played with pauses and acceleration. Messi's was down to breakneck speed and acceleration," Valdano told El Pais. "It's impossible not to compare Messi's goal with Maradona's, but the comparison doesn't turn Messi into Maradona."
Watch both goals below and let us know if you think Messi's goal matches up.

Ronaldo leads Messi in race for personal glory

 Ronaldo Leads Messi In race Of Style And Beauty.


Messi with 50 goals break Spanish record
PARIS — Arguments over who is the better player can rumble long into the night, but Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo can at least be compared scientifically in the cold currency of goals.
With an astonishing 52 goals in 54 competitive club matches this season, Barcelona phenomenon Messi is scoring at a rate that has not been seen in top-level European football since the 1950s.
His 50th goal arrived in a 2-0 defeat of Osasuna in late April and broke a Spanish goalscoring record previously held by Real Madrid's great Hungarian forward Ferenc Puskas.
More impressive than the mere statistics, however, has been the quality of Messi's goals.
A relentless and persistent dribbler who operates at the hub of Barca's attack, Messi's strikes frequently involve him weaving through a posse of defenders before beating the goalkeeper with a deft finish.
His second goal in Barca's 2-0 defeat of Ronaldo's Real in the first leg of their hotly contested Champions League semi-final was a case in point.
An exchange of passes with Sergio Busquets late in the game released Messi to bear down on the Real defence and after shrugging off Lassana Diarra he skipped past three defenders before rolling the ball into the bottom-left corner with his right foot.
It is goals of such majesty that helped Messi to win the inaugural FIFA Ballon d'Or award in December last year despite fierce competition from his World Cup-winning Spanish team-mates, Xavi and Andres Iniesta.
Messi, it is said, is a genius, while Ronaldo is a machine.
In recent weeks, however, that machine has cranked into gear in such irresistible fashion that the Portuguese is now poised to eclipse his Argentine nemesis in the battle for Spain's golden boot.
Barcelona having romped to a 21st league title, Ronaldo has turned his attention to filling his boots and his recent form threatens to put even Messi's achievements in the shade.
After netting four goals in a 6-2 thrashing of Sevilla on May 7, he netted a hat-trick -- his sixth of the season -- in a 4-0 defeat of Getafe last Tuesday to go five goals clear of Messi in the 'Pichichi' standings.
The award, named after Athletic Bilbao's prolific 1920s goalscorer Rafael Moreno 'Pichichi' Aranzadi, is given to the top scorer in the Spanish league each season.
With 36 goals under his belt -- and 49 in all competitions -- Ronaldo is in line to beat the all-time record of 38 strikes jointly held by Real's explosive Mexican striker Hugo Sanchez (1989-90) and Bilbao's Telmo Zarra (1950-51).
There will be a title party at Camp Nou when Barca host Deportivo La Coruna on Sunday, but the debate over who is the superior player will only get rowdier if Ronaldo can pip Messi to the golden boot.

Dirk Kuyt Statistics

Dirk Kuyt Statistics
Professional Club Performance
Club Season England Premier League FA Cup League Cup Europe Others Total
App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals
Liverpool 2010–11 31 13 1 0 0 0 7 2 0 0 39 15
2009–10 37 9 2 0 1 0 13 2 0 0 53 11
2008–09 38 12 2 0 0 0 11 3 0 0 51 15
2007–08 32 3 4 1 0 0 12 7 0 0 48 11
2006–07 34 12 1 1 2 0 11 1 0 0 48 14
Total
172 49 10 2 3 0 54 15 0 0 239 66
Club Season Netherlands Eredivisie Dutch Cup - Europe Play-offs Total
App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals
Feyenoord 2005–06 33 22 1 0 - - 2 1 2 2 38 25
2004–05 34 29 3 4 - - 7 3 - - 44 36
2003–04 34 20 2 1 - - 4 1 - - 40 22
Total
101 71 6 5 13 5 2 2 122 83
FC Utrecht 2002–03 34 20 4 2 - - 2 1 - - 40 23
2001–02 34 7 3 3 - - 4 1 - - 41 11
2000–01 32 13 5 3 - - 0 0 - - 37 16
1999–00 32 6 4 4 - - 0 0 - - 36 10
1998–99 28 5 2 1 - - 0 0 - - 30 6
Total
160 51 18 13 6 2 184 66
Total
433 171 34 20 3 0 73 22 2 2 545 215
Amateur Club Performance
Club Season Netherlands Saturday Hoofdklasse A Dutch Cup - Europe Play-offs Total
App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals App Goals
Quick Boys 1997-98 6 3 - - - - - - - - 6 3
Total
6 3 - - - - 6 3

