Tag Archives: striker

Benjamin Moukandjo kicks picture

Continued here:

AS Monaco Benjamin Bile Moukandjo (C) kicks the ball while Cris of Olympique Lyon (L) looks on during their French Ligue 1 soccer match at Louis II stadium in Monaco, May 29, 2011. Cameroon#39;s star winger Benjamin Moukandjo is attracting Premier League interest. The Sun says Liverpool want to sign Moukandjo from AC Monaco. Kop boss Kenny Dalglish may get the 22-year-old for a bargain fee after Monaco#39;s weekend relegation. Reds chief Damien Comolli has been active in the French transfer

Benjamin Moukandjo kicks picture

Benjamin Moukandjo Height Age Statistics

More here:

Biography for Benjamin Moukandjo Full name Benjamin Moukandjo Bilé Date of birth 12 November 1988 (1988-11-12) (age 22) Place of birth Douala, Cameroon Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 1⁄2 in) Playing position Striker Club information Current club Monaco Number 11 Youth career 2003–2006 Kadji SA 2006–2008 Rennes B Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 2007–2009 Rennes 2 (0) 2008–2009 → L#39;Entente (loan) 13 (2) 2009–2011 Nîmes 46 (7) 2011– Monaco 0 (0) National team‡ 2008 Camero

Benjamin Moukandjo Height Age Statistics

Leslie Nielsen Has Died | Photos | Videos

JUST COMING IN NOW…. Leslie Nielsen Dies 28 minutes ago by TMZ Staff Legendary funny man Leslie Nielsen died today of complications of pneumonia in a hospital near his home in Fort Lauderdale, this according to his agent. He was 84. His agent tells TMZ Nielsen passed surrounded by his wife and friends at about 5:34 PM ET. Nielsen was best known for his roles in “Airplane” and the “Naked Gun” series. His “Airplane” co-star, Barbara Billingsley, passed away last month. Ted Striker: Surely you can't be serious. Rumack: I am serious… and don't call me Shirley. Elaine Dickinson: A hospital? What is it? Rumack: It's a big building with patients, but that's not important right now. added by: EthicalVegan

Leslie Nielsen Has Just Died | Please Add Updates

JUST COMING IN NOW…. Leslie Nielsen Dies 28 minutes ago by TMZ Staff Legendary funny man Leslie Nielsen died today of complications of pneumonia in a hospital near his home in Fort Lauderdale, this according to his agent. He was 84. His agent tells TMZ Nielsen passed surrounded by his wife and friends at about 5:34 PM ET. Nielsen was best known for his roles in “Airplane” and the “Naked Gun” series. His “Airplane” co-star, Barbara Billingsley, passed away last month. Ted Striker: Surely you can't be serious. Rumack: I am serious… and don't call me Shirley. Elaine Dickinson: A hospital? What is it? Rumack: It's a big building with patients, but that's not important right now. added by: EthicalVegan

FIFA World Cup 2010: Brazil vs Côte d’Ivoire Live Stream

Watch Brazil vs Côte d’Ivoire Football Live Streaming Online , the live event of your favorite Football Soccer Team of the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa soccer match between Brazil and Côte d’Ivoire on their great match in Group G this June 20, exactly 20:30 local time and the game scheduled in Soccer City, Johannesburg. Stay tuned and feel free to watch this great match between the best teams here online. Don’t miss to watch the live event of 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa live coverage via satellite. A good and exciting game will be played by the two great teams of FIFA World Cup, the Brazil vs Côte d’Ivoire. Watch it and enjoy, who’s gonna be the winner. FIFA World Cup 2010: Brazil vs Côte d’Ivoire Live Stream FIFA World Cup 2010: Brazil vs Côte d’Ivoire Live Stream is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Miroslav Klose’s red card crucial as Serbia fail to hand it to Germany | David Hytner

