Tag Archives: croatia

Karissa Shannon Height Bio

Biography for Karissa Shannon Born October 2, 1989 (1989-10-02) Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S. Measurements Bust: 34B Waist: 26 Hips: 34 Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) Weight 125 lb (57 kg) In 2008, Hugh Hefner of Playboy chose the Shannons to be two of his three new girlfriends, replacing the departed Bridget Marquardt and Kendra Wilkinson. (Crystal Harris replaced Holly Madison as Hefner#39;s “number one” girlfriend with whom he shares a bed.) Because of their relationship with Hefner, the Shann

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Karissa Shannon Height Bio

Ivan Capan picture

Ivan Capan of Croatia celebrates after winning the men#39;s 50-meter breaststoke final at the Youth Olympic Games on Friday Aug. 20, 2010 in Singapore. Australia capped a fantastic week in the pool by winning five medals in a thrilling climax to the Youth Olympics swimming event. All but one of the Australians in action medalled on Friday night, with the team picking up a gold, silver and three bronzes. Australia#39;s swimming team finished with 16 medals – four gold, six silver and six bronz

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Ivan Capan picture

Europe poised to commit suicide, admit Turkey into EU

Turkey would immediately become the largest state in the EU. Rapidly Islamizing Ankara would be calling the shots for people in Berlin, London, Paris, and Rome. 70 million Muslims or more, including an untold number of active Islamic jihadists, would be able to enter Europe easily and travel around it freely. European Death Watch Alert: “Belgian EU presidency would support enlargement,” from the Telegraph, June 28 : Belgium will support the enlargement of the European Union to include Croatia, Iceland and Turkey during its forthcoming presidency of the bloc. Olivier Chastel, the Belgian secretary of state for EU affairs, in a joint news conference with Spanish counterpart Diego Lopez Garrido, raised the possibility of the opening of a new chapter in negotiations with Turkey in the coming months after Spain, which currently holds the EU presidency, backed Ankara's bid despite resistance from France and Germany. Belgium takes over the six-month rotating EU presidency from Spain on July 1. The EU began membership talks with Turkey in 2005 but the process has made slow progress. Only 12 of the 35 policy chapters, which all EU candidate countries must successfully negotiate prior to membership, are open…. added by: crystalman

World Cup 2010: Gareth Barry’s return can lift England against Algeria| Kevin McCarra

England should be able to regain some rhythm and momentum against Algeria that can help them for tougher challenges later Few doubted that Fabio Capello would do an excellent job with England since he always has both a practical plan and the force of character to ensure his men apply it. The surprise lay in the verve shown over the World Cup qualifiers that made his side the highest scorers in Europe, with a total of 34 goals. It might seem that such a spree is sure to come to an end at the finals, where opponents are supposed to be more obstinate, but, in practice, the contrast is not so stark. England scored nine times over the pair of games with Croatia, yet the losers then still enjoy a far loftier ranking than the Algeria line-up that Capello’s side take on in their second group fixture. If no one dares assume that England are about to cut loose once more that is because of the slightly hesitant air in the draw with the USA. The team played well in patches yet did not add to a fourth‑minute opener from Steven Gerrard even though that goal was engineered with confidence. • Follow the Guardian’s World Cup team on Twitter • Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game • Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player • The latest team-by-team news, features and more An explanation would incorporate the comments that Wayne Rooney made the other day. It must have slipped his mind to pretend that he is in peak condition and instead he had a few wistful words about the mid-season break that is widely appreciated on the continent. In England, the holiday period at Christmas and New Year is frenetic for footballers who, by tradition, are expected to entertain a public with time on its hands. Even with the pause in Champions League, there was a welter of work for key men such as Rooney. Despite the great influx of foreign players, the Premier League retains a frenetic character that outsiders mostly have to accept since they cannot alter it. Capello was well aware that there would need to be a regeneration of his squad at the World Cup. It has not been witnessed just yet and there are ramifications to the shortage of dynamism. Robert Green has had to sweat over his prospects of staying in the line‑up after conceding that equaliser to the USA. His circumstances would have been eased markedly if his team‑mates had made light of the mistake by re-establishing a lead and securing the points. Even so, there is ample time and talent to alter the tone of the campaign. Gerrard made inroads when scoring on Saturday, but with Gareth Barry not risked because of his ankle problem the captain had some orthodox duties in midfield and could not be allowed the licence Capello generally grants him. Gerrard sustained his contribution regardless and was at least competing vigorously for the ball when England’s cutting edge was dulled in the second half. The midfielder could bring back some of the verve that will be essential to the team as the tournament progresses. No matter how many miles have been run since last August, a World Cup is also a world apart and Capello’s side, like any other, will be increasingly invigorated if they start to believe an adventure is taking shape. For all the sophistication of sports medicine, the principal rejuvenation comes when people begin to be convinced of their prospects. The remaining two fixtures should leave England feeling that they are in control. Fatigue can then recede. The manager may be toying with the reintroduction of Jermain Defoe at some point, although his one goal for his country since September will barely enter the record books since it came in the practice game with the South African club Platinum Stars. There is stress on attackers because England have less hope of keeping clean sheets now that Rio Ferdinand is unavailable. Barry will make a difference but that is not simply because of his reading of the play, when he closes off the passing options available to opponents. With the Manchester City player in action once more, there should be expanded licence for Frank Lampard. England will be relieved if he can be reminiscent of the player who scores so heavily for Chelsea. There is no escaping the fact, all the same, that the side’s fortunes are tied most tightly to those of Rooney. He is the principal figure. When he meandered away from the attack because of his craving to get on the ball the Manchester United player reduced the strain on the USA. It is improbable that he was obeying instructions, yet neither Capello nor anyone else seemed able to make him go back where he belongs. That cannot be repeated and, again, England may recover the virtues mislaid on Saturday in this match with an Algeria squad that appreciates how close to elimination it already is following defeat by Slovenia. Routs are rare and the opposition, conquerors of Egypt in the qualifiers, have their moments, yet England should recover a rhythm that will assist them in matches of greater moment that ought to lie ahead. England Algeria World Cup 2010 Group C World Cup 2010 Kevin McCarra guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Gareth Barry’s return can lift England against Algeria| Kevin McCarra