Dutch professional footballer Dirk Kuyt International Goals

Dirk Kuyt International Goals

International goals

Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1. 9 October 2004 Skopje City Stadium, Skopje, Macedonia  Macedonia 2–1 2–2 2006 World Cup qualification
2. 4 June 2005 De Kuip, Rotterdam, Netherlands  Romania 2–0 2–0 2006 World Cup qualification
3. 8 June 2005 Olympic Stadium, Helsinki, Finland  Finland 0–2 0–4 2006 World Cup qualification
4. 1 March 2006 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  Ecuador 1–0 1–0 Friendly
5. 6 September 2006 Philips Stadion, Eindhoven, Netherlands  Belarus 3–0 3–0 Euro 2008 qualification
6. 22 August 2007 Stade de Genève, Geneva, Switzerland  Switzerland 2–1 2–1 Friendly
7. 24 May 2008 De Kuip, Rotterdam, Netherlands  Ukraine 1–0 3–0 Friendly
8. 13 June 2008 Stade de Suisse, Bern, Switzerland  France 1–0 4–1 Euro 2008
9. 19 November 2008 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  Sweden 3–1 3–1 Friendly
10. 28 March 2009 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  Scotland 3–0 3–0 2010 World Cup qualification
11. 1 April 2009 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  Macedonia 1–0 4–0 2010 World Cup qualification
12. 1 April 2009 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  Macedonia 3–0 4–0 2010 World Cup qualification
13. 12 August 2009 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  England 1–0 2–2 Friendly
14. 3 March 2010 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  United States 1–0 2–1 Friendly
15. 1 June 2010 De Kuip, Rotterdam, Netherlands  Ghana 1–0 4–1 Friendly
16. 14 June 2010 Soccer City, Johannesburg, South Africa  Denmark 2–0 2–0 2010 World Cup
17. 3 September 2010 Stadio Olimpico, Serravalle, San Marino  San Marino 0–1 0–5 Euro 2012 qualification
18. 9 February 2011 Philips Stadion, Eindhoven, Netherlands  Austria 3–0 3–1 Friendly
19. 25 March 2011 Stadium Puskas Ferenc, Budapest, Hungary  Hungary 0–3 0–4 Euro 2012 qualification
20. 29 March 2011 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  Hungary 4–3 5–3 Euro 2012 qualification
21. 29 March 2011 Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands  Hungary 5–3 5–3 Euro 2012 qualification

