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Topics - Red Mango

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1
Football / Jabloteh’s training ground moves to Santa Cruz
« on: September 10, 2010, 01:44:22 PM »
http://www.ctntworld.com/SportArticles.aspx?id=23784&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Local powerhouse San Juan Jabloteh is the latest T&T Pro league club to move their training base closer to home.

The Brian Lara Recreation Ground in Santa Cruz has become the newest training facility for the financially challenged multiple pro league champions.


Coach Terry Fenwick believes that his team's new initiative is the first step in bringing the club within touching distance of its fans.

He predicts that playing matches at the venue would be the next step.

2
Football / FIFA to consider scrapping extra-time at next World Cup
« on: September 09, 2010, 05:39:52 AM »
http://www.thesportreview.com/tsr/2010/09/fifa-extra-time-golden-goal/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

FIFA President Sepp Blatter has revealed the governing body will consider both scrapping extra-time and reintroducing the ‘golden goal’ rule to promote free-flowing football at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

Blatter, 74, believes certain teams at this year’s tournament in South Africa were too defensive-minded and were guilty of “playing for a draw from the outset”.

“Football has become such a strategic game, with teams moving as a unit,” said Blatter. “It can be an impressive sight; gone are the days of simple tactics where you attacked then defended.

“But in the first few matches of the group stage in South Africa, we witnessed some teams that went out to avoid defeat, that were playing for a draw from the outset.

“This is a topic that I would like to discuss at upcoming Football and Technical Committee meetings. We have to try to find a way to encourage free-flowing football in tournaments like the World Cup, with teams playing to win.

Blatter added that some sides who made it to the latter stages of the competition were overly focused on not conceding rather than attempting to seal victory – an issue FIFA will now address ahead of the next tournament.

“We plan to take the opportunity to look at the concept of extra time as well. Often we see teams set themselves up even more defensively in extra time, in an attempt to avoid conceding a goal at all costs.

He added: “To prevent this, we could go directly to a penalty shoot-out at full time, or reintroduce the golden goal rule. We’ll see what emerges from the Committee meetings.”

3
Football / Greatest free-kick 'was no fluke' say physicists
« on: September 02, 2010, 03:05:53 AM »
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11153466

 By Victoria Gill  Science reporter, BBC News
Roberto Carlos (Getty Images)

Physicists have explained one of football's most spectacular goals.

Brazilian Roberto Carlos's 1997 free-kick against France curved so sharply that it left goalkeeper Fabian Barthez standing still and looking puzzled.

Now, a study published in the New Journal of Physics suggests that the long-held assumption that the goal was a fantastic fluke is wrong.

A French team of scientists discovered the trajectory of the goal and developed an equation to describe it.

They say it could be repeated if a ball was kicked hard enough, with the appropriate spin and, crucially, the kick was taken sufficiently far from goal.

Roberto Carlos scored his wonder goal during the inaugural match of the Tournoi de France, a friendly international football tournament that was held in France ahead of the 1998 World Cup.
Follow the curve

Many pundits referred to it as "the goal that defied physics", but the new paper outlines the equation that describes its trajectory exactly.

"We have shown that the path of a sphere when it spins is a spiral," lead researcher Christophe Clanet from the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris told BBC News.
Graphic of Roberto Carlos's free kick

Dr Clanet described this path as a "snail-shell shaped trajectory", with the curvature increasing as the ball travels.

Because Roberto Carlos was 35m (115ft) from the goal when he kicked the ball, more of this spiral trajectory was visible. So the apparently physics-defying sharp turn of the ball was actually following a naturally tightening curve.

Dr Clanet and his colleague David Quere were studying the trajectory of bullets when they made their sporting discovery.

They used water and plastic balls with the same density as water to "simplify the problem".
Long flight

This approach eliminated the effects of air turbulence and of gravity and revealed the pure physical path of a spinning sphere.

