Sie sind nicht angemeldet.

Neue Antwort erstellen

Lieber Besucher, herzlich willkommen bei: PKV Foren für alle Private Krankenversicherung. Falls dies Ihr erster Besuch auf dieser Seite ist, lesen Sie sich bitte die Hilfe durch. Dort wird Ihnen die Bedienung dieser Seite näher erläutert. Darüber hinaus sollten Sie sich registrieren, um alle Funktionen dieser Seite nutzen zu können. Benutzen Sie das Registrierungsformular, um sich zu registrieren oder informieren Sie sich ausführlich über den Registrierungsvorgang. Falls Sie sich bereits zu einem früheren Zeitpunkt registriert haben, können Sie sich hier anmelden.

Achtung! Die letzte Antwort auf dieses Thema liegt mehr als 2 121 Tage zurück. Das Thema ist womöglich bereits veraltet. Bitte erstellen Sie ggf. ein neues Thema.

Beitragsinformationen
Beitrag
Einstellungen

Internet-Adressen werden automatisch erkannt und umgewandelt.

Smiley-Code wird in Ihrem Beitrag automatisch als Smiley-Grafik dargestellt.

Sie können BBCodes zur Formatierung nutzen, sofern diese Option aktiviert ist.

Dateianhänge
Dateianhänge hinzufügen

Maximale Anzahl an Dateianhängen: 5
Maximale Dateigröße: 150 kB
Erlaubte Dateiendungen: bmp, gif, jpeg, jpg, pdf, png, txt, zip

Sicherheitsmaßnahme

Bitte geben Sie die untenstehenden Zeichen ohne Leerstellen in das leere Feld ein. Groß- und Kleinschreibung müssen nicht beachtet werden. Sollten Sie das Bild auch nach mehrfachem Neuladen nicht entziffern können, wenden Sie sich an den Administrator dieser Seite.

Der erste Beitrag

1

Dienstag, 26. Juni 2018, 04:45

Von xiaolan

Socceroos' time of transition sees

Bert draws a blank,” the Courier-Mail’s back page screamed after Australia’s 1-1 draw with Denmark. “Golden opportunity goes begging as Socceroos coach leaves our greatest goal-scorer sitting on the bench,” went the standfirst. But the Queensland tabloid wasn’t the only one unhappy as Tim Cahill received zero minutes in Australia’s two World Cup matches to date. The Daily Telegraph’s sports editor-at-large accused head coach Bert van Marwijk of disrespecting Cahill by leaving him out. Former Socceroos Robbie Slater and Mark Bosnich also chipped in. Slater, a Fox Sports football pundit, described it as “a national outrage,” http://www.officialcanadiensonline.com/R…n+Drouin+Jerseywhile fellow commentator Bosnich tweeted that “questions must be asked of the manager as to why Tim Cahill was not used with 10-15 minutes to go”. The bleating and complaining about the non-use of Cahill in Australia has been immense. On the one hand, it’s completely expected. The striker is Australia’s greatest-ever goal-scorer with 50 goals in 106 matches. He’s saved the Socceroos’ bacon Jared Dudley Jersey more times than Jesus performed miracles in Galilee – off the Walter Payton Jersey bench against Japan in the 2006 World Cup, scoring crucial goals to qualify Australia for tournaments in 2010, 2014 and 2018 and banging in one against Serbia eight years ago just to name a few. His place in Australian sporting history is already assured. On the other hand, the melodrama over Cahill’s absence is completely overblown. The forward is 38 years old, turning 39 in less than seven months. His best days are clearly behind him. He is five years older than skipper Mile Jedinak and six years older than Mark Milligan, the other two veterans of the squad. Unlike Jedinak and Milligan, Cahill has barely played club football in the past year. He has played 16 first-team games since October, for Melbourne City in the A-League and Millwall in the English Championship, and not started any of them. As a substitute his sum total of goals is zero. His total time on the pitch in the Larry Robinson Jersey past season? A mere 157 minutes. That’s less than two full games. Warren Joyce didn’t rate him enough to give him regular game-time and neither did Cahill’s close friend and former teammate, Neil Harris. Why would Van Marwijk be any different? The speculation is that FFA pushed Van Marwijk to take the veteran to Russia for commercial reasons. True or not, Cahill does not suit the Dutch coach’s counter-attacking, defensive-minded game-plan. The quicker and more mobile Andrew Nabbout, who can press and harry defenders does, hence his starts against France and Denmark. To accuse Van Marwijk, a man who has coached at the elite level of European football for more than two decades, and who led the Netherlands to the 2010 World Cup final, of footballing ignorance is absurd. The 66-year-old knows what his team wants and needs, and won’t be swayed by hysteria or nostalgia. Cahill certainly does have some value as a leader, as a big-brother influence and as someone who can help advise and assist younger teammates. And on evidence in Russia he has done just that without complaint. Football is a young man’s game – you only need to look at the likes of Kylian Mbappé at this World Cup or Pelé, Michael Owen and Lionel Messi at previous tournaments – as evidence. And the youngest player amongst all 32 nations in Russia is Daniel Arzani. In just two matches this Khorramabad-born wing-wonder, an Iranian migrant who grew up in Sydney’s eastern suburbs, has delighted not only Australia’s footballing community but caught the eye of the world. Many are clamouring for the 19-year-old to receive more minutes and even start in the Socceroos’ http://www.indianapoliscolts.us.com/WOME…LEY-JERSEY.html must-win game against Peru in Sochi. Considering Arzani has played just 24 first-team games in his whole life, all in the A-League and only four times lasted the full 90 minutes, that may be a bridge too far. Still, his rise is nothing short of remarkable. Against Denmark he almost scored, set up two excellent chances for teammates and skinned Pione Sisto in just a 22-minute cameo. cheap jerseyswholesale jerseys wholesale nfl jerseys wholesale jerseys from china cheap nfl jerseys