Dirk Kuyt Liverpool No.18 Striker

 Dirk Kuyt Personal Information,Profile , Playing Position , Carrier In Club Liverpool and national Team Netherlands.
Dirk Kuijt, July 2009 - The Prime Minister of Thailand Photo.jpg
Personal information
Full name Dirk Kuijt
Date of birth 22 July 1980 (age 30)
Place of birth Katwijk aan Zee, Netherlands
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Playing position Winger / Striker
Club information
Current club Liverpool
Number 18
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1998–2003 Utrecht 160 (51)
2003–2006 Feyenoord 101 (71)
2006– Liverpool 172 (49)
National team
2004– Netherlands 76 (21)
Dirk Kuyt  is a Dutch professional footballer who plays for English club Liverpool. He started his career as a striker, earning the nickname Based Dirk due to his heart and attitude, but he has been converted into a winger and plays the position for both Liverpool and the Netherlands national team. Kuyt began his professional career with FC Utrecht in 1998 and quickly became part of their first team. He spent five years at the club and in his final season he won his first senior honour, the Dutch Cup, and was chosen as the season's Dutch Golden Shoe Winner. Following this, he left Utrecht in a €1 million transfer to Feyenoord. He became the club captain in 2005 and was a prolific goalscorer at the Rotterdam club; he was the club's top scorer for three consecutive seasons, the top goalscorer in the 2004–05 Eredivisie season, and the 2005–06 Dutch Footballer of the Year. Kuyt missed only five games over seven seasons from 1999 until 2006 and appeared in 179 consecutive matches between 2001–06, striking up a fruitful partnership with fellow Feyenoord teammate Salomon Kalou.
He left Feyenoord after three years, having scored 71 league goals in 101 appearances, and joined Premier League side Liverpool for £10 million. He made his Premier League debut late in 2006 and immediately became part of the first team squad. He scored in his first ever UEFA Champions League final with Liverpool against AC Milan, with Kuyt offering late hope for Liverpool although eventually losing 2–1.
Kuyt scored several important goals for Liverpool elsewhere too, including seven goals in the 2007-08 Champions League tournament, including a goal in the quarter final against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium & in the semi final against Chelsea, two penalty kicks against Everton in the derby the same season. He scored his first "Hat-Trick" for Liverpool against Manchester United on March 6th 2011. Kuyt has a 100% penalty record for Liverpool, and takes spot kicks in the absence of club captain Steven Gerrard.
He made his international debut in 2004 and has represented the Netherlands at three major international tournaments, the 2006 and 2010 World Cup and Euro 2008.

Real Madrid Striker Gonzalo Higuain Match Statistics For Season 2010/11

The Argentinian striker at Real Madrid Gonzalo Higuain has had an excellent season 2009/10. At the outset of the season he was thought to play a secondary role coming off the bench with Raul and Benzema in front of him for the starting line up. However, Higuain has taken the chance whenever he has played and therefore he has now become indispensable in the Real Madrid starting formation.
The following abbreviations are used:
Vs. = versus
H/A = home / away
T. = tournament
R. = result
Min. = minutes played
G. = goals
A. = assists
B. = booking (yellow card)
E. = expulsion (red card)


Vs.H/AT.R.Min.G.A.B.E.
DeportivoHomeLiga3-2180000
EspanyolAwayLiga0-3730000
ZurichAwayCL2-5661100
XerezHomeLiga5-0Bench0000
VillarrealAwayLiga0-2640000
TenerifeHomeLiga3-0Bench0000
MarseilleHomeCL3-0210000
SevillaAwayLiga2-1380000
ValladolidHomeLiga4-2191000
AC MilanHomeCL2-3N/A0000
SportingAwayLiga0-0N/A0000
AlcorconAwayCopa4-0N/A0000
GetafeHomeLiga2-0762000
AC MilanAwayLiga1-1730000
Atletico MAwayLiga2-3651000
AlcorconHomeCopa1-0900000
RacingHomeLiga1-0901000
ZurichHomeCL1-0901000
FC BarcelonaAwayLiga1-0900000
AlmeriaHomeLiga4-2901100
MarseilleAwayCL1-3620010
ValenciaAwayLiga2-3902000
ZaragozaHomeLiga6-0622000
OsasunaAwayLiga0-0710000
MallorcaHomeLiga2-0901000
AthleticAwayLiga1-0N/A0000
MalagaHomeLiga2-0N/A0000
DeportivoAwayLiga1-3N/A0000
EspanyolHomeLiga3-0191000
XerezAwayLiga0-3660000
LyonAwayCL1-0630000
VillarrealHomeLiga6-2902110
TenerifeAwayLiga1-5772100
SevillaHomeLiga3-2900000
LyonHomeCL1-1900000
ValladolidAwayLiga1-4733000
SportingHomeLiga3-1901010
GetafeAwayLiga2-4802000
AtleticoHomeLiga3-2871000
RacingAwayLiga0-2891000

