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Messages - sammy

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2881
Becuz God is de boss.

After today I can safely say it have at least two.

yeah brother i retarted.

 -----------------

Anyhow.......i humbly request that u leave "Allah's" name out of the shit talk.

If u wanna use "god" name in vain....then thats up to allyuh...but when it becomes personalize is a different thing.

I not trying to make a big deal out of nothing, but to a Muslim using Allah or Muhammad name in vain talk worse than cussing himm bout his mother or father or children etc etc etc. I hope that i haven't made an unreasonable request? -thanks




ah what the heck...might as well...
so lemme ask you coule of things..
1. do u say" OH god" AT ALL CAUSE if u do..i go shook some cristians on yuh.
2. saying allah akbar in vain is worse than saying it just before cutting of someones head? i jus asking your opnion on that eh. to hear your thoughts

1. I try not to.....n just additional info....arab speaking Christians call also God - Allah.
2. depends on the situation.


and as i said.....i not trying to make no big deal about it, i just felt i had to point it out and I know people have free speech etc etc etc. and that people say offensive things to people.

2882

no worries.

I just felt that i had to ask which was my right.

If no-one obliges well what i would do?

2883
Football / Re: Which Players Moving On
« on: June 13, 2007, 07:51:39 AM »
My picks: Jan(3rd string)...Augillera...Spann..Theobald..Kerry Baptiste...Glasgow...Roberts..McFarlane

Glasgow? Nah breds.... All dat does come to mind when i see dat man is





I'll have the roast duck, with the mango salsa

 :rotfl: allyuh brutal yes

2884
General Discussion / Re: Suicide jumper
« on: June 13, 2007, 07:12:35 AM »
 :rotfl:

2885
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Re: john rambo watch de trailer.
« on: June 13, 2007, 06:59:39 AM »

 and what he cuff that other one with to make he head fly off so ohh llaaaad, they trying to do a kill bill or what?


i thought he chop of the man head?

2886
Becuz God is de boss.

After today I can safely say it have at least two.

yeah brother i retarted.

 -----------------

Anyhow.......i humbly request that u leave "Allah's" name out of the shit talk.

If u wanna use "god" name in vain....then thats up to allyuh...but when it becomes personalize is a different thing.

I not trying to make a big deal out of nothing, but to a Muslim using Allah or Muhammad name in vain talk worse than cussing himm bout his mother or father or children etc etc etc. I hope that i haven't made an unreasonable request? -thanks




2887
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Re: john rambo watch de trailer.
« on: June 12, 2007, 10:04:02 AM »
real gorey

2888
whappen dis is a hen cage or wha....  :devil:

God is de BOSS....
allah u akbar

 ??? how Allah come in dat talk?

2889
General Discussion / Re: India readies world's cheapest car: $2,467
« on: June 12, 2007, 07:30:38 AM »
it already have tata vans and trucks down here

2890
Cricket Anyone / Re: How to win the last test
« on: June 12, 2007, 06:42:36 AM »
good plan.... ;D

Fishes for WI head coach  :cheers:

2891

Portugal legend Sousa hails Nani


Portuguese football legend Paulo Sousa believes Manchester United newcomer Nani has the potential to become one of the best footballers in the world.

Capped 51 times by Portugal and now an assistant coach for the national team, Sousa says Nani has enormous potential.

"He's very explosive and very strong. He's fast and is going to be a great signing for United," he told BBC Sport.

"I think that in the next five or 10 years, he and Cristiano Ronaldo can become the best players in the world."

United have agreed in principle to sign the 21-year-old Nani from Sporting Lisbon and the youngster has passed a medical at the club.

He now needs international clearance before he completes his move to the Premiership champions.

Sousa, who won the Champions League in successive years with Juventus in 1996 and then with Dortmund in 1997, said Nani is less versatile than new team-mate Ronaldo.

