Beautiful Lake of Disaster

Incomplete feel if you visited the North Sumatra did not stop for a moment to Lake Toba, volcanic lake which is the largest lake in Indonesia, and even Southeast Asia. Exotic charm vast expanse of the lake like a sea with shady trees and hills, charming. The lake, measuring 1700 square meters with a depth of approximately 450 meters and lies 906 meters above sea level, in the middle of the lake there is Samosir Island became the object of not less interesting excursions.



During his visit in 1996, Prince Bernard of the Netherlands even expressed his admiration for the beautiful panorama of the lake. "Sell me name to this lake. I can not describe how beautiful Lake Toba, "he says enthusiastically.

There are seven districts around the lake, namely Simalungun, Toba Samosir, North Tapanuli, Humbang Hasundutan, Dairi, Karo, and Naidoo who has a wonderful natural panorama and a tourist destination location. Generally, tourists enjoy the beauty of Lake Toba Parapat in Simalungun and Tuktuk Siadong on Samosir Island.

It is estimated that Lake Toba explosion occurred at about 73 thousand-75 thousand years ago and is a super volcano eruption (super volcano) the most recent. Bill Rose and Craig Chesner from Michigan Technological University estimate that volcanic materials spewed out of the mountain as much as 2800 km ³, with 800 km ³ of rock Ignimbrite and 2,000 km ³ of volcanic ash which is expected in the wind to west for two weeks.



Volcanic dust in the wind has spread to half the earth, from China to South Africa. Explosion occurred during the week and throw the dust up to 10 km above sea level.

This incident caused mass death and, in some species, also followed by extinction. According to some DNA evidence, this eruption also reduced the number of people to about 60% of the total human population of the earth at that time, which is about 60 million people. The eruption was also contributed to the occurrence of ice ages, although the experts still debate.

After the eruption, the caldera formed which is then filled with water and became what is now known as Lake Toba. Pressure upward by magma that has not come out cause the emergence of Samosir Island. While enjoying the beauty of this lake, you might not imagine that the charm of the place comes from the catastrophic volcanic eruptions that brought fear and horror at the time.
Travel overland to Lake Toba, precisely to Parapat, takes four to five hours from Medan. Available bus or travel directly to Parapat. The route through the Lubuk Pakam, Cliff High, and turn toward Siantar. Along the way, we were treated to a panorama of palm oil and rubber plantations.

When using the train, from Medan select a route to Siantar. From here the journey continues by bus to Parapat. Left sails through one hour.




For a place to stay and stay longer to enjoy the beauty of Lake Toba, there are many hotels and inns. In Parapat, there are at least 900 hotel rooms of all types, ranging from four star to homestay, in Tuktuk also not different. Both in Parapat and Tuktuk, tourists can instantly enjoy the lake from the rim. Rates for hotels in Parapat Tuktuk and varied, according to typical tourists who come. Starting from Rp 30 thousand to USD 500 thousand per night depending on the type of hotel.

A travel companies even offer to enjoy the beauty of Lake Toba from the air, ie use paragliding. Every tourists are given the opportunity to fly using the paragliding from the mountains Tongging, Karo District, North Sumatra. For tourists who want to try paragliding will be accompanied by an experienced instructor, but of course determination can fly or not depends on weather conditions and wind.

Not only that, enjoy the beautiful sunrise and sunset you can enjoy from the coastal lakes. From the Karo highlands on the north, the lake looks elongated beauty viewed from Sikodonkodon. However, there is only one resort here. On the west side, views of the lake and the island of Samosir can be perfectly seen from the Tele. There is a viewing post at an altitude of about 1,000 meters from sea level to enjoy the sunset on Lake Toba.

Here are 10 Foods Healer



Let food be obatmu.
The words of ancient Greek physician named Hippocrates was so popular in the medical world. Messages that are then encouraged the scientists to figure out the benefits of food for health.


For years, nutrition experts conducted a study to identify the nutritional benefits of certain foods. They studied proteins, carbohydrates, calories, fats, minerals and vitamins to determine health benefits for the human body.

Here are some foods that provide many benefits to the body, as quoted by the website Methods of Healing.

1. Honey

Research shows that honey contains antibacterial and antiviral. Studies over the mention of honey useful for wound healing and good for digestive health.

2. Green Tea

Research shows that green tea helps reduce the risk of cancer, stroke and heart disease. Green tea is also believed to help prevent type two diabetes and osteoporosis, and relieve inflammation of the intestine.

3. Walnuts

Eating 1.5 ounces of walnuts every day can be a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol may reduce the risk of coronary heart disease.

4. Blueberry

Is one of the fruits with high antioxidant levels. The content of substance in it to help slow down aging, reduce the risk of diabetes, lower cholesterol, improve motor skills, and support urinary health and eyesight. Blueberries also have anti-inflammatory properties.

