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Saturday, December 26, 2015

Al Majidi: I’m glad to be a role model


(FIFA.com) 
Sudanese female coach Salma Al-Majidi in action during a training session
Invariably dressed in sports gear, with a whistle in her mouth and a group of footballers under her control, Selma Al Majidi is very much one of a kind, the first Arab and Sudanese woman to take charge of a men’s football team.
Al Majidi has dreamed of being a coach virtually all her life, having first made her first foray on to a football pitch to watch her little brother train at the age of 11. Paying close attention to the sessions, she made a mental note of the advice the coach gave her younger sibling.
Recalling those days, she told FIFA.com: “I noted down everything the coach said to my brother and his team-mates. I learned his tactical instructions by heart and even the way in which he set the cones out.
“In the evening, I’d try out all his instructions with my brother at home, which became a training room. I’d use kitchen utensils as cones and I’d watch football matches on TV with my family. And that’s how I started to understand everything in a sport that in my country is the sole preserve of men.”
A place in footballing history
Al Majidi’s dream came true when she was invited to coach the U-13 to U-16 teams at Omdurman club Al Hilal, an invitation she accepted without a moment’s thought, given the lack of women’s teams in Sudan.
Explaining what the job involved, she said: “It’s very difficult to coach teenagers, and I had to be strong to face up to them. Teenagers don’t usually listen to adults and sometimes they’d even laugh at what I had to say to them. I learned the importance of being patient, which has helped me a lot in my career in senior football.”
Having since taken training courses and earning coaching certificates with the Sudanese Football Association and the African Football Confederation, Al Majidi now holds the Sudanese and African “C” badge and is in the process of obtaining the African “B” badge.
Thanks to her qualifications and fine record with Al Hilal, several Sudanese clubs began knocking on her door, and after taking up positions with some of them, the 25-year-old eventually found herself at third-division Al Nasr of Omdurman.
Taking up the story, she said: “To start with, some of the players didn’t want to work with me just because I was a woman. It was strange for them and everyone was uncertain about the situation. With time, though, they’ve come to respect me and they’ve praised me for my work. It was a big challenge and I faced it in the best possible way by saving the team from relegation.”
Breaking taboos
Al Majidi has had to fight to make her way in the game and overcome resistance in the shape of people who believed that there is no place for women in football. Her iron will and determination have helped her overcome those barriers, however.
The holder of a degree in Accountancy and Management Studies from Al Nasr Technical College, Al Majidi expanded on her battle to gain recognition: “Society didn’t look favourably on what I was doing because the belief was that only men should coach men’s teams. We live in an eastern society and the people of Sudan have habits and customs that put a block on women in all walks of life, football among them.”
Al Majidi’s family encouraged her to persevere with her work, however, and to fulfil her childhood dream: “The man in the street here was more conservative than my parents, who encouraged me to go ahead and coach men. My family is my biggest support, especially my mother and my little brother, who I want to thank a lot.”
The pioneering coach added: “I am happy to be a sporting role model in Sudan. Wherever I go my compatriots say hello to me and congratulate me. I hope I can continue on this path and take over at a first division club or even reach international level by coaching the national team.”
Figuring on the BBC’s list of the 100 most inspirational women of 2015, Al Majidi is already looking ahead to next year, while continuing to harbour hopes of seeing a Sudan national women’s team come into being one day, with her at the helm.

Friday, December 25, 2015

Pelé atiza a Neymar


"Es bueno, pero Vasconcelos fue diez veces mejor"
Pelé saluda desde el campo a los aficionados 
Pelé ha criticado a su compatriota Neymar en una entrevista en la brasileña Placar. "No colabora atrás, no crea, no sale con el balón. Es difícil compararle sin todo eso. Neymar es un buen jugador, pero ¿cuántos goles marcó de cabeza?".
Pelé va más allá y ni siquiera cree que Neymar esté entre los mejores jugadores de la historia del Santos, donde ambos jugaron: "Vasconcelos fue diez veces mejor que Neymar".
O'Rei cree que Messi está por encima de todos: "Es el mejor de los últimos diez años. Pero no va bien de cabeza y usa más la izquierda y poco la derecha. Hace tiempo estaba Cristiano, quepara mí ha sido igual que Ronaldo Nazario".
A la hora de las comparaciones históricas sobre quién es el mejor jugador de la historia, el brasileño dijo: "Hoy en día Pelé sería mejor que antes porque la preparación física es mucho mayor. El don es cosa de Dios, pero si además estás preparado de mejor manera...".

Ten fairy tales from the beautiful game


(FIFA.com) Friday 25 December 2015
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Ten fairy tales from the beautiful game
© Getty Images
Football never ceases to amaze with its ability to inspire passion in the most improbable places, with a love of the game capable of blossoming anywhere from a post office to a caravan or a zoo, or even the heart of a civil war.