   
Nani has incredible talent and Sir Alex loves to work with such talent - and is brilliant at creating big players


"Nani is still young but has progressed very quickly. He will face strong competition at Manchester which should help him progress," said Sousa.

Nani is seen as a possible long-term successor to Ryan Giggs and is one of three new players United have signed since the end of last season.

He will join England holding midfielder Owen Hargreaves and Brazilian playmaker Anderson as United's other summer recruits.

Sousa admitted that Nani is not yet the finished product: "He does need some time and will need to grow up in the correct way.

"He has Sir Alex Ferguson who is a man I love because of the way he brings players on.

"Nani has incredible talent and Sir Alex loves to work with such talented players and is brilliant at creating big players."

2892
Football / Galaxy snub Real over Beckham bid
« on: June 11, 2007, 10:20:49 AM »

Galaxy snub Real over Beckham bid


Real Madrid have had a bid to buy David Beckham out of his LA Galaxy contract rejected by the MLS club.

Real approached the 32-year-old's advisors and LA Galaxy with their offer but were told "politely but firmly" that Beckham would not change his mind.

The Spanish giants were told Beckham's contract did not have a get-out clause, which they believe existed.

"Nothing has changed. We can't wait for Beckham to get here," LA Galaxy general manager Alexi Lalas told BBC Five Live.

Interview: LA Galaxy general manager Alexi Lalas

He added: "Real's hopes about keeping Beckham are benign. As far as that is concerned, that ship has sailed."

Earlier, the Real's president Ramon Calderon was reported by Marca newspaper as saying: "We need to sit down with Beckham, his representatives and with (Real sporting director Predrag) Mijatovic, look at this clause, and decide between us.



"But for me I would be delighted if he remained at the club."

The Madrid side reacted sharply to Beckham's rejection of their contract offer in January.

Coach Fabio Capello said Beckham would never play for the first-team again.

Calderon was even more scathing, branding Beckham: "an average cinema actor living in Hollywood," comments which prompted Real's players to throw their backing behind the England midfielder.

   
There was a bit of anger by the premature announcement of his exit


But Beckham's attitude impressed Capello enough to win back his first-team place.

The England midfielder has been inspirational as Real have put themselves in pole position to win the Spanish title.

The Real boss admitted that he and others at the club made errors in judgement regarding Beckham and that he would like the player to stay on at the Bernabeu.

"Beckham would be a very important player for Madrid, there's no doubt about that. If the club tells me that Beckham is staying, I would be very happy," Capello said in an interview with Spanish newspaper AS.

He added: "We have all made mistakes regarding Beckham's issue.

"On the sporting side we have made a decision and I am the one that has the maximum responsibility.

"The truth is that with Beckham is that we made a mistake.

   
The truth is that with Beckham is that we made a mistake.

Real coach Fabio Capello

"Beckham is a great player. Now he is playing at the same level as he did at Manchester United.

"He is a player that has recovered his physical and psychological condition because he was upset not to be playing with his national team.

"For every player, the national team is important and for English players, more so."

Beckham won back his place in the England team, for the games against Brazil and Estonia, after his international career appeared to have ended following England's exit from last year's World Cup.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/europe/6739101.stm

2893
Cricket Anyone / Re: Chanderpaul should be up their with the best
« on: June 11, 2007, 09:39:01 AM »
well said....

People tend to look down at him because he is unorthodox in batting and cant "speak" well. But the man dependable.

2894
Cricket Anyone / Re: Ganga dismissed LBW 5 times in 6 innings?
« on: June 11, 2007, 09:33:22 AM »
Ganga Dhara
Kenneth Ramchand

Saturday, June 9th 2007

   

This piece was written on June 7, 2007 after lunch on the first day of the Third Test between England and West Indies, played at Old Trafford. The fourth English wicket had just fallen and the score stood at 132. I am writing about the period running from immediately after lunch when the score was 112 for 1 to the time when the score was 137 for 4.

