#Diego Lasarte
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biglisbonnews · 2 years ago
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Federal inspectors fine Amazon $60,269 for putting workers at risk The US Labor Department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has fined Amazon for failing to keep its workers safe. Investigators found ergonomic and other hazards at three Amazon warehouses that compromised worker health, including elevated levels of musculoskeletal disorders.Read more... https://qz.com/amazon-fined-for-warehouse-safety-violations-1850005916
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sequestering · 1 year ago
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Disney's ESPN moves into US sports betting with $2bn Penn Entertainment deal by Sara Germano (Financial Times) | All-in on sports betting, Disney is making ESPN earn its keep by Diego Lasarte (Quartz) | Wayne Gretzky and Connor McDavid Star in Newest BetMGM Television Spot (BetMGM) | BetMGM | Gambling ads and the NHL: should Gretzky and McDavid do better? by Colin Horgan (The Guardian) | The Washington Capitals | Hockey Night in Canada wants to know why you're not gambling by Chris Selley (National Post) | The dark side of the US sports betting boom by Oliver Barnes (Financial Times) | Sports Interaction: East vs West (Sports Interaction) | Gambling ads are changing how we view hockey by Cathal Kelly (Globe and Mail)
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goalhofer · 24 days ago
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2024 olympics Spain roster
Archery
Pablo Acha (Burgos)
Èlia Canales (Tarragona)
Athletics
Julio Arenas (Madrid)
David García (Alcorcón)
Ibrahim Chakir (Seville)
Yago Rojo (Madrid)
Mohamed Attaoui (Torrelavega)
Adrián Ben (Viveiro)
Elvin Canales (Girona)
Ignacio Fontes (Ciudad Granada)
Mario García (Villar De Gallimazo)
Adel Mechaal (Palamós)
Thierry Ndikumwenayo (Castellón De La Plana)
Abdessamad Oukhelfen (Reus)
Enrique Llopis (Gandia)
Asier Martínez (Zizur Mayor)
Daniel Arce (Burgos)
Iñaki Cañal (Gijón)
Óscar Husillos (Palencia)
Tariku Novales (Santiago De Compostela)
Diego García (Madrid)
Álvaro Martín (Llerena)
Paul McGrath (Barcelona)
Miguel López (Murcia)
Jordan Díaz (Guadalajara)
Jorge Ureña (Onil)
Ester Navarrete (Vigo)
Dr. Meritxell Soler (Barcelona)
Cristina Montesinos (Terrassa)
Jaël Bestué (Barcelona)
Lorea Ibarzabal (Madrid)
Lorena Martín (Ciudad Salamanca)
Esther Guerrero (Banyoles)
Águeda Marqués (Segovia)
Marta Pérez (Soria)
Marta García (Ciudad León)
Carolina Robles (Dos Hermanas)
Irene Sánchez-Escribano (Ciudad Toledo)
Sonia Molina-Prado (Manzanares)
María Pérez (Seville)
Paula Sevilla-López (La Solana)
Carmen Avilés (Madrid)
Blanca Hervás (Madrid)
Eva Santidrián (Burgos)
Berta Segura (Lleida)
Majida Maayouf (Bilbao)
Laura García-Caro (Lepe)
María Pérez (Valencia)
Fátima Diame (Valencia)
Tessy Ebosele (San Sebastián)
Ana Compaoré (Guadalajara)
María Toimil (Mugardos)
Yulenmis Aguilar (A Coruña)
Badminton
Pablo Abián (Calatayud)
Carolina Marín (Huelva)
Basketball
Lorenzo Brown (Roswell, Georgia)
Jaime Pradilla (Zaragoza)
Rodolfo Fernández (Palma)
Xabier López-Arostegui (Getxo)
Santi Aldama; Jr. (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
Darío Brizuela (San Sebastián)
Alberto Díaz (Ciudad Málaga)
Juan Hernangómez (Madrid)
Guillermo Hernangómez (Madrid)
Destiny Garuba (Azuqueca De Henares)
Alejandro Abrines (Palma)
Sergio Llull (Maó)
Mariona Ortiz (Calella)
Laura Gil (Murcia)
Alba Torrens (Binissalem)
María Pérez (Vigo)
Queralt Casas (Girona)
Leticia Romero (Agüimes)
Leonor Rodríguez (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
María Cazorla (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
Andrea Vilaró (Barcelona)
Megan Gustafson (Port Wing, Wisconsin)
Paula Ginzo (Santoña)
María Conde (Barcelona)
Gracia Alonso-De Armiño (Bilbao)
Juana Camilión (Mallorca)
Vega Gimeno (Valencia)
Sandra Yguaravide (Valencia)
Boxing
Oier Ibarreche (Galdácano)
Rafael Lozano; Jr. (Ciudad Córdoba)
José Quiles (Elda)
Enmanuel Reyes (A Coruña)
Ayoub Ghadfa (Marbella)
Laura Fuertes (Asturias)
Canoeing
Pablo Crespo (Madrid)
Adrián Del Río (Madrid)
Miquel Travé (La Seu d'Urgell)
Pau Echaniz (San Sebastián)
Manuel Ochoa (Tomiño)
Diego Domínguez (Madrid)
Joan Moreno (Pollença)
Francisco Cubelos (Talavera De La Rena)
Carlos Arévalo (Betanzos)
Rodrigo Germade (Cangas)
Marcus Cooper (Mallorca)
Saúl Craviotto (Lleida)
Estefanía Fernández (Mérida)
Begoña Lazkano (Pontevedra)
Carolina García (Pontevedra)
Sara Ouzande (Gijón)
Miren Lazkano (San Sebastián)
Maialen Chourraut (Lasart-Oria)
María Corbera (Madrid)
Antía Jácome (Pontevedra)
María Portela (Cangas)
Climbing
Alberto Ginés (Ciudad Cáceres)
Leslie Romero (Sant Cugat Del Vallès)
Cycling
Alex Aranburu (Ezkio-Itsaso)
Juan Ayuso (Barcelona)
Oier Lazkano (Vitoria-Gasteiz)
Albert Torres (Ciudatella De Menorca)
Sebastián Mora (Villarreal)
Jofre Cullell (Santa Coloma De Farners)
David Serrano (Baza)
Mireia Benito (Beix Penedès)
Margarita García (Marratxí)
Diving
Adrián Abadía (Mallorca)
Nicolás García (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
Valeria Antonilo (Madrid)
Ana Carvajal (Villeneuva De La Cañada)
Equestrian
Borja Carrascosa (Madrid)
Claudio Castilla (Jerez De La Frontera)
Juan Jiménez (Castro Del Río)
Esteban Benítez (Cádiz)
Carlos Díaz (Cádiz)
Eduardo Álvarez (Madrid)
Sergio Álvarez (Avilés)
Ismael García (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
Fencing
Carlos Llavador (Madrid)
Lucía Martín-Portugués (Villeneuva De La Cañada)
Field hockey
Marc Vizcaino (Terrassa)
Borja Lacalle (Madrid)
Bruno Font (Madrid)
Alejandro Alonso (Santander)
Jordi Bonastre (Terrassa)
Xavier Gispert (Madrid)
Rafael Vilallonga (Madrid)
Pepe Cunill (Terrassa)
Álvaro Iglesias (Madrid)
José Basterra (Getxo)
Gerard Clapés (Eindhoven, The Netherlands)
Marc Reyné (Barcelona)
Marc Miralles (Bloemendaal, The Netherlands)
Luis Calzado (Barcelona)
Marc Recasens (Barcelona)
Joaquín Menini (Madrid)
Eduard De Ignacio-Simó (Madrid)
Ignacio Rodríguez (Santander)
Laura Barrios (Madrid)
Sara Barrios (Madrid)
Júlia Strappato (Matadepera)
Lucía Jiménez (Madrid)
María López (Gijón)
Belén Iglesias (Madrid)
Marta Segú (Madrid)
Constanza Amundson (Madrid)
Blanca Pérez (Madrid)
Lola Riera (Valencia)
Begoña García (Zaragoza)
Xantal Giné (Barcelona)
Beatriz Pérez (Santander)
Alejandra Torres-Quevedo (Madrid)
Clara Pérez (Madrid)
Patricia Álvarez (Santander)
Golf
David Puig (La Garriga)
Jon Rahm (Scottsdale, Arizona)
Azahara Muñoz (Málaga)
Carlota Ciganda (Pamplona)
Gymnastics
Néstor Abad (Madrid)
Thierno Diallo (Madrid)
Nicolau Mir (Palma)
Joel Plata (Madrid)
Miguel Zapata (Madrid)
David Vega (Barcelona)