Alberto Undiano’s decision to send off Germany’s Miroslav Klose against Serbia was harsh. Anyone for netball? Miroslav Klose is the man who saves his best for the world stage. Impotent for Bayern Munich over the course of this past season, the striker flicked the switch in Germany’s opening group game against Australia, scoring his 11th goal at World Cup finals to close in on the Brazilian Ronaldo’s record of 15. Onwards and upwards, everyone predicted, with Germany widely fancied. Yet he and his team were stopped brutally in their tracks here. Klose’s red card was one of those moments that had eyes widening and mouths opening all around the stadium. Already on a booking for a trip on Branislav Ivanovic, as the Serb had burst out of defence, Klose’s challenge on Dejan Stankovic was nothing more than a nibble at ankles. Yes, it was a foul, but a second yellow card? Stanovic was not about to spark a Serbian attack and there was certainly nothing nasty in Klose’s intent. But you knew that the referee Alberto Undiano was going to do it by the way that he rushed in. • 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 The Spaniard had possibly made a rod for his own back by dishing out five yellow cards in the first 32 minutes but his application of the strictest letter of the law drew gasps. The Germany players, it ought to be said, were commendably restrained in their protests. What will they make of the decision at the referees’ headquarters in Pretoria? Each of the four-strong teams of officials from the various nations are based there and, after every performance, there is an extensive debrief involving them all. Could it be that the furore over Cristiano Ronaldo’s call for greater protection had an influence? The consensus here was that if Klose’s second card were merited, football would be entering the realms of non-contact sports. Anyone for netball? The World Cup had so far been notable for an absence of controversy. Undiano appeared keen to compensate and, as he continued to keep the whistle to his lips in the second half, so the blood pressure of the Germany manager, Jogi Löw, rose. At full time, Löw marched straight off down the tunnel, gesturing angrily. The dismissal shaped the game, although it should not detract from an encouraging performance from Serbia, whose football was compact, committed and laced with no little enterprise. Their three starting midfielders held a narrow line, with the captain, Stankovic, in the middle, ever available for the short ball out of defence. On the flanks, Milos Krasic and the new Liverpool signing Milan Jovanovic impressed, Krasic particularly so. The CSKA Moscow winger is a summer transfer target for Juventus and he would have added to his value. His crosses and trickery were a delight. Serbia sometimes offer the impression that their finger is never far from the self-destruct button. The vital penalty that Zdravko Kuzmanovic conceded for handball in their opening game defeat against Ghana was utterly needless and Nemanja Vidic, inexplicably, aped his team-mate to concede another one. Mercifully for Serbia, Vladimir Stojkovic saved Lukas Podolski’s 60th minute kick. Germany showed great character with 10 men and Löw the boldness to chase the game with attacking substitutions. But his players, as they diced with conceding a second on the counter, could not fashion the equaliser. Löw was keen not to turn his team’s final group game, against Ghana on Wednesday, into a drama. Thanks in part to Undiano, he has been denied his wish. Germany Serbia World Cup 2010 Group D World Cup 2010 David Hytner guardian.co.uk

Read the original post:
Miroslav Klose’s red card crucial as Serbia fail to hand it to Germany | David Hytner

World Cup 2010: Steven Gerrard hopes old habits bring England progress | Kevin McCarra

The midfielder is set to return to a more advanced role and revive his ‘fantastic understanding’ with Wayne Rooney Steven Gerrard believes a return to old ways will bring impetus to England’s World Cup campaign in their match with Algeria tomorrow night. The Liverpool midfielder, who scored the opener in the 1-1 draw with the USA, expects to revert to the more advanced role he had in qualifiers that saw Wayne Rooney score nine times. There have been no further international goals for the striker since the 5-1 rout of Croatia at Wembley last September. The balance of the line-up will alter now that Gareth Barry is free of his ankle injury. With the holding midfielder in place, Gerrard should be liberated as he roves from an attacking post towards the left. “I think that’s the plan,” he agreed, as he anticipated linking with Rooney. “We’ve had a fantastic understanding in qualification. “I like playing with good players and I enjoy playing with Wayne. Hopefully I can provide a goal for him to get off the mark. I’ve said all the way through qualifying that, if we got to the World Cup, we’d need Wayne to be our top goalscorer and to score the goals to take us to the later stages because he’s our main player.” Gerrard, after a trying season with Liverpool, exudes a confidence now that he has been released into a World Cup campaign. Few anticipated that Rooney might be the person in need of a fillip, yet his one goal in an England shirt

Go here to read the rest:
World Cup 2010: Steven Gerrard hopes old habits bring England progress | Kevin McCarra

World Cup 2010 team news: England v Algeria

Venue Green Point Stadium, Cape Town Referee R Irmatov (Uzb) Odds England 1-4 Algeria 12-1 Draw 5-1 TV ITV1 Radio BBC 5 Live England Manager Fabio Capello Fifa ranking 8 Doubtful None Injured King (groin) Suspended None Algeria Manager Rabah Saadane Fifa ranking 30 Doubtful Chaouchi (knee) Injured None Suspended Ghezzal (one match) Match pointers • This will be the first ever meeting between England and Algeria • England have not lost any of the 15 matches they have played against an African side, winning 11 and drawing four • Algeria have failed to keep a clean sheet in the seven previous World Cup matches they have played in • England’s last five World Cup goals have been scored by a midfielder, three of them by Steven Gerrard • Wayne Rooney has now failed to score in back-to-back competitive international matches for the first time since March 2007 England Algeria World Cup 2010 Group C guardian.co.uk