This episode is interesting for what it tells us about the difference between being on the field and being in a spectating position; and it tells us about the difference between armchair captaincy and captaincy on the field. It also tells us about the sense of responsibility owed to players and listening audience by the most influential armchair captains, the commentators.

When Ganga began the post-lunch session with the slowest of his five bowlers, it crossed my mind that a fling by the fastest of the lot, Fidel Edwards might have been a good though predictable gambit.

But I figured the captain did not want to risk an expensive start (Fidel had been expensive and did not threaten before lunch); and that he would begin with containment, try to put the batsmen under pressure to take risks, and see what could happen. I figured he knew what he would do if his ploy was unsuccessful.

I trusted that Ganga had a plan because while I have some doubts about his batting as an opener, I am confident that he is the best leader in West Indian cricket at the present time. The T&T team has become a powerful unit during his captaincy.

One commentator declared that if you go into containment in the second session of the first day of a five day match, you are virtually conceding the match.

Another brought out statistics and diagrams to show that the Old Trafford pitch suited spinners like Shane Warne (and Lance Gibbs?) or else it favoured tall men bowling fast. Fidel wasn't tall but he was fast and therefore Ganga should have put him on immediately after lunch.

Just about this time, Vaughan played an attacking shot where in the pre-lunch session, with runs easier to come by, he would defended. The commentators returned to their cry. Time to bring on Fidel to get Peterson early, otherwise another demoralising big innings. Ganga should be flexible. He could switch into attack knowing he could go back into defence if he had to.

Meanwhile, on the field, Peterson tried to hook Collymore and Bravo took the catch. On the field, pressure told again and Cook fell to the medium-pacer Collymore. The commentators found that the slightly older ball was now swinging and the weather was warming up since lunch (thus making it less advantageous to the tall fast men?). It was time to shook Fidel at the two new batsmen at the crease.

On the field, Ganga decided to give Collymore a rest. Not before time, he brought on Fidel. But the commentators felt vindicated.

To me, the commentators were so full of themselves and so sceptical of Ganga, they failed in their responsibilities. After the event, not one commentator conceded that Ganga had orchestrated the session well. During the episode, not one of them paid Ganga the respect of thinking there was method in what he was doing. Not one of them noticed a decided respect growing for the captain between 112 for 1 and 132 for 4.

What Ganga will do with this support and whether he will continue to have the respect of his team only time will tell. But for the first time in years I have begun to feel that my hope in the team is not groundless.

- Professor Kenneth Ramchand is an

Independent Senator.

http://www.trinidadexpress.com/index.pl/article?id=161159676

2895
Cricket Anyone / Re: Ganga dismissed LBW 5 times in 6 innings?
« on: June 11, 2007, 09:30:33 AM »
gayle has been given umpteen chances and has failed, scoring many ducks as an opener, every player goes through a strain of bad luck, he need to come good for the last test, however his captaincy was very good...

true and i hope they give him plenty chances like gayle........but i fraid they salts him.

2896
Cricket Anyone / Re: Ganga dismissed LBW 5 times in 6 innings?
« on: June 11, 2007, 07:06:16 AM »
Ganga does get me vex yes...the man throwing away he chance...

2897
Cricket Anyone / Re: Windies fighting
« on: June 11, 2007, 06:54:11 AM »
hmmm.....like they over eat a what?

2898
Cricket Anyone / Re: Windies fighting
« on: June 11, 2007, 06:52:38 AM »
dem fellas over doing it with the appealing

how ever, i hear they applauded chanders when they came of for lunch....

2899
Sammy...dat have to be de most dotish response I ever hear.  We could tell you never play no decent cricket.  Any bowler would take pride in mowing down the Top Order and in good fashion. 

