Official Football Highlights: Denmark 1 – 2 England 09/02/11



FATV – Goals from Darren Bent and Ashley Young secure 2-1 win in Denmark.

England got 2011 off to a winning start in Copenhagen, putting in a competent and impressive performance to see off Denmark and head into next month’s European Championship qualifier with Wales in good spirit.

Goals from Aston Villa duo Darren Bent and Ashley Young proved the difference after falling behind to an early goal from Denmark but it was England’s controlling display in the second half which will please Manager Fabio Capello the most.

The Three Lions retained possession well and could even have added to their goal tally, but after the disappointment of their last game with France in November, a win was the main objective here and that was exactly what they achieved.

England Team Sheet:

Joe Hart
Glen Johnson
Ashley Cole 81′
Michael Dawson 60′
Jack Wilshere 46′
John Terry
Theo Walcott 68′
James Milner
Frank Lampard(C) 46′
Darren Bent 10′
Wayne Rooney 46′
Substitutes
Ashley Young 46′ 68′
Gareth Barry 46′
Joleon Lescott
Gary Cahill 60′
David Stockdale
Kyle Walker
Stewart Downing 68′
Scott Parker 46′
Jermain Defoe
Leighton Baines 81′
Carlton Cole
Robert Green

Peter Schmeichel – Manchester United Legend

Born in Denmark in 1963 Peter Schmeichel became one of Manchester United’s greatest goalkeepers. In eight years at the club Schmeichel won five league titles, three FA Cups, the League Cup, Super Cup and the Champions League.

Schmeichel signed for Manchester United in 1991 from Danish side Brøndby for a fee of £530,000. The team had won four Danish First division league titles in five seasons and had reached the semi-finals of the 1991 UEFA Cup. Schmeichel had also become the first choice goalkeeper for the Danish national side, and his talents were noted when he played at the 1988 European Football Championships in Germany.

During Peter Schmeichel’s first season Manchester United finished second in the league to the winners Leeds United, but they won silverware that season by winning the League Cup final for the first time when they beat Nottingham Forest 1-0.

During the summer of 1992 Schmeichel played for Denmark as they won the European Championships in Sweden by beating Germany 2-0 in the final, he had an outstanding tournament and was voted as the Worlds Best Goalkeeper for 1992.

The following season United won the Premier league, which was their first league title for twenty six years. Schmeichel kept 22 clean sheets as United won the league by a massive ten points, and he was again named as the worlds best goalkeeper.

The 1993-94 season saw United retain the premier league title and this time add the FA Cup, by beating Chelsea 4-0 in the final.

The Reds were everyone’s favourite to win the title for a third consecutive year during the 1994-95 season, but they lost out to Blackburn in the Premier league and lost the FA Cup final to a determined Everton side, who secured a 1-0 victory, to leave United trophy less that season.

During the 1995-96 season United claimed a second double by reclaiming the premier league title overturning Newcastle who had a 10 point lead over them at Christmas. United beat old rivals Liverpool 1-0 in the FA Cup final. This season famously saw Peter Schmeichel score his first and only goal for United as he scored with a header in a UEFA Cup match. Schmeical was renowned for making runs into the opposition half or coming forward for late free kicks or corners in an attempt to secure a winning goal or late equaliser. In total he scored 11 goals during his career, including a goal for Denmark. A remarkable achievement for a goalkeeper.

1999 was probably Schmeical’s best season at United as they secured the premier league and FA Cup and then faced Bayern Munich in the Champions League Final, coming back from 1-0 in the last minutes of the game to win 2-1. Schmeichel who was captain on the night in the absence of Roy Keane and he made a string of fine saves to keep United in the match and ultimately win the trophy.

The Champions League Final turned out to be Peter Schmeichel’s last game for Manchester United as he decided to leave English football at the age of 36 and he joined Sporting Clube de Portugal. He later returned to the Premier League to play for Aston Villa and then Manchester City. In total he made 398 appearances for Manchester United and will always be remembered as a true legend.

Biotechnology and Colours

Biotechnology and the world of colours have always been intertwined. Nature’s hues and tints are captured in their natural or synthetic state in a variety of market products. The flower markets of natural blood-red roses and gene-designed blue roses recently released in Japan are apt examples.

