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Показаны сообщения с ярлыком Sport. Показать все сообщения
Показаны сообщения с ярлыком Sport. Показать все сообщения

вторник, 15 мая 2018 г.

Alessandra Ambrósio sports belly healed on beach day in Miama

 



Alessandra Ambrosio paraded her belly turned in Miami last Tuesday (7). The top model from the state of Rio Grande do Sul, mother of the couple Anja, 9, and Noah, 5, chose a white bikini to enjoy the sun. Alessandra had fun picking up some chips and being attacked by seagulls, who wanted the treat. Calm, the top laughed at the attack before cooling off at sea.



Alessandra Ambrosio (Photos: Grosby Group)
Source: Who Happens

понедельник, 14 мая 2018 г.

Luize Altenhofen topless in rehearsal on the beach

 

Luize Altenhofen (Photo: Reproduction)


Luize Altehofen did topless for a photo essay on the beach. "My life is a movie where I choose the script!" She joked. The blonde, who recently exhibited her sculptural body in Miami, spoke to WHO as she does to keep fit. "I like the more feminine body, not so much of the muscular woman, but after 30, physical activities are very important, have to get heavier, speed up the metabolism. and it's a great workout for weight loss fast. I also love surfing, biking and snowboarding, "he explained. At 38, Luize continues to work as a model. The blonde, who is a former miss TV presenter, is married to businessman Frederico Galiotto, with whom she has a daughter, Greta, 7. Her last television work was at the 2016 Olympics when she was in the coverage of the event for the SBT. "My daughter is my companion, she wakes up and says," Mom, are we going to the gym? "She is a partner, agitated, and wakes up early in the morning.We go to the gym together.Greeting does judo, swimming and sports initiation - I think it's a great responsibility to educate, but we are friends.We have a very quiet and close-knit relationship. Elá is a very calm and easy-going girl. " We have a very quiet and close-knit relationship. We're all stuck together. Elá is a quiet and easy-going girl. " We have a very quiet and close-knit relationship. We're all stuck together. Elá is a quiet and easy-going girl. "








Source: Who Happens 

вторник, 19 июля 2016 г.

Rafael Benitez joins the lucky managers' club

JUST when many believed Rafael Benitez was nudging closer to crisis, he added 'jammy git' to his array of management skills.
The Liverpool chief not only delivered shrewd tactical changes, he proved he also has one of the most vital talents in this cut-throat game...luck.
He will probably deny it was a fluke goal that completely changed this game. Instead, he will focus on his inspired decision to send on Xabi Alonso after the break.
And when Alonso delivered the cross for the 71st-minute equaliser and then grabbed the third and decisive goal from a free-kick eight minutes later, he certainly had a point.
But it was the cruellest of deflections off Zat Knight's thigh that turned this game after Fulham had stormed to a two-goal lead.
And an evil deflection off Papa Bouba Diop's head supplied Alonso with that match-winning third even before Igor Biscan, another inspired substitute, slammed in a fourth Liverpool goal during added time.
But Benitez claimed: "I thought we had the game under control although we were two goals behind.
Mistakes
"We knew if we scored quickly in the second half we could then get back into the game.
"Goals can come from mistakes and deflections like that but we also made mistakes and we gave the ball away too easily which led to their two in the first half."
Fulham boss Chris Coleman, angered by his side's dreadful recent 2-0 defeat at Crystal Palace, had decided to go on the attack.
He accused some of his stars of "taking their foot off the gas" — clearly levelled at big names such as Steed Malbranque and Luis Boa Morte. And what a reaction he got.
Liverpool looked stunned by Fulham's first-half blitz and it seemed only a matter of time before the Reds would buckle.
Central defenders Sami Hyypia and Jamie Carragher looked a yard behind the pace and were being stretched by Malbranque, playing behind lone striker Brian McBride.
And the Kop back line were embarrassed when Malbranque intercepted a Salif Diao pass in midfield and charged forward.
His flicked pass cut through to McBride, who crossed the ball low for Boa Morte to beat Josemi at the far post with a simple tap-in.
And things got worse for Benitez on the half-hour — just after John Arne Riise had missed a chance to level with his head.
Mark Pembridge then won the ball off Garcia in yet another lapse of concentration from the visitors.
Young left-back Adam Green struck it forward for Malbranque to again slice open the Reds' defence with a lightning-quick pass.
Boa Morte unleashed a low shot from his left boot that raced through the legs of Chris Kirkland.
Coleman said: "I'm more disappointed with the way we let our heads drop than the terrible luck we had. I think the terrible luck is papering over the cracks a bit.
"We were superb in the first half but Liverpool's lucky goal seemed to lift them and we were not able to cope with that.
"I'm really disappointed and the players' chins are on the floor. This time last year we were beating Manchester United and that was because we believed in ourselves.
"We have to turn it around quickly — we don't want to get sucked in to a battle at the bottom."
Lady Luck stepped in after Benitez had made the right decision at half-time, taking off midfielder Diao and bringing on Alonso.
Milan Baros slammed the ball from 25 yards out it took a wicked deflection off Knight's inside leg and bounced bizarrely up and over Edwin van der Sar, one of the tallest keepers in the Premier League.
Dived
It goal changed the whole pattern of the game as suddenly Fulham lost their swagger and Liverpool sensed not an equaliser, but victory.
In the 71st minute their graft paid off when Alonso, 22, crossed from the left flank, Luis Garcia's header was saved, but Baros dived in to score from the rebound.
Josemi got himself sent off moments later for a second bookable foul on Boa Morte.But Biscan's last-minute strike ensured there would be no way back for Fulham.