"On a real soccer pitch, we will see something close to this ideal spiral, but gravity will modify it," explained Dr Clanet.

"But if you shoot strongly enough, like Carlos did, you can minimise the effect of gravity."

The crucial aspect of the wonder strike, according to the scientists, was the distance the ball had to travel to beat Fabian Barthez.

"If this distance is small," said Dr Clanet, "you only see the first part of the curve.

"But if that distance is large - like with Carlos's kick - you see the curve increase. So you see the whole of the trajectory."

4
General Discussion / Fidel
« on: August 07, 2010, 06:28:33 PM »
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-10903048

Fidel Castro addresses parliament after four-year gap

Fidel Castro outlined the ''immensely higher price'' of a war

Fidel Castro, the former Cuban leader, has delivered his first speech to the national assembly since resigning over ill health four years ago.

The chamber erupted into applause at the sight of Mr Castro, dressed in his familiar olive-green fatigues but without his comandante's insignia.

In an uncharacteristically short speech of just over 10 minutes, he urged the US not to allow a war with Iran.

His brother Raul, who succeeded him as president, sat at his side as he spoke.

It was the first time the two had appeared together in public since Fidel Castro stepped down in 2006.

The speech was a solid, polished performance, Mr Castro's voice stronger than at any point since he re-emerged into public life, the BBC's Michael Voss reports from Havana.
'Nuclear holocaust'

Fidel Castro emerged from seclusion about a month ago and has since given television interviews, launched his memoirs and talked to selected groups of intellectuals and young communists.

But the national assembly address is his first public foray into a political setting.

The leader of the Cuban revolution ceded the presidency to his brother Raul Castro after becoming ill, but remains head of the powerful communist party.

His return has ignited widespread speculation that he is seeking to be more active again in the day-to-day running of this one-party state. But Fidel has stayed out of domestic politics, making no comments at all about his brother's economic changes or the release of political prisoners.

Mr Castro arrived in the chamber on the arm of a subordinate, waving and smiling as the crowd applauded loudly in unison.

In the past, his speeches ran to hours.

After Saturday's address, he sat on for about an hour and 10 minutes, listening to questions from deputies on foreign affairs and responding to them.

The former president warned of the risk of a "nuclear holocaust" involving the US and Iran.

He accused the US of planning to attack Iran and North Korea and urged President Barack Obama to prevent such a conflict happening.

Iran has been accused by the US and others of seeking to develop illegal nuclear weapons - an allegation Tehran denies.

"If war breaks out the current social order will suddenly disappear and the price will be infinitely greater," Mr Castro said.

Asked by one deputy if Mr Obama would be capable of starting a nuclear war, Mr Castro replied: "No, not if we persuade him not to."

'Big battle'

Despite his health problems, Fidel Castro is still first secretary of the Cuban Communist Party and has become more active in the last month, giving television interviews and talking in public to selected groups.

Observers are watching the body language between Fidel and Raul Castro closely, reports the BBC's Michael Voss in Havana.

But Culture Minister Abel Prieto told the BBC before the speech that Fidel Castro was not about to re-enter the government.

"I think that he has always been in Cuba's political life but he is not in the government," he said.

"He has been very careful about that. His big battle is international affairs."

Raul Castro, 79, has himself dismissed any suggestion that there is a divide in the Communist Party leadership over the direction of policy, particularly as his government attempts to liberalise parts of Cuba's state-run economy.

5
Football / Best penalty ever?...
« on: July 25, 2010, 08:39:34 AM »
http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/blogs/world-of-sport/article/19275/

Quite possibly. Spain U19 star Ezequiel Calvente shows just how it should be done by scoring an audacious 'switch-hit' penalty against Italy at the U19 European Championships in France.

The Real Betis midfielder beats the Italian keeper with ease after running up to seemingly hit the spot kick with his right foot only to surprise everyone by hitting with his left.