FIFA organised five different tournaments in 2015, plus numerous qualifiers for the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia™, which meant that FIFA.com jetted off to all four corners of the globe to bring you the very best insights from behind the scenes. We now look back at ten of the most memorable stories recounted by our editorial team in the last 12 months.

Youga starting to deliverA former postman at a sorting office in Lyon, midfielder Amos Youga is now plying his trade in the French elite for Gazelec Ajaccio and has turned out for Central African Republic in World Cup qualifying. His day-to-day routine has clearly been transformed, but Youga himself remains unchanged. "I've not got Cristiano Ronaldo's car or house!" he told us. "I've got a low-key, practical flat, and I have everything that I need. It's got two bedrooms, a balcony, a living room and a kitchen, but no swimming pool. There wouldn't be any point in that. I'm keeping my feet on the ground. Not all that long ago, I was delivering letters."

Read his story

Kamara's incredible journeyBorn in Kenema, Sierra Leone, forward Kei Kamara grew up in the middle of an 11-year civil war that left the country devastated. "You woke up in the morning and there were dead bodies on the street, vultures eating their flesh," he said, having ultimately found refuge in football. Kamara left home and hid in bushes before eventually leaving Sierra Leone for a refugee camp in Gambia, after which he was granted asylum in the United States. Now a striker for Columbus Crew, he is making the most of the present – even if he has not forgotten his past.

Read his story

Myanmar's globetrottersMyanmar's adventure at the FIFA U-20 World Cup New Zealand 2015 was nothing short of a life-changing event for the players involved. After sealing their historic finals berth, the White Angels spent time in no less than eight countries and experienced a huge amount as they prepared for and then contested the main event: Germany, Australia, Belgium, Hungary, FYR Macedonia, Slovenia, Ukraine and, of course, New Zealand. FIFA.com was on hand to hear their travel tales.

Read their story
Lopez: from extra to star turnPablo Lopez first lent a hand to Mexico's U-17 team a number of years before he took the pitch at the FIFA U-17 World Cup Chile 2015. "It was during the 2011 World Cup that Mexico won on home soil," Lopez explained. "As a member of the Pachuca academy, I got to be a ball boy for the two matches that the team played in the city. I was 13; I knew I wanted to be a footballer and to represent my country, but back then I never imagined that I'd one day play in the same competition." Play he did, though, as Mexico surged through to the semi-finals in Chile.

Read his story

Ryan reaching farBack when he was 18, Mat Ryan was watching the 2010 World Cup in a caravan and playing in the reserves for Central Coast Mariners. Just four years later, he slipped on the gloves for Australia at Brazil 2014 – and the success continued this year as he also played his part in the Socceroos' greatest triumph yet, their 2015 AFC Asian Cup win. Read more about Ryan's fascinating journey from Norah Head, north of Sydney, to Valencia in Spain.

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Slater's tall taleSt. Vincent and the Grenadines forward Tevin Slater is more than just a gifted footballer – he can also lay claim to being a talented fisherman. "Scoring goals and catching fish are kind of the same feeling," he told us. "It makes you smile. There's no guarantees out on the water or out on the pitch. But when they come, the goals or the fish, it's a nice feeling."

Read his story

Jara Saguier's family trade
Paraguay ended a 14-year absence from the U-17 World Cup when they contested Chile 2015, and one of the key figures in their resurgence was coach Carlos Jara Saguier. Football feats seem to run in the family, though, as Carlos is one of seven brothers who played professionally in Paraguay. "I don't think there's any other family in the world that's done that," he said. "And that's not all. My father also founded Rubio Nu, who now play in the first division. I'm one person who can definitely say that I've got football in my blood."

Read his story

Williams' animal passionAustralia would surely not have impressed with quite the same panache at the FIFA Women's World Cup Canada 2015™ without the long reach and quick reflexes of goalkeeper Lydia Williams. But what if she picked up a few pointers on how to jump and punch the ball from a kangaroo? Daughter of an Aborigine father and American mother, the Matildas' last line of defence kept one as a pet when she was growing up and has never lost her love of animals, having even studied for a degree in zoo-keeping. 

Read her story

Quinteros teaching by exampleMonica Quinteros spends her days at school as a Physical Education teacher, explaining the need to work hard and make sacrifices to her pupils. She is well placed to spread the message as she brought those very same qualities to bear as she scored the crucial goal that earned Ecuador their maiden Women's World Cup berth at Canada 2015.

Read her story

Rayo's ray of light"Football's always been a sport that's about solidarity," explained Roberto Trashorras, captain of a Rayo Vallecano side that has long lived in the shadows of Real Madrid and Atletico in the Spanish capital. "Solidarity is our lifeblood," added Raul Martín Presa, President of one of the very last 'neighbourhood clubs' in the professional game. Learn more about the different community initiatives regularly launched by the small Madrid side with a big heart. 