Laura Casabuena (Alcoy)
Ana Pérez (Madrid)
Alba Petisco (Villarinos De Los Aires)
Alba Bautista (Teruel)
Polina Berezina (Alicante)
Ana Arnau (Madrid)
Inés Bergua (Huesca)
Mireia Martínez (La Pobla De Vallbona)
Patricia Pérez (Valencia)
Salma Solaun (Vitoria-Gasteiz)
Noemí Romero (Madrid)
Handball
Gonzalo Pérez-De Vargas (Ciudad Toledo)
Jorge Maqueda (Ciudad Toledo)
Alex Dujshebaev (Santander)
Daniel Dujshebaev (Santander)
Rodrigo Corrales (Cangas)
Adrià Figueras (Barcelona)
Imanol Garciandia (Urretxu)
Abel Serdio (Avilés)
Agustín Casado (Carboneras)
Aleix Gómez (Sabadell)
Ian Tarrafeta (Sabadell)
Miguel Sánchez-Migallón (Ciudad Real)
Kauldi Odriozola (Zumaia)
Daniel Fernández (Sabadell)
Javier Rodríguez (Madrid)
Nicole Wiggins (Madrid)
Marta López (Ciudad Málaga)
Carmen Campos (Madrid)
Silvia Arderius (Madrid)
Maitane Etxeberria (Lezo)
Mercedes Castellanos (Ciudad Real)
Jennifer Gutiérrez (Elche)
Lara González (Santa Pola)
Paula Arcos (Petrer)
Lysa Tchaptchet (Cuenca De Pamplona)
Kaba Gassama (Granollers)
Alicia Fernández (Valdoviño)
María Prieto (Zamora)
Alexandrina Barbosa (Estella-Lizarra)
Mireya González (León)
Judo
David García (Madrid)
Salvador Cases (Alicante)
Francisco Garrigós (Móstoles)
Tristani Mosakhlishvili (Vigo)
Nikoloz Sheradishvili (Madrid)
Ariane Toro (Bilbao)
Laura Martínez (Madrid)
Cristina Cabaña (Mérida)
Ai Tsunoda (Lleida)
Pentathlon
Laura Heredia (Barcelona)
Rowing
Dennis Carracedo (Banyoles)
Rodrigo Conde (Moaña)
Aleix García (Girona)
Caetano Horta (Noia)
Jaime Canalejo (Ciudad Seville)
Javier García (Ciudad Seville)
Virginia Díaz (El Astillero)
Esther Briz (Zaragoza)
Aina Cid (Amposta)
Sailing
Ignacio Baltasar (Sa Ràpita)
Andrés Barrio (Arucas)
Joaquín Blanco; Jr. (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
Diego Botín-Sanz (Santander)
Florian Trittel (Barcelona)
Jordi Xammar (Barcelona)
Pilar Lamadrid (Ciudad Seville)
Ana Moncada (Barcelona)
Gisela Pulido (Premià De Mar)
Támara Echegoyen (Ourense)
Paula Barceló (Palma)
Nora Brugman (Barcelona)
Tara Pacheco (Arucas)
Shooting
Andrés García (Ciudad Cuenca)
Alberto Fernández (Madrid)
Fátima Gálvez (Baena)
Mar Molné (Madrid)
Skateboarding
Alain Kortabitarte (Madrid)
Danny León (Móstoles)
Natalia Muñoz (Madrid)
Daniela Terol (Barcelona)
Julia Benedetti (A Coruña)
Naia Laso (Bermeo)
Soccer
Arnau Tenas (Vic)
Marc Pubill (Terrassa)
Juan Miranda (Olivares)
Eric García (Martorell)
Pau Cubarsí (Bescanó)
Pablo Barrios (Madrid)
Diego López (Turón)
Beñat Turrientes (Beasain)
Abel Ruiz (Almussafes)
Alejandro Baena (Roquetas De Mar)
Fermín López (El Campillo)
Jon Pacheco (Elizondo)
Joan García (Sallent De Llobregat)
Aimar Oroz (Arazuri)
Miguel Gutiérrez (Madrid)
Adrián Bernabé (Barcelona)
Sergio Gómez (Badalona)
Sam Omorodion (Ciudad Seville)
Cristhian Mosquera (Alicante)
Juan Sánchez (Dos Hermanas)
Sergio Camello (Madrid)
Alejandro Iturbe (Madrid)
María Rodríguez (Las Palmas De Gran Canaria)
Ona Batlle (Vilassar De Mar)
Teresa Abelleira (Pontevedra)
Irene Paredes (Legazpi)
Oihane Hernández (Mungialda)
Aitana Bonmatí (Vilanova I La Geltrú)
Athenea Del Castillo (Medio Cudeyo)
María Caldentey (Felanitx)
Salma Paralluelo (Zaragoza)
Jenni Hermoso (Madrid)
Alèxia Putellas (Mollet Del Vallès)
Pati Guijarro (Palma)
Cata Coll (Marratxí)
Laia Aleixandri (Santa Coloma De Gramenet)
Eva Navarro (Yecla)
Laia Codina (Campllong)
Lucía García (Aller)
Olga Carmona (Seville)
Vicky López (Madrid)
María Méndez (Oviedo)
Alba Redondo (Albacete)
Elene Lete (Zumarraga)
Surfing
Andy Criere (Hendaye, France)
Nadia Erostarbe (Zarautz)
Janire González (Zumaia)
Swimming
Carlos Garach (Granada)
Mario Mollà (Barcelona)
Arbidel González (Corvera De Asturias)
Luís Domínguez (Zaragoza)
Ferran Julià (Sabadell)
Carles Coll (Tarragona)
Sergio De Celis (Barcelona)
Hugo González (Palma)
César Castro (Plasencia)
Alisa Ozhogina (Ciudad Seville)
Iris Tió (Barcelona)
Txell Ferré (Barcelona)
Marina García (Sant Cugat Del Vallès)
Lilou Lluís (Madrid)
Meritxell Mas (Granollers)
Paula Ramírez (Barcelona)
Blanca Toledano (Madrid)
Ángela Martínez (Elche)
Ainhoa Campabadal (Barcelona)
María Daza (Madrid)
Alba Herrero (Sant Cugat Del Vallès)
Paula Juste (Lleida)
Carmen Weiler (Singapore)
África Zamorano (Barcelona)
Jessica Vall (Barcelona)
Laura Cabanes (Madrid)
Emma Carrasco (Lleida)
María De Valdés (Fuengirola)
Table tennis
Álvaro Robles (Huelva)
María Xiao (Madrid)
Taekwondo
Adrián Vicente (Madrid)
Javier Pérez (San Fernando De Henares)
Adriana Cerezo (Madrid)
Cecilia Castro (San Agustín Del Guadalix)
Tennis
Carlos Alcaraz; Jr. (Villena)
Pedro Martínez (Alzira)
Jaume Munar (Barcelona)
Rafael Nadal (Manacor)
Pablo Carreño (Barcelona)
Marcel Granollers (Barcelona)
Cristina Bucșa (Torrelavega)
Sara Sorribes (La Vall d'Uixó)
Triathlon
Alberto González (Ciudad Málaga)
Roberto Sánchez (Mislata)
Antonio Serrat (Vigo)
Miriam Casillas (Badajoz)
Anna Godoy (Barcelona)
Volleyball
Adrián Gavira (San Roque)
Pablo Herrera (Castellón De La Plana)
Daniela Álvarez (Gijón)
Tania Moreno (Madrid)
Lili Fernández (Alicante)
Paula Soria (Orihuela)
Water polo
Unai Aguirre (Barcelona)
Alberto Munárriz (Pamplona)
Álvaro Granados (Terrassa)
Bernat Sanahuja (Terrassa)
Miguel De Toro (Ciudad Seville)
Marc Larumbe (Barcelona)
Martin Faměra (Barcelona)
Sergi Cabanas (Barcelona)
Roger Tahull (Barcelona)
Felipe Perrone (Barcelona)
Unai Biel (Barcelona)
Alejandro Bustos (Madrid)
Eduardo Lorrio (Madrid)
Laura Ester (Barcelona)
Isabel Piralkova (Arenys De Mar)
Anni Espar (Barcelona)
Bea Ortiz (Terrassa)
Nona Pérez (Sant Cugat Del Vallès)
Paula Crespí (L'Hospitelet De Llobregat)
Elena Ruiz (Rubí)
María Peña (Madrid)
Judith Forca (Sabadell)
Paula Camus (Madrid)
María García (Sabadell)
Paula Leitón (Terrassa)
Martina Terré (Barcelona)
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newswireml · 2 years ago
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What deal have New York hospitals offered nurses to end strikes?#deal #York #hospitals #offered #nurses #strikes
What deal have New York hospitals offered nurses to end strikes?#deal #York #hospitals #offered #nurses #strikes
The new deal includes a commitment to improving the patient-to-staff ratio in hospitals as well as a 19% pay raise.Image: Diego Lasarte for Quartz More than 7,000 nurses were due to return to work today (Jan. 12) after reaching a tentative new contract with two major hospitals in New York City that includes a commitment to increased staff and higher wages. Three days after embarking on the…
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gardeniahungma · 3 years ago
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Estrella Damm - Amor A Primera Vista (International Version) from Ian Pons Jewell on Vimeo.