5. Pomegranate

As a fruit rich in antioxidants, a study showed that pomegranate helps reduce the risk of heart disease and lowering blood pressure. In fact, help lower cholesterol and reduce the risk of certain cancers.

6. Spices

Cinnamon helps lower cholesterol and stabilize blood sugar. Ginger helps to improve digestive health, and contains anti-inflammatory. Benefits of ginger for the prevention of cancer is also being studied. While anti-inflammatory properties of turmeric is believed to slow the progression of Alzheimer's disease and reduce the risk of cancer.

7. Yogurt

The best thing is plain yogurt. The content of calcium, magnesium, Vitamin B-2 & B-12, and probiotics are known as good bacteria in the gut, digestive system healthy and beneficial immunity. Regular consumption of yogurt is also believed to help lower cholesterol.

8. Dark chocolate

Type of brown offers good benefits for the cardiovascular system as well as protection from cancer. Not only that, eating dark chocolate can also generate a good mood for the emotional and mental health.

9. Salmon

Salmon rich in omega-3 fatty acids and protein, low calorie, low saturated fat, and has anti-inflammatory properties. Salmon health benefits including prevention of diabetes, Alzheimer's, cancer and cardiovascular system healthy.

10. Broccoli

Broccoli is full of vitamins like folic acid, vitamin A, B6 and K. Minerals such as calcium and potassium make it more healthy. Broccoli is considered a healing food that is activated by the phytochemicals indole-3-carbinol and sulforaphane, helps fight cancer.

Existing Tsunami Since 8000 Years Ago

The atmosphere of the city of Talcahuano, Chile,
after the earthquake and tsunami



SR 7.2 magnitude earthquake that shook the Mentawai Islands, West Sumatra, Monday, October 25, 2010, causing a wave of deadly attacks, the tsunami. All the settlements are located on the west coast islands were hit by a tsunami that killed more than 400 people.

Indonesia is no longer familiar with the disaster. In December 2004, the great tsunami occurred in Aceh. Then the next three months occurred in Nias. One more year, exactly 17 July 2006, the tsunami also occurred in Pangandaran, West Java.

Tunami track record was already in place since 6000 BC. Scientific media page Livescience.com records list all-powerful tsunamis that have occurred on Earth.

6,000 BC

Large cluster in Sicily snow avalanches and falls into the sea. Landslide that occurred at 8 thousand years ago has sparked the tsunami spread across the Mediterranean Sea. There is no historical record of this disaster. Only the scientists estimate tsunami geology at 320 kilometers per hour has reached a height of 10 floors building.

1 November 1755

After the earthquake that destroyed Lisbon, Portugal, and shook much of Europe. Many people who take refuge in the boat. However, the tsunami would occur. No doubt this disaster killed more than 60 thousand people.

August 27, 1883

The eruption of Mount Krakatau in the Sunda Strait, triggering a tsunami that drowned coast of Sumatra, northern Java, and the Thousand Islands. Wave strength can drag coral weighing 600 tons to the beach. 36 thousand people have died in vain.

June 15, 1896

Waves as high as 30 feet emerged shortly after the earthquake in Japan. All of the tsunami that swept the east coast. 27 thousand people died.

1 April 1946

Large earthquake in Alaska cause big waves in Hawaii. Disasters are often referred to as the "mystery" April Fools tsunami "that killed 159 people.

July 9, 1958

8.3 Richter magnitude earthquake in Alaska sends out a wave of up to 576 meters in Lituya Bay, Alaska. It is the largest tsunami recorded in modern times.

Fortunately, the tsunami occurred in isolated places, so it does not cause many casualties. Tsunamis are only left two fishermen died, because the ship sank, hit by the waves.

May 22, 1960

The largest earthquake ever recorded of 8.6 magnitude in Chile. This earthquake created a tsunami that struck Chile Beaches within 15 minutes. High waves occur up to 25 meters. The tsunami killed 1,500 people in Chile and Hawaii.

March 27, 1964

Alaska Earthquake "Good Friday" measuring 8.4 magnitude, caused waves of 67 meters at Valdez Inlet region, Alaska. Wave at 640 kilometers per hour, killing more than 120 people. Ten of them were from the Crescent City, California, who also got sent waves as high as 6.3 meters.

August 23, 1976

Tsunami in the southwest Philippines killed at 8 thousand people. This great wave also triggered earthquakes in the vicinity of the beach.

July 17, 1998

An earthquake with magnitude 7.1 force generate a tsunami in Papua New Guinea. BESA wave quickly kill 2,200 people.

December 26, 2004

All-powerful earthquake with a strength of 9.3 magnitude rocked the Indian Ocean, off the west coast of Aceh. Largest earthquake during the last 40 years has led to high waves in North Sumatra, West Coast of Peninsular Malaysia, Thailand, the East Coast of India, Sri Lanka, even to the East Coast of Africa.

At least 320 thousand people from eight countries died. This disaster is the biggest death throughout history.