Scottish Premier League fixtures 2010-11

Every encounter in the SPL season beginning this August

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Scottish Premier League fixtures 2010-11

Rangers begin SPL title defence against Kilmarnock

• Celtic face newly-promoted Inverness on opening day • Dundee United travel to St Mirren and Dons face Hamilton Rangers will begin their Scottish Premier League title defence against Kilmarnock at Ibrox. The reigning SPL champions last faced Kilmarnock on the opening day of the 2003-04 season, hammering the Ayrshire side 4-0, although the result did not kickstart a successful season, with Alex McLeish’s side finishing 17 points behind Celtic. Celtic, who have not won the title since 2008, face a trip to newly-promoted Inverness Caledonian Thistle on the opening day. The first Old Firm game of the season comes on 23 October at Celtic Park. Dundee United, who finished third behind the Glasgow giants last season, travel to St Mirren on the opening day, while Aberdeen face Hamilton Academicals and Motherwell welcome Hibs to Fir Park. Falkirk, relegated from the SPL last season, begin life in the First Division with a derby against Dunfermline. The First, Second and Third Divisions kick off on Saturday 7 August, while the SPL begins a week later on 14 August. Scottish Premier League John Ashdown guardian.co.uk

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Rangers begin SPL title defence against Kilmarnock

World Cup 2010: Will attacking full-backs win the competition? | Jonathan Wilson

The last four winners relied on marauding defenders but is a tactical change under way in South Africa? Correlation is not necessarily causation. It is intriguing that the last four World Cup winners have been the sides who have had the pair of attacking full-backs in the best form (Jorginho and Branco for Brazil in 1994, Lilian Thuram and Bixente Lizarazu for France in 1998, Cafu and Roberto Carlos for Brazil in 2002 and Gianluca Zambrotta and Fabio Grosso for Italy in 2006), but that is not sufficient to state that the side with the best attacking full-backs this time round will be equally successful. There is, to start with, a troubling circularity about the argument, for the team that wins the World Cup is liable to have the player in the best form – or at least perceived to be in the best form – in any given position. Does a team win the World Cup because it has the best full-backs, or does it have the best full-backs because it wins the World Cup? It’s hard to say, but even allowing for that caveat, the link between success and attacking full-backs seems strong – Thuram, Cafu and Grosso stood out even in excellent teams. In this tournament already, it is notable that Philipp Lahm had a fine game in Germany’s 4-0 win over Australia, that Cha Du-ri was excellent for South Korea in their 2-0 win over Greece, and that it was an overlapping Maicon who finally opened the scoring for Brazil against North Korea last night. Even Chris Lochhead, operating more as a wing-back, was the source of much of New Zealand’s attacking intent in their 1-1 draw against Slovakia. Given Glen Johnson and Ashley Cole were two of their less disappointing players against the USA, even England fans could cling to the full-back theory as a source of hope. Before making any judgment on the importance of full-backs, though, it first must be established why that correlation between attacking full-backs and success exists. This is a subject I’ve dealt with in greater detail before , but essentially it comes down to the point Jack Charlton made after the 1994 World Cup, that when a back four meets a team playing 4-4-2 or 3-5-2, the full-backs are the players who tend to have the most space in front of them, and thus the most time on the ball, and the most opportunities to make relatively risk-free runs into unexpected areas. Increasingly, though, teams are not playing 4-4-2, and so the advantage Charlton highlighted no longer exists. When a back four plays a 4-2-3-1 or a 4-3-3, the full-back no longer has space in front of him, but a winger. That complicates matters for an attacking full-back. If he is playing an attacking wide player, then he can effectively fight fire with fire – as, for instance Roberto Carlos did against David Beckham when Real Madrid beat Manchester United 3-1 at the Bernabéu in 2003, or Michael Essien against Cristiano Ronaldo in the final hour plus extra-time of the Champions League final in 2008. That, though, is a risk: Theo Walcott didn’t just score a hat-trick in Zagreb in 2008, he destroyed Croatia’s entire left side by making Danijel Pranjic, a full-back so attacking he usually plays in midfield, try to defend. So it may be safer for even an attacking full-back to sit deep and try to absorb the threat, as Ashley Cole did against Ronaldo in Euro 2004. If they are going to sit back, then it probably makes more sense for the full-back to be a naturally defensive player (Arsenal’s Lee Dixon on Newcastle’s David Ginola in a League Cup tie in January 1996, Manchester