DIRECTED BY: Ian Pons Jewell WRITTEN BY: Oriol Villar CAST
Mario: Mario Casas Mariona: Mireia Oriol Lucia: Laia Manzanares Miguel: Nao Albet Monica: Monica López Fisherman: Pep Cruz Gloria: Tamara Ndong Julio:Daniel Ibañez Enric: Joan Amargos Rigoberta Bandini as herself
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY: Mauro Chiarello EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Mario Fornies EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Zico Judge EP / PRODUCER:Laia Vidal POST PRODUCER: Emmanuelle Le Chat PRODUCTION DESIGNER: Maruxa Alver PRODUCTION MANAGER: Yolanda Gata TALENT COORDINATOR: Marta Muntane LOCATION MANAGER: Joan Cobos STYLIST: Buki MUH ARTIST: Alma Casal ART DIRECTOR: Nina Caussa EDITOR: Tobias Suhm POST PRODUCTION COORDINATOR: Marc Farreras
SET MANAGER: Victor Macià LOCATION ASSISTANT: Pep Ferrer LOCAL PRODUCTION: Rosa Preto 1ST AD: Lluís Casacuberta 2ND AD: Carlos Santana 3RD AD: Oriol Rovira 3RD AD: Rafael Sanz VERSE ADVISOR: Daniel Orviz SCRIPT: Marieta Torrents PRODUCTION COORDINATOR: Marta Vega PRODUCTION COORDINATOR: Carla Vila PRODUCTION ASSISTANT: Nerea Soms RUNNER: Javier Nieto RUNNER: David Ceballos RUNNER: Aleix Lladó RUNNER: Ramón Novellas RUNNER: Nitus RUNNER: Raul Mata RUNNER: Nico Santa Maria RUNNER: Marc Didac RUNNER: Ana Perez RUNNER: Elisabet Talens RUNNER: Maide Patiño
VFX: Carsten Keller MAKING OF: Yosigo
1ST AC: Alicia Galiña 2ND AC: Raul Mulas 2ND AC: Sergi Lafuente CAMERA OPERATOR: Teo Lopez VIDEO ASSISTANT A: Lucia Forner VIDEO ASSISTANT B: Carlos Nava DIT: Jose Manuel Ochando STEADICAM OPERATOR: Nico Lasarte SOUND Carles Prats SOUND ASSISTANT: Alberto de Ros SOUND ASSISTANT: Kemen Longo KEY GRIP: David Arres KEY GRIP ASSISTANT: Daniel Vergara KEY GRIP ASSISTANT: Andres Enrique KEY GRIP ASSISTANT: Antonio Espejo GRIP ASSISTANT: Rodrigo Alvarez GRIP ASSISTANT: Sergi Mestres
GAFFER: Mario Scattoloni BEST BOY (THEATER): Dani Vazquez SPARK: Ferran Grau SPARK: Daniel de Jose Homs GENNY: Carlos Vila BEST BOY B: Jose Antonio Danta TECHNICAL SPARK: Joel Sitjes SPARK: Alex Postius SPARK: Albert Cantallops SPARK ASSISTANT: Pere Llopart SPARK ASSISTANT: Pablo Marqués SPARK ASSISTANT: Antonio Salcedo Rueda SPARK / GRIP ASSISTANT: Joan Francesc Bagur SPARK ASSISTANT: Luis Andrés Mendoza SPARK ASSISTANT: David Gottschelg
ASSISTANT STAND BY PROPS: Heura Marimon SET DRESSER: Diego Oicco LEAD PAINTER: Zaida Sabatés CONSTRUCTOR: Jose Manuel Ramirez CONSTRUCTOR: Juan Carlos Alvarez SET DRESSER: Pau Albi ART PA: Nicolas Juaneda PRODUCT MASTER: Pau Arregui STYLIST ASSISTANT: Yahir Hernandez STYLIST ASSISTANT: Emiliano Nicolas Denis STYLIST ASSISTANT: Jonathan Morales MUH ASSISTANT: Sonam Airtel MUH ASSISTANT: Pili Urena
CAMERA EQUIPMENT:Servicevision LIGHT EQUIPMENT: Zeferino LIGHT CREW: Backlight PRODUCTION: Location Support VANS SCOUT: Ok Mobility VANS RECCE: Coches Menorca VANS RECCE: Hiper Rent A Car NURSE ON SET: Juaneda SANIEC: Jaume Ventura GRIP EQUIPMENT: Gripsupport CATERING: Julio Cordoba Ruiz
POST-HOUSE: MPC Executive Producer: Dafydd Upsdell Senior VFX Producer: Mireille Antoine Line Producer: Chitra Vinod Colour: Ricky Gausis Colour Producers: Caitlin Forrest/Ivana Banh Creative Directors: Anthony Bloor Carsten Keller VFX Supervisor: Judy Roberts Comp: Pavel Vicik Zeki Doru Ondun Mauro Nodari Tri Do Shaik Ahamed Bashra Gijo George CG Lead: Mike Little FX Lead: Christopher Honninger FX: Platon Filimonov Selcuk Ergun Arnau Gilabert Rob Richarson Alok Dwivedi Sandeep Goje Amaranth Reddy Hari Prasad Anumula Lighting: Jack Enever Giovanni Bianchet Vittorio Barabani Pritesh Krishnappa Assets: Shashi Kumar S Sunil Mohapatra Animation: James Bown Ambalika Nandy GRADE: Ricky Gausis
Sound Designer/Music Supervisor: Tim Harrison Sound Effects Editor : Sam Mason Mix Technician: Pär Carlsson
Film Out – Adrian Bull Film Processing and Scanning - Cinelab Film & Digital. Film Processing – Andy Hudson, Tony Puzas, John Gurney, Steve Sheridan, Derek Collins, John Allaker. Film Scanning – Rob Wickings Film Lab Commercials Dailies Producer - Aarti Mahtani Special thanks - Cinelab Film & Digital.
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cooltivarte · 3 years ago
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Autor: William Shakespeare - Dirección: María Varela - Elenco: Robert Moré - Oliver Luzardo - Diego Rovira - Sergio Pereira - Lucía Persichetti - Cecilia Baranda - Denise Daragnès - Carlos Scuro - Manuel Caraballo - Xabier Lasarte
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spartanssports · 3 years ago
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Pratinjau: Kolombia vs. Chili
Kolombia dan Chili bertemu di Barranquilla pada Rabu malam dengan hanya tiga poin yang memisahkan kedua tim di klasemen kualifikasi Piala Dunia CONMEBOL. Meskipun duduk di posisi kedelapan, Chili akan melewati lawan mereka yang berada di urutan kelima dengan kemenangan berkat selisih gol yang sedikit lebih unggul.
Pratinjau pertandingan
Dengan hanya memenangkan dua dari delapan pertandingan kualifikasi pembukaan mereka, Reinaldo Rueda akan mengakui bahwa Kolombia beruntung masih duduk di lima besar. Kolombia mencatat hasil imbang melawan Bolivia dan Paraguay sejak awal bulan. Namun demikian, Rueda akan puas bahwa timnya tetap terpaut tiga poin dari Ekuador yang berada di posisi ketiga. Di sisi positifnya, tiga dari hasil imbang mereka diperoleh dari posisi kalah, tetapi hanya satu clean sheet yang dipertahankan dalam tujuh pertandingan di semua kompetisi. Penyerang Porto Luis Diaz telah menjadi bintang Kolombia tahun 2021, mencetak lima gol dari sembilan penampilannya di panggung internasional. Pelatih kepala Martin Lasarte berada di bawah tekanan untuk mengakhiri empat pertandingan tanpa mencetak gol. Chili masih memiliki banyak waktu untuk membalikkan keadaan selama kualifikasi Piala Dunia, terutama dengan pertemuan mereka berikutnya melawan Brasil atau Argentina tidak dijadwalkan sampai tahun depan. Namun, dengan absennya pemain seperti Alexis Sanchez dan Eduardo Vargas dari pertandingan ini, Lasarte akan membutuhkan beberapa anggota skuadnya yang tidak berpengalaman untuk maju dalam kontes ini.
Berita Tim
Rueda berpotensi memberikan recall kepada Diaz dan Radamel Falcao setelah mereka berdua memulai pertandingan terakhir di bangku cadangan. Gustavo Cuellar dan Alexander Mejia bersaing untuk dipanggil kembali di lini tengah, tetapi Juan Quintero mungkin tetap di antara penggantinya. Diego Valencia masuk dalam daftar pemain inti Chile sebagai akibat dari skorsing Vargas. Pablo Galdames bisa diberi kesempatan di lini tengah sebelum bergabung dengan klub baru Genoa. Ben Brereton Diaz kembali absen untuk Chile setelah Blackburn Rovers mencegah penyerang itu melakukan perjalanan ke Amerika Selatan karena pembatasan perjalanan virus corona.
Kemungkinan susunan pemain Kolombia:
Ospina; Medina, Sanchez, Murillo, Tesillo; Cuadrado, Barrios, Uribe, Diaz; Borre, Falcao
Kemungkinan susunan pemain Chili:
Bravo; Diaz, Roco, Medel; Isla, Vidal, Baeza, Galdames, Vegas; Valencia, Menes
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Uruguay Football World Cup: Uruguay vs Chile - prediction, team news
Uruguay will look to record their first win of the Copa America campaign when they take on Chile in Cuiaba. Oscar Tabarez's men agonized a defeat to Argentina in their only game of the competition so far, while Chile have together four points from two matches, with a win sealing their place in the quarter-finals
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                        Uruguay kicked off their campaign with a main clash against Argentina, and they were barely defeated in Brasilia. Guido Rodriguez opened the scoring after 13 minutes, and Tabarez's men were incompetent to level the game, recurring empty-handed as a result. That was their fourth conventional game without a win in all competitions, before being held to unsatisfactory goalless draws by both Paraguay and Venezuela in Football World Cup Qualifiers at the beginning.
Having come into the tournament as one of the favorites to go far, La Celeste will be anxious to put their first points on the board to rapidly cement themselves at the top end of group B, as they look to book their residence in the final eight with wins from their final three group matches. For more details about FIFA World Cup Tickets click here.
Against come into the game having had a strong start to the group stage, and they can confirm their qualification to the knockout stage with a win. In their opening group game, Chile picked up an admirable point as they drew 1-1 with group favorites Argentina.
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Lionel Messi opened the scoring for them against with a stunning free-kick, but Chile equalized on the hour mark as Eduardo Vargas smashed in the recover after Emiliano Martinez saved Arturo Vidal's penalty, sealing an inspiring point to start their campaign. They then noted their first win of the tournament last time out, as Ben Brereton obtained the only goal of the game in a 1-0 win over strugglers Bolivia.
As a result, Martin Lasarte's men find themselves on the edge of qualifying alongside Argentina, and they will be hopeful of obtaining another win to not only confirm their spot in the quarter-finals but also to help attain a high finish to gain a more favorable draw in the first knockout round.
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The Uruguay line should be controlled by the potent pair of Manchester United forward Edinson Cavani and Atletico Madrid talisman Luis Suarez, with the duo having acquired a combined 114 goals on the international stage. They will be maintained by the threat of Nicolas De la Cruz, while Tabarez may look to take in another winger after setting up protectively to take on Argentina, with Brian Ocampo likely getting the nod on the right flank.
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The change of method could see midfielder Lucas Torreira sacrificed, with La Celeste potentially favoring a pairing of Real Madrid prospect Federico Valverde and Juventus man Rodrigo Bentancur in the middle. At the back, former Atletico Madrid pair Diego Godin and Jose Gimenez should continue to partner up at the heart of the back four, having made a collective 205 Uruguay presences.
Having only recently acknowledged for Chile, Blackburn Rovers attacker Ben Brereton is making his first international presence at this year's Copa America, and he acquired his first goal in his first start to fire them to a 1-0 win last time out, helping him cement an initial spot.
They boast a solid collection of abilities across the pitch, with Brereton leading the line alongside Eduardo Vargas, while the midfield is toured by the impressive trio of Arturo Vidal, Charles Aranguiz, and Erick Pulgar. For more to know about Football World Cup packages click here.
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Meanwhile, center-backs Gary Medel and Guillermo Maripan have both overwhelmed with assured performances in their opening two group games and will line up collected in front of Claudio Bravo again. They boast a solid collection of abilities across the pitch, with Brereton leading the line alongside Eduardo Vargas, while the midfield is toured by the impressive trio of Arturo Vidal, Charles Aranguiz, and Erick Pulgar.
Meanwhile, center-backs Gary Medel and Guillermo Maripan have both overwhelmed with assured performances in their opening two group games and will line up collected in front of Claudio Bravo again.