Generally speaking, wickets caught in the deep are not as valuable as outfoxing a true batsman by bowling dem, having dem caught around de wicket or lbw.

aye pardner..... right now..we need to wickets any way we can get them.....
and i am pretty sure Harmison or Vass or who ever anyone else go be happy if the lick up any tail that giving them trouble and will cost the game.......remember in the world cup when Malinga almost brought back the game for Sri Lanka against St Africa? he looked pretty happy to be getting out the tail and take "pride" in getting he 4 wickets.


and no i didnt play no "decent" cricket (i never said or implied that i did). There i hope i made your day - big cricketer- U feeling special now, that u play decent cricket and i didnt?
-----------------------------------------

BTW i kinda agree with Bitter about the crusade thing about the spinner.... plus , TI when men implying that Tail enders wickets come like nutten.......then is no sense trying to reason with these fellas.......cause ...maybe the neighbor close the window and dey eh see how many times tail enders come and put on valuable runs that take away games from the WI

2900
how much times tail enders add valuable runs that went on to beat the west indies?

lol alyuh is kicks yes............u making sound like tail enders dont make some contribution to the final score even if they are just holding an end while the more accomplish batsman makes the runs.

 ??? :-\

2901
General Discussion / Re: Manning vs Bro. Michael
« on: June 08, 2007, 12:52:37 PM »

he is still a monk?

i will never forget the time he come to give we a chat in naps and say he eh picking up no junior sec chirren who looking for ride because "junior sec children smell bad."


:rotfl: :rotfl:

anyhow...for this last walk about.......people come and wash down streets and thing b4 manning come to walk

2902
Football / Re: Thread for the T&T v El Salvador game.
« on: June 07, 2007, 10:07:33 PM »
i feel roberts will get a red card ....

2903
Football / Re: Thread for the T&T v El Salvador game.
« on: June 07, 2007, 09:26:54 PM »
team playing ok so far

2904
Football / Re: Thread for the T&T v El Salvador game.
« on: June 07, 2007, 09:18:04 PM »
ohh goddddd!!
look at bullett

2905
Football / Re: Thread for the T&T v El Salvador game.
« on: June 07, 2007, 09:06:05 PM »
or hor...

the game showing now

EL salvador anthem sounding kicksie yes  :rotfl:

2906
Football / Re: Thread for the T&T v El Salvador game.
« on: June 07, 2007, 09:04:15 PM »
steups,

TV6 showing some kinda government programming shit >:(

2907
Football / Re: usa v guatemala
« on: June 07, 2007, 09:01:02 PM »
^^ it now done......

-hate the dog shit commentary though  :-\

2908
Football / Re: usa v guatemala
« on: June 07, 2007, 08:40:20 PM »
We hadda support the US to beat these ther 2 teams...

Guatemala not impressive, they playing real nasty too...

Oniweyu have Ruiz in check.

he now get a red card :rotfl:

2909
Cricket Anyone / Taylor Impresses but Rampaul Injured.
« on: June 01, 2007, 11:51:16 AM »
Paceman Jerome Taylor boosted his hopes of staying in the West Indies team by taking five wickets as the MCC reached 234-7 on the opening day in Durham.

Taylor finished with 5-43 off 18 overs against an inexperienced team led by Sri Lanka star Sanath Jayasuriya.

But it was a day of mixed fortunes for the tourists as Chris Gayle and Ravi Rampaul left the field with injuries.

Laurie Evans top-scored with a patient 51 for the MCC before he was caught behind by Denesh off Taylor.

Taylor's wickets were just the boost the visitors needed after their innings defeat by England in the second Test at Headingley.

Captain Ramnaresh Sarwan went home with a shoulder problem after that and stand-in skipper Daren Ganga lost the toss on a sunny morning in the north east.

Jayasuriya opted to bat and his side were soon in trouble against disciplined bowling.

Edwards looked lively and got the early breakthrough when Paul Dixey was in all sorts of trouble against a short delivery and the ball looped to Runako Morton at slip.