March 28, 2005

Three months later, tsunami also occurred in Sumatera. Off the coast of Nias Earthquake measuring 8.7 Richter which sparked a major tsunami that killed 1,300 people on Nias Island, West Sumatra.

La Liga Matchday 9: Villarreal and Valencia unable to keep the pace



A nice little round up of the rest of the matches this weekend in La Liga which saw Real Madrid and Barcelona begin to pull away from the pack.

Valencia 1 - 1 Real Zaragoza

It was only three weeks ago that Valencia were sitting pretty at the top of La Liga after a storming start to the season which saw them win five and draw one out of their first six league fixtures. Then came defeats to Barcelona and Mallorca and suddenly the boat began to rock. Tonight was the perfect chance for Unai Emerys side to get back on track as the Liga whipping boys, Real Zaragoza, came to town. Things didn't get off to the best of starts for Valencia as Zaragoza centre-back Mauricio Lanzaro neatly spun and fired in from just inside the area after only 2 minutes. Jose Aurelio Gays side played their best football of the season so far, with Jorge Lopez and Angel Lafita both in the thick of the action, yet they still went into the break all square. Lanzaro undoing all his good work with the opener, as he comically headed past his keeper to bring Valencia back into it. The second half saw Valencia struggle to find any rythym, as the man who makes them tick over, Ever Banega, never got into the match. Even the introduction of striker Roberto Soldado and the ludicrous sending off of Real Zaragoza midfielder Ander Herrera failed to spark them into life. There is talk of pressure on manager Unai Emery, but I wouldn't read too much into it. Fourth in the league and looking good to qualify out of their group in the Champions League is hardly a crisis. For Jose Aurelio Gay, he'll be hoping this is the beginning of a revival as they fight to lift themselves off the foot of the table.

Atletico Madrid 1 - 1 Almeria

Not the best of derby day preparations for Atletico Madrid as they let a 1-0 lead slip at home to Almeria. Sergio Agüero got the opener for 'Los Colchoneros', finally getting off the mark for the season with a simple tap-in, but his team suffered two lethal blows before halftime that they simply couldn't recover from. Blossoming young talent Pablo Piatti grabbed a tasty equaliser for Almeria, a sweet volley after a cleared corner came to him on the edge of the box, and shortly after Jose Antonio Reyes pulled up with a calf strain. Atletico will be even more stretched for their trip to the Bernabeu as giant defender Luis Perea is ruled out through suspension. Quique will need his frontmen Agüero and Forlan more than ever next weekend.

Sporting Gijon 1 - 1 Villarreal

Villarreal had done a good job of sandwiching themselves between Real Madrid and Barcelona for a while there. But just when we were hoping at least one of them or Valencia could maintain a challenge at the top, both start to fade away. That's not to take anything away from Sporting, who more than contributed to a feisty match full of meaty challenges and lung-busting effort. In the end the points were shared with a penalty apiece, Villarreals scored with pretty much the last kick of the match, converted by goal machine Guiseppe Rossi. Not the most attractive of matches, although the rain and some more poor refereeing didn't allow it to be.

Deportivo La Coruña 3 - 0 Espanyol

If Espanyol had won today they would have leaped up into the giddy heights of the Champions League spots. Yet with Depor reverting back to a more accustomed (and secure) back five and Espanyol without their hitman Osvaldo this was always unlikely. And so it proved as the home side recorded their first home win of the season to haul themselves closer to safety at the foot of the table. Spain Under-21 striker Adrian slotting in the first when a corner caused mayhem in the Espanyol box. Then two of Depors centre-backs got in on the act late in the match to make the three points safe. The pressure has been lifted off Miguel Angel Lotina. For now at least.

Racing Santander 4 - 1 Osasuna

If Osasuna stay up this season, it will be through sheer grit and determination because they are seriously lacking in any quality. Racing Santander have struggled badly so far, yet they were given the freedom of El Sardinero as their Swedish stars Kennedy Bakircioglu (try saying that name after a couple of pints) and Markus Rosenburg scored three of Racings four to send Camachos men back to Pamplona empty-handed. Osasuna weren't helped by the absence of their only goal threat, Walter Pandiani, but they simply cannot rely on a veteran to keep them up. Racing leap up to mid-table with a vital win over a direct rival for relegation.

Athletic Bilbao 3 - 0 Getafe

Amazing as it may seem, Athletic Bilbao scored three goals tonight and Fernando Llorente didn't get one of them. The Basque team have always been known for their fighting qualities but in players such as Llorente, Susaeta, Iraola and Muniain they have some serious quality to add to their considerable bite. Their performance tonight was as intense as they come and Getafe did their best impression of rabbits in the headlights. Atheltic raced into an early 2-0 lead through Iraola and San Jose. It was a lead that they never looked like giving up and to make sure Gabilondo added a late third. All manager Jose Caparros needs to do now is get his team to replicate these performances away from the intimidating San Mames.