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biglisbonnews · 2 years ago
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New York nurses’ union has reached a tentative deal to end the strike More than 7,000 nurses were due to return to work today (Jan. 12)after reaching a tentative new contract with two major hospitals in New York City that includes a commitment to increased staff and higher wages. Three days after embarking on the largest strike the city has seen in decades, the New York State Nurses…Read more... https://qz.com/nurses-strike-new-york-hospitals-deal-1849979469
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0-1. Nacional gana Torneo Intermedio uruguayo y jugará la Copa Sudamericana
Montevideo, 16 jul (EFE).- El Nacional alzó este domingo el trofeo como campeón del Torneo Intermedio uruguayo y obtuvo un cupo para la Copa Sudamericana de 2018, al ganar al Defensor Sporting con un gol de Rodrigo Aguirre en el estadio Centenario de Montevideo. El que fue el último partido del torneo destacó porque prevaleció la táctica, el juego interrumpido por las faltas de lado y lado que se tradujo en ocho amonestados y dos expulsados del Defensor Sporting y dos tarjetas amarillas para el Nacional. La grada tricolor tuvo que esperar hasta el minuto 68 para hacer resonar el estadio tras el gol del montevideano de 22 años Rodrigo Aguirre que rompió el empate a cero. La jugada tuvo como protagonista al número 7, Kevin Ramírez, quien había entrado al campo tan solo cuatro minutos antes para sustituir a Sebastián Fernández y asistió al anotador de la tarde. Con este tanto, Aguirre sumó su undécimo gol de la temporada, ya que marcó cinco en el Apertura y la misma cantidad en el Intermedio. El partido también fue pasado por agua, marcado por gélidas temperaturas, con pocas emociones y escasos tiros a las porterías. - Ficha técnica: 0. Defensor Sporting: Guillermo Reyes; Guillermo De Los Santos (m.78, Héctor Acuña), Gonzalo Maulella, Andrés Lamas; Matías Zunino, Martín Rabuñal, Carlos Benavídez, Mathías Suárez; Matías Cabrera (m.61, Facundo Castro); Gonzalo Carneiro y Gonzalo Bueno (m.64, Ayrton Cougo). Entrenador: Eduardo Acevedo. 1. Nacional: Esteban Conde; Jorge Fucile (m.86, Gonzalo Porras), Rafael García, Diego Polenta, Alfonso Espino; Diego Arismendi, Sebastián Rodríguez, Felipe Carballo (m.75, Alvaro González), Tabaré Viudez, Sebastián Fernández (m.64, Kevin Ramírez) y Rodrigo Aguirre Entrenador: Martín Lasarte. Gol: m.68, Rodrigo Aguirre (Nacional). Árbitro: Daniel Rodríguez. Expulso a Guillermo De Los Santos (m.84) y Guillermo Reyes (m.93). Amonestó a Carlos Benavídez, Sebastián Fernández, Jorge Fucile, Diego Polenta, Matías Zunino, Ayrton Cougo, Gonzalo Carneiro y Martín Rabuñal. Incidencias: partido final del Torneo Intermedio Uruguayo, jugado en el estadio Centenario de Montevideo. EFE syr/gbf
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goalhofer · 3 years ago
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2020 Olympics Spain Roster
Archery
Daniel Castro (Madrid)
Inés De Velasco (Madrid)
Swimming
Nicolás García (Madrid)
Alberto Martínez (Cartagena)
Hugo González (Palma De Mallorca)
J.L. Pons (Sóller)
Alisa Ozhogina (Moscow, Russia)
Iris Tió (Barcelona)
Ona Carbonell (Barcelona)
Berta Ferreras (Mataró)
Meritxell Mas (Granollers)
Paula Ramírez (Barcelona)
Sara Saldaña (Madrid)
Blanca Toledano (Madrid)
Mereira Belmonte (Badalona)
Marina García-Urzainqui (Barcelona)
Lidón Muñoz (Castellón De La Plana)
Jimena Pérez (Santander)
Paula Ruiz (Madrid)
Jessica Vall (Barcelona)
África Zamorano (Barcelona)
Athletics
Pablo Sánchez-Valladares (Madrid)
Odei Jainaga (Eibar)
Óscar Husillos (Palencia)
Adrián Ben (Viveiro)
Saúl Ordóñez (Ponferrada)
Ignacio Fontes (Granada)
Jesús Gómez (Burgos)
Adel Mechaal (Tétouan, Morocco)
Mohamed Katir (Mula)
Carlos Mayo (Madrid)
Asier Martínez (Zizur Mayor)
Orlando Ortega (Ontinyent)
Sergio Fernández (Barañain)
Daniel Arce (Burgos)
Fernando Carro (Madrid)
Sebastián Martos (Huelma)
Javier Guerra (Segovia)
Ayad Lamdassem-El Mouhcine (Lleida)
Daniel Mateo (Soria)
Diego García (Madrid)
Miguel López (Murcia)
Álvaro Martín (Llerena)
Luis Corchete (Torrevieja)
Jesús García (Madrid)
Marc Tur (Santa Eulària Des Riu)
Bernat Erta (Lleida)
Samuel García (Santa Cruz De La Palma)
Eusebio Cáceres (Onil)
Pablo Torrijos (Castellón De La Plana)
L.M. Martínez (Castellón De La Palma)
Javier Cienfuegos (Montijo-Badajoz)
Jorge Ureña (Onil)
María Pérez (Madrid)
Jaël-Sakura Bestué (Barcelona)
Natalia Romero (Villajoysa)
Teresa Errandonea-Fernández (Irun)
Carolina Robles (Madrid)
Sara Gallego (Madrid)
Aauri Bokesa (Madrid)
Esther Guerrero (Banyoles)
Marta Pérez (Barcelona)
Lucía Rodríguez (Madrid)
Marta Galimany (Valls)
Elena Loyo (Vitoria)
Laura Méndez-Esquer (Valencia)
Laura García-Caro (Lepe)
Raquel González (Mataró)
María Pérez (Orce)
Laura Bueno (Granada)
Fátima Diame (Valencia)
Ana Peleteiro (Ribeira)
María Toimil (Murgardos)
Laura Redondo (Barcelona)
María Vicente (L’Hospitalet De Llobregat)
Badminton
Pablo Abián (Calatayud)
Clara Azurmendi (Madrid)
Basketball
Pau Gasol (Sant Boi De Llobregat)
Rodolfo Fernández (Palma De Mallorca)
Sergio Rodríguez (San Cristóbal De La Laguna)
Ricky Rubio (El Masnou)
Víctor Claver (Valencia)
Marc Gasol (Sant Boi De Llobregat)
Guillermo Hernangómez (Madrid)
D.U. Garuba (Azuqueca De Henares)
Alberto Abalde (A Coruña)
Alejandro Abrines (Palma)
Sergio Llull (Mahón)
Juan Hernangómez (Madrid)
Cristina Ouviña (Zaragoza)
Silvia Domínguez (Madrid)
Alba Torrens (Binissalem)
Laia Palau (Barcelona)
Leonor Rodríguez (Las Palmas)
Maite Cazorla (Barcelona)
Tamara Abalde (Vigo)
Raquel Carrera (Ourense)
Queralt Casas (Bescanó)
María Conde (Madrid)
Laura Gil (Murcia)
Astou Ndour-Barro (Las Palmas)
Boxing
José Quiles (Murcia)
Gazimagomed Jalimov (Madrid)
Emmanuel Reyes (La Coruna)
Gabriel Escobar (Leganés)
Canoeing
Cayetano García (Madrid)
Pablo Martínez (Madrid)
Ander Elosegi (Irun)
David Llorente (Palazuelos De Eresma)
Carlos Arévalo (Betanzos)
Saúl Craviotto (Lleida)
Francisco Cubelos (Talavera De La Reina)
Íñigo Peña (Zumaia)
Rodrigo Germade (Cangas)
Marcus Walz (Mallorca)
Antía Jácome (Pontevedra)
Isabel Contreras (Madrid)
Núria Vilarrubla (La Seu d’Urgell)
Maialen Chourraut (Lasarte-Oria)
María Portela (Cangas)
Cycling
Jofre Cullell (Santa Coloma De Farners)
Omar Fraile (Santurtzi)
Jesús Herrada (Mota Del Cuervo)
Gorka Izagirre (Ormeiztegi)
Ion Izagirre (Ormeiztegi)
Alejandro Valverde (Las Lumbreras)
Albert Torres (Ciutadella De Menorca)
Sebastián Mora (Villarreal)
David Valero (Baza)
Margarita García (Marratxí)
Ane Santesteban (Errenteria)
Rocío Del Alba-García (Villa Del Prado)
Diving
Alberto Arévalo (Madrid)
Nicolás García-Boissier (Las Palmas)
Equestrian
Francisco Gaviño (Seville)
José Garcia-Mena (Madrid)
Severo Jurado (Madrid)
Eduardo Álvarez (Madrid)
Beatriz Ferrer-Salat (Barcelona)
Fencing
Carlos Llavador (Madrid)
Field Hockey
Alejandro Alonso (Valencia)
Marc Recasens (Madrid)
Llorenç Piera (Madrid)
José Basterra (Valencia)
Albert Béltran (Madrid)
Francisco Cortés (Terrassa)
Josep Romeu (Barcelona)
Ricardo Sánchez (Madrid)
Marc Sallés (Terrassa)
Miquel Delàs (Barcelona)
Enrique González (Madrid)
Álvaro Iglesias (Madrid)
David Alegre (Barcelona)
Roc Oliva (Barcelona)
Xavi Lleonart (Terrassa)
Viçens Ruiz (Terrassa)
Pau Quemada (Logroño)
Marc Boltó (Terrassa)
Laura Barrios (Madrid)
Candela Mejías (Madrid)
María Ruiz (Madrid)
Clara Ycart (Matadepera)
Carlota Petchamé (Barcelona)
María López-García (Madrid)
Berta Bonastre (Sabadell)
Belén Iglesias (Madrid)
Lola Riera (Valencia)
Julia Pons (Terrassa)
Begoña García (Zaragoza)
Beatriz Pérez (Madrid)
Georgina Oliva (Terrassa)
Alejandra Torres-Quevedo (Madrid)
Alicia Magaz (Madrid)
Lucía Jiménez (Madrid)
Soccer
Unai Simón (Vitoria)
Óscar Mingueza (Santa Perpètua De Mogoda)
Marc Cucerella (Alella)
Pau Torres (Villarreal)
Jesús Vallejo (Zaragoza)
Martín Zubimendi (San Sebastián)
Marco Asensio (Palma)