Taylor made an almost instant impact by bowling Zoheb Sharif in his second over and then trapped William Porterfield lbw with a swinging full-toss.

James Morris (30) added 83 with Evans but both edged behind to keeper Denesh Ramdin and Jayasuriya managed only 18 when he fell to the on-song fast bowler.

But the West Indies were hit by Gayle's withdrawal shortly after lunch with a stomach strain and Rampaul visiting hospital for a scan on a thigh injury later in the session.

Darren Sammy then got in on the act after tea, bowling Simon Butler for 12 and the seventh wicket with the score on 188.

Shaaiq Choudry (45 not out) and Sir Viv Richards' son Mali Richards (20 not out) put on an unbeaten 44 to bring the MCC side back into the reckoning at stumps.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/cricket/other_international/west_indies/6710771.stm

2910
Football / Why are Brazil So Good?
« on: June 01, 2007, 10:02:37 AM »
Brazil. That single word has come to sum up the very best of football.

It stands for artistry, inspiration and genius, for the combination of sublime individual skill and collective fluidity to create a whole that is both beautiful to watch and devastatingly effective.

The country has produced 50 years' worth of great players - Garrincha, Pele, Jairzinho, Tostao, Socrates and Zico to name but a few.

They had a disappointing World Cup in 2006. But with outstanding individual talents such as Ronaldinho and Kaka orchestrating the team, expectations that they will produce more moments to live on in football legend remain as high as ever.

But how does Brazil produce so many great teams and wonderful players?

As the world's most exciting team prepare for their friendly with England on Friday, BBC Sport asks some of the biggest names in Brazil's football history what makes them so good.

The story of Brazil's domination of world football starts with the sport's uniquely important position in national life.

"The national football team," says its former coach Carlos Alberto Parreira, "is the symbol of national identity, the only time the nation gets together."


Football is the most important thing in Brazilian national life

"Football in Brazil is like a religion," adds Carlos Alberto Torres, captain of the side that won the 1970 World Cup.

"Everybody talks about it all the time - not only when we are close to the World Cup.

"This is the difference between Europe and Brazil. After the World Cup, people in Europe start to think about life, business. Here in Brazil, we breathe football 24 hours a day."

According to Parreira, no-one is quite sure why.

"Sociologists, psychologists have tried to explain, but nobody can find one reason," he says.

"Maybe because we didn't have to fight for independence, we don't have earthquakes or things like that. We didn't go to war."



Journalist Alex Bellos, author of Futebol - A Brazilian Way of Life, believes it was also due to the relatively late abolition of slavery at the end of the 19th century, and a lack of positive symbols.

Whatever the reason, Brazil very early "recognised football in our future and tradition and (as) our opportunity to communicate to the world that we are powerful," says 1994 World Cup winner Leonardo.

"In the 1930s, we started to organise a team to be competitive in the World Cup, and the 1950s were the beginning of this big dream to make Brazil the best international team in the world," he added.

Losing the final to Uruguay in 1950 was viewed as a national tragedy, but it only heightened the desire to win.

And it led to a little-known aspect of Brazilian football. Believing they had let themselves down through personal weakness and a lack of research, the national side came to see comprehensive preparation and innovative tactics as crucial to success.

   

Contrary to the popular belief that Brazilian teams are defensively naive, the idea of the modern back-four originated in the 1958 World Cup-winning team.

Through a careful evolution of the way they played, Brazil continued to have a tactical lead until 1970.

Allied to detailed planning and a concentration on physical training beyond that in Europe - not to forget the sheer quality of players - Brazil's plan met with unprecedented success. They won three of the four World Cups between 1958 and 1970.


Having an entire nation obsessed with football and, by extension, winning the World Cup, has developed a degree of self-fulfilment.


For some children, sport is the only way out of poverty in Brazil
Brazil is a big country - 183m people - and that is a lot of potential footballers, especially when, as Parreira says, "the whole of Brazil" is playing the game.

