Saturday, June 12, 2010

Capello not Want Blame Green


Fabio Capello played a little gamble Robert Green in the face of the United States. But the England coach refused to blame the Green because it was a blunder.

England won only one point after the United States held 1-1 at Royal Bafokeng Stadium on Sunday (06/13/2010) pm dawn. The Three Lions had superior first through Steven Gerrard scored in the third minute.

But the U.S. Green equalized after goalkeeper made a blunder. Clint Dempsey kick the ball imperfectly captured and then released the ball rolling slowly into the post.

Capello Still do not want to criticize the errors made Green. "Sometimes forwards failed to score goals and sometimes the goalkeeper makes a mistake, this is football," he said as quoted by Soccernet.

The Italian coach was also no regrets over his decision to play Green than David James and Joe Hart. In doing one mistake in the second round but he played very well, "said Capello.

Green blunder Hands, U.S. Steal One Points



Trauma of the defeat of Croatia in Euro 2008 qualifying as lifted to the surface, when a blunder by goalkeeper Robert Green makes the U.S. managed to steal one of my favorite figures from the World Cup champions.

Steven Gerrard made England ahead in the first five minutes when Heskey breakthrough bait successfully exploited Gerrard.

Ironically, late in the second round, Dempsey failed to anticipate a weak kick to perfection by Green, and the UK had failed to break the U.S. again until the long whistle.

Captain Gerrard to lead England directly with real examples in the fourth minute, when the attack with short passes ended with ingenuity anticipates Emile Heskey Gerrard's position that ran through into the penalty box, and Gerrard calmly placing the ball into the goalkeeper Tim Howard.

England were a bit complacent, and bait-bait U.S. gastric defense sometimes difficult to anticipate with perfect English, but Jozy Altidore and Oguchi Onyewu failed to take advantage of Landon Donovan's cross to butt the ball into the goalkeeper Robert Green.

Jabulani ball either because the had changed direction, or indeed one of anticipation, the United States as a land of good fortune when the kick bounced from Clint Dempsey could not arrest Green perfectly, and the ball rolled into the Green goal four minutes before the break.

This incident brings trauma such as Scott Carson's blunder when opponents Croatia in Euro 2008 qualifying recurrence, and they had difficulty penetrating the U.S. defense until the interval.

In the second half, Heskey partnership with Aaron Lennon almost sweet fruit, but Howard's successful saves in one-on-one situations.

U.S. turns against, while Carragher, who replaces Ledley King, defeated quickly with Altidore, but this time, Green is able to pay his mistake with the ball to ward off the goalposts in the 64th minute.

After that, England took the initiative more attacks, and Rooney had a motorcycle and several times threatened to attack Howard's goal, before finally getting frustrated because it failed cooked balls from the midfield the Three Lions.

U.S. again he gave a surprise for your favorite World Cup champion, having got rid of Spain in the semi-finals of the Confederation Cup in 2009.

Ronaldinho's Best Free Kick





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Friday, June 11, 2010

David Beckham's Best Free Kick


Adidas's Teamgeist World Cup ball has already been criticised by Germany and Arsenal keeper Jens Lehmann for its unpredictability, but is there any scientific basis for perennial concerns over swerving balls?

In the early 1950s a young Brazilian midfielder nicknamed Didi invented the swerving free kick. He realised that a ball kicked with spin would deflect significantly in flight.

It is no accident that the technique emerged first in the South American game. The leather ball of that era was very prone to water absorption and the weight increase made it much less responsive to the aerodynamic forces caused by the spin. This was seldom a problem in the warm, dry conditions of Brazil but a serious drawback in Europe's winter game.

Not until a ball with a synthetic, impermeable surface was introduced in the 1960s could the technique catch on. European players then became as adept as their Brazilian masters and a long line of expert free-kickers stretches from Didi to the present day.

Few can forget David Beckham's marvellous last-gasp equaliser against Greece in 2001. This wickedly swerving and dipping shot took England to the 2002 World Cup in Japan and Korea and England's recent warm-up games against Hungary and Jamaica show that Beckham is back to top form.

It took the modern science of fluid dynamics to understand exactly what happens in a swerving free kick. When a football moves through the air at low speed the air flow separates from its surface at characteristic points - see graphic 1.

A sphere is not a very efficient aerodynamic shape and when this early separation occurs turbulence is created behind the ball. Turbulence always causes drag and if things remained like this a football would be a very sluggish object when kicked.

Above a certain speed - about 12 mph for a football - a miraculous thing happens. Turbulence begins to move backwards, producing a boundary layer - a layer of very thin flow very close to the ball's surface - and this has the effect of causing the air flow to cling more closely to the ball's surface - graphic 2.