Mikel Merino (Pamplona)
Rafa Mir (Murcia)
Dan Ceballos (Utrera)
Mikel Oyarzabal (Eibar)
Eric García (Martorell)
Álvaro Fernández (Arnedo)
Carlos Soler (Valencia)
Jon Moncayola (Garínoain)
Pedro González (Tegueste)
Javi Puado (Barcelona)
Óscar Gil (Elche)
Dan Olmo (Terrassa)
Juan Miranda (Olivares)
Bryan Gil (Barcelona)
Iván Villar (Aldán)
Golf
Adri Arnaus (Barcelona)
Jon Rahm (Scottsdale, Arizona)
Carlota Ciganda (Pamplona)
Azahara Muñoz (Ciudad Málaga)
Gymnastics
Thierno Diallo (Madrid)
Nicolau Mir (Palma)
Joel Plata (Barcelona)
Néstor Abad (Madrid)
Miguel Zapata (Las Palmas)
Laura Bechdejú (Girona)
Marina González (Malgrat De Mar)
Alba Petisco (Villarina De Los Aires)
Roxi Popa (Madrid)
Handball
Gonzalo Pérez-De Vargas (Toledo)
Eduardo Gurbindo (Pamplona)
Jorge Maqueda (Toledo)
Ángel Fernández (El Astillero)
Valero Rivera (Barcelona)
Raúl Entrerríos (Gijón)
Alex Dujshebaev (Santander)
Daniel Sarmiento (Las Palmas)
Rodrigo Corrales (Cangas)
Julen Aguinagalde (Irun)
Ferran Solé (Sant Quirze)
Adrià Figueras (Barcelona)
Viran Morros (Barcelona)
Antonio García (La Llagosta)
Aleix Gómez (Sabadell)
Gedeón Guardiola (Petrer)
Marta López (Ciudad Málaga)
Carmen Martín (Almería)
Carmen Campos (Madrid)
Silvia Arderíus (Madrid)
Silvia Navarro (Valencia)
Mercedes Castellanos (Ciudad Real)
Jennifer Gutiérrez (Elche)
Nerea Pena (Pamplona)
Lara González (Sant Pola)
Soledad López (Ciudad Málaga)
Kaba Gassama (Granollers)
Alicia Fernández (Ferrol)
Almundena Rodríguez (Las Palmas)
Ainhoa Hernández (Barakaldo)
Lysa Tchaptchet (Yaoundé, Cameroon)
Mireya González (León)
Judo
Francisco Garrigós (Móstoles)
Alberto Gaitero (Tarragona)
Nikoloz Sherazadishvili (Madrid)
Cristina Cabaña (Ciudad Málaga)
Julia Figueroa (Ciudad Córdoba)
Ana Perez (Groesbeek, The Netherlands)
María Bernabéu (Alicante)
Karate
Damián Quintero (Torremolinos)
Sandra Sánchez (Talavera De La Reina)
Pentathlon
Aleix Heredia (Madrid)
Rowing
Jaime Canalejo (Seville)
Javier García (Seville)
Manel Balastegui (Banyoles)
Caetano Horta (Madrid)
Virginia Díaz (El Astillero)
Aina Cid (Amposta)
Sailing
Ángel Granda-Roque (Las Palmas)
Joel Rodríguez (Ipa)
Juan Cardona (Madrid)
Nicolás Rodríguez (Vigo)
Florián Trittel (Sant Andreu De Llaveneres)
Jordi Xammar (Barcelona)
Diego Botín (Santander)
Iago López (Santander)
Cristina Pujol (Porto d’Aro)
Paula Barceló (Palma)
Blanca Manchón (Seville)
Patricia Cantero (Vilamoura)
Silvia Mas (Vilamoura)
Támara Echegoyen (Ourense)
Tara Pacheco (Arucas)
Shooting
Alberto Fernández (Madrid)
Fátima Gálvez (Baena)
Skateboarding
Danny León (Madrid)
Jaime Mateu (Mallorca)
Julia Benedetti (La Coruña)
Andrea Benítez (Madrid)
Climbing
Alberto Ginés (Cáceres)
Table Tennis
Álvaro Robles (Huelva)
Galyna Dvorak (Barcelona)
María Xiao (Madeira, Portugal)
Taekwondo
Adrián Vicente (Madrid)
Javier Pérez (San Fernando De Henares)
Raúl Martínez (Elche)
Adriana Cerezo (Madrid)
Tennis
Pablo Andújar (Valencia)
Roberto Carballés (Ciudad Granada)
Pablo Carreño (Barcelona)
Alejandro Davidovich-Fokina (Fuengirola)
Paula Badosa (Begur)
Garbiñe Muguruza (Geneva, Switzerland)
Sara Sorribes (La Vall d’Uixó)
Carla Suárez (Barcelona)
Triathlon
Francisco Gómez (A Coruña)
Mario Mola (Palma)
Anna Godoy (Madrid)
Miriam Casillas (Badajoz)
Volleyball
Adrián Gavira (La Línea De La Concepción)
Pablo Herrera (Castelló De La Plana)
Elsa Baquerizo (Madrid)
Lili Fernández (Benidorm)
Water Polo
Álvaro Granados (Barcelona)
Miguel Del Toro (Seville)
Bernat Sanahuja (Terrassa)
Marc Larumbe (Barcelona)
Martin Faměra (Barcelona)
Alejandro Bustos (Madrid)
Unai Aguirre (Barcelona)
Daniel López (Barcelona)
Alberto Munárriz (Pamplona)
Francisco Fernández (Madrid)
Roger Tahull (Barcelona)
Felipe Perrone (Rio De Janeiro, Brazil)
Blai Mallarach (Olot)
Laura Ester (Barcelona)
Marta Bach (Mataró)
Anni Espar (Barcelona)
Beatriz Ortiz (Terrassa)
Roser Tarragó (Barcelona)
Elena Ruiz (Rubí)
Clara Espar (Barcelona)
María Peña (Madrid)
Judith Forca (Sabadell)
Irene González (Barcelona)
María García (Barcelona)
Paula Leitón (Terrassa)
María Sánchez (Terrassa)
Weightlifting
Marcos Ruiz (A Coruña)
David Sánchez (El Ejido)
Andrés Mata (Valencia, Venezuela)
Lidia Valentín (Ponferrada)
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marilynngmesalo · 6 years ago
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Luis Suarez to Antoine Griezmann: Stop pretending to be Uruguayan
Luis Suarez to Antoine Griezmann: Stop pretending to be Uruguayan https://ift.tt/eA8V8J Luis Suarez to Antoine Griezmann: Stop pretending to be Uruguayan
NIZHNY NOVGOROD, Russia — Luis Suarez has a message for France forward Antoine Griezmann: Stop pretending to be Uruguayan.
Griezmann likes the traditional South American drink mate, he speaks Spanish like someone from Uruguay and he’s been pictured wearing the team’s jersey.
The Atletico Madrid player has a special fondness for Uruguay, leading many to believe that it will be heartbreaking for him to face the team in the World Cup quarterfinals on Friday.
Suarez is not having any of it though.
“As much as he says he’s half Uruguayan, he’s French,” the Barcelona forward said Tuesday. “He does not really know what the feeling of a Uruguayan is. He does not know about the dedication and effort to be able to succeed in football with so few people. ”
Uruguay’s population is about 3.5 million, while France’s is around 67 million.
“He will have his habits, his way of speaking, but (not) the feeling … we feel differently,” Suarez said.
“I do not know what’s going on in his head, but this is the World Cup. There is another mentality,” said Uruguay’s record scorer, who has 53 goals in 102 appearances. “For us it’s a special game. I do not know if it is for him.”
Uruguay and France face each other in Nizhny Novgorod in search of a spot in the World Cup semifinals, and Griezmann will try to penetrate a Uruguayan defence led by two of his teammates and close friends at Atletico Madrid, Juan Maria Gimenez and Diego Godin.
The latter is the godfather of Griezmann’s daughter.
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Griezmann’s affection for Uruguay started about a decade ago. He made his first division debut in 2009 for Real Sociedad under the direction of Uruguayan coach Martin Lasarte. He also established a close relationship there with Carlos Bueno, another Uruguayan.
It was from Lasarte and Bueno that Griezmann learned how to drink mate. The Frenchman also became a fan of Uruguayan club Penarol and learned the chants sung among its supporters.
When he moved to Atletico, he befriended more Uruguayans: Cristian Rodriguez, then Gimenez, Godin and fitness coach Oscar Ortega.
Unlike Suarez, others believe Griezmann has grasped what it means to be from the South American country.
“Griezmann is very Uruguayan. He tries to look Uruguayan,” midfielder Nahitan Nandez said. “It could be a very special match for him. We hope that he behaves well on the field and that he remembers that he is Uruguayan.”
The Frenchman has said he’s an admirer of Uruguay forward Edinson Cavani, according to media reports.
But it’s not clear if they will see each other on the field, since Cavani has a calf injury that could rule him out of the match.
Suarez had one compliment for Griezmann, saying he has a “brilliant left foot.” But he went on to praise Griezmann’s partner in attack, Kylian Mbappe.
“He’s a very good player, like (Thierry) Henry a few years ago,” he said. “He’s an important player, but France isn’t just one player.”
While Godin and Gimenez will try to stop Griezmann, Suarez’s objective is to get past Barcelona teammate Samuel Umtiti.
“I’ve always joked … that I wanted to face Umtiti at the World Cup — and it came true,” Suarez said, adding that Uruguayan players are feeling good physically after four matches.
“You have exams 48 hours after the games,” he said. “And mine after the match against Portugal ” in the round of 16 “was better than those of the first three games. We are well prepared.”