To-date notwithstanding the awe-inspiring snip and tuck techniques of genetic engineering, the legendary ‘Black Tulip’ of French author Alexander Dumas still remains the ‘Holy Grail of the Tulip world’. Several types from ‘Tulip Queen of Night’ (1944) to T.’Black Hero’ (1984) constitute ‘the category of the ‘blackest of the officially ‘purple’ tulips’.

Nature’s wealth of colours have inspired celebrity painters and poets —French-born Hillarie Belloc describes in verse the morphology of The Microbe with its ‘seven tufted tails with lots of pink and purple spots.’; and schoolchildren to explore the microbial world through the ‘looking-glass’ of Winogradsky’s column with its purple and green bands —consortia of the green and purple photosynthetic bacteria. Blue-green cyanobacteria contribute to the economy of Nature’s important biogeochemical Cycles-the nitrogen cycle.

The Red Sea may derive its colour and name from the red-cyanobacterium — Trichodesmium erythraeum, but the destruction of numerous fish is due to the Red Tide population of the plant-like red-brown dinoflagellates. Pigments help classify the brown, yellow, red and green algae; and protozoa and yeasts such as Euglena and Pichia. Nature’s colour artistry occurs throughout the biospectrum incorporating interalia green and purple bacteria, antibiotic-producing species of Streptomyces and Nocardia, fungi that color cheeses, blue-green anoles, rainbow papaya and trout, and green fluorescent proteins responsible for the coloration of diverse corals and anemones. Green, yellow, orange-red and purple-blue chromoproteins are the raison d’etre of fabled reef colours varying in the spectrum of daylight conditions.

Verily, Nature’s palette of pigments and paints underscores the need of bioresources centres to capture, classify and conserve the planet’s biotreasury lest extinction result from benign neglect and commercial exploitation.

‘Biomimicry…… is a new science that studies nature’s best ideas and then imitates these designs and processes to solve human problems. ……Organisms use two methods to create colour without paint: internal pigments and the structural colour that makes tropical butterflies, peacocks, and hummingbirds so gorgeous. A peacock is a completely brown bird. Its «colours» result from light scattering off regularly spaced melanin rods, and interference effects through thin layers of keratin (the same stuff as your fingernails).’

New military clothing uses fluorescent colours, biosensors and bioinformatics at the nano-level to mimic natural phenomena of biomimicry and chameleonic colours. Geofabrics coloured for appropriate use contribute to landscape and urban management — conservation of golf courses and park-lawns, and safeguarding creative and aesthetic instinct of humankind is embedded in of soil embankments and floral gardens.

The clean and green technologies. The first biodegradable green credit card was issued in 1997. ‘Coral proteins put on the red light’ in marine waters, and coloured glow fish function as indicators of pollution in aquatic reservoirs. Colours used in biotextile grafts make attractive and acceptable use of bioceramic materials in dentistry, medicine orthopaedics, tissue engineering and veterinary science.

Genetic research has contributed to understanding human eye and skin colour. The genesis of coat colours of cats, dogs, rabbits, ponies, etc. has been deciphered. The head colour of birds too. Coat colour alleles are used to produce sublines of mice for studies concerning ageing, cancer, cardiovascular, neurobiological and reproductive biology. The Big Blue mouse is used to research cancer and neurodegenerative disease. Yellow mice help localize gene mutations on specific chromosomes.Custom-made mice — the albino, cream, brown and black models are research keys studying tumour biology. Indeed, ‘the ability to follow coat colours’ requires ‘no complicated tools such as molecular genotyping’ in ‘the breeding and maintenance of mutant strains.’

Colours inspire, motivate and uplift humankind. Clinics and psychological facilities use soothing colours to aid convalescents. Colours exist in sports too. Winners express a sense of national achievement and pride in draping themselves in their national flags. In EURO 2004 – soccer and biopsychology met. To enhance local psychobiological advantage and patriotism the coach of the home team requested fans ‘to wear something red or green’ their national colours ‘toface the orange shirts’ of their opponents’ in a qualifying match.