Malaga 1 - 2 Real Sociedad

Many teams make the leap from La Segunda to the top flight without the sufficient quality to stay up. Real Sociedad break that mould and with players such as Joseba Llorente, Antoine Griezmann and Xabi Prieto I fully expect them to maintain their La Liga status come what May. Still, you should not read too much into a victory at La Rosaleda, a stadium where all away teams walk away with three points in the bag. Malaga fans must be sick of seeing their team unable to repeat their electric away performances at home as they make it five defeats from five. 21 goals conceded in nine matches tell you all you need to know about where it's all going wrong. For Real Sociedad, goals from Llorente and Griezmann were enough to edge their team into the top half of the table.

As seen on SB Nation: http://www.sbnation.com/soccer/2010/10/31/1784146/la-liga-matchday-9-david-villa-back-in-the-goals-as-pressure-mounts

U-17 Championship Documentary



Le Championnat d'Europe de football des moins de 17 ans est une compétition de football organisée par l'Union des associations européennes de football (UEFA). De 1982 à 2001, cette épreuve était ouverte aux joueurs de moins de 16 ans. Ce tournoi sert de qualification pour la Coupe du monde de football des moins de 17 ans.




http://www.megaupload.com/?d=Z3WQNUSP


La première édition de la compétition a lieu en 1982 en Italie. Elle est alors ouverte aux sélections nationales des joueurs de moins de 16 ans des fédérations membres de l'UEFA. La deuxième édition se déroule en 1984. Depuis la compétition a lieu tous les ans. À partir du Championnat d'Europe 2002, la compétition est ouverte aux footballeurs de moins de 17 ans .

Le vainqueur de chaque édition est désigné au cours d'une finale. Le titre n'est cependant pas attribué en 1987 : l'Italie remporte la finale contre l'Union soviétique mais est déchue de son titre pour avoir aligné un joueur non-éligible. De 1982 à 2006, un match est organisé pour désigner les troisième et quatrième de la compétition. (wikipedia)

 Stats

Germany England Qualifs World Cup 2002






England : Seaman, G Neville (Dyer 46mins), Le Saux (Barry 77), Adams, Keown, Beckham (Parlour 82), Scholes, Southgate, Barmby, Cole, Owen
Germany : Kahn, Rehmer, Worns (Asamoah 46), Nowotny, Linke, Boehme, Hamman, Deisler, Ballack (Klose 67), Jancker, Neuville (Kehl 78)






1ere Mi Temps :



2eme Mi Temps :

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=ZX8O9NGZ


This important World Cup qualification group match took place on September 1, 2001 in Munich. England knew that they needed to beat Germany to have a chance of qualifying top of the group and a loss would have ensured that Germany finished top of the group (with England not by any means certain of a play off place). 
 
 
This was probably one of England's greatest games, especially seeing as it was an important competitive match - England's dominance in the second half was magnificent and the team that played have effectively booked their places for the World Cup 2002 (apart from for injury). Germany had beaten England 1-0 at Wembley the previous year and were considered almost undefeatable at home. They had previously only ever lost once at home before.
After 6 minutes of the game, however, England fans were fearing the worse as Germany scored. Deisler attacked and passed to Neuville who headed to Jancker splitting the England defence - he easily beat Seaman from close range and Germany were 1-0 up.
England did not have to wait long before they equalised, on 13 minutes. Beckham (looking fully recovered from his recent injury) misdirected a free kick which was collected by Gerrard who looped ball back across the box and out to Neville. Neville headed it back into the box to Barmby who headed it across to Owen - the ball bounced and Owen fired it home.
Germany came back into the game with Neuville sending a shot wide and Seaman saving a good attempt from Boehme. Deisler had a good chance to score for Germany but messed up his shot when in the clear.



Deep into injury time in the first half, however, England were 2-1 up. A Beckham cross was nodded back by Ferdinand standing inside the penalty area and Gerrard drove an excellent low shot into the goal from 25 yards out. 3 minutes into the second half and England scored again to make it 3-1.
Beckham crossed to Heskey who headed the ball to Owen in space. Kahn almost saved Owen's shot from a fairly acute angle inside the penalty box - but the ball went in at the near post and England fans were now becoming very optimistic.
Germany almost replied when Ballack put a very good chance wide from close range and Jancker missed with a header.
After 65 minutes, McManaman replaced Barmby and 1 minute later England were 4-1 up. Gerrard won the ball and put Owen through - with Owen's speed and confidence in front of goal he hit the ball straight past the German goalkeeper as he went to ground and put the ball in the roof of the net.
After 74 minutes, Heskey was put clean through by Scholes and hit the ball hard under the goalkeeper to make it 5-1. By now the German team had as good as given up, England's passing was superb, the England fans were singing loudly and the German fans were already leaving the stadium. The German team could not wait for the final whistle to come.
Who played well: All the players on the pitch had a great game - obviously Owen had a great great game with his hat-trick and Gerrard stood out as having a tremendous game too.