View original post here:
World Cup 2010 team news: England v Algeria

France 0-2 Mexico | World Cup 2010 Group A match report

Manchester United have not seen much of Javier Hernández yet but the striker who will join them for the new season delighted the hordes of underdressed Mexican fans in chilly Polokwane by scoring the goal that set his side on the way to victory against a ragged France. Hernández came on as 55th-minute substitute and made the breakthrough nine minutes later, beating the offside trap by a matter of inches and leaving France looking at elimination. A penalty from another substitute, the veteran Cuauhtémoc Blanco made certain of victory 12 minutes from time, taking Mexico level with Uruguay at the top of Group A and leaving France and South Africa with a point each. A point is about all France deserve after two extremely underwhelming displays at this World Cup, and though they could finish their group games with a victory over South Africa, the worry will be that Mexico and Uruguay will draw to both progress. Mexico began as if they meant business, showing much more attacking desire than in their opening game against South Africa and giving France a couple of scares in the first 10 minutes. Giovani dos Santos was in an offside position when he struck a post after only two minutes, but France had been warned. Carlos Vela managed to stay onside when Mexico came forward again, though after expertly gathering Rafael Márquez’s lofted pass, he shot early and high with his left foot. Guillermo Franco, who picked up the game’s first caution for delaying the taking of a free-kick, also shot too high after easily turning Eric Abidal on the adge of the area. France weathered that storm and gradually pushed Mexico back before producing a few attacks of their own. There was no one in the middle when Franck Ribéry crossed invitingly across the face of goal from the right, and though Jérémy Toulalan sent over an even better centre a few minutes later Florent Malouda was unable to get on the end of it. There was a definite sense, missing in most of the opening round of games, that both sides wanted to win this fixture. That would make qualification almost certain, whereas to lose, with Uruguay already on four points, would make life tricky if not impossible on the final day. Carlos Salcido, Mexico’s impressive left-back, brought the first real save of the evening from Hugo Lloris with a galloping run into the box and a shot directly at the goalkeeper, but the El Tri cause was not helped when Vela disappeared after just half an hour. He went down injured after no obvious contact with an opponent and was unable to continue. Little had been seen of Nicolas Anelka until he brought a routine save from Oscar Perez with a tame shot on the stroke of half-time, though he was indirectly involved in Toulalan collecting a caution in the last act of the first half that will put him out of the next game. Anelka tried to shoot from a free-kick for a foul on Ribéry, but shot into the Mexican wall so meekly that the wall broke up and a downfield breakaway was launched. Toulalan could not get back in time and was obliged to block Franco near halfway to prevent the Mexican striker breaking into space. It was hardly the biggest of surprises when Anelka was hauled off at half-time, though Raymond Domenech chose to replace him with André-Pierre Gignac rather than Thierry Henry. PSV Eindhoven’s Salcido continued to show up well, cutting in from the left at the start of the second half and shaping to shoot before Bacary Sagna brought him down. Mexico produced a well worked free move from the free kick to get Dos Santos to the goal-line, only for the former Spurs player to waste the opportunity with a cross played behind his strikers. France came back down the pitch and Malouda brought a save from Perez with a rising shot that the goalkeeper tipped over the bar, before Dos Santos wasted a couple of free-kicks at the other end by a distance that suggested the ball was to blame. Both efforts, from a fair way out, sailed so harmlessly dead it was difficult to know what he was attempting, though the look Javier Aguirre shot him from the bench on the second occasion suggested he might be wiser trying something more reliable next time. That was rendered unnecessary by what happened next, with Hernández taking advantage of a stupendously good linesman’s call to stay onside and put Mexico in front. The substitute passed backwards to Márquez then set off upfield for the return, which was timed to perfection and left Hernández the relatively simple task of gathering in space, then rounding Lloris to score. The French appealed for offside, but the flag had stayed down throughout the move, and replays showed that Hernández was onside, though by no more than a foot, when the ball was played. France gave up without much of a fight, with neither Ribéry nor Malouda succeeding in taking the ball past opponents, and another perplexing attacking substitution by Domenech failing to make any discernible difference. Their off-night was summed up when Eric Abidal brought down Pablo Barrera for the penalty. The defender seemed to have time to pull out of the tackle when Barrera played the ball past him and drew the foul, but Abidal was either too tired or too resigned to be concerned. Contact was made, the referee was correct in pointing to the spot, and Blanco found the bottom corner. Surprisingly good last time, France are right back in the doldrums again. World Cup 2010 Group A World Cup 2010 France Mexico Paul Wilson guardian.co.uk

Read the original post:
France 0-2 Mexico | World Cup 2010 Group A match report

David Smith visits Soweto for Youth Day during the World Cup

David Smith visits Soweto for Youth Day during the World Cup for the anniversary of the uprising David Smith Peter Sale

View original post here:
David Smith visits Soweto for Youth Day during the World Cup