It's a new technique that has never really been seen at the top level before - perhaps it will catch on for the start of the new season?

7
Football / Moratti given three month ban
« on: July 10, 2010, 09:26:51 AM »
Inter Milan president Massimo Moratti has been suspended for three months by the Italian Football Federation due to irregularities in the transfer of Diego Milito and Thiago Motta from Genoa last summer.

The case centres around the involvement of Genoa owner and president Enrico Preziosi, who is banned from footballing activities for five years but claimed to have instigated the sale of the duo to Inter. Preziosi has now been given an additional six-month suspension and Genoa fined 90,000 euros, while Inter have to pay out 45,000 euros and Moratti will not be able to be involved in footballing matters during this summer's busy transfer period.

"I have a lot of respect for the judges, but a lot less for the federation," said Moratti. "(Former Inter boss Jose) Mourinho was right when he said that this year would be hard and they would make us pay. He left for this reason. Unfortunately I can't do that because I don't have his freedom. I don't feel guilty at all. They didn't listen to our defence and justifications."

Milito scored 30 times for Inter last season and was instrumental in them winning the treble, with goals in the UEFA Champions League final, the Coppa Italia final and the last game of the campaign where victory secured the Serie A title. Preziosi was handed a five-year ban in May 2005 after he was found to be heavily involved in the club bribing Venezia to throw a match against Genoa.

The Grifone, who had just been promoted to Serie A for the first time in 10 years, were relegated to the third division. The FIGC have known about an alleged contravening of the ban for almost a year after Preziosi told local TV channel Telenord: "I saw Moratti at breakfast, we reached an agreement on the valuation of the two players and we shook hands. Between us there is a lot of sympathy and there could be other collaborations in the future."

Note: Rafa Benitez has been seen pulling his hair out...  ;D

8
Football / Football's Fogotten man...Lennart Johansson
« on: July 10, 2010, 12:25:50 AM »
http://fourfourtwo.com/interviews/qanda/38/article.aspx

With that thinning grey hair and those droopy jowls, he may never qualify as the most glamorous, nor the most recognisable, face in football but for the last 17 years Lennart Johansson has certainly been one of the most influential. Elected as UEFA president in 1990, the 72-year-old Swede will go down in history as the man who, during his four terms, oversaw the expansion of the European Championships and created the Champions League.

It hasn’t been all Swedeness and light for Johansson, however. During his long reign he’s had to fend off rumours of corruption, dodge accusations of sexism and cope with being beaten by bitter rival Sepp Blatter in the 1998 FIFA presidency race. To add insult to injury, earlier this year he was invited to stand for re-election as UEFA president only to be subsequently ousted by one Michel Platini.

click on the link for more...

9
2010 World Cup - South Africa / Busquets making Spain forget Senna
« on: July 09, 2010, 11:50:36 PM »
http://www.fifa.com/worldcup/news/newsid=1271383/index.html#busquets+making+spain+forget+senna

Two years ago when Spain lifted the European title in Vienna, a Brazilian-born defensive midfielder was widely regarded as the team's unsung star.

With all the focus on the goalscoring feats of David Villa and Fernando Torres or the silky skills of Andres Iniesta and Xavi, Marcos Senna still managed to attract as many plaudits for his vital role in helping the rest of the team tick. He was also named in UEFA's squad of the tournament.

But after a poor and injury-plagued season in Spain, the 33-year-old was left out of coach Vicente Del Bosque's FIFA World Cup™ squad. Instead, Del Bosque turned to 21-year-old Barcelona midfielder Sergio Busquets and neither player nor coach have looked back since.

click the link for more...

10
2010 World Cup - South Africa / Platini taken to hospital
« on: July 09, 2010, 02:25:11 PM »
...after fainting at Jo'burg restaurant...

More to follow

12
Football / Why football’s biggest stars failed to shine
« on: July 05, 2010, 03:29:59 PM »
http://bleacherreport.com/tb/b4NTD

Follow Dan Wetzel on Twitter at @DanWetzel
Diego Maradona owned the 1986 World Cup tournament, leading Argentina to the title.