But for some in Brazil football is more than just a game.

It is, says journalist Lito Cavalcanti, a "life solution".

Many of Brazil's greatest footballers grew up in favelas - the shanty towns in its sprawling cities. Here, life is hard, and football offers an escape from the crippling poverty.

"It's the only way out of misery," says Cavalcanti. "The lower classes have no effective schooling. They live in favelas where drug dealers control their lives. Sport is the only way out, and in Brazil football is the only sport people care about.

"What makes them so good? Necessity. It's the only life they have ahead of them. That is their drive."


In 2006, Carlos Alberto Torres received a Fifa award for the most beautiful goal to have been scored in World Cup history - his thunderbolt in Brazil's 4-1 win over Italy in the 1970 World Cup final.

Nine Brazilians were involved in the move, with Rivelinho, Jairzinho and Pele providing memorable cameos before the coup de grace - Alberto's unstoppable shot.

   

"Now I realise how beautiful and how important that goal was," said Alberto.

Alberto was just 25 when he scored that goal, but his artistry had been honed day-by-day, week-by-week, year-by-year as a young child.

In Brazil children learn football in a very different way from their European counterparts.

There are no leagues or competitive matches for young children - such a concept is seen as likely to hinder a player's creative impulses.

"The children play a lot but it's always very free," says Leonardo.

"We don't tell eight-year-olds you have to play right-back."

Parreira agrees: "We don't put them in a cage, say 'you have to be like this'. We give them some freedom until they are ready to be coached."

And that sense of creativity is never lost.

Ronaldinho is just the latest in a long line of brilliant Brazilian players - but why are there so many?
"In Europe if you are dancing in the team bus before a World Cup final match it would be viewed as not concentrating," says Leonardo.

"But in Brazil if you are not speaking and laughing on the bus that is seen as being afraid.

"It is a different mentality. The idea of the system and the collective is different. The system is more important in Europe than it is in Brazil, even if we know it is important."

Brazil's success, though, stems from more than talent and the freedom to express it - behind Ronaldinho's gleaming smile lies hours of hard work.

"The English academy system is one where players are training for just four hours a week," says Brazilian football expert Simon Clifford.

"Compare that to Ronaldinho when he was a 16-year-old with Gremio, where he would have been training for up to 20 hours a week."

Parreira adds: "In Brazil players are fabricated, they are produced.

   
Crlos Alberto Torres
We say in Brazil that a great player is born every day Carlos Alberto
1970 World Cup winning captain "They come to the clubs when they are 10-12 and then they start in categories according to age.

"There are no more players from the beach or from the street. This is a myth, a legend. They are built, grown in the clubs."

Tactically, too, Brazil remain to this day very different from other international sides.

Former Republic of Ireland coach Brian Kerr says Brazil are unique in international football.

"The only two players who are really defenders are the centre-backs," says Kerr. "The shape of the team is 2-2-2-2, with the full-backs playing high up the pitch.

"That is how they would line up, but after that anything could happen that might lead them to have three wide players on the left.


Brazil have an embarrassment of riches on the player front
"It was different from anything I had seen and it was the quality of the players that allowed them to do that."

Brazil's football production-line has its fair share of casualties - Ronaldo was the only player from the under-17 Brazilian team who went on to become a professional.

Only the very best make it through to Brazil's starting 11 to display their extravagant skills on the world's stage.

In Ronaldinho, Adriano, Kaka, Ronaldo and Robinho, Brazil have five potential match winners - most teams are happy to have just one such player in their side.

And success has bred success for more than half a century.

"You go to the schools here," says Carlos Alberto Torres, "and you see the kids saying I want to be like Ronaldo or Pele or Zico.

"They are examples to the kids - and we have lots of them, not only one or two.

"We say in Brazil that a great player is born every day."

That might well be so. But just as important is that Brazil's unique environment ensures they actually become one.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/internationals/6700897.stm


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