Corporate biotech is engaged in ‘chasing the rainbow.’ Former Vice-President Al Gore envisioned the ‘pot of gold at the end of the biotechnology rainbow.’ Entrepreneurs, however, focus their quest ‘somewhere over the genetic rainbow’. UN policy-makers use colour-codes in combating, and designing solutions to problems of hunger and poverty. The UN Economic Commission for Africa in 2002 described ‘Realizing the Promise of Green Biotechnology for the Poor’ and ‘Tackling the Diseases of Poverty through Red Biotechnology’ —technologies that involve using genetically-engineered mosquitoes with the potential to eradicate malaria; and gene modified foods —golden rice and orange bananas, enriched with vitamin A to counteract the onset of blindness.

‘Ethical challenges of green biotechnology for developing countries’ arise, and, ‘whether transgenic plants should carry distinguishing markers, such as distinguishing colours, so that they can be identified and not intermixed with other plants of the same species’ is under review for use in regulatory work. In space biology research, transgenic plants using blue and green colours are being developed as biosensors to indicate presence of certain kinds of stress.

Nutritionists talk of a rainbow diet rich in micronutrients and vitamins that make food naturally attractive and appetizing for a ‘good feel’status. Traditional medicine recommends eating naturally coloured foods possessing natural phytonutrients in their skin ingredients. A judicious choice of red (meat), green (salads), yellow (cereals and fruits) and violet (vegetables) foods contributes to the sustenance of long-term good health in combating artificial diabetes and obesity. Blue cheese and black truffles are delicacies without added food colorants; and supermarkets may soon offer carrots in red and purple with the orange variety. ‘Research into different coloured carrots is not about making a fashion statement but about potential health improvements’.

In agro-trade, traffic-colours of amber and green define policies that distort trade of certain commodities. Amber box policies signify ‘caution’ relating to ‘price supports, marketing loans and subsidies, and livestock quantities’. Green box policies cover ‘research, pest and disease control, and crop insurance and conservation programs’. Blue box policies –a temporary WTO category that accommodates transatlantic negotiations, are ‘redefined amber box policies concerning production limiting programs’.

Biotechnologies described in colours spotlight salient aspects of research for economic development. The Cordia-EuropaBio Convention 2003 in Vienna in ‘Blue Biotechnology – Exploitation of Marine Resources’ focused on the ‘Ocean of Opportunities’ for sustaining development through rational use of marine bioresources. Europe’s catalytic role in ‘Green Biotechnology in Africa’ resides in collaborative biotech education, research, development, and market ventures.

In January 2004, a European Commission meeting at the Biosciences ‘Technology Facility’, University of York, UK, recognized that any ‘biotechnology platform, developing bio-based products would have to be a concerted marriage of the ‘White’ together with the ‘Green’ and ‘Blue’ biotechnology sectors’. Unlocking of bottlenecks could be achieved through programmes utilizing ‘the synergies between green, white and blue biotechnologies.’

In 2005, the 12th European Biotechnology Congress will use 4 biotech motors: white (industrial); red (pharmaceutical), green (food and feed) and blue (environment) in ‘Bringing Genomes to Life’ in Denmark.

The use of colour codes is seemingly the lingua franca of science policy in Germany. Sixty percent of the 253 biotechnological firms with some 43,000 employees in a survey by Hessen’s Ministry of Economy were specializing in red biotechnology (diagnosis and treatment of diseases); 4% were specializing in green biotechnology (agriculture, food production); and, 1% was in grey biotechnology (pure industrial processes with an environmental nuance). In Baden-Württemberg, over half of the biotech companies excel in red biotechnology with smaller numbers in the grey and green sectors. German market studies emphasize the white and red biotechnologies. Red biotechnology accounts for some 86% of all biotech companies. Green biotechnology with 27% is followed by grey biotechnology with 10%.

In the USA, a 5 colour-coded security system from green (low) through blue (guarded), yellow (elevated), and orange (high) to red (severe) has been decreed. Adoption of protective and self-defense responses involves all levels of vigilance and preparedness to combat and neutralize the threats of terrorism and those of bioterrorism that aim at destruction of that country’s security and its peoples. Colour alert systems for air pollution (USA) and inclement weather (Mozambique) are indicators of time available for precautionary action by people susceptible to asthmatic and respiratory diseases as well as in offsetting loss of life and bioeconomic resources.