Germany beat England in football matches all too often and I don't think any England fan really expected their team to end up winning in such a convincing manner. This was the game that gave pride and belief back into England - Sven Goran Eriksson had to calm down his players quickly though  there was an important match at home to Albania in four days time.
(worldukonline)
Review Bbc:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/7655749.stm

Borussia M'Gladbach Liverpool Champions League 1977 1978

Semi Final
First leg
23 March 1978
Attendance 66000

Bob Paisley flinched when he heard thé draw for the Européen Cup semi-finals. Although Liverpool would hâve had a testing time against either Juventus or FC Bruges, Borussia Mô'nchengladbach were the team he really feared. Liverpool had beaten Udo Lattek's West German champions in the previous year's final, and in a UEFA Cup Final in 1973, but Bob Paisley knew Borussia would be yearning for revenge.
Liverpool had only rarely reproduced the form that had won them the Champions' Cup. The spirit of Rome had somehow been missing. The league championship looked lost, and they had been beaten by Nottingham Forest in thé League Cup Final, a trophy which had not found its way into the Liverpool locker. The European Cup offered thé last hope of success. Borussia knew that there was no Keegan, or Toshack, thé Welshman having departed for Swansea City to become player-manager. 
 The Germans, meanwhile, looked a stronger side than a year before, though they had scraped into thé semi-finals after losing 3-1 at SSW Innsbruck. In Germany, the talk was ail of revenge. Liverpool needed cool heads in front of 66,000 fans in Dusseldorf.

Liverpool kept faith with the tactic of using only two men, Heighway and Dalglish, in attack, leaving the rest of the team to defend in depth. Nevertheless, they still created good chances, and with more luck, and a little more accuracy, McDermott might well hâve given thé Reds a two-goal lead by half-time. Instead, they went in a goal down, after the 20-year-old defender Wilfried Hannes had headed home after a corner.
After 65 minutes, Paisley replaced McDermott with David Johnson, and Heighway with Souness, giving thé future Liverpool manager his first taste of European soccer. It turned out to be much to his liking. Liverpool's back four had played admirably, continually stifling thé flair of Herbert Wimmer and thé goalscoring prowess of Josef Heynckes. A single goal defeat looked the likely outcome but, with thousands pouring out of thé stadium — and thé Spanish référée already looking at his watch, Liverpool scored, when Johnson darted through the defence to meet Case's cross.
It was at this late stage in the game, when Liverpool have traditionally been at their most dangerous, that thé Reds were given a dose of their own medicine. Still celebrating, Liverpool lost concentration, and Bonhof curled a 25-yard free kick beyond Ray Clémence. It was a recurring nightmare for thé England 'keeper who, only a month before, had conceded a similar goal to Bonhof in England's 2-1 defeat by West Germany in Munich. A defeat by thé same score for Liverpool still left thé Reds with a chance of going through, though thé manner of their defeat was annoying.






Resume 25mt
http://rapidshare.com/files/427409418/Ch.Lg.77.78.Gladb.Liv.Twb22.avi.avi


Borussia Mônchengladbach: Kleff, Vogts, Hannes, Wohlers, Bonhof, Nie/sen, Del'Haye, Wimmer, Lienen (Danner), Kulik, Heynckes.

Liverpool: Clémence, Neal, Smith, Thompson, Kennedy, Hughes. Dalglish, Case, Heighway (Souness), McDermott (Johnson), Cal/aghan.

Scorers: Hannes (28) Bonhof (89); Johnson (88).

Michael Owen The Man The Myth The Magic

A profile of the football star, Michael Owen, born in
Chester in 1979 and now one of England's best strikers.








http://www.megaupload.com/?d=G85J91H0


"Form is temporary, class is permanent", is a phrase that has often been repeated in Michael Owen's career.
He has always delivered a fair amount of goals every season, except 1999-2000 when he was out with injury for long periods. He may have dry spells in between but that is to be expected of the best.
Owen is the only Liverpool player who has been voted the best player in Europe. He is one of 11 LFC players who have scored over 100 league goals for the club, a feat he achieved in 185 games. He was crowned the "Prince of Wales" after his mastery won the FA Cup in 2001. He's been the Premier League's joint top scorer twice. He was the youngest ever England international in the 20th century and has played in nearly 90 internationals (scoring 40 goals) and appeared in three World cups. He scored eight hat-tricks in his LFC career.
He was a star at Liverpool, but sadly he wanted to test pastures new at Real Madrid. He scored no less than 16 goals in his only season at the Bernabeu despite being mainly used as a substitute. Owen returned to England in the summer of 2005 and signed for Newcastle, partly because Real seemed to want around twice the fee that they had paid Liverpool only a year earlier.