Zaragoza Arbeloa Real Madrid player profile

Zaragoza Arbeloa jersey , shorts, boots.
Though originally from Zaragoza Arbeloa played several years in the youth ranks of Real Madrid. He is therefore considered by the club and its’ fans as “canterano” a player who has been developed by Real Madrid. Arbeloa saw first team football for Real Madrid already in the 2004/05 season but though included in the first team squad he only made two appearances. Then he played in Depor and in Liverpool before coming back to Real before the start of the 2009/10 season. He started off wearing the jersey number 16 but after longtime Bernabeu icon Salgado was shown the door he was given the number 2 instead. Number 2 and number 3 are usually the backs in the Spanish system and since that is the preferred position of Arbeloa that would fit well.
Arbeloa with the number 2 on the back and on the shorts
Zaragoza Arbeloa Real Madrid player profile

On the backside of Arbeloa’s jersey it is written ARBELOA and he wears the number 2 for Real Madrid clearly visible in the photo..
Arbeloa before a standard situation in the RM penalty box
Zaragoza Arbeloa Real Madrid player profile

Arbeloa and Kaka on the Real Madrid sideline before throw in
Zaragoza Arbeloa Real Madrid player profile
Arbeloa alongside Kaka on the sideline. While it is not very clear from the photo a close-up would reveal that Arbeloa plays in the adidas Predator boots.

New Real Madrid player Pedro Leon

  Pedro Leon jersey , shorts , boots
For the season 2010/11 Real Madrid has exercised a buying option with Getafe for the player Pedro de Leon who will be wearing white for the next 6 seasons. Pedro de Leon was presented on the Bernabeu on the 16th of July and after the presentation there was a Q&A session in the press room at the Bernabeu.
To read more about what Pedro de Leon said and to watch a video clip from the presentation click here:

Pedro de Leon at the Estadio Santiago Bernabeu in Madrid
New Real Madrid player Pedro Leon

It is still unknown at the time of writing what will be the jersey number of Pedro Leon in Real Madrid. The same holds for Angel di Maria and will ultimately be determined by the players leaving Real Madrid and which numbers will become available by then.
Getafe jersey Pedro Leon number 20
New Real Madrid player Pedro Leon

In Getafe Pedro Leon wore the jersey number 20 a number which is currently occupied by Higuain in Real Madrid. However, if Raul leaves the club and Cristiano Ronaldo gets to wear the jersey number 7 – Higuain might switch number to number 9 which would leave the number 20 available. But these are all speculations – nothing confirmed yet.
Pedro Leon is a right footed midfielder with a great shot. Corners, free kicks , crosses for the looks + the ability to kick the ball has given him the nickname “The Spanish Beckham” or “the new Beckham”. In the interview after the introduction he would decline all such speculations and stick to a more humble attitude about doing his best and then see what would happen. But without making any comparisons to Beckham or Michel or any other former Real Madrid star.
David Villa Valencia and Pedro Leon Getafe
New Real Madrid player Pedro Leon

Pedro Leon plays in the adidas Predator boot.

Most Popular Real Madrid Players Profiles On Facebook

Most Popular Real Madrid Players Profiles On Facebook
Real Madrid general Facebook information:
According to the website All Facebook the most popular athletes on Facebook when measuring number of fans to their fanpage are:

Cristiano Ronaldo 14,356,680: Click to go to Cristiano’s Facebook page
Lionel Messi 5,525,218: Click to go to Messi’s Facebook page!
David Beckham 5,487,932: Click to check out David Beckham’s Facebook fan page!
Second most popular current Real Madrid player is Ricardo Kaka in 12th spot with 2,851,000 fans.
Number 35 on the list is Mesut Özil with 955,312 fans.
Number 75 is Gonzalo Higuain with 425,978 fans.
and finally there is Iker Casillas with 283,159 fans.
So in total there are 5 Real Madrid players among the 100 athletes in the world with the most fans.
Cristiano Ronaldo seems to be the by far most popular athlete in the world. And Özil a rising star. Before the World Cup 2010 probably not many outside of Germany had ever heard about him. . .
Xabi Alonso comes in at place number 200 with 143,883 fans as the second most popular Spaniard in the current Real Madrid squad.
For some reason Pipita Higuain is also on the list at number 143 with 203,468 fans.
The same happens to other players further down the list. Probably there is a fan page of the player himself and then there are other pages by fans so there are fans of fans of a player in that latter case.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Javier Hernández Biography