Hero Van ends talk of crisis at United

On the Ruud back

SIR ALEX FERGUSON has enjoyed 700 senior games in charge of United. Has he ever had a player more valuable than Ruud van Nistelrooy? Probably not.
Ferguson always insisted United should be judged with their best striker back in the team — and now he is, the early-season crisis seems to have faded as quickly as the summer sun.
His penalty was the difference here — a difference that might not have existed a few weeks ago.
Suddenly, United look confident again. Not at their peak, but certainly a more formidable unit than that which scraped points late on against Bolton and Blackburn.
Rio Ferdinand and Gabriel Heinze have brought greater calm to the defence and, in Cristiano Ronaldo, United possess a unique talent who, even on his quieter days and this was one, is never less than terrifying to any full-back.
Attack
But it is Van Nistelrooy that defines United these days, and there was something very final in the way he put his penalty past Paul Robinson — something that underlined the message that, with consecutive wins against previously unbeaten Liverpool and Tottenham, United were back and the race was on.
The prospect of United reaching October without an away win would once have been unthinkable.
For a change, Spurs were the unbeaten side, for a change the crisis was taking place elsewhere.
United boss Ferguson said: "Tottenham have been rejuvenated this season and their fans were fantastic, they cheered every pass and every challenge and this was a difficult game for us.

"The fans tried to influence the referee but he did his job well and there were no contentious issues, just some hoo-ha. A lot of teams will come here and drop points but we defended well."
Spurs chief Santini was not so happy with stand-in ref Pat Walton and launched a blistering attack after the game.
He was also not convinced by the penalty. Santini said: "It was difficult to see because the incident happened on the opposite side but Erik Edman said there was some pulling from both players."
For 40 minutes Spurs matched United despite losing striker Frederic Kanoute to a hamstring strain on the half-hour.
Their first chance came after seven minutes when a corner from Robbie Keane was met by giant defender Noureddine Naybet who steered his header over the bar.
In the 23rd minute sloppy defending by Mikael Silvestre gave the ball to Pedro Mendes but his shot sailed over the bar.
United keeper Roy Carroll did need to be alert moments later when Mendes found his range, his shot dipping and kicking up viciously.
His opposite number, Robinson, was saved embarrassment after 13 minutes when a poor clearance travelled straight to Ronaldo with the goal now empty and its keeper stranded.

But Ronaldo's shot lacked venom and was blocked by Naybet. Robinson did react quickly moments later to save at the near post as Ledley King sliced his attempt to clear Van Nistelrooy's shot.
Then Ryan Giggs cut across from right to left before striking a fine shot from 25 yards that flew just wide with Robinson beaten.
Giggs and Ronaldo were constantly swapping wings and it seemed to panic Edman.
In the 41st minute he pulled at John O'Shea's shirt from Heinze's cross. True, the Irishman went over easily but the offence was plain to the nearby linesman — and ref Walton took his word and pointed to the spot.
Problems
Van Nistelrooy converted in style, his first league goal of the season, and Tottenham fans reacted angrily at half-time when they were shown the replay and O'Shea's fall.
Up to now, nothing had been heard of Jermain Defoe, on current form the best goalscorer in the country.
It could not last and, sure enough, in the second-half, he perked up to cause United no end of problems.
In the 50th minute, his speed caused problems and Ferdinand and partner Silvestre just did enough to send his shot wide.
Soon after, he played a one-two with Edman, ending with an audacious chip that won full marks for imagination but nil for the trouble it caused Carroll in the United goal.