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ultrasfcb-blog · 6 years ago
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World Cup 2018: The making of Uruguay and Barcelona forward Luis Suarez
World Cup 2018: The making of Uruguay and Barcelona forward Luis Suarez
World Cup 2018: The making of Uruguay and Barcelona forward Luis Suarez
The making of Uruguay’s Suarez
“The story of love was an objective, more important than being successful in football.”
Luis Suarez: serial winner, prolific goalscorer, headline-maker and, probably less well known, a romantic who left South America as a teenager to follow his childhood sweetheart to Europe.
The 31-year-old has won the Champions League and multiple La Liga titles with Barcelona, claimed the Premier League Golden Boot and Player of the Year trophy with Liverpool, and is Uruguay’s all-time leading scorer.
But his footballing tale begins with him borrowing boots in Montevideo, and is one motivated by the constant desire to reunite with girlfriend Sofia after her family moved to Barcelona when he was 16.
From joining Urreta as a seven-year-old to becoming one of the game’s most sought-after talents at Ajax, BBC Sport explores the making of Suarez with those who knew him best.
‘Crafty kid in borrowed shoes’
Luis Suarez is Uruguay’s all-time record goalscorer
Suarez was born in Salto in January 1987, moving to Montevideo aged seven with his parents and six brothers. It was here he began playing “baby football” for Urreta FC.
Pablo Parodi, friend and neighbour of the Suarez family in Montevideo: “He was a quiet kid, he wasn’t someone who would stand out. He always spent time with his brothers. He was very relaxed, very quiet, very respectful. But he had his personality, he was also a little crafty.
“Sometimes he’d come to the bakery, wolfing down a cake or something sweet, so he didn’t have to share with his brothers because there were loads of them.
“At the weekends they’d go to the pitches and play at Urreta. They’d go out early and get back late at around seven or eight at night, all wiped out – they’d come back pleased because they always won and there were goals.
“They were a very close family. In terms of money, they were very poor. They didn’t have a lot and work was down to the mother.”
Antonio di Candia coached Suarez when at Urreta: “He’d come here with his mother and his brother and he played on Saturdays, so they’d spend the entire day here.
“He’d moved from Salto and generally the children are quieter and don’t say as much. He didn’t speak much, but on the pitch he was pretty unbearable.”
Wilson Piris, Suarez’s first agent: “His brothers, all of his family, they were very humble, yet were working people with drive and I think he soaked all that up at home.
“Sometimes he didn’t have shoes and played with ones he’d borrowed. If you needed to get shoes for him, you got shoes for him. He’d often walk to training to save money and take it home.
“At 12 years of age, these aren’t things that everyone would do. Luis had that personality, to help at home in a way he felt he could at that moment. And then at the weekend, he earned money from us for goals.
“We’d laugh because we’d always have ‘bets’ to encourage him. And, as you could imagine, for him to help his family was the most valuable thing there was.”
Already dreaming of Barcelona
Suarez fulfilled a long-held dream of signing for Barcelona in 2014
The youngster’s ability caught the eye of one of Uruguay’s biggest clubs, Nacional, and he joined the Montevideo-based side’s youth set-up as a 14-year-old.
Di Candia: “Luisito was already standing out as a goalscorer. Sometimes games would end 5-0, 8-0, 8-2, and he’d get four or five goals. So the signs were already there that he was going to be a great player.
“He was really strong and he had a temper back then, just like now. Luisito would argue with his team-mates if they didn’t pass to him, over a free-kick, a penalty. He had a fiery temper.”
Piris: “There were few of us who really believed in Luis, because he had a very particular personality and playing style. He was the type of kid who would fall over the ball and, where other kids would miss the target, Luis would score.
“I suspected he might make it and have that future, because he said that he was going to play for Barcelona.
“I’d always say the same to him: ‘What are you talking about, playing at Barcelona, when you’re a sub in the seventh team at Nacional? There’s no way you can make it.’ And that was his personality, in that he always thought he would get there.”
Mario Rebollo, who first spotted Suarez playing for Nacional Under-15s while he was coaching Montevideo Wanderers: “Luis was part of a really good crop of players at Nacional.
“He wasn’t the outstanding player that he is today, but he played in a strikeforce with Martín Cauteruccio, Bruno Fornaroli and this was the best generation of players out of all of the teams around here.
“Then we saw each other again two years later, in 2004. I moved on to be assistant coach to Santiago Ostolaza, who was the coach of Nacional, and that pre-season we made Luis come back from Spain.
“Luis was going out with Sofia and he still holds it against me to this day that we made him report for pre-season training, cut short his holiday, and then didn’t pick him for the first-team squad.”
‘This kid has a long way to go’
Suarez would soon break into the first team, making his debut as an 18-year-old and scoring 10 times in 27 matches as Nacional won the Uruguayan title.
Martin Lasarte, who handed Suarez his debut at Nacional: “The first time I saw Luis was arriving at the pitches for a training session. It was a double session, he missed the one in the morning because he’d travelled from Spain and had been at his girlfriend’s house.
“His demeanour stood out for me, he’d come here straight from the airport. He surprised me a great deal. He had a lot of desire, willingness and was excited about the period he was about to go through.
“We quickly realised he was going to be something different. He had qualities that I hadn’t seen in older players. Perhaps there were still things to work on, he was still a rough diamond, but his potential was well above average for a kid of his age.
“He’d always talk about his dreams as we walked around the pitches, saying he was going to play for Barcelona. At 18 years of age I thought, ‘this kid has got a long way to go’, but obviously he made it.”
Diego Arismendi, a team-mate of Suarez at Nacional and Uruguay: “You could see that he was destined for great things. In the Under-20 national team he was one of the oldest, so he had to be one of the more responsible ones.
“With those closest to him his personality is that of someone who likes to joke around, but not so much within that group because he was one of those that had to behave more responsibly.”
Lasarte: “Once he started playing regularly, he immediately gave you the impression he was a player who, instead of being 18, was 25 or 26. He made decisions, he got stuck into opponents, making them angry.
“He wasn’t intimidated, he didn’t get scared if a senior player hit him or got in his ear. In fact, he wanted more. He got angry with himself when he didn’t score, even if they were winning.”
An ‘impulse buy’, Suarez moves for love
Rons Jans (right) was manager of Groningen when the Dutch side signed Suarez from Nacional
In 2006 Groningen sent scouts to Uruguay to watch a transfer target – they came back with Luis Suarez after the tenacious teenager wowed the travelling Dutch contingent. But Suarez had more than football reasons for wanting a transfer to Europe…
Lasarte: “He started telling me about his girlfriend and the distance, which was the only thing that separated them because they were really very in love. The story of love was an objective in itself. It was probably more important than being successful in football, because it was very powerful.
“He’d always mention she was far away, and he missed her, or they missed each other. If there was a chance to see each other they did.”
Former Groningen head coach Ron Jans: “It was my holiday at the beginning of June and I got a phone call from my director: ‘we are going to buy the most expensive player we have ever bought?’ He is always very impulsive.
“It was a mistake, because they went to Uruguay for another player. They went to a game, saw Luis Suarez and said: ‘We want him!’ In those times, the data scouting wasn’t there. So it was an impulse buy. It’s been one of the best decisions the club ever made.”
Rebollo: “He did the impossible. Sofia lived in Barcelona – it wasn’t your everyday relationship – and he did whatever he could to be close to her.”
Overweight and out of the side
Suarez made his debut for Uruguay while with Groningen and was sent off in a 3-1 win over Colombia
Having completed the £720,000 purchase, Groningen allowed Suarez extra time off after his season ended with Nacional. He arrived overweight, but keen to learn Dutch and integrate into the side.
Jans: “He came late in pre-season. It was better in the long term because your body and mind need a break. But he was too heavy. So I told him he wasn’t in the starting XI. He showed in one training session that he didn’t like it.
“I said to him: ‘If you train like this you will never come in the first team and if you don’t lose weight you will never play. The first task is to lose two kilos before I am serious about starting with Luis Suarez.’ It helped so much our relationship, but it also gave him motivation to do things.
“He didn’t have any patience, he wanted to start and play and score – after that it grew only better and better. In December he came in and we started with him.”
Piris: “For Luis to make that big move to Europe, and to Dutch football, was the best thing that could have happened to him. If he’d gone to a big league from the start, perhaps he would have found it a bit tougher.
“What he learned there was to play European football, that defined him and developed him much more. It showed him what it meant to play in Europe and that’s why he excelled in the way he did. Groningen was key.”
Suarez makes his own luck
Suarez scored twice and made an assist as Groningen overturned a 3-1 deficit in the last 10 minutes to beat Vitesse
Suarez forced his way into the side and finished the season with 10 goals in 29 league appearances, including two in the final 10 minutes of a 4-3 win over Vitesse. He also made his debut for Uruguay, but with the goals and international recognition came the attention of Dutch giants Ajax.
Jans: “The game before Vitesse I made a substitution and took him out. He wasn’t happy with that, I wasn’t happy with his reaction. But after that we were cheering the crowd together and it was good.
“For me the turning point was making the starting XI. Physically he needed a little bit more time, but he became known – not famous yet – as a special striker.
“He was happy here. He saw that he was getting better, and when you get appreciation from your fellow players, then you get so much confidence.
“It was all practice. After training sessions he always took free-kicks, he also loved to be the goalkeeper. In one v one we always thought he was lucky, but when 7/10 times you are lucky, it isn’t luck.”
Rebollo would work with Suarez again as Uruguay’s assistant coach: “He had a permanent desire to improve. He always wanted to get better.
“He went to Europe and became a true professional, not just in training, but in other aspects of his life that players require to be at elite level.”
Heading for Amsterdam
Suarez scored 22 goals in all competitions during his first season at Ajax
Suarez put pen to paper on a £6.75m move to Ajax in August 2007. It followed a year of impressive progress for the Uruguayan: arriving at Groningen, breaking into the first team and making his international debut.
Jans: “When you get better at Groningen you create interest from other clubs and Ajax came. It was not a good situation because he wanted to go, he wanted to leave.
“His ambition I understood. I talked to him, but the club were in negotiations with Ajax and it lasted a few weeks and there was some trouble.
“I am amazed how quick he learned on the pitch, in the dressing room, in the team but also as a person. The whole career for Luis is evolution – from Uruguay, to Groningen, to Ajax, to Liverpool, to Barcelona.”