United’s Gary Neville on Arsenal’s José Antonio Reyes in October 2004) in which case the hegemony of the attacking full-back may be over. That’s not to say that the attacking full-back is outmoded, but that they are not such an advantage as they once were. If that is so, then the likes of Argentina and Holland may not be so hindered by their lack of attacking full-backs as it seemed they might be. There is always the chance in tournaments that a team reverting to a formation that seems thoroughly outdated will shock the opposition by setting them a problem they have forgotten how to solve. It worked for Greece when Otto Rehhagel reintroduced man-marking at Euro 2004, and it may be that a back four of essentially defensive players is such a novelty that opponents struggle against Diego Maradona’s Argentina. Jonás Gutiérrez, of course, is not a particularly solid option at right-back, and Nigeria frequently exploited his weak positional sense, but it could be that he is dropped for Nicolás Burdisso, who looked more convincing having come off the bench on Saturday. Holland present a less extreme case, but neither Gio van Bronckhorst, because of his age, nor Gregory van der Wiel, because of his essentially defensive outlook, are likely to be pouring forward making overlapping runs. Both play, in diluted form, a version of the “broken team” that was so prevalent in Italy in the late 1990s, in which some players have a very clear attacking role, and some a very clear defensive role, with little in between. Against Nigeria, Argentina had a very obvious back four plus Mascherano, and a front four of Angel di María, Carlos Tevez, Lionel Messi and Gonzalo Higuaín, with Juan Sebastián Verón providing some sort of link as a deep-lying playmaker. The Dutch similarly had a back four and a front four plus Nigel De Jong, with Mark van Bommel linking. That is a mode of play that places great onus on individual talent, and less on the system. Perhaps that is natural in international football, in which the lack of time available to coaches, as both Valeriy Lobanovskiy and Arrigo Sacchi made clear, makes sophisticated systematisation difficult to develop, perhaps it even plays into the hands of the advertisers whose ideal is a Ronaldo step-over rather than Rafa Benítez making compact gestures, but it does suggest that the age of the attacking full-back is, if not over, then at least being challenged. If Maradona has recognised that – or if he has listened to Carlos Bilardo telling him that – then he may just be smarter than many give him credit for (and, of course, Argentina’s lack of attacking full-backs makes it a wholly logical experiment). For if it comes down to a battle not of system – which would benefit Spain with their phalanx of gifted midfield pass-and-movers – but of individual attacking talent, then there is no side better placed than Argentina, with Holland not too far behind. It worked for Bilardo and Argentina in 1986 when, to put it slightly crudely, seven players defended and Jorge Valdano, Jorge Burruchaga and, of course, Maradona attacked. If Gabriel Heinze and Gutiérrez or Burdisso can help provide a platform, then with Angel Di María, Gonzalo Higuaín, Carlos Tevez and, of course, Messi, it might just work again. World Cup 2010 Jonathan Wilson guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Will attacking full-backs win the competition? | Jonathan Wilson

Croatia vs Wales 2010 score 2-0

Andrew Dorman (L) of Wales and Croatia#39;s Ivan Strinic fights for the ball in their friendly soccer match in Osijek May 23, 2010. Goals from Ivan Rakitic and Drago Gabric condemned a patched-up Wales side to a valiant 2-0 defeat in Sunday night#39;s international friendly in Croatia. Rakitic undid a fine Wales first-half showing with a stunning strike just before the interval and substitute Gabric wrapped up victory late on. Yet Wales, denied the services of 15 senior players, could look ba

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Croatia vs Wales 2010 score 2-0

Austria vs Croatia 2010 score 0:1

Croatia#39;s players celebrate their goal against Austria, during their friendly soccer match in Klagenfurt, Austria, Wednesday, May 19, 2010. A goal in the 86th minute by substitute Mate Bilic gave Croatia a 1-0 victory Wednesday over Austria in an international friendly. Bilic slid the ball past Austria goalkeeper Jurgen Macho from a pass by Drago Grabic. Croatia dominated the match throughout but saw several good chances thwarted by Macho, who saved close-range shots from Luka Modric, Niki

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Austria vs Croatia 2010 score 0:1

Outasight And Ameer Bring New Perspectives To Hip-Hop

‘Sight brings his ‘suburban perspective,’ while Ameer speaks the ‘truth,’ in Mixtape Daily. Ameer Firestarter: Outasight It’s so obvious and you hate to say it, but Outasight looks nothing like the Yonkers music royalty we know that come from the outskirts of NYC

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Outasight And Ameer Bring New Perspectives To Hip-Hop