In satire, a ‘five (colour) level Mad Cow alert’ exists. The alert levels range from eating cow parts (green) through limited beef consumption (blue) and exercise of planned protective measures (yellow) to symptomatic mooing and chewing of the cud (orange) to a switch to fermented food – tofu (red).

Using colours to describe biotechnology constitutes a new mechanism in:

– attracting school children to the microbial world in different environments;

– teaching biotechnology in graduate and medical schools; and

– providing sound bytes for use by non-technical policy-makers promoting the biotech powerhouse for sustainable development.

Dr. R. Colwell, Director, US National Foundation at a US-EC Biotech meeting in 2003 said: «If we could weave a Flag of Biotechnology, some say, it would feature three colours: red for medical applications, green for agricultural and white for industrial. In fact this flag may accrue even more colours over time as environmental and marine biotech and other applications add their stripes’.

In that context, the colour index below may be a useful guide with further additions as biotechnology and colours intertwine over time in promoting public perception and understanding of biotech applications for the cause of science, development, and the current and post human future of humankind.

Color Type Area of Biotech Activities

Red – Health, Medical, Diagnostics

Yellow – Food Biotechnology, Nutrition Science

Blue – Aquaculture, Coastal and Marine Biotech

Green – Agricultural, Environmental Biotechnology – Biofuels, Biofertilizers, Bioremediation, Geomicrobiology

Brown – Arid Zone and Desert Biotechnology

Dark – Bioterrorism, Biowarfare, Biocrimes, Anticrop warfare

Purple – Patents, Publications, Inventions, IPRs

White – Gene-based Bioindustries

Gold – Bioinformatics, Nanobiotechnology

Grey – Classical Fermentation and Bioprocess Technology

England 4-1 Denmark, U16s Development Tournament



England U16s roared back from Sunday’s setback against Spain as they fired four past Denmark at St. George’s Park. Kenny Swain’s Young Lions could have doubled their tally such was their attacking dominance, but a double from Liverpool’s Yan Dhanda and strikes from Manchester United’s Zachary Dearnley and West Ham’s Jahmal Hector Ingram sealed their emphatic victory.

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Banner Advertising – The Importance Of Ad Placement In Increasing Web Site Traffic

Increasing web site traffic can be done effectively and somewhat inexpensively through online marketing methods like banner advertising. The key to successful banner advertising is to learn and understand the most effective methods and track what produces the best results and directs the most useful web site traffic to your web site. In this article we will discuss banner ad placement.

There are probably websites out there in cyberspace with a demographic that appeals greatly to you. You may ask yourself exactly how you can tap into the demo market of a particular web site and bring some of their web site traffic to your site. Banner advertising is the way to do this. Concentrate your search on sites that focus on a similar niche to your site without being a direct competitor. Review their pricing for banner advertising to see if buying their ad space is within your budget. You may even want to contact the site administrator or Webmaster to ask about the possibility of a banner exchange program between your two sites with the idea that both sites could generate increased web site traffic. A free banner swap with a similar niche site may save you some dollars by avoiding the need to buy high priced ad spots. It’s important to remember that banner placement is crucial to the success of your banner advertising actually increasing web site traffic. This is especially important if you are spending a lot of money for your banner advertising. Many popular high traffic websites are not one bit shy about charging a good penny for ad space on their site – so know where your banner is getting placed to ensure that the money you are throwing out will actually increase your web site traffic!

It was once believed that the most effective placement for banner advertising on any website was the very top of the page. This made sense since the banner ad is immediately visible at the very beginning of the page load and requires no scrolling. Most web visitors are likely to ignore a banner that is near the bottom of the page that requires scrolling down. Banner advertising is still a hundred times more effective with a banner advert placed at the top of the page rather than the bottom of the page, however, there is also evidence that suggests that banner advertising is most effective in increasing web site traffic when ads are placed next to the right scroll bar, usually in the lower right-hand corner of the homepage or at least 1/3 down the page. This placement may generate a higher click-through rate and increased web site traffic than ads at the top of the page. This news should be particularly good for Webmasters on a tight budget when
it comes to advertising because the ads on the right-side of the page are typically smaller dimensions than ads running at the top, which typically means cheaper banner advertising rates. So don’t feel like you have to purchase the highest priced ad, with the largest size dimensions, placed at the very top of the page, to benefit from increased web site traffic.