Michael suffered constantly with injuries after joining Newcastle. Although he was fit enough to take his place in England's 2006 World Cup squad, he suffered a serious knee-injury in the first minute of the group match against Sweden, an injury that would keep him out of action for almost a year. He didn't return to first-team action in a competitive game until the last day of April, 2007 but only two weeks later was stretchered off the pitch after colliding with a team-mate on the final day of the Barclays Premier League season. 
Owen managed to make 27 Premier League appearances for Newcastle in 2007-08, scoring 11 goals. Again he struggled with injuries and the following year was part of the Magpies' squad that was relegated to the Championship.
In the summer of 2009 he stunned Kopites by signing for arch-rivals Manchester United on a free transfer.

Web:
http://www.michaelowenonline.com/career/liverpool

Shankly The Story Of A Soccer Legend

A tribute to Bill Shankly, the man who brought Liverpool  Football Team into the First Division and stayed their manager for  fifteen years. Includes the best highlights from FA and UEFA Cup Finals. 
There had been whispers circulating Merseyside for a month predicting Phil Taylor's departure, the rumour adding that there was little doubt who would succeed him Bill Shankly, the manager of Huddersfield Town. The Liverpool Echo had his name top of their list but also reckoned the club were thinking about Harry Catterick, Jimmy Hagan and Jimmy Murphy. Even Billy Liddell was said to be under consideration along with two other backroom boys, Reuben Bennett and interestingly, Bob Paisley. Shankly had applied once before for the manager's job at Anfield when Phil Taylor was selected but this time it was the club which approached him. Liverpool chairman Tom Williams and director, Harry Latham had travelled over the Pennines to Huddersfield in mid-October to watch Town taking on Cardiff City in a Division Two match. It was not the game they had come to see. After the match, the two approached Shankly and asked him bluntly if he would like to manage Liverpool. Although he was inclined to accept immediately he bided his time until Taylor had formally resigned. Three weeks later on Tuesday 1 December 1959, following a board meeting, forty-six-year-old Bill Shankly was appointed manager of Liverpool with an annual salary of £2,500.
William Shankly had been born in 1913 in the coalmining village of Glenbuck, a stone's throw away from the racecourse at Ayr. One of ten children, he was brought up with coalmining and football in his blood, all five sons later playing professional soccer. He was spotted playing football while still a teenager and was snapped up by Carlisle United where he spent a frustrating season in the reserves. In 1933 Preston North End, then struggling in the Second Division, signed him and he began a long association with the north Lancashire club as their right half. He played in two successive Cup finals helping Preston to a win in 1938 and in the same year won the first of his five Scottish caps. But war interrupted his career, stealing him from what might have been a distinguished international spell. He played after the War for a few years and even captained Preston but then in 1949 he was offered the manager's job back at Carlisle. He leaped at the opportunity and after a short spell on the Borders moved to Grimsby, Workington and Huddersfield in fairly quick succession, learning the managerial ropes on the way. When he arrived at Anfield, however, it was with potential rather than reputation. What he found was hardly to his liking. He later wrote that 'the ground was an eyesore. It needed renovating and cleaning up. It was not good enough for the public of Liverpool and the team was not good enough for the public of Liverpool.
But he did start on one positive note. He told the backroom staff that the new manager would not be introducing any new assistants. He would be loyal to those already on the staff but in return expected loyalty from them. It was a valuable beginning and a lesson that has carried on through the years. Changes among the backroom staff may not have been necessary but after Liverpool's first game when Cardiff City won 4-0 it was quickly apparent that changes on the field were vital. Shankly jotted down the names of twenty-four of the club's long list of players and within a year all twenty-four had moved on. N'ew blood was needed and the Liverpool Echo was soon speculating that Dennis Law might be the first signing from his old club but Law's price was already escalating way out of Liverpool's reach. Instead Shankly tried first to sign Jack Charlton from Leeds United but Leeds wanted more than the £18,000 Liverpool were prepared to pay. Results picked up in the New Year with only one defeat in ten matches and the team slowly began to climb from mid-table towards the top. They also had a fine run at the end of the season but with Aston Villa and Cardiff so far ahead there was never any chance of promotion. Instead they finished third yet again, eight points behind the Welshmen. The attack had knocked in a creditable ninety goals, thanks mainly to a young lad called Roger Hunt who had just been introduced to League football. He scored twenty-one goals but the main problem lay with the defence which had conceded sixty-six goals. It was clear where the first priority lay in the transfer market. In the Cup they faced Leyton Orient in the opening round and comfortably beat them 2—1 only to draw glamorous Manchester United at Anfield in the next round. United won by three goals to one but Liverpool put up a spirited performance against Matt Busby's side. Seventeen-year-old Ian Callaghan was plucked from among the club's apprentices and thrown into the Second Division performing well enough to hang on to his place for the next eighteen years. But these were only just the beginnings. There was still much more to do and it would take more than a season or two before the rich promise could be fulfilled.