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Bradley voted USA's best


(AFP) Wednesday 23 December 2015
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Bradley voted USA's best
© AFP
USA captain Michael Bradley has been voted the 2015 US Soccer Federation Male Player of the Year, the organisation announced on Tuesday.
The 28-year-old midfielder won the award for the first time in his career and enjoyed success at the club and global level, captaining Toronto FC to the Major League Soccer playoffs for the first time in team history.
The two-time FIFA World Cup™ veteran claimed his 100th cap this year, becoming the fourth-youngest player to do so.
Bradley received 43 per cent of the votes from national team players, top level club and US national team coaches, former players and reports. He was followed by Fabian Johnson at 33 per cent and Clint Dempsey at 20 per cent.
"It's an honour to be selected amongst this group of players," said Bradley. "This has been a challenging year for our team, yet we continue to understand the opportunity we have to represent the United States and know how important it is that we give everything we have every time we step on the field."
Bradley, the son of former US national team coach Bob Bradley, led the Americans with 1,668 minutes on the field and topped the team with a career-best six assists while also scoring three goals.
He claimed Man of the Match honours in road victories over the Netherlands and Germany.

Title joy and a ten-goal triumph


(FIFA.com) 
Real Madrid's Welsh forward Gareth Bale (L) celebrates with teammates
© AFP
FIFA.com’s latest weekly stats review throws the spotlight on a trio of new South American champions, in-form Watford and the high-scoring stars of Barcelona, Napoli and Real Madrid.
50Serie A goals was the milestone reached and then passed by Gonzalo Higuain in just his 86th appearance in the Italian top flight. The Argentinian claimed his fifth brace of the season with goals number 50 and 51 in Napoli’s 3-1 win over Atalanta on Sunday. He has now scored 16 in just 17 league outings this season. That impressive tally leaves him second only to Borussia Dortmund’s 18-goal Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang across Europe’s top five leagues, and is the best seen at this stage of a Serie A season since Luca Toni – then of Fiorentina - in 2005/06. Napoli’s other goal, meanwhile, came from a player in considerably less prolific form. Marek Hamsik’s strike, in fact, ended a mammoth 1392-minute scoring drought – his longest goalless run since moving to Serie A in 2004.
15league titles was the landmark reached by Atletico Nacional on Sunday, establishing them as Colombia’s record champions. The Medellin outfit beat Atletico Junior 3-2 on penalties in a tense Liga Aguilla final and, in doing so, surpassed Millonarios, with whom they had previously shared the record of 14. Atletico Nacional are certainly established as the dominant force of the current era, having won four of the last six Colombian championships. There were less predictable champions elsewhere in South America though, nowhere more so than in Bolivia, where Sport Boys edged out record champions Bolivar to win the first title of their 61-year history. This Apertura championship represented a remarkable success story for a team who only last season needed a play-off to avoid relegation. There was also a landmark title triumph for FBC Melgar of Peru, who became champions for just the second time – 34 years after their first.
10goals was the unthinkable tally amassed by Real Madrid in their match against Rayo Vallecano on Sunday. In doing so, Rafa Benitez’s men became the first team in Spain’s top flight to hit double figures in a match since 1960, when Los Merengues themselves – with Puskas, Di Stefano et al in their pomp - thrashed Elche 11-2. Sunday’s scoreline fell just one short of that mark, but was nonetheless just the fourth time in Real’s history that they have scored ten or more in a competitive fixture, with Barcelona (11-1, 1943) and Las Palmas (10-1, 1959) their other victims. They are also the first team in any of Europe’s top five leagues to achieve this feat in the last three decades, with Borussia Monchengladbach’s 10-0 win over Eintracht Braunschweig in 1984 the most recent prior instance. Real’s ‘BBC’ frontline were responsible for nine of the ten goals – a record for the trio – with Gareth Bale scoring four in a single league match for the first time in his entire career. The Welshman, who doubled his Liga tally for the season in the process, duly became the first Madrid player - other than Cristiano Ronaldo, of course – to score four or more in a single game since Gonzalo Higuain against Malaga in November 2008.
5goals in just two games at Japan 2015 saw Luis Suarez set a new single-edition record at the FIFA Club World Cup. The Uruguayan became the first player to score a hat-trick at the competition in Barcelona’s semi-final win and went on to become just the third – after Lionel Messi (2011) and Filippo Inzaghi (2007) – to claim a brace in a Club World Cup final. In doing so, he surpassed the previous single-edition benchmark of four set by Denilson of Pohang Steelers in 2009. Messi was also on target in the final, becoming the first player to score in six difference club competitions within a single calendar year on two separate occasions, having previously managed this feat in 2011. Furthermore, this latest Club World Cup provided the 26th winner’s medal of theBarça icon’s glittering career, establishing him as the most decorated Argentinian player in history. He is, however, off the pace of 28 major titles set by team-mate Andres Iniesta, with the midfielder having equalled the Spanish record tally of old comrade Xavi with this latest conquest.
3unanswered Watford goals on Sunday handed Liverpool their heaviest defeat to a newly promoted side in over two decades. Not since an identical 3-0 loss to Newcastle United in November 1993 had the Reds been so soundly beaten in such a fixture, with Watford’s fine win continuing an excellent run of form. It was the Hornets’ fourth straight Premier League victory and ensures that, even at this early stage of the season, they have already equalled their points tally from their last top-flight campaign in 2006/07. The star of their rise to seventh in the table has been Nigerian striker Odion Ighalo, who has struck five times in his last four home appearances and, with 27 league goals in 2015, ranks as the year’s highest scorer across England’s top four divisions.