What Does Denmark vs Finland Tell Us About Football Today?



#EUROS2020 #ChristianEriksen
In a sobering reality check yesterday, images of Christian Eriksen down on the ground in apparent agony were broadcast across the world. Those harrowing moments were a reminder of how delicate and demanding football broadcasting is today. Our panel talks about their personal experiences with a similar situation in 2004 in Indian football. They also debate the ethics, merits and demerits of broadcasting images of a player in distress to the world.

The World’s Five Worst Olympic Countries

1. Cuba- Drugs & Scandals

Unfortunately, Cuba is already a nightmare in the Olympic Movement. Why? Since 1964, Cuba has produced athletes with a huge superiority complex and strong anti-American feeling. They have showed this anti-Olympic feeling many times. Angel Volodia Matos Fuentes, a Cuban taekwondo athlete, is the only athlete in the Olympic history that has hit a referee. This sportsman kicked a referee in the face after he lost a match at the 2008 Olympics. «We didn’t expect anything like what you have witnessed to occur. I’m at a loss for words. This is an insult to the Olympic vision, an insult to the spirit of taekwondo and, in my opinion, an insult to mankind», said Yang Jin-suk (World Taekwondo Federation secretary). Angel won a gold medal at the Summer Olympic Games in 2000.

In Atlanta in 1996, the Cuban’s women’s volleyball team quarreled with the Brazilian team during the semi-finals. This is why Regla Radameris Torres Herrera, who has received several offers to become a top fashion model in Italy, was suspended and could not play for several months. Cuban players of women’s volleyball are famous for their aggressiveness against rivals.

Cuba’s Javier Sotomayor Sanabria will be remembered as one of the worst examples in the world sports community. In 1988, Prensa Latina -Cuban news agency- announced that in its annual poll of sportswriters Javier Sotomayor was named «Cuban Athlete of the Year». He beat out Felix Savon (boxing), Jorge Fis (Judo), and Ana Fidelia Quirot (track & field). Javier, known as «Soto», was one of the most successful athletes in the history of the Cuban Revolution.

On September 8, 1988, Javier -whose country had boycotted the Summer Olympics in 1988- set a world record in the high jump. A year later he set another world record (2.45 m / 8′ 1/2″). Under the direction of Jose Godoy, a Soviet-educated professor, he won almost all his competitions in the 1990s.

In 2001, Javier Sotomayor, in one of a series of exhibitions tournaments, tested positive for a muscle-building steroid. «The decision to let him compete again is like a hit in my face», said Arne Ljungqvist (vice president of the IAAF).Two years ago, Javier also had tested positive for drugs at the 1999 Pan American Games in Winnipeg (Canada). However, he had been exonerated by the Cuban Olympic Committee. Furthermore, Fidel Castro Ruz -Cuba’s dictator- denied that Javier had taken cocaine. In an article in Granma (Communist party daily), Javier said » I’m innocent. I have only seen that substance in the movies. I´m the victim of maneuver, a dirty trick».

Unlike Ben Johnson and Linford Christie, Javier received a special treatment by the IAAF. He was banned by the IAAF for only 11 months. Thanks to this, Javier Sotomayor could compete at the 2000 Olympics, where he won a silver medal. Three European countries, Norway, Finland and Denmark, criticized this controversial decision. «If you test positive and get suspended, you shouldn’t get a reduced sentence just because you’re a famous track athlete», said Patrick Sjoberg, a former world record holder in men’s high jump.