Frank de Boer, who was coaching Ajax’s youth team when Suarez arrived: “He was a really interesting player for Ajax. Of course it helped he was at Groningen, he learned a little bit about the Dutch league, what he could expect.
“When he came to Ajax he learned to cope with the pressure of the stadium, to win every game. He coped very well, also tactically. He is a player who really adapts very quickly in all kinds of levels.
“He brings something different; energy, a winner’s mentality. You could already see at that moment he wanted to score so many goals.”
The two sides of Suarez
Suarez first met wife Sofia at the age of 15, and followed her to Europe
Suarez may have been finding the net during his early years in the Netherlands, but the forward’s feisty approach was also landing him in trouble with critics and referees.
Jans: “He is all about winning, doing everything. In Holland and England it is the same, we don’t like when you dive or ask for yellow cards.
“Off the pitch he is nice, not arrogant, simple. He always likes to make fun, make a game and he always wants to put money on it. He’s a family man, social. His first girlfriend is his wife. He’s great with his family and the kids now. He’s not in the publicity with those kind of things, just the football.”
De Boer: “He wants to score, score, score. It doesn’t matter how. If he has to cheat or something like that, it doesn’t matter. It is so important to win and to score a lot of goals. It is in his genes, maybe a little bit the South American temperament.
“He couldn’t cope with losing. That winning spirit is in his blood, especially on the pitch. He was a good example for everybody. Dennis Bergkamp was a little bit the same. It’s not cheating, but it’s how far the referee will allow you to go.
“He’s such a fantastic guy outside the pitch. One of the guys that is always friendly, first in the dressing room to say ‘hello’. That is fantastic about Luis. It’s like he switches a button and suddenly is a different person.”
Piris: “This craftiness he has always came from his will to win and this means doing anything that’s within the rules on a pitch. In Europe it’s very difficult because it’s not the done thing and we know it’s very difficult for them to understand him.”
Rebollo: “Luis is a warrior who overcomes adversity and doesn’t give up. On the other hand, he’s really sensitive, very nice, very much a family man and he’s a loveable character, too.
“He doesn’t want to lose and he moans at the referee in the training games and he fights with his opponents. That’s the way he is. That temperament kept under control is a real asset.”
Suarez has been banned for biting three times, most recently in the 2014 World Cup against Italy
It was while at Ajax that Suarez received the first of three bans for biting – a seven-game suspension for an incident with PSV Eindhoven’s Otman Bakkal.
De Boer: “It was the first real thing with him, the concentration of the media because of course you don’t do it.
“It was difficult for everyone. You want to get him up again and try to avoid those kind of things, but it is somewhere deep in him. He is much more mature now. But for everybody, especially him, it was a difficult period.
“He did some stupid things at Ajax and he did stupid things at Liverpool. Everywhere he is, he does stupid things. But he is just eager to win and to score goals – that’s also a very important quality, that’s why he reached so far and is playing for Barcelona.”
Jans: “I was afraid after that situation he would maybe lose his winning mentality on the pitch but it is still there. He is more in control now. Everybody worried it could have been the end of his career, but he learned without losing that mentality.”
Leaving Ajax as a legend
Suarez was named Footballer of the Year in his final full season at Ajax
In a three-and-a-half-year spell in Amsterdam, Suarez scored 111 goals in 159 appearances. Liverpool’s attention was piqued during his final full season at the club, when the Ajax captain scored 35 goals in 33 league games, making it 49 in all competitions as his side won the KNVB Cup and he was crowned Footballer of the Year. It prompted the Reds to pay £22.7m for the forward, with Suarez heading to Anfield in January 2011.
De Boer, who became Ajax boss at the beginning of the 2010-11 season: “He was the captain, which means the group have accepted you. He is a talent everyone loves, because he is working, fighting to win for the club. The supporters like that. Every fan wants to see 100% energy. Fighting spirit on the pitch.
“We knew he was a very good player. That he reached the level he has now, nobody could predict that. Of course, you saw a lot of talent – the heart to get on to that level. Every time he surprises you he can be better and better.
“There came a period when he was a little bit above this league. You hear the rumours Liverpool are interested and I knew when I became the new manager it was not going to take long, he was going to go to a big league somewhere else. Liverpool came, then you know he has gone and his head is already there.
“He was no problem. That is the destiny of Ajax and we have to accept that. We thanked him for everything and said ‘continue what you are doing…’.
“Everybody is proud of Luis. He is a product of Ajax, it is really here that you saw Luis could be a very interesting player for the big leagues.”
BBC Sport – Football ultras_FC_Barcelona
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365footballorg-blog · 6 years ago
Text
World Cup 2018: The making of Uruguay and Barcelona forward Luis Suarez
“The story of love was an objective, more important than being successful in football.”
Luis Suarez: serial winner, prolific goalscorer, headline-maker and, probably less well known, a romantic who left South America as a teenager to follow his childhood sweetheart to Europe.
The 31-year-old has won the Champions League and multiple La Liga titles with Barcelona, claimed the Premier League Golden Boot and Player of the Year trophy with Liverpool, and is Uruguay’s all-time leading scorer.
But his footballing tale begins with him borrowing boots in Montevideo, and is one motivated by the constant desire to reunite with girlfriend Sofia after her family moved to Barcelona when he was 16.
From joining Urreta as a seven-year-old to becoming one of the game’s most sought-after talents at Ajax, BBC Sport explores the making of Suarez with those who knew him best.
‘Crafty kid in borrowed shoes’
Suarez was born in Salto in January 1987, moving to Montevideo aged seven with his parents and six brothers. It was here he began playing “baby football” for Urreta FC.
Pablo Parodi, friend and neighbour of the Suarez family in Montevideo: “He was a quiet kid, he wasn’t someone who would stand out. He always spent time with his brothers. He was very relaxed, very quiet, very respectful. But he had his personality, he was also a little crafty.
“Sometimes he’d come to the bakery, wolfing down a cake or something sweet, so he didn’t have to share with his brothers because there were loads of them.
“At the weekends they’d go to the pitches and play at Urreta. They’d go out early and get back late at around seven or eight at night, all wiped out – they’d come back pleased because they always won and there were goals.
“They were a very close family. In terms of money, they were very poor. They didn’t have a lot and work was down to the mother.”
Antonio di Candia coached Suarez when at Urreta: “He’d come here with his mother and his brother and he played on Saturdays, so they’d spend the entire day here.
“He’d moved from Salto and generally the children are quieter and don’t say as much. He didn’t speak much, but on the pitch he was pretty unbearable.”
Wilson Piris, Suarez’s first agent: “His brothers, all of his family, they were very humble, yet were working people with drive and I think he soaked all that up at home.
“Sometimes he didn’t have shoes and played with ones he’d borrowed. If you needed to get shoes for him, you got shoes for him. He’d often walk to training to save money and take it home.
“At 12 years of age, these aren’t things that everyone would do. Luis had that personality, to help at home in a way he felt he could at that moment. And then at the weekend, he earned money from us for goals.
“We’d laugh because we’d always have ‘bets’ to encourage him. And, as you could imagine, for him to help his family was the most valuable thing there was.”
Already dreaming of Barcelona
<!–
The youngster’s ability caught the eye of one of Uruguay’s biggest clubs, Nacional, and he joined the Montevideo-based side’s youth set-up as a 14-year-old.
Di Candia: “Luisito was already standing out as a goalscorer. Sometimes games would end 5-0, 8-0, 8-2, and he’d get four or five goals. So the signs were already there that he was going to be a great player.
“He was really strong and he had a temper back then, just like now. Luisito would argue with his team-mates if they didn’t pass to him, over a free-kick, a penalty. He had a fiery temper.”
Piris: “There were few of us who really believed in Luis, because he had a very particular personality and playing style. He was the type of kid who would fall over the ball and, where other kids would miss the target, Luis would score.
“I suspected he might make it and have that future, because he said that he was going to play for Barcelona.
“I’d always say the same to him: ‘What are you talking about, playing at Barcelona, when you’re a sub in the seventh team at Nacional? There’s no way you can make it.’ And that was his personality, in that he always thought he would get there.”
Mario Rebollo, who first spotted Suarez playing for Nacional Under-15s while he was coaching Montevideo Wanderers: “Luis was part of a really good crop of players at Nacional.
“He wasn’t the outstanding player that he is today, but he played in a strikeforce with Martín Cauteruccio, Bruno Fornaroli and this was the best generation of players out of all of the teams around here.
“Then we saw each other again two years later, in 2004. I moved on to be assistant coach to Santiago Ostolaza, who was the coach of Nacional, and that pre-season we made Luis come back from Spain.
“Luis was going out with Sofia and he still holds it against me to this day that we made him report for pre-season training, cut short his holiday, and then didn’t pick him for the first-team squad.”
‘This kid has a long way to go’
Suarez would soon break into the first team, making his debut as an 18-year-old and scoring 10 times in 27 matches as Nacional won the Uruguayan title.
Martin Lasarte, who handed Suarez his debut at Nacional: “The first time I saw Luis was arriving at the pitches for a training session. It was a double session, he missed the one in the morning because he’d travelled from Spain and had been at his girlfriend’s house.
“His demeanour stood out for me, he’d come here straight from the airport. He surprised me a great deal. He had a lot of desire, willingness and was excited about the period he was about to go through.
“We quickly realised he was going to be something different. He had qualities that I hadn’t seen in older players. Perhaps there were still things to work on, he was still a rough diamond, but his potential was well above average for a kid of his age.
“He’d always talk about his dreams as we walked around the pitches, saying he was going to play for Barcelona. At 18 years of age I thought, ‘this kid has got a long way to go’, but obviously he made it.”
Diego Arismendi, a team-mate of Suarez at Nacional and Uruguay: “You could see that he was destined for great things. In the Under-20 national team he was one of the oldest, so he had to be one of the more responsible ones.
“With those closest to him his personality is that of someone who likes to joke around, but not so much within that group because he was one of those that had to behave more responsibly.”
Lasarte: “Once he started playing regularly, he immediately gave you the impression he was a player who, instead of being 18, was 25 or 26. He made decisions, he got stuck into opponents, making them angry.