Javier Hernández Profile 
Javier "Chicharito" Hernandez vs MLS All Stars.jpg
Personal information
Full name Javier Hernández Balcázar
Date of birth 1 June 1988 (age 22)
Place of birth Guadalajara, Mexico
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current club Manchester United
Number 14
Youth career
1997–2006 Guadalajara
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2006–2010 Guadalajara 64 (26)
2010– Manchester United 26 (13)
National team
2007–2009 Mexico U20 5 (1)
2009– Mexico 23 (14)

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Messi said that My style is that of a child

Messi in action for world cup 2014
MADRID — Two-time world footballer of the year Lionel Messi said that he was still playing the game as he did when he was a child growing up in Argentina, in an interview with Spanish newpaper El Mundo on Saturday.
The 23-year-old - who surprisingly edged Barcelona team-mates Xavi and Andres Iniesta for the 2010 world player of the year award - said that he realised he was being well paid for what he did but he couldn't shake off his old childhood habits.
"I have changed nothing, my style of play is still that of a child," said Messi, who in contrast to Xavi and Iniesta had a disappointing World Cup as Argentina were well beaten by Germany in the quarter-finals.
"I know that above all it is my job and that I should approach it in another way, but one must not lose sight of the fact that football is a game.
"It is imperative one plays to amuse oneself, to be happy. That is what children do and I do the same thing."
Messi, who is equal top scorer with Cristiano Ronaldo in the Primera Liga with 24 goals this term, revealed that he does have moments of self doubt, belying his usual placid temperament he displays on the pitch.
"When I am angry, I go into my shell, I become mad," he said.
"But that happens more often at home, alone, than on the pitch."
Messi said he enjoyed playing centre forward far more than where he had been slotted in on the wing when he first started.
"I began playing in this position last season and it is the ideal spot, because virtually all of our play at Barcelona comes through the centre," he said.
Messi said that he ignored the criticism he had received for what are seen to be below-par performances for the national side and his superlative form for Barcelona.
"Yes, that (criticism) annoyed me.
"But, happily, these criticisms are behind me.
"I am now very at ease in the national side and would like to win the World Cup one day.
"As far as I'm concerned, you are never really a great footballer until you have won one."
Messi also dismissed any comparions between himself and legendary compatriot Diego Maradona, who almost singlehandedly inspired Argentina to the 1986 World Cup trophy and coached Messi and his countrymen at the 2010 World Cup.
"Argentina has been searching for a long time for a successor to Diego.
"There was Pablo Aimar and then Javier Saviola... But there is only one Diego and it is illusory to want to have another one."

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Rafael Nadal premieres underwear ads

rafael nadal tennis
The world's number one tennis player, Rafael Nadal, is starring in Armani's latest traffic-stopping underwear ads.
Nadal is the third athlete to front the campaign, following in the footsteps of fellow soccer stars David Beckham and Cristiano Ronaldo. However, it is the first time that the Italian fashion house has opted for a sportsman who is equally lusted after by women and accepted by men - maybe hinting at a more manly, less "over-groomed" image being pursued by the brand. And Nadal is continuing to up his luxury appeal, having already starred in French label Lanvin's perfume ads in 2009.
The tennis player's female counterpart for the brand's underwear campaign is actress Megan Fox, who is featuring in the campaign for the third time in a row and who is also the face of Armani's beauty line. All ads were shot by fashion's star photographer duo, Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott, and will be published next month.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Beckham rates high as role model


David Beckham is considered to be a good role model by many young boys in Britain today - but their parents reckon Madonna would be a better choice.
Footballer and expectant dad Becks was second only to boys' own fathers when it came to being a role model for young boys, according to new research.
The nationwide study of more than 1,200 boys and their parents found one in five boys, or 18%, look up to the former England captain.
However, 50% of the boys surveyed said their own father was their number one role model.
Other sports stars cited by young boys as top role models were Cristiano Ronaldo and Roger Federer.
The findings are in contrast to those of parents who favoured musicians, actors and even royalty among their role models with Madonna and Diana, Princess of Wales securing pole position with 14% each.
Other celebrities on the list included Jeremy Clarkson, Lord (Alan) Sugar, Bill Gates and Simon Cowell.
Louise Ellis, sport psychologist and performance consultant, said: "It's testament to Beckham's sheer hard work and determination both on and off the pitch, as a sportsman, a businessman, a father and a global ambassador. He's a winning inspiration for the new generation."
The research was conducted to mark the launch of Disney XD's Aim High campaign which offers boys a once-in-a-lifetime mentorship with their heroes.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

David Bekhams Wife Is pregnant and they are hoping for daughter after three boys.