2. Myanmar- Sports & Dictatorships

Olympic sport can unify a country like Myanmar -an Asian country which has many ethnic conflicts. However, it -pop. 52 million- has one of the world’s worst Olympic teams. In the last fifty years, three dictatorships have destroyed the Olympic spirit in this land of friendly people. For unknown reasons, Myanmar did not compete at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Canada. In 1980, Sue Khin finished in 47th place in the marathon at the Moscow Summer Games. Four years later, Myanmar -it officially changed its name from Burma in 1989- sent 1 athlete (boxer) to Los Angeles (USA). In 1996, Myanmar was represented by only 3 athletes (athletics and shooting).

At the 2006 Asian Games in Qatar, Myanmar finished 27th in the unofficial team standings (behind China, Bahrain, Hong Kong, Mongolia, Jordan, Lebanon, etc). In an interview, Khin Maung Lwin, secretary of the Myanmese Olympic Committee, said «Our NOC has worked in close collaboration with the respective national sports federations to make all the necessary preparations for participation in Doha 2006. We have selected the athletes who showed their best form and achieved top results from that 23rd SEA Games for the 15th Asian Games Doha 2006. As a founding member of the Asian Games Federation in 1949 and the Olympic Council of Asia, we believe the Asian Games is a very important tool for the development of the youth of Asia and for the promotion of international respect, friendly and goodwill…»

3. Albania – Enver Hoxha’s Legacy

What is the reason why Albania does not produce world-class athletes? Albania is well-known for its indifference to sports. It is one of the few European countries that have not Olympic champions. Albania was one of the most unsuccessful countries at the 2008 Summer Olympics in the People’s Republic of China.

Like Mao Tse-tung (Chinese dictator, 1949-1976) and Pol Pot (Cambodian tyrant, 1975-1979), Enver Hoxha did not support friendly relations with the International Olympic Committee. From 1950 to 1985, Enver Hoxha -one of the bloodiest dictators of the 20th century- gained a reputation as an anti-Olympic leader in the world. During his Maoist dictatorship, Albania boycotted seven Olympic Games (Rome ’60, Tokyo ’64, Mexico City ’68, Montreal ’76, Moscow ’80, Los Angeles ’84, Seoul ’88), seven Mediterranean Games (Beirut ’59, Naples ’63, Tunis ’67, Izmir ’71, Algiers ’75, Split ’79, Casablanca ’83) and other international events (Winter Games, World University Games, World championships, European tournaments). In 1985, two weightlifters had defected to Yugoslavia (currently Serbia).

Since 1991, the new government does not have interest in sports and recreation. This European nation is losing its best athletes, who are choosing to live abroad, and not returning to Albania. Many Greeks athletes have Albanian descent: Leonidas Sampani (weightlifting), Sawa Lika (track and field), Pyrro Dimas (weightlifting / Olympic champion, 1992, 1996, 2000), Mirela Manjani (athletics). At the World Championships in 2003, Mirela won a gold medal. Albania has been a member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) since 1959.

4.Taiwan is not Ethiopia

Who was the last world-class athlete of Taiwan? Her name: Chi Cheng (1959-1972). This Olympic ambassador has been called «the Eastern Flying antelope». At the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City, in October, she, who studied and trained in California, won a bronze medal in the 80 meter low hurdles. Two years later, she broken the world records in the 100m (11,00 seconds) and 200m (22,44 seconds) in July 1970, but she failed in the Olympic Games in 1972. Unexpectedly, she had an injury. Chi Cheng was the favorite to win the gold medal in the 200m. To prepare for the Munich Games, she competed in Asia, Europe and the United States. In 1972, she announced that she was retiring from athletics. In 1971, she was elected «World Athlete of the Year» by the Associated Press. In this election, she beat Edson Arantes do Nascimento, one of the greatest athletes of all time. Since 1972, Taiwan continues to celebrate Chi Cheng’s world records.

Unfortunately, Taiwan can not produce world-class athletes.

This Asian country -also known as ROC, Chinese Taipei, Republic of China on Taiwan or Free China- has 10,000 stadiums, 1,850 swimming pools, 1,420 tennis courts, 14,252 sports parks, more than 762 gymnasiums, nearly 9,100 basketball and handball courts, and 87 cycling tracks. With more than double the budget of Jamaica, Ethiopia and North Korea, Taiwan only has won two gold medals (1960-2008). At the 1996 Games, Chinese-Taipei sent 71 athletes and won one silver medal (tennis table).