Didier Drogba puts the bite on Boro

STRIKER Didier Drogba ended Chelsea's goal drought and put the swagger back into coach Jose Mourinho's walk.
The cocky Mourinho confessed to having had his doubts as the minutes ticked away with his star-studded side staring down the barrel at a third 0-0 Premiership draw on the trot.
It was August 28 when Frank Lampard scored his 41st-minute winner against Southampton.
After firing blanks at Villa Park and at home to Spurs, it meant Chelsea had gone an incredible 310 minutes without a Premiership goal when Boro's Franck Queudrue fouled the impressive Paulo Ferreira with nine minutes to go.
Boro pulled every man back into the area to defend it, but that man Lampard, so often Chelsea's talisman, was one step ahead — or, more accurately, one thought ahead.
Instead of sweeping the ball into a packed area he drilled it back to Drogba, who had checked back to the edge of the box.
Sweet
The £24m striker swept it home first time with a sweet side-footer from 15 yards that keeper Mark Schwarzer couldn't keep out.
Justice had been done — and no one was more relieved than the little boss man on the touchline.
Mourinho confessed that he had greeted Drogba's winner with a huge sigh of relief.
"Phew... Jesus, finally," is how he put it. Not the most eloquent of descriptions, but certainly telling.
"We were at risk of losing two points for the third consecutive game," he added. "That would have been a big blow for us."
He had urged his players not to lose their faith and self-belief, promising: "A team playing like us should not be too worried that it doesn't score goals.

"We played fantastic at Aston Villa and again against Tottenham, when we had 20 chances to score to their one. Here, Middlesbrough did not have one single chance."
Absolutely true. But Chelsea had about 20 chances again, and only scored one. Mourinho knows that strike ratio won't win any titles.
On the final whistle he actually walked out to congratulate his men.
He admitted: "My players wanted to win so much. It is not easy when you play well and don't score, play well and don't score, play well and don't score.

"I was pleased for them because we controlled the game. The only surprise was that the goal took so long."
Looking at Chelsea's recent form, the real surprise was that they scored at all!

That's seven goals in seven Premiership games — a real weakness when you are in pursuit of the game's greatest prizes.
But they have conceded just one league goal so far, and Mourinho knows someone is in for a hiding when everything comes together.
Steve McClaren admitted his Boro side never looked like winning but he'd hoped they could hold out for a gritty, backs-to-the-wall 0-0.
He said: "We were disrupted by not having Chris Riggott and Szilard Nemeth. Then we lost Jimmy-Floyd Hasselbaink for 10 minutes with a cut head that needed 10 stitches.
"We also saw Mark Viduka and Joseph-Desire Job come off with hamstring trouble and Ray Parlour taken off with a gashed kneecap.
Upset
"We weren't good enough to win on the day, but we were nine minutes away from a 0-0.
"We just have to put it down to a bad day at the office and close it up and move on."
Middlesbrough's one chance of an upset came with the game still goalless. Stuart Parnaby's 62nd-minute drive struck John Terry's arm and there was a huge penalty appeal.
TV replays showed there was some justice in the shout — but that the infringement was just outside the box. On another day, Chelsea might not have been so lucky.
That's the risk they run while they continue to squander so many chances.
Chelsea dominated the first half but once again didn't make their superiority pay. Drogba came closest on the half-hour.
He had time to pick his spot, but lashed at the chance and hit the underside of the bar.

Ashley Cole blow is a real chiller for Keegan

Cole blow is a real chiller for Keegan
Quick as a fl-Ash!

ENGLAND full-back Ashley Cole extended Arsenal's amazing unbeaten run to 47 with a magical strike.
But it was the Gunners' giant "Gladiator" who would have given Sven Goran Eriksson the biggest lift.
Sol Campbell, labelled Gladiator by his boss Arsene Wenger, returned from three months of injury with a performance to match that of Rio Ferdinand in midweek.
The big man was awesome for the full 90 minutes and looks ready to reclaim his England place for the two vital World Cup qualifying clashes in two weeks' time.
Blues boss Kevin Keegan looked to the skies in despair as Jose Antonio Reyes and Thierry Henry linked up to supply Cole with a 14th-minute winner that was simple but stunning.
But defiant Keegan roared afterwards: "If there is a such a thing as a really good defeat, that was it.
"We gave Arsenal a severe test. We asked them the question: Just how good are you? And the answer was: Very good. There is quality throughout their side.
Sweat
"We put sweat on our shirts and played with big hearts, but we still lost."
Gunners boss Arsene Wenger admitted: "I was a bit concerned that we were becoming careless in the second half, when it was difficult for us to get our passing going.
"Manchester City played a cup game. They showed a side I did not know they had — tenacious defending for 90 minutes.
"But I have to be realistic, you can't win all of your games by three or four goals. I'm pleased we can win 1-0 too.
"Ashley Cole surprised me. The way he took his goal was like a striker."
Campbell slotted in comfortably alongside Kolo Toure and the Gunners suddenly looked more assured at the back.

