I AM FROM VENEZUELA IN WHERE THIS THE AREPA WHIT CHESSE AND CARAOTAS JAJAJA REALLY¡ VIVA VENEZUELA MI PATRIA QUERIDA.
viernes, 25 de julio de 2008
dont like and yes like
YES LIKE:
To my like the girls cute ,eat pasta and pasticho, play soccer, the black shirt, the life, the radio.
Dont like:
I DONT LIKE GREEN PANTS, THE URBE, THE TEAM BARCELONA, THE BROCCOLI, THE TENNIS, MUSIC METAL METAL AND MI MOTHER JAJAJA.
capelo wants lampard to stay with chelsea.
Capello wants Lampard to stay with Chelsea
England coach Fabio Capello hopes Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard will turn down the chance to join Internazionale and remain in London.
Inter coach Jose Mourinho has made no secret of his desire to take the England international to Italy, but Chelsea have so far not budged in their stance of rejecting all offers for the player.
And Capello believes it would be in the best interests of the English national team if Lampard stays where he is.
'As England coach I would prefer it if Lampard remained in England. He would have less travelling to do that way,' he told Italian newspaper La Repubblica.
Capello also lamented the lack of talent available to him in the Premier League, compared to the amount of Italian players his counterpart Marcello Lippi has to chose from in Serie A.
'I'm worse off than Lippi, than everyone. I have Welsh players, Scottish, Irish,' he continued. 'In the Premier League only 35% of the players are English. In Italy it's about 72%.'
Despite the setbacks Capello hopes to make 'an impact' on the World Cup with England in 2010, and reiterated that the England job will be his last in football.
'I will complete my contract with England, but my time in the dugout will end with my England experience,' he said. 'However, I would like to end my career having made an impact at a World Cup.'
The former AC Milan, Real Madrid, Roma and Juventus coach also reiterated that 33-year-old David Beckham still has a future with the England team.
Capello said: 'As long as he's at the level to play, he'll play.'
On his own national team, Capello came to the defence of former Italy boss Roberto Donadoni, who left his role at the helm following a below-par performance at Euro 2008.
The former AC Milan and Italy midfielder was blamed in the Italian media for the Azzurri's failure to repeat their success from the World Cup two years ago, but Capello decided instead to place the blame on out-of-sorts striker Luca Toni.
When asked where Donadoni had gone wrong, Capello replied: 'Toni went wrong. He used up all his goals in the German league (where he finished top scorer with Bayern Munich).
'In the European Championships he had so many chances and he didn't take any of them.'
England coach Fabio Capello hopes Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard will turn down the chance to join Internazionale and remain in London.
Inter coach Jose Mourinho has made no secret of his desire to take the England international to Italy, but Chelsea have so far not budged in their stance of rejecting all offers for the player.
And Capello believes it would be in the best interests of the English national team if Lampard stays where he is.
'As England coach I would prefer it if Lampard remained in England. He would have less travelling to do that way,' he told Italian newspaper La Repubblica.
Capello also lamented the lack of talent available to him in the Premier League, compared to the amount of Italian players his counterpart Marcello Lippi has to chose from in Serie A.
'I'm worse off than Lippi, than everyone. I have Welsh players, Scottish, Irish,' he continued. 'In the Premier League only 35% of the players are English. In Italy it's about 72%.'
Despite the setbacks Capello hopes to make 'an impact' on the World Cup with England in 2010, and reiterated that the England job will be his last in football.
'I will complete my contract with England, but my time in the dugout will end with my England experience,' he said. 'However, I would like to end my career having made an impact at a World Cup.'
The former AC Milan, Real Madrid, Roma and Juventus coach also reiterated that 33-year-old David Beckham still has a future with the England team.
Capello said: 'As long as he's at the level to play, he'll play.'
On his own national team, Capello came to the defence of former Italy boss Roberto Donadoni, who left his role at the helm following a below-par performance at Euro 2008.
The former AC Milan and Italy midfielder was blamed in the Italian media for the Azzurri's failure to repeat their success from the World Cup two years ago, but Capello decided instead to place the blame on out-of-sorts striker Luca Toni.
When asked where Donadoni had gone wrong, Capello replied: 'Toni went wrong. He used up all his goals in the German league (where he finished top scorer with Bayern Munich).
'In the European Championships he had so many chances and he didn't take any of them.'
viernes, 11 de julio de 2008
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