A little bundle of joy is on the way for the Beckhams; the couple will be hoping for a girl after their three boys

A spokeswoman for David and Victoria Beckham announced yesterday that the couple are expecting their fourth baby this summer. The couple has three sons together; Brooklyn, Romeo, and Cruz, aged 11, 8 and 5.

Close friends say the couple do not want to know the sex of the child before it is born, but Victoria, now 36, has often hinted that she would like a daughter. On his Facebook page, David posted, "I’ve got great news to tell you. Victoria and I are expecting a fourth child this summer. The boys are very excited about the arrival of their new brother or sister."

David spoke openly about his love for Victoria and the boys during his acceptance speech at the BBC Lifetime Achievement Awards ceremony. "Not only has she given me three amazing boys, she is truly an inspiration for me every single day," David said at the occasion.

Congratulatory messages poured in from the public and other celebrities alike; "WOW, congratulations to Victoria Beckham and David, fourth child on the way," tweeted singer Kylie Minogue. British TV presenter, Amanda Holden added, "Great news that the Beckhams are expecting their fourth child. Hope they get a pink one."

English bookies are already taking bets on the unborn child’s name. Top favourites so far have been Sandra (David’s mother's name), and David Junior. Other suggestions, include Galaxy (from LA Galaxy, David’s current team), and Pele.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Lionel Messi suits up for charity


Not only is Lionel Messi one of the best soccer players in the world, but he also has a charitable heart! The Barcelona forward made his arrival at the “Leo Messi Foundation” benefit dinner at Sofitel Reserva Hotel on Tuesday, December 28th, 2010 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
The Leo Messi Foundation originated as an initiative of the native Argentinian with the support of all his family and with the idea that all children have the same opportunities for making their dreams come true. The prospects are: to work on actions, not only in our country, but also abroad and together with other institutions which develop projects in alignment with the ideals of the Foundation.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Cristiano Ronaldo Gets engaged to russion lingerie Model

Portuguese star football player Cristiano Ronaldo has proposed to his beloved Russian-born model Irina Sheik. Sheik has already received her parents’ blessing.
Sheik revealed the information about the engagement in an interview to Portuguese tabloid Lux that was published with a photograph of the smiling couple on the cover with the caption “I’m a bride!”
Observers of the Portuguese newspaper Correio de Manha have learned that Ronaldo struggled for the heart of the Tatar green-eyed brunette. Twenty-four-year-old Irina Sheik, known for her career as a lingerie model with Victoria's Secret and Intimissimi, was chased by the Portuguese half-back of Spanish Real Madrid for over four months. The girl persistently refused to give out her cell phone number, but eventually succumbed to his charms.
“He had to beat around the bush for a long time, which is generally a rarity for him”, says the footballer’s ex, 27-year-old model Rute Penedo. “If there was no struggle, Ronaldo would not be as enthusiastic about this girl.”
In the past, Cristiano Ronaldo has had relationships with Americans Paris Hilton and Kim Kardashian, and Spain’s Nereida Gallardo.
At the moment the groom is occupied with the World Cup in South Africa where he recently scored a goal in the match against North Korea.
The relationship was made public in May this year when the couple was noticed together on vacation in Corsica.
Irina Sheik (Irina Shaikhlislamova) was born in the city of Yemanzhelinsk in the Chelyabinsk region. In 2005 she moved to Paris. She has worked with Armani, Guess, Lacoste, La Perla. Before her acquaintance to Ronaldo she was in a relationship with Linkin Park rock band drummer Rob Bourdon.