“He wasn’t intimidated, he didn’t get scared if a senior player hit him or got in his ear. In fact, he wanted more. He got angry with himself when he didn’t score, even if they were winning.”
An ‘impulse buy’, Suarez moves for love
<!–
In 2006 Groningen sent scouts to Uruguay to watch a transfer target – they came back with Luis Suarez after the tenacious teenager wowed the travelling Dutch contingent. But Suarez had more than football reasons for wanting a transfer to Europe…
Lasarte: “He started telling me about his girlfriend and the distance, which was the only thing that separated them because they were really very in love. The story of love was an objective in itself. It was probably more important than being successful in football, because it was very powerful.
“He’d always mention she was far away, and he missed her, or they missed each other. If there was a chance to see each other they did.”
Former Groningen head coach Ron Jans: “It was my holiday at the beginning of June and I got a phone call from my director: ‘we are going to buy the most expensive player we have ever bought?’ He is always very impulsive.
“It was a mistake, because they went to Uruguay for another player. They went to a game, saw Luis Suarez and said: ‘We want him!’ In those times, the data scouting wasn’t there. So it was an impulse buy. It’s been one of the best decisions the club ever made.”
Rebollo: “He did the impossible. Sofia lived in Barcelona – it wasn’t your everyday relationship – and he did whatever he could to be close to her.”
Overweight and out of the side
<!–
Having completed the £720,000 purchase, Groningen allowed Suarez extra time off after his season ended with Nacional. He arrived overweight, but keen to learn Dutch and integrate into the side.
Jans: “He came late in pre-season. It was better in the long term because your body and mind need a break. But he was too heavy. So I told him he wasn’t in the starting XI. He showed in one training session that he didn’t like it.
“I said to him: ‘If you train like this you will never come in the first team and if you don’t lose weight you will never play. The first task is to lose two kilos before I am serious about starting with Luis Suarez.’ It helped so much our relationship, but it also gave him motivation to do things.
“He didn’t have any patience, he wanted to start and play and score – after that it grew only better and better. In December he came in and we started with him.”
Piris: “For Luis to make that big move to Europe, and to Dutch football, was the best thing that could have happened to him. If he’d gone to a big league from the start, perhaps he would have found it a bit tougher.
“What he learned there was to play European football, that defined him and developed him much more. It showed him what it meant to play in Europe and that’s why he excelled in the way he did. Groningen was key.”
Suarez makes his own luck
<!–
Suarez forced his way into the side and finished the season with 10 goals in 29 league appearances, including two in the final 10 minutes of a 4-3 win over Vitesse. He also made his debut for Uruguay, but with the goals and international recognition came the attention of Dutch giants Ajax.
Jans: “The game before Vitesse I made a substitution and took him out. He wasn’t happy with that, I wasn’t happy with his reaction. But after that we were cheering the crowd together and it was good.
“For me the turning point was making the starting XI. Physically he needed a little bit more time, but he became known – not famous yet – as a special striker.
“He was happy here. He saw that he was getting better, and when you get appreciation from your fellow players, then you get so much confidence.
“It was all practice. After training sessions he always took free-kicks, he also loved to be the goalkeeper. In one v one we always thought he was lucky, but when 7/10 times you are lucky, it isn’t luck.”
Rebollo would work with Suarez again as Uruguay’s assistant coach: “He had a permanent desire to improve. He always wanted to get better.
“He went to Europe and became a true professional, not just in training, but in other aspects of his life that players require to be at elite level.”
Heading for Amsterdam
<!–
Suarez put pen to paper on a £6.75m move to Ajax in August 2007. It followed a year of impressive progress for the Uruguayan: arriving at Groningen, breaking into the first team and making his international debut.
Jans: “When you get better at Groningen you create interest from other clubs and Ajax came. It was not a good situation because he wanted to go, he wanted to leave.
“His ambition I understood. I talked to him, but the club were in negotiations with Ajax and it lasted a few weeks and there was some trouble.
“I am amazed how quick he learned on the pitch, in the dressing room, in the team but also as a person. The whole career for Luis is evolution – from Uruguay, to Groningen, to Ajax, to Liverpool, to Barcelona.”
Frank de Boer, who was coaching Ajax’s youth team when Suarez arrived: “He was a really interesting player for Ajax. Of course it helped he was at Groningen, he learned a little bit about the Dutch league, what he could expect.
“When he came to Ajax he learned to cope with the pressure of the stadium, to win every game. He coped very well, also tactically. He is a player who really adapts very quickly in all kinds of levels.
“He brings something different; energy, a winner’s mentality. You could already see at that moment he wanted to score so many goals.”
The two sides of Suarez
<!–
Suarez may have been finding the net during his early years in the Netherlands, but the forward’s feisty approach was also landing him in trouble with critics and referees.
Jans: “He is all about winning, doing everything. In Holland and England it is the same, we don’t like when you dive or ask for yellow cards.
“Off the pitch he is nice, not arrogant, simple. He always likes to make fun, make a game and he always wants to put money on it. He’s a family man, social. His first girlfriend is his wife. He’s great with his family and the kids now. He’s not in the publicity with those kind of things, just the football.”
De Boer: “He wants to score, score, score. It doesn’t matter how. If he has to cheat or something like that, it doesn’t matter. It is so important to win and to score a lot of goals. It is in his genes, maybe a little bit the South American temperament.
“He couldn’t cope with losing. That winning spirit is in his blood, especially on the pitch. He was a good example for everybody. Dennis Bergkamp was a little bit the same. It’s not cheating, but it’s how far the referee will allow you to go.
“He’s such a fantastic guy outside the pitch. One of the guys that is always friendly, first in the dressing room to say ‘hello’. That is fantastic about Luis. It’s like he switches a button and suddenly is a different person.”
Piris: “This craftiness he has always came from his will to win and this means doing anything that’s within the rules on a pitch. In Europe it’s very difficult because it’s not the done thing and we know it’s very difficult for them to understand him.”
Rebollo: “Luis is a warrior who overcomes adversity and doesn’t give up. On the other hand, he’s really sensitive, very nice, very much a family man and he’s a loveable character, too.
“He doesn’t want to lose and he moans at the referee in the training games and he fights with his opponents. That’s the way he is. That temperament kept under control is a real asset.”
<!–
It was while at Ajax that Suarez received the first of three bans for biting – a seven-game suspension for an incident with PSV Eindhoven’s Otman Bakkal.
De Boer: “It was the first real thing with him, the concentration of the media because of course you don’t do it.
“It was difficult for everyone. You want to get him up again and try to avoid those kind of things, but it is somewhere deep in him. He is much more mature now. But for everybody, especially him, it was a difficult period.
“He did some stupid things at Ajax and he did stupid things at Liverpool. Everywhere he is, he does stupid things. But he is just eager to win and to score goals – that’s also a very important quality, that’s why he reached so far and is playing for Barcelona.”
Jans: “I was afraid after that situation he would maybe lose his winning mentality on the pitch but it is still there. He is more in control now. Everybody worried it could have been the end of his career, but he learned without losing that mentality.”
Leaving Ajax as a legend
<!–
In a three-and-a-half-year spell in Amsterdam, Suarez scored 111 goals in 159 appearances. Liverpool’s attention was piqued during his final full season at the club, when the Ajax captain scored 35 goals in 33 league games, making it 49 in all competitions as his side won the KNVB Cup and he was crowned Footballer of the Year. It prompted the Reds to pay £22.7m for the forward, with Suarez heading to Anfield in January 2011.
De Boer, who became Ajax boss at the beginning of the 2010-11 season: “He was the captain, which means the group have accepted you. He is a talent everyone loves, because he is working, fighting to win for the club. The supporters like that. Every fan wants to see 100% energy. Fighting spirit on the pitch.
“We knew he was a very good player. That he reached the level he has now, nobody could predict that. Of course, you saw a lot of talent – the heart to get on to that level. Every time he surprises you he can be better and better.
“There came a period when he was a little bit above this league. You hear the rumours Liverpool are interested and I knew when I became the new manager it was not going to take long, he was going to go to a big league somewhere else. Liverpool came, then you know he has gone and his head is already there.
“He was no problem. That is the destiny of Ajax and we have to accept that. We thanked him for everything and said ‘continue what you are doing…’.
“Everybody is proud of Luis. He is a product of Ajax, it is really here that you saw Luis could be a very interesting player for the big leagues.”
BBC Sport – Football
World Cup 2018: The making of Uruguay and Barcelona forward Luis Suarez was originally published on 365 Football
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biglisbonnews · 2 years ago
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The US is reducing tax credits for foreign-made EV models The US Treasury Department announced new electric vehicle (EV) tax rules that will reduce or cut tax credits on EVs primarily made in foreign markets in an attempt to combat China’s growing market share in emission-free automobile production.Read more... https://qz.com/electric-vehicles-us-reducing-tax-credits-1850288096
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teleindiscreta · 7 years ago
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Diego Alonso, a un paso de ser el nuevo entrenador del Depor
Fuente original: Diego Alonso, a un paso de ser el nuevo entrenador del Depor Puedes ver más visitando Teleindiscreta - Las mejores noticias de actualidad, famosos, salud, belleza, cocina, motor, música y mucho más.
Diego Alonso está a un paso de convertirse en el nuevo entrenador del Deportivo tras la destitución de Cristóbal Parralo. El acuerdo entre el entrenador uruguayo, de 42 años, y el club coruñés está prácticamente cerrado y sólo un giro de última hora evitaría que aterrizase en A Coruña. El exjugador de Valencia o Atlético, dirige en la actualidad al Pachuca mexicano, equipo del que se desvincularía para tomar las riendas del equipo gallego con el objetivo de sacarlo del descenso.
La primera opción del Deportivo era otro uruguayo: Martín Lasarte. El exjugador deportivista se encontraba actualmente sin equipo, pero no tenía claro el proyecto que se le ofrecía, por lo que las negociaciones se enfriaron y el club herculino, ante la imperiosa necesidad de firmar a un técnico, se ha decantado por el ‘plan B’. Diego Alonso, además del Pachuca, ha entrenado al Olimpia y Guaraní en Paraguay y al Peñarol y Bellavista en Uruguay.
Fuente: AS
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