VHS Rip :

Theater of Dreams

Theater of Dreams


Cover Scan Brut : http://uppix.net/0/1/7/6fc7550b4ddbda5fcad041438ba7c.jpg

An insider's guide to Old Trafford with a look at all the
key areas including the manager's office, the boardroom and the training ground.




http://uppix.net/9/b/8/c6963f94d98ea106a22e627ba7839.jpg

http://www.multiupload.com/OZ110M52AW
ou
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=CFX3L62L

The Bobby Charlton Story





The Bobby Charlton Story








Sir Robert "Bobby" Charlton was born 11 October 1937 in Ashington, Northumberland) is an English former professional football player who was a member of the England team who won the World Cup and was named the European Footballer of the Year in 1966. He played almost all of his club football at Manchester United, where he became renowned for his attacking instincts from midfield and his ferocious long-range shot. His elder brother Jack, who was also in the World Cup-winning team, is a former defender for Leeds United and coach.







Rio Ferdinand Leeds


Rio Ferdinand cemented his status as the best centre-back in British football with a series of assured performances at the 2002 World Cup--prompting comparisons yet again with 1966 hero and England captain Bobby Moore, and making the record-breaking £18m that Leeds paid to swoop the young defender from West Ham look like a bit of a bargain. Despite his exalted status, and undeniable promise, you may think that the two hours-plus of Rio material on offer here is more than enough, but even for non-Leeds fans this Official Club production is a surprisingly entertaining effort.


Following his career from boyhood on the streets of Peckham, London, through the ranks at West Ham, the move to Leeds, and subsequent  Champions League adventures, and his times with England (though not including the 2002 World Cup), it's typical rags-to-riches stuff. There's plenty of chat from family, friends, team-mates, players and managers past and present--with Ferdinand himself coming across as a likable, open young man--plus loads of action from all stages of his career. This aspect of the programme would have set the production team a real  challenge--Ferdinand is hardly a prolific scorer, and the best purely defensive performances can't really be appreciated from clips--but they make a reasonable enough job of it, leaving you in little doubt that Rio is a very special footballer, of whom we have not seen the best yet.
This DVD Edition features the full unedited 'Rio' interview, set in the surroundings of his bar 'Sutra's', the Rio Stats Index and a collation of photographs from his career and his personal collection.

Cover Scan Brut :
http://uppix.net/1/e/8/d866c4e9ab26ac005c0bd4eb198f6.jpg
 


Part 1 :

Part 2: Interview



Part 3: West Ham Leeds 2000 2001



Part 4: Leeds West Ham 2000 2001



Part 5:




The Greatest Ever Leeds United Team

 
 À la plus belle place du gotha de Leeds, l'immense Don Revie. D'abord joueur dans les années 1950, il a illuminé le style de l'équipe du Yorkshire. Milieu de terrain brillant et enthousiaste, il a largement influente ce club dont il est devenu l'entraîneur charismatique en 1961. C'est lui, Don Revie, qui a installé les fondations de cette équipe, parvenue en 1975 en finale de la Coupe d'Europe des clubs champions, après avoir remporté la Coupe de la League en 1968, le titre national en 1969 et 1974 et la Coupe d'Angleterre en 1972. En 1975, Revie quitte Leeds pour diriger la sélection nationale d'Angleterre; c'est alors son successeur, Jîmmy Armfield, qui entraîne Leeds jusqu'à la finale européenne contre le Bayern Munich, au Parc des Princes de Paris. Pendant cette épopée européenne - cinq finales entre 1967 et 1975 -, un joueur a été présent chez les blancs de Leeds lors des cinq matées : le défenseur Norman Hunter. Les outres héros de cette aventure : les milieux Bremner et Giles (quatre finales chacun), le défenseur Jacky Charlton et le milieu Lorimer (trois finales chacun). Leeds a retrouvé les sommets du football anglais en 1992, avec un nouveau titre de champion national. Dans l'équipe entraînée par Howard Wilkinson : \e Français Éric Contona, l'Écossais Gordon Strachan et le magicien suédois
Thomas Brolin.



VHS Rip

The Don Revie story

'Don Revie mode Leeds United, plank by careful plank, ushering boys
towards greatness, buying wtth briliiant judgment and always building
to last - welding talent to talent, spirit to spirit, to attain tremendous
collective strength.' Hugh Mcllvanney, 1975