CAPE TOWN, South Africa – Football’s superstar players never materialized here at the World Cup. The game’s best – Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Kaka, Wayne Rooney, etc. – often failed to lift their play and, in turn, their teams, to a level this grand stage demands.

The conventional wisdom on why: They were too selfish, unable to adapt to the team concept of a national squad.

Then there’s Diego Maradona’s take: Unlike the past, the stars weren’t selfish enough.

“Today the players are more collective, more team players,” the Argentina coach said after his own star-studded team was bounced from the World Cup. “They want to do everything with their teammates. It is a different type of game right now.”

This goes against so much of what we’ve come to believe, and expect, in sports. The reason that Uruguay and the Netherlands square off here Tuesday in a semifinal is because they embraced selfless, team-oriented play.

Such a mentality is celebrated.

What Maradona is suggesting is that this line of thinking has become so widespread it’s actually killed the star player, who no longer acts like a star player. Rather than demanding his place in the natural pecking order of pure talent and past performance, they sink back into the pack.

Such thinking would carry little weight except it is Maradona who said it. Who could know more about what’s needed for a talented player to morph into a larger-than-life superstar and dominate the World Cup? No one owned this event the way Maradona did in 1986 when he led Argentina to the title.

His implication is that the star needs to act like the star. That he is better than his teammates is a given. Rather than apologize for it, he must remind them of it, make them respect it. He must lead not by being one of the guys but by being above the guys. It’s the cult of personality, if you will.

“I think we were more selfish,” Maradona said, which has to be the first time an old player said that about a bygone era. “Maybe before it was about being selfish players who [made the] rest of the team work for us.”

Today’s players receive remarkable hype – television commercials, video games and media attention. They are single-name personalities around the globe.

Yet you’d never hear one say that the rest of the team works for them. They’d be vilified. Instead today’s stars go out of their way to support their teammates and talk publicly about how no one player is more important than the other.

Only some players are more important, Maradona notes.

Consider the most competitive environments on earth – the military battlefield, the flight deck of a commercial airliner or a hospital operating table.

This is where failure is not an option. In those cultures, the delineation between the star (the general, the lead pilot) and the others (private, flight attendant) is clear. Often socialization between classes is prohibited – enlisted men do not dine with officers – and the word of the higher-ranked person must be respected.

When having open-heart surgery, no patient would care if the lead surgeon is friends with or helps empower the nurse. In fact, the idea that the nurse would fear disappointing the lead surgeon and would clearly defer to him at all times might be considered a positive. You’d want the most brilliant talent to be the leader.

In Maradona’s day, he says, that carried over to a football team. He was Diego Maradona and they were not.

“Time changes in life,” Maradona said.

In this time, the star player must be humble and supportive. And not just on the field, but in all parts of team life. Obviously all players know they need others to make them better in the game. Someone has to pass them the ball. Or receive a pass. But off the field, is one for all, all for one really the best concept?

It’s difficult to say. Maradona only knows the mentality that made him lead a country to World Cup glory. It certainly isn’t the only way.

Perhaps it is one of them, though. And with most of the world’s top individual players home watching the semifinals, with criticism of their selfish play ringing through their heads, maybe the opposite is true. Maybe they weren’t selfish enough.

Maybe Maradona’s correct. Maybe the football world has gone soft.

NOTE: The word "soccer" has been removed and replaced with the word "football" for reasons of clarity and correctness...

13
Football / Greetings fellow Soca Warriors
« on: July 02, 2010, 05:53:08 PM »
I is Bongonatti 11

yuh could call I Bongonatti or 11 buh not Bongo... or Natty...

Natti could wuk tho, although 11 is de safest bet...

ah real glad to be on here...

Brazil2014.... We comin'

Bless up!...

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