Kuqi: Leaving Kosovo was the hardest time in my life


(FIFA.com) Wednesday 23 December 2015
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Kuqi: Leaving Kosovo was the hardest time in my life
© Getty Images
For many children, football is a part of their lives that gives them the opportunity to spend time with friends and challenge themselves. Some, however, find it takes on a much greater importance.
As Shefki Kuqi grew up, playing the game became a crucial outlet in an alien environment as he overcame upheaval and uncertainty over a thousand miles from home. Aged just 12, the former Finlandinternational and English Premier League striker fled the impending war in Yugoslavia, being whisked away to Scandinavia as tensions simmered in his Balkan homeland.
“At that age you don't think about politics, what's going on outside,” Kuqi told FIFA.com. “Your first reaction is, 'Where are we going? Are we ever going to see our friends and cousins again? We're going there and we don't know anybody.' It was the hardest time in my life.”
Growing up in the small town of Vucitrn, nestled among the hills of northern Kosovo, reports of attacks on ethnic Albanians began to surface, while his eldest brother faced military service. It was decided that Shefki and his close family would follow their uncle to Finland.
So, on a snow-wrapped winter's day in 1989, he, his siblings and mother all left their home in Kosovo for the final time – a moment still etched in Shefki's memory. A nervous journey to Gdansk, Poland, via Belgrade, followed. “We had to be quiet on the train so no one would hear us talking. We were scared someone would grab us and send us back home. There was a lot happening.
“I was overcome by the feeling of when someone throws you into the water,” he said, describing the moment their ferry left for Finland. “We had no idea where we were going and we didn't know what was going to happen.”
Looking back, the coach of Finnish second division side PK-35 Vantaa appreciates the sacrifice his family took. “I have to give real thanks to my parents – they decided to give everything up for us, to look after their kids and make sure they had the best possible options in life. I have two and I would do anything for them.”
Kuqi can empathise with the plight of today's masses of refugees, but also finds their ordeal beyond even his own comprehension. “I don't think there are words that can explain [the choices being made],” he said. “Of course you don't want anybody to go through things like that. You're moving, you're leaving everything behind.
“People today just want to have a normal life, but – especially when you have kids – you can come to a position where you have no option. They still have no idea where you are going to end up. If you have an idea of where you are going, you know you'll get there some day.”
Adapting to a new life
While the Kuqis had their destination set, they were still stepping into the unknown. A new culture, language and climate all met them on the Finnish shore. “We were some of the first foreigners to come over here. Just by looking, people knew you weren't Finnish,” the former Newcastle United forward reflected. “When you have no friends and you don't speak the language, it's pretty hard.”
On the brink of his teenage years, Kuqi had to face those challenges in school, but football proved a way to break down the barriers. “When you are a foreigner, one of the great ways to get an insight into people is football. For me it was a massive, massive help. Football is just one language – you understand each other.”
Having spent many of his formative years in Finland, so much so as to feel “half Finnish”, he jumped at the chance to pull on the national shirt once his playing career began. “I have huge respect for Finlandand the opportunities they gave me,” Kuqi said. “I'm really proud and honoured to have represented them so many times.”
The first of his 62 caps came in an “unbelievable game” with Belgium in 1999 which ended 4-4, but a 2-0 FIFA World Cup™ qualifying win – and goal – against Albania three years later holds particularly cherished memories. “I remember that goal well,” he laughs. “To go and play against your nation was a special feeling for me.”
After working through his struggles, which he credits with providing his mental strength, he has blazed a trail which his brothers Njazi, a fellow Finnish international, and Albert, whom he coaches at PK-35, have followed. “I was the first ever player to represent Finland who had not been born there,” Shefki said. “Now we have loads in the same situation.
“I feel great to have been able to open that door, not only for my brothers but for plenty of players inFinland. I think it was much easier for Njazi and Albert. [Race and nationality] doesn't matter any more like it did before. You go through all those things, but now I feel proud."