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Monday, December 14, 2009

Maradona not going anywhere before World Cup


Maradona not going anywhere before World Cup



Diego Maradona was one of the greatest players ever to step onto a soccer field.But while he was beloved by millions of fans during his playing career, the Argentine ace was also a favorite target of the media and always walked around with a big bull's-eye painted on his back, thanks in large part to his self-indulgent lifestyle and public acts of arrogance.Not much has changed since El Diego retired from the game he learned to play while growing up in Villa Fiorito, a shantytown on the outskirts of Buenos Aires.Although the former Boca Juniors star has kicked his drug problem, he still has an air of conceit and the press continues to hound him, especially since he took over as manager of Argentina's national team in November 2008.Maradona was handed the coaching reins following the resignation of Alfio Basile and, though Argentina improved under his tutelage, it didn't disguise the fact that the team laboured through a tumultuous qualifying campaign.

During Maradona's tenure, La Albicelestes suffered a historic and humiliating 6-1 humbling at the hands of lowly Bolivia in La Paz. A harder-than-it-looked win over Colombia was followed by three consecutive losses (to Ecuador, Brazil and Paraguay) before Maradona's men finally secured a World Cup berth on the final day of the South American qualifiers.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Maradona Hand Of God

Monday, December 7, 2009

South African World Cup 2010( theme song)

World Cup 2010 Theme Song performed by Rezza Brothers


Watch this video in a new window Brazil v Argentina: 2010 South American World Cup Qualifier

Watch this video in a new window Brazil v Argentina: 2010 South American World Cup Qualifier




Monday, November 23, 2009

FIFA WORLD CUP-2010-VENUE


FIFA WORLD-2010 VENUE SUMMARY
Description Ellis Park Stadium 2009.
Ellis Park Stadium, on Johannesburg, South Africa.
Date
1 July 2009(2009-07-01), 00:14:42
Source
originally posted to Flickr as Ellis Park Stadium
Author

FIFA WORLD-2010 VENUE SUMMARY

Description Loftus-Stadion.JPG
Deutsch: Loftus-Stadion Pretoria
Date
9 October 2004(2004-10-09)
Source
own photo
Author
Zakysant at de.wikipedia
Permission
(Reusing this image)
Licensed under the GFDL by the author.

Venue-World Cup-2010

VenueSummary of World Cup-2010

Description Soccer City (june 2009).jpg
Español: Soccer City, estadio de la.
Date
Source

Own work
Author

JOENKIKE
Permission



Commons-logo.svg This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons. The description on its description page there is shown below.
Commons is a freely licensed media file repository. You can help.
This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons
Description Durban 21.08.2009 12-02-25.jpg

Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa, Construction of the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban for the FIFA 2010 World Cup
Date

21 August 2009(2009-08-21)
Source

Own work Simisa (talk · contributions)
Author

Simisa (talk · contributions)
Permission


Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0

Summary

Description CTS01.JPG
English: Cape Town Stadium
Date

2009/10/09
Source

RossW
Author

Ross
Permission
(Reusing this image)
coming nex ........... thanks

World Cup-2010

2010 FIFA World Cup
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
"2010 World Cup" redirects here. For other competitions of that name, see 2010 World Cup (disambiguation).
2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa 2010

2010 FIFA World Cup official logo
Tournament details
Host country South Africa
Dates 11 June – 11 July
Teams 32 (from 6 confederations)
Venue(s) 10 (in 9 host cities)

The 2010 FIFA World Cup will be the 19th FIFA World Cup, the premier international football tournament. It is scheduled to take place between 11 June and 11 July 2010 in South Africa. The 2010 FIFA World Cup will be the culmination of a qualification process that began in August 2007 and involved 204 of the 208 FIFA national teams. As such, it matches the 2008 Summer Olympics as the sports event with the most competing nations.

This will be the first time that the tournament has been hosted by an African nation, after South Africa beat Morocco and Egypt in an all-African bidding process. Italy are the defending champions. The draw for the finals will take place on 4 December 2009 in Cape Town.

List of qualified teams

The following 32 teams qualified for the final tournament:
AFC (4)
* Australia
* Japan
* Korea DPR
* Korea Republic
CAF (5+1)
* Algeria
* Cameroon
* Côte d'Ivoire
* Ghana
* Nigeria
* South Africa (hosts)



CONCACAF (3)

* Honduras
* Mexico
* United States

CONMEBOL (5)

* Argentina
* Brazil
* Chile
* Paraguay
* Uruguay

OFC (1)

* New Zealand



UEFA (13)

* Denmark
* England
* France
* Germany
* Greece
* Italy
* Netherlands
* Portugal
* Serbia
* Slovakia
* Slovenia
* Spain


Venues

In 2005, the organisers released a provisional list of thirteen venues to be used for the World Cup: Mangaung/Bloemfontein, Cape Town, Durban, Johannesburg (two venues), Kimberley, Nelspruit, Orkney, Polokwane, Nelson Mandela Bay/Port Elizabeth, Tshwane/Pretoria (two venues), and Rustenburg. This was narrowed down to ten venues[3] which were officially announced by FIFA on 17 March 2006:
Johannesburg Durban Cape Town Johannesburg Pretoria
Soccer City Moses Mabhida Stadium Cape Town Stadium Ellis Park Stadium Loftus Versfeld Stadium
Capacity: 94,700 Capacity: 70,000 Capacity: 69,070 Capacity: 62,567 Capacity: 51,760
Fig9-2.jpg Durban 21.08.2009 12-02-25.jpg CTS01.JPG Ellis Park Stadium 2009.jpg Loftus-Stadion.JPG
Port Elizabeth Bloemfontein Polokwane Nelspruit Rustenburg
Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium Free State Stadium Peter Mokaba Stadium Mbombela Stadium Royal Bafokeng Stadium
Capacity: 48,000 Capacity: 48,070 Capacity: 46,000 Capacity: 44,000 Capacity: 42,000
NelsonMandelaBayStadium-001.JPG South Africa-Bloemfontein-Free State Stadium01.jpg