They have not learnt the experience of South Korea, whose athletes have won 85 gold medals-its best unconventional diplomacy in the world. A good example for a country which does not have full diplomatic relations with 180 nations. Chinese Taipei -one of the developing world’s most successful democracies- is only recognized by 23 countries: Belize, Burkina Faso, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Gambia, Guatemala, Holy See, Haiti, Honduras, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Nicaragua, Palau, Panama, Paraguay, Saint Kitts & Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent & the Grenadines, Solomon Islands, Sao Tome & Principe, Swaziland, Tuvalu.

5. Iceland- A country without Olympic Champions

Iceland – a nation in the North Atlantic near the Arctic Circle- has never won an Olympic medal in the Winter Games. It is one of the oldest Olympic countries in the world (IOC member since 1921). Ranked by the United Nations as one of the richest countries in the world, Iceland has several sports facilities- indoor stadiums, winter Olympic arenas, sports parks and swimming pools. Many people can not believe that one of the richest nations in Europe can not win a winter Olympic medal. Unlike Iceland, Liechtenstein -an area the size of District of Columbia- has won two Olympic titles and 58 World championships. Iceland -it is slightly larger than South Korea- took part in 15 editions of the Winter Games between 1948 and 2006. Glíma, a traditional wrestling, is the national sport of Iceland.

References

-Agacino, Ricardo. «30 años», Cuba Internacional, Habana, diciembre de 1988

-Almanaque Deportivo Mundial 1976, editorial America, Panama,

1976 – «Castro defends fighter facing ban», The Miami Herald, August 26 2008

-Encyclopaedia Britannica Book of the Year: 1977, 1981, 1984, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Chicago

-The World Almanac and Book of Facts: 1975-2007, The World Almanac Books, New York

-Guevara Onofre, Alejandro. Enciclopedia Mundototal, editorial San Marcos, Lima, 1999

——–«La silenciosa caída del deporte cubano» (The silent fall of the Cuban sport ). Lima, 5 de septiembre del 2005

-Human Development Reports: 1996-2007

-Martinez Perez , Pedro. «Desarrollo deportivo en Cuba», Granma, Habana, 28 de mayo de 1978

-The Republic of China Yearbook. Taiwan 2002

-Urbano, Fernando.»Del Batos a Montreal», Cuba Internacional, Habana, junio de 1978

——«Derecho al deporte», Cuba Internacional, Habana, julio de 1976

-2004 Athens Official Report Volume 1, International Olympic Committee, Lausanne, 2005

-2000 Sydney Official Report Volume 2, International Olympic Committee, Lausanne, 2001

-1984 Los Angeles Official Report Volume 2, International Olympic Committee, Lausanne, 1985

-1980 Moscow Official Report Volume 2, International Olympic Committee, Lausanne, 1981

-1976 Montreal Official Report Volume 1, International Olympic Committee, Lausanne, 1977

DENMARK 23 Man Squad World Cup 2018 | Denmark Football Team 2018 Squad



Denmark Football Team 2018 Squad. DENMARK 23 Man Squad World Cup 2018. Bendtner left out as Denmark announces 23-man World Cup squad. Denmark World Cup 2018 squad and team guide.

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♦ ♦ ♦ Denmark 23 Man Squad 2018 World Cup ♦ ♦ ♦

►Coach – Åge Hareide

►Goalkeepers: Kasper Schmeichel , Frederik Ronnow , Jonas Lossl .

►Defenders – Simon Kjaer , Mathias Jorgensen , Andreas Christensen , Henrik Dalsgaard , Jannik Vestergaard , Jens Stryger Larsen , Jonas Knudsen .

►Midfielders – Christian Eriksen , Lasse Schone , Michael Krohn-Dehli , Thomas Delaney , William Kvist , Lukas Lerager.

Forwards – Andreas Cornelius , Kasper Dolberg , Martin Braithwaite , Nicolai Jorgensen , Pione Sisto , Viktor Fischer , Yussuf Poulsen .

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