Don Revie, the first Footballer of the Year to graduate as Manager of the Year, is the black sheep in the game's hall of fame. No manager of his calibre and record has a smaller constituency of advocates and yet the evidence in this book stakes out a claim for greatness on his and his team's behalf that stands in the face of thirty years of muck-raking and innuendo about their venality.
The rôle he played in engendering the modem game is also largely forgotten. He boiled down his approach to being the father of the Leeds United family, saying time and again that 'I look on every one of them at this club as my own son'. But there was more to him than this modest job description. He turned a provincial Second Division side from what was then still a parochial city into arguably the best team in England for a decade from 1965. 
 For a time he even made the city synonymous with his football club. He achieved this by training the players, devising the on-field strategy, scouting the best prospects in Britain, persuading them to join his crusade, designing the kit they played in, sorting out their finances and vetting their girlfriends. On any given day he was consigliere, masseur, dietician, transport manager and coach.
In essence he was the alpha and omega of Leeds United. He built a great team but he may be said to have failed to create a great club because the System and structure he developed depended entirely on him. United's rise as England's finest squad could not have happened without him. Great teams, however, grow old. Great clubs have stron-ger foundations. By doing almost everything himself, Revie had become indispensable as the Leeds board found to their cost when they repaid his service by giving his job to the man in football who hated him most...




http://nsa19.casimages.com/img/2010/10/24/...14754305480.png
http://nsa19.casimages.com/img/2010/10/24/...14853728528.png
http://nsa19.casimages.com/img/2010/10/24/...14910443832.png
http://nsa20.casimages.com/img/2010/10/24/...14937286255.png



Vhs Rip



Don Revie, Donald was born on 10 July 1927 at 20 Bell Street, Middlesbrough.  He was educated at Archibald secondary modern school, Middlesbrough, and left school at fourteen to become an apprentice bricklayer, before joining Leicester City Football Club in 1943. Hull City bought him for £20,000 in 1950.
Revie transferred to Manchester City in 1953, and reached his peak as a footballer in the mid-1950s, winning six England caps and being voted footballer of the year in 1955. Manchester City won the FA Cup in 1956, using what became known as the ‘Revie plan’, with Revie, as centre forward, lying deep while feeding the ball to the other forwards and then moving through in the final stage, a tactic copied from the successful Hungarian team by the Manchester City manager.
 

Revie moved to Leeds United in 1958, after two years with Sunderland. At Leeds he was appointed manager in 1961, at a time when the club was struggling to avoid relegation to the third division. Revie not only avoided this, but brought Leeds to the top of the second division in 1964, and second to Manchester United in the first division in 1965, winning the League championship in 1969 with 67 points, the highest total in the history of the championship, and the FA cup in 1972.

His ambitions for the club were not confined to the domestic scene, and in 1968 Leeds won the European Fairs cup (the UEFA cup), beating Ferencváros 1–0, the first British club to win the cup. Despite these successes, Leeds had the reputation of being perpetual runners-up: they lost to Liverpool in the 1965 FA cup final, came second in the League championship in 1965, 1966, and 1970, lost to Chelsea in the FA cup final in 1970, were runners-up to Arsenal in the League championship in 1971, and lost to second-division Sunderland in the 1973 FA cup final.




In 1974, after Leeds United had won the League championship, remaining undefeated for the first twenty-nine games of the season, Revie resigned to take up the position of England team manager, following the sacking of Sir Alf Ramsey after England had failed to qualify for the 1974 world cup finals.
After a successful first season as the England manager, with the team undefeated after nine internationals, Revie encountered a set-back when England was eliminated from the European championship early in the 1975–6 season. While Revie was manager, England won fourteen out of twenty-nine matches, with seven defeats and eight draws. The poor results were attributed to the uncertainty and lack of continuity caused by frequent team changes rather than to the lack of outstanding players. He used fifty-two players in the twenty-nine games, awarding twenty-nine new caps, and he only once fielded an unchanged side. Morale sagged when England lost 2–0 to Italy in a world cup qualifying match in November 1976, and the press began to forecast England's elimination from the competition and Revie's dismissal.
In July 1977 the Daily Mail, to which Revie had sold his story, revealed that he had been in secret negotiations with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) while the England team had been playing in South America, had accepted the post of team manager to the UAE for four years at £60,000 a year, and had resigned from his England job. This led the Football Association to ban him from English football for ten years. Revie successfully appealed against the ban in the High Court in November 1979, on the grounds that the head of the tribunal, Sir Harold Thompson, chairman of the Football Association, was biased. But the judge made it clear that it was still felt that Revie's conduct in leaving England so abruptly had brought English football into disrepute. He became manager of al-Nasir Football Club in 1980, and moved to the National Football Club, Cairo, in 1984.



By the time he left in 1974 some argued that Leeds was the greatest club side of all time, and that his achievements lay there, and not in his spell as England manager. He transformed Leeds from a club in danger of relegation into a club aiming at, and achieving, major honours at home and abroad.  Revie was appointed OBE in 1970, and was voted manager of the year in 1969, 1970, and 1972.
Revie died on 26 May 1989 in Murrayfield Private Hospital, Edinburgh, of motor neurone disease.  Leeds United legend Terry Cooper once said ‘He was a great man and a great manager who looked after us by wrapping us in cotton wool. On the field of play he made you feel 10 feet tall, so that you wanted to die for Leeds United.’
(soccerhistory.org.uk)

Bio : http://www.mightyleeds.co.uk/managers/revie1.htm