And they needed to be, with former Highbury star Nicolas Anelka fired up and ready to inflict some damage on his old club. Several times Arsenal had to scamper back to smother the danger.
Anelka came closest to finding the net when he brilliantly controlled the ball before launching it just past the angle.
But City had no answer to Arsenal whenever the ball was at their opponents' feet.
Reyes was in stunning form. He was even applauded by City fans for a wonderful chip over vertically challenged England starlet Shaun Wright-Phillips.
Keegan told fans before the game he would not walk out on the task unless someone made him. But Reyes was doing him no favours.
It was his pass that led to City falling behind. He was a yard quicker than anyone on the pitch in a blistering counter-attack and he had the vision to try to find Henry as he burst round the back of the City defence.
Richard Dunne did well to block the pass, but when Cole picked up the ball there was little anyone could do.
Cole took the ball on his right foot and moved into space with only keeper David James to beat.
James thought Cole was shaping to shoot with his unfavoured boot, but suddenly he flicked it in with his left. James hardly had time to dive.
James later produced a superb save to foil Henry from the edge of the box.
Keegan stood for most of the first half on the edge of his technical area. After the break Wenger joined him. It was a sign the Arsenal chief was uncomfortable with the way things were shaping up for his side.
Jens Lehmann had to use all the strength in his arms to block a fierce Anelka free-kick.
At the other end James had to use every part of his body as the last man in a shaky City defence.
Frantic
His best effort was when he stretched out his left glove to block an Henry pass that was heading straight to Freddie Ljungberg, unmarked in the goalmouth.
Much of City's effort was frantic, and they had cause to thank referee Neale Barry for his leniency.
Antoine Sibierski should have been yellow-carded for a lunge on Ljungberg — as should have Sun Jihai. Paul Bosvelt was lucky to stay on the park after a kick on Patrick Vieira's knee.

PATRICK KLUIVERT keeps Suey on track

PATRICK KLUIVERT showed his nifty moves as Graeme Souness' honeymoon as Newcastle boss continued.
The Dutch superstar — who was photographed coming out of a London nightclub at 2am this week — swapped his dancing shoes for scoring boots.
And second-half goals from Kluivert, James Milner and Alan Shearer handed Souness his third win on the trot since taking over earlier this month.
But the game turned after West Brom defender Darren Purse was sent off for two cautions in the 63rd minute with the score at 0-0.
Souness said: "I started off playing Patrick behind the front two but we weren't getting the best out of him in that position. So I moved him alongside Alan.
Softer
"Pat is a top-quality player and if he is given half a chance he will score. I always felt we looked like scoring and when we got the first I knew more would follow.
"I have to give credit to West Brom for the way they came here and tried to stop us. But more clubs will do that and we have to live with it."
West Brom boss Gary Megson fumed: "The sending off was a turning point. I thought the first booking was soft and the second one was even softer."
Megs also shrugged off rumours his job is on the line.
He added: "I'm not under pressure any more than anyone else. We will just keep going."
Newcastle looked disjointed up front in the first 45 minutes as they struggled to break down a resilient Baggies defence.
Souness restored Craig Bellamy in attack alongside Shearer, with Kluivert playing just behind. Kluivert headed over the bar from a Bellamy cross in the opening minutes but West Brom came to battle and would not lie down easily.
Goalkeeper Russell Hoult had to pull off a save from a Lee Bowyer piledriver early in the first half before Newcastle were denied two penalty appeals.
The first came when Shearer latched on to a Bellamy knock-down before Purse seemed to block the shot with his hand. But referee Mike Riley waved away Newcastle's yells.

Seconds later, the Toon army were baying for a penalty again when Bowyer was bundled over in the box by Thomas Gaardsoe — only for Riley to again ignore the shouts.
But it was not all one-way traffic. West Brom striker Robert Earnshaw was put in the clear by Kanu only to trip over the ball.
Newcastle created their best chance of the half in stoppage time.
Bowyer was found unmarked at the back post by Olivier Bernard only to hit the side-netting.
Newcastle had to survive a scare in the second half when a Neil Clement free-kick beat the wall only to go just past a post.
But the Toon were still the dominant team with man-of-the-match Bowyer involved in nearly everything his side did.
Chipped
After 55 minutes Souness switched to 4-4-2 with Bellamy making way for Laurent Robert and Kluivert partnering Shearer.
The switch almost paid immediate dividends as Bowyer found more space in midfield.
And the former Leeds man cleverly chipped Hoult only for the ball to came back off the crossbar.
Purse was then dismissed for two bookings in the 63rd minute.
The West Brom defender's trip on Kluivert outside the box came after he had entered Riley's book in the first half for a foul on Bellamy.
Newcastle finally broke the deadlock in the 70th minute.
Robert sent over a teasing left-foot cross and Hoult bundled the ball to Kluivert, who volleyed in.
Sub James Milner added a second 60 seconds after coming on for Kluivert by blasting home following good work from Jermaine Jenas in the 78th minute.
And Jenas also created Toon's third when he teed up Alan Shearer in the 86th minute.
Not even a consolation header from Geoff Horsfield seconds later could spoil Newcastle's day.