Turbulence is reduced and the drag plummets. When this happens we say that the boundary layer is "tripped" and since most of footballs' actions such as kicking or throwing take place above the critical speed the ball can be moved around in a pacey manner.

When the ball rotates - see graphic 3 - the boundary layer remains tripped but the air flow separation around the ball is distorted. Separation occurs earlier on the side rotating against the flow and later on the side rotating in the same sense as the flow. This causes a pressure differential and a deflecting force which is responsible for moving the ball in the air in a free kick.

It was not realised for many years that the boundary layer was tripped by surface "imperfections", in fact by the slight indentations where the ball's panels are joined together.

More panels means more seams and greater aerodynamic stability but panel designs have varied enormously over the years. For example, the familiar hexagon-pattern ball has 32, the classic English model 26.

The new World Cup ball, Adidas' Teamgeist, has only fourteen panels, however. Might this be the factor behind the disquiet expressed by Jens Lehmann? To see why this might be so we can take a look at a very simple object, the baseball which has only two panels separated by a continuous seam.

Baseball pitchers conventionally swerve the ball by throwing it with spin. This "curveball" is very similar to a swerving free kick and the rotating seam trips the boundary layer in much the same way as a football does.

Occasionally though, pitchers serve up a wicked delivery known as the "knuckleball". This bobs about randomly in flight and is very disconcerting for batters. It happens because pitchers throw the ball with very little spin. Then, as the limited seam rotates lazily in the air flow, it trips the boundary layer at certain points on the surface.

This causes an unpredictable deflection which may be completely reversed when another portion of the seam rotates into the critical position. The key, of course, is to ensure a very low spin rate, easier to achieve in a baseball throw than a kick. But this does occasionally happen in football and then the panel pattern can have a big influence on the trajectory.

The Teamgeist ball with its 14 panels is aerodynamically closer to the baseball than either English ball with 26 panels or the 32 panel hexagon pattern. So no problem when the Teamgeist spins but watch out if it is kicked with a very slow rotation rate.

Goalkeepers are often criticised for punching or palming away balls which are moving unpredictably, rather than catching them cleanly, but they can be forgiven if they are facing football's equivalent of a knuckleball.

There will be plenty of spectacular scoring free kicks at the forthcoming World Cup and elite performers like David Beckham, Thierry Henry and Ronaldinho must be itching to get the ball at their feet. Watch the slow motion replays for the tell-tale movement of the markings on the ball, the best indicator for revealing the kind of spin applied in the shot: sidespin for players like Henry and Ronaldinho but a vital component of topspin when Beckham unleashes his special delivery.

Most of all look for the rare occasions when the shot produces little or no rotation and the frantic efforts of the poor goalkeeper struggling to come to terms with the ball's chaotic, meandering flight path. We are in for an enthralling four weeks of football.

Dr Ken Bray will be taking part in Material World: Science of Football on Radio 4 on Thursday 8 June at 1630 BST.

Source:BBC NEWS

Cristiano Ronaldo's Best Free Kick



Cristiano Ronaldo's free-kick technique has been revealed: he is so obsessed with learning to put effect on the ball that he even practises it playing table-tennis.

Leonel Pontes, who was youth coach at Ronaldo's former club Sporting Lisbon, recalls: "He'd say, 'look boss, if you hit it this way with the bat, the ball gains this effect. This is how to do it'.

"There was no beating him at table tennis, even when he was 13 or 14. He was the same at football. He was able to say that if you touch the ball in a certain way, it would gain that direction.

"He always wanted to be the best, the strongest, the one who scored the most goals, did the best dribbles. He was terrible for challenges."

According to Pontes, Ronaldo, 23, was disappointed to be named only third best footballer in the world in Fifa's awards, but that will spur him on: "From the moment he was named third, it's a challenge. Ambitious people need challenges. At the age of 11 we saw that he had potential. His own team-mates, when he arrived, noticed the difference. They said that Cristiano played a lot. When he was a youth player the senior players asked if he could train with them.

"He's reached an unbelievable level and it's extraordinary what he's done so far. Most players who have achieved stardom did so later. For example, Luis Figo's performances grew, he reached his best level at the age of 25/26, received the Balon D'or at the age of 28 and was the best in the world at 29."

Ronaldo himself says he does not care about records as long as Manchester United beat Liverpool tomorrow and retain the Premier League title.

* Ferguson tells his players to show referees respect

He said: "I only think about maintaining the consistency of my performances."

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk