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সোমবার, মে ৩১, ২০১০

Honduras Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

HONDURAS
Group H
Manager: Rueda
Star Player : Carlos Pavon


Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 1
Best result: 1st round (1982)
All-time record: 3 games played, 0 wins, 2 draws, 1 loss
Goals for: 2, Goals against: 3
Biggest defeat: 1-0 vs. Yugoslavia in 1982
Top scorer: Hector Zelaya and Antonio Laing (1 goal)
Most appearances: Several players (3 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: Never

LIVE STREAM  HONDURAS MATCHES :    

June 16, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Honduras vs Chile
at Mbombela Stadium

June 21, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Spain vs Honduras
at Ellis Park

June 25, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group H
Switzerland vs Honduras
at Free State Stadium

Short Team Profile Honduras:
FIFA member since: 1946
Team nickname: Los Catrachos
All-time caps leader: Amado Guevara (130)
All-time leading scorer: Carlos Pavon (56)
Notable achievements: CONCACAF Championship (1981)
Legendary Player: Regarded as one his country's all-time great players, Gilberto Yearwood was a member of the Honduran team that played at the 1982 World Cup in Spain. Yearwood was the only player who earned a living outside of Honduras - the defensive midfielder played for Spanish side Real Valladolid at the time of the World Cup.
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A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Ricardo Canales Goalkeeper 1.89m 87 kg May 30, 1982
- Donis Escober Goalkeeper 1.80m 78 kg February 3, 1981
- Noel Valladares Goalkeeper 1.79m 80 kg May 3, 1977
- Victor Bernardez Defender 1.84m 82 kg May 24, 1982
- Osman Chavez Defender 1.88m 86 kg July 29, 1984
- Maynor Figueroa Defender 1.80m 85 kg May 2, 1983
- Oscar Boniek García Defender 1.75m 72 kg September 4, 1984
- Emilio Izaguirre Defender 1.77m 73 kg May 10, 1986
- Sergio Mendoza Defender 1.84m 80 kg May 23, 1981
- Johnny Palacios Defender 1.82m 77 kg December 20, 1986
- Mauricio Sabillon Defender 1.80m 82 kg November 11, 1978
- Edgar Alvarez Midfielder 1.73m 75 kg January 9, 1980
- Roger Espinoza Midfielder 1.78m 74 kg October 25, 1986
- Amado Guevara Midfielder 1.80m 75 kg May 2, 1976
- Julio Leon Midfielder 1.74m 70 kg September 13, 1979
- Ramon Nunez Midfielder 1.69m 63 kg November 14, 1985
- Wilson Palacios Midfielder 1.78m 71 kg July 29, 1984
- Hendry Thomas Midfielder 1.80m 75 kg February 23, 1985
- Danilo Turcios Midfielder 1.64m 59 kg May 8, 1978
- Walter Martinez Forward 1.65m 67 kg March 28, 1982
- Carlos Pavon Forward 1.78m 76 kg October 30, 1973
- David Suazo Forward 1.82m 75 kg November 5, 1979
- Georgie Welcome Forward 1.78m 76 kg March 9, 1985
Want to Know More About Honduras ? Read More !!
Appearances at finals:
1982 - First round

Overall record at finals: Played 3, Won 0, Drew 2, Lost 1.

Best performance: The first round of the 1982 World Cup in Spain.

Most appearances at finals: Gilberto Yearwood (1982) - 3.

Most goals at finals: Hector Zelaya, Antonio Laing (1982) - 1.

World Cup legend: Hector Ramon, nicknamed 'Eagle Chest', left his mark by scoring the country's first goal in a World Cup in 1982.

World Cup high: Drawing 1-1 with hosts Spain in the first round of the 1982 World Cup.

World Cup low: Defeat and subsequent elimination against Yugoslavia in the first round in 1982.

The story so far: After only one appearance in the World Cup, Honduras, wrapped in political turmoil during the past few months, are dreaming of a brighter future. Their sole appearance came in 1982 and they put up a creditable showing. They drew with hosts Spain and Northern Ireland, but a defeat to Yugoslavia in the final game cost Honduras a place in the second group stage.

However, the country's World Cup history will always be associated with a conflict that broke out with El Salvador in 1969. Relations had been tense due to immigration between the two neighbouring nations before rioting broke out during and after a qualifying game for Mexico 70 in San Salvador. The Salvadoran Army launched an offensive in Honduras and fighting raged on until a ceasefire was called six days later. Despite the problems running far deeper than sport, this has been labelled the 'Football War'.

Qualification: Honduras fought it out with Costa Rica to the last breath. Honduras had lost their second-to-last game against USA in the Honduran capital, and thus needed to defeat El Salvador in the final match and then hope that Costa Rica failed to earn three points on American soil.

Costa Rica had looked poised for victory after Brian Ruiz scored two goals in the first half, but the Ticos crumbled in the second half, and the game played in Washington ended in a draw, which, coupled with a 1-0 win against El Salvador, allowed Honduras to return to the World Cup by virtue of their better goal difference.

Qualifying record: GP10, W5, D1, L4, F17, A11, Pts16.

Most appearances: Noel Valladares (18).

Top goalscorer: Carlos Pavon (7).


TEAM PROFILE HONDURAS:

Honduras reached the finals of the FIFA World Cup™ for only the second time in dramatic fashion, an equaliser in the dying seconds of the USA's clash with Costa Rica triggering frantic celebrations from Los Catrachos' fans thousands of miles further south. Yet despite having squeezed into the finals, coach Reinaldo Rueda's talented team will not be going to South Africa just to make up the numbers.

The road to South Africa
Rueda's men dug deep from the off to oust Puerto Rico 6-2 on aggregate to progress to the penultimate round of North, Central America and Caribbean Zone qualifying. Once there they successfully negotiated a tricky section to qualifying for the final six-team Hexagonal round ahead of Mexico, Jamaica and Canada.

The decisive final phase could barely have got off to a worse start, however, with La Bicolor sinking to a 2-0 reverse away to fierce rivals Costa Rica. A 1-1 draw in Trinidad and Tobago and a 3-1 home win over mighty Mexico got their bid back on track, only for Honduras to suffer a narrow 2-1 defeat in the United States. A run which included wins over El Salvador (1-0), Costa Rica (4-0) and Trinidad and Tobago (4-1) and a 1-0 reverse on Mexican soil then gave Los Catrachos the opportunity to clinch their passage to South Africa in the penultimate round of qualifying against the USA.

Wasteful finishing and a resilient Stars and Stripes display contributed to a 3-2 reverse in San Pedro Sula, which meant that Honduras now had to win their final match in El Salvador and hope for a favourable result between United States-Costa Rica. And despite having clinched a 1-0 win in San Salvador, the Hondurans would have missed out on direct qualification had it not been for that last-gasp American equaliser.


The star players
Over and above the country's big-name stars plying their trade in the European game, Los Catrachos' key man in qualifying was evergreen 36-year-old forward Carlos Pavon. In typically clinical fashion, it was the well-travelled goalgetter who fired his side's winner in El Salvador to ensure their place at the African showpiece. Aided and abetted by the hugely talented David Suazo, Wilson Palacios, Julio Leon and Amado Guevara, Pavon would love nothing more than to crown his glorious international career with a goal-laden showing on the biggest stage of all.

The coach
For Honduras, qualifying phases for the FIFA World Cup qualifying had become something of a recurring nightmare. Always among the pre-event favourites, La Bicolor invariably contrived to fall short at key moments - that is until the arrival of 42-year-old Colombian strategist Rueda.

After taking the job in early 2007, his professionalism struck a chord with the powers that be in Honduran football, who gave him the time to work denied many of his predecessors. Rueda repaid that faith by guiding his adopted country to South Africa 2010 on the back of sparkling attacking football and a solid backline.

Previous FIFA World Cups
• Honduras return to global football's top table after 28 years away. Their only previous appearance at the finals came at Spain 1982.
• Under the watchful eye of then coach Jose de la Paz, Los Catrachos surprised the world by drawing 1-1 with the hosts and then with Northern Ireland, before exiting the tournament after conceding a late goal in a 1-0 defeat by the former Yugoslavia.
• On the scoresheet for Honduras at that FIFA World Cup were Hector Zelaya and Antonio Laing, against Spain and Northern Ireland respectively.

Records
• Prior to the 3-2 defeat by the United States in San Pedro Sula, Honduras had racked up an eight-game unbeaten home run in South Africa 2010 qualifying.
• Honduras conceded just 11 goals in the final Hexagonal, the best defensive record in the section.
• Veteran sharpshooter Pavon was Los Catrachos' most prolific scorer in qualifying, helping himself to an impressive seven goals in nine appearances.

What they said
"Nobody could believe it. Our game ended and we were all dejected, then we saw the row the fans were making and we realised that the USA had equalised against Costa Rica. We're so happy to be going to South Africa and we're not going to let down all those people who believed in us." Honduras striker Carlos Pavon after his team booked their passage to the 2010 showpiece.

Greece Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

GREECE
Group B
Manager: Otto Rehhagel
Star Player : Sotirios Kyrgiakos

Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 1
Best result: 1st round (1994)
All-time record: 3 games played, 0 wins, 0 draws, 3 losses
Goals for: 0, Goals against: 10
Biggest defeat: 4-0 vs. Argentina and Bulgaria in 1994
Most appearances: Several players (3 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: Never

LIVE STREAM  GREECE MATCHES :   

June 12, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group B
South Korea vs Greece
at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium

June 17, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group B
Greece vs Nigeria
at Free State Stadium

June 22, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group B
Greece vs Argentina
at Peter Mokaba Stadium

Short History of GREECE:
FIFA member since: 1927
Team nickname: Ethniki
All-time caps leader: Theodoros Zagorakis (120)
All-time leading scorer: Nikos Anastopoulos (29 goals)
Notable achievements: European Champions (2004)
Legendary Player: Anthimos Kapsis was a Panathinaikos legend who led the Athens side to the 1971 European Cup final, a 2-0 loss to Ajax.
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A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Konstantinos Chalkias Goalkeeper 1.98m 82 kg May 30, 1974
- Michalis Sifakis Goalkeeper 1.85m 77 kg December 10, 1981
- Alexandros Tzorvas Goalkeeper 1.90m 79 kg August 12, 1982
- Giorgos Galitsios Defender 1.83m 76 kg July 6, 1986
- Sotirios Kyrgiakos Defender 1.93m 81 kg July 23, 1979
- Stilianos Malezas Defender 1.92m 81 kg March 11, 1985
- Kostas Manolas Defender 1.79m 67 kg June 14, 1991
- Stergos Marinos Defender 1.78m 70 kg September 17, 1987
- Vaggelis Moras Defender 1.93m 78 kg August 26, 1981
- Avraam Papadopoulos Defender 1.86m 79 kg December 3, 1984
- Sokratis Papastrathopoulos Defender 1.83m 82 kg June 9, 1988
- Giourkas Seitaridis Defender 1.88m 76 kg June 4, 1981
- Nikos Spyropoulos Defender 1.71m 66 kg October 10, 1983
- Vassilis Torosidis Defender 1.88m 80 kg June 10, 1985
- Giorgios Tzavellas Defender 1.83m 80 kg November 26, 1987
- Loukas Vintra Defender 1.84m 76 kg February 5, 1981
- Lazaros Christodoulopoulos Midfielder 1.82m 76 kg December 19, 1986
- Giorgias Karagounis Midfielder 1.75m 69 kg March 6, 1977
- Kostas Katsouranis Midfielder 1.83m 84 kg June 21, 1979
- Grigoris Makos Midfielder 1.73m 74 kg January 18, 1987
- Sotirios Ninis Midfielder 1.73m 69 kg April 3, 1990
- Christos Patsatzoglou Midfielder 1.83m 73 kg March 19, 1979
- Athanassios Prittas Midfielder 1.83m 78 kg January 9, 1979
- Alexandros Tziolis Midfielder 1.89m 84 kg February 13, 1985
- Angelos Charisteas Forward 1.90m 82 kg February 9, 1980
- Theofanis Gekas Forward 1.79m 76 kg May 23, 1980
- Pantelis Kapetanos Forward 1.90m 82 kg June 8, 1983
- Konstantinos Mitroglou Forward 1.88m 86 kg March 12, 1988
- Dimitrios Salpingidis Forward 1.77m 72 kg August 18, 1981
- Georgios Samaras Forward 1.93m 86 kg February 21, 1985
Want To Know More About GREECE ? Continue Reading ...
Appearances at finals:
1994 - First round

Overall record at finals: Played 3, Won 0, Drawn 0, Lost 3.

Best performance: Reaching the group stage in 1994.

Most appearances at finals: Ioannis Kalitzakis (1994), Savvas Kofidis (1994), Nikos Nioplias (1994), Nikos Machlas (1994) - 3.

Most goals at finals: Greece have yet to score a World Cup goal.

World Cup high: Beating Ukraine away in their play-off second leg to seal their place at the 2010 World Cup.

World Cup low: Failing to score a single goal during their solitary appearance at the finals in 1994.

World Cup legend: None of the 1994 squad did anything to earn legendary status, but Theofanis Gekas contributed half their goals in qualification for South Africa and topped the UEFA scoring charts.

The story so far: Greece qualified for the 1994 World Cup by topping their qualification group ahead of Russia, and much was expected at their first ever finals. However, their debut ended in unmitigated disaster after they lost 4-0 to Argentina, 4-0 to Bulgaria and 2-0 to Nigeria, exiting without a point or even a goal scored.

Coach Alketas Panagoulias opted to stick with the same players who booked Greece's place at the World Cup rather than search out new talent, and he gave every member of the squad, including the three goalkeepers, a game at the tournament.

Qualification: Despite the exploits of star striker Theofanis Gekas, the top scorer in UEFA qualifying with 10 goals, Greece made hard work of a modest World Cup 2010 qualification group that included Israel, Switzerland, Moldova, Latvia and Luxembourg.

After losing home and away to group winners Switzerland, the Greeks were consigned to a play-off with Group Six runners-up Ukraine. Manager Otto Rehhagel stuck to the negative tactics that won Euro 2004 and, following a 0-0 draw in Athens, it looked like the Greeks were going out. But in Donetsk, Dimitrios Salpigidis scored a goal on the counter-attack and that was enough to send Greece to their second World Cup finals.

Qualifying record: P10, W6, D2, L2, F20, A10, Pts20.

Most appearances: Theofanis Gekas and Sotirios Kyrgiakos (11).

Top goalscorer: Theofanis Gekas (10).

TEAM PROFILE GREECE

After seemingly coming from nowhere to triumph at UEFA EURO 2004, Greece continue to defy the odds under wily coach Otto Rehhagel and have clinched qualification for only their second FIFA World Cup™ finals.

Though dismissing Rehhagel would have amounted to high treason, given the regal status ‘King Otto’ has enjoyed since victory on Portuguese soil, failure to reach Germany 2006 and a limp group-stage exit at EURO 2008 had ratcheted up the pressure on the German supremo. The Greek FA kept the faith, however, and were rewarded by qualification for their first global finals since USA 1994.

The road to South Africa
Greece kicked off South Africa 2010 qualifying in impressive fashion, picking up victories over Luxembourg, Latvia and Moldova, scoring eight times and conceding none in the process.

The 2004 European champions subsequently suffered their first loss in Group 2 when going down 2-1 at home to Switzerland, their clearest rivals for an automatic qualifying berth. After bouncing back with four points from their double-header against Israel, drawing 1-1 away and winning 2-1 at home, the Helvetians then undid the Greeks once more – this time triumphing 2-0 on Swiss soil.

Rehhagel’s troops then allowed Switzerland to extend their advantage in the standings by only drawing 1-1 in Moldova, a result that also brought Latvia back into the hunt for second. A thumping 5-2 victory over the latter in Greece’s penultimate group match virtually clinched a play-off spot, however, which was sealed by the final day 2-1 win against Luxembourg.

The European Zone play-off draw pitted captain Georgios Karagounis and Co against Ukraine, opponents who had taken four points from the Greeks in Group 2 of qualifying for Germany 2006. This time around, after a 0-0 draw in Athens, Greece grabbed a 1-0 second-leg success in Donetsk, the decisive goal coming from Dimitrios Salpingidis.

The star players
There will be no shortage of experience for the Greeks to call on come South Africa 2010. Chief among their veteran performers are defender Sotirios Kyrgiakos, who played more qualifying minutes than any other squad member, and former Inter Milan and Benfica midfielder Karagounis. Nor are they slouches going forward, boasting as they do ten-goal Theofanis Gekas - the top scorer in European Zone qualifying - and the physical presence of four-goal Angelos Charisteas, scorer of the winner in the final at EURO 2004.

The coach
South Africa 2010 will be coach Rehhagel’s first FIFA World Cup finals, where he is set to be the oldest strategist on show. After a glittering career in his homeland, the German boss has earned worldwide recognition for his achievements with the Greek national team since taking over in 2001.

With Greece having only reached one FIFA World Cup and one European Championship prior to his arrival, within three years of taking the post Rehhagel had guided the Greeks to EURO glory, before going on to clinch qualification for both EURO 2008 and South Africa 2010.


Records
• Greece will be determined to improve on their showing at USA 1994, where they sank to group-stage defeats against Argentina (4-0), Bulgaria (4-0) and Nigeria (2-0) and headed for home at the first hurdle.

• That competition on United States’ soil was the Greeks’ first and only previous appearance at the finals of a FIFA World Cup.

What they said
“The players have been rewarded for their incredible passion and competitive spirit. We said that before achieving success you need to have the Gods on your side.” Otto Rehhagel, Greece coach.

Ghana Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

GHANA
Group D
Manager: Milovan Rajevac
Star Player : Michael Essien



Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 1
Best result: 2nd round (2006)
All-time record: 4 games played, 2 wins, 0 draws, 2 losses
Goals for: 4, Goals against: 3
Biggest victory: 2-0 vs. Czech Republic in 2006
Biggest defeat: 3-0 vs. Brazil in 2006
Top scorer: Sulley Muntari, Asamoah Gyan, Stephen Appiah, Haminu Dramani (1 goal)
Most appearances: Several players (4 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: Never

LIVE STREAM  GHANA MATCHES :    


June 13, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group D
Serbia vs Ghana
at Loftus Versfeld Stadium

June 19, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group D
Ghana vs Australia
at Royal Bafokeng Stadium

June 23, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group D
Ghana vs Germany
at Soccer City Stadium

Short History of GHANA :
FIFA member since: 1958
Team nickname: The Black Stars
All-time caps leader: Abedi "Ayew" Pele (73)
All-time leading scorer: Abedi "Ayew" Pele (33)
Notable achievements: African Nations Cup Champions (1963, 1965, 1978, 1982)
Legendary Player: One of the greatest African players of all time, Abedi "Ayew" Pele is his country's scoring leader with 33 goals in a record 73 appearances. He was a key figure for Olympique Marseilles when they dominated Ligue 1, the French first division, in the early 1990s with four league titles. Voted African player of the year in 1992.
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A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Daniel Adjei Goalkeeper 1.86m 81 kg November 10, 1989
- Stephen Ahorlu Goalkeeper 1.86m 78 kg September 5, 1988
- Richard Kingson Goalkeeper 1.91m 87 kg June 13, 1978
- Lee Addy Defender 1.75m 73 kg September 26, 1985
- Ibrahim Ayew Defender 1.78m 77 kg April 16, 1988
- Samuel Inkoom Defender 1.79m 75 kg August 22, 1989
- John Mensah Defender 1.79m 81 kg November 29, 1982
- Jonathan Mensah Defender 1.88m 75 kg July 13, 1990
- John Pantsil Defender 1.80m 76 kg June 15, 1981
- Hans Sarpei Defender 1.78m 70 kg June 28, 1976
- Isaac Vorsah Defender 1.96m 85 kg June 21, 1988
- Anthony Annan Midfielder 1.75m 68 kg July 21, 1986
- Kwadwo Asamoah Midfielder 1.78m 78 kg August 9, 1988
- André Ayew Midfielder 1.75m 72 kg December 17, 1989
- Derek Boateng Midfielder 1.85m 78 kg May 2, 1983
- Kevin-Prince Boateng Midfielder 1.84m 79 kg March 6, 1987
- Sulley Muntari Midfielder 1.79m 76 kg August 27, 1984
- Stephen Appiah Midfielder 1.78m 77 kg December 24, 1980
- Dominic Adiyiah Forward 1.72m 71 kg November 29, 1989
- Matthew Amoah Forward 1.77m 66 kg October 24, 1980
- Asamoah Gyan Forward 1.86m 77 kg November 22, 1985
- Owusu-Abeyie Quincy Forward 1.80m 72 kg April 15, 1986
- Prince Tagoe Forward 1.85m 83 kg November 9, 1986

Wannat Know more About GHANA ? READ MORE !!
Appearances at finals:
2006 - Second round

Overall record at finals: Played 4, Won 2, Drawn 0, Lost 2.

Best performance: Second round in 2006.

Most appearances at finals: Richard Kingson (2006), John Paintsil (2006) - 4.

Most goals at finals: Stephen Appiah (2006), Sulley Muntari (2006), Haminu Dramani (2006), Asamoah Gyan (2006) - 1.

World Cup high: Making the second round at the 2006 finals, having finished behind eventual winners Italy in the group stage, before losing to reigning champions Brazil in the last 16.

World Cup low: Failing to qualify for the finals prior to 2006 despite being the second most successful team in African Nations Cup history, qualifying for five successive Olympic Games and enjoying considerable success at world youth level.

World Cup legend: Michael Essien excelled in midfield at the 2006 finals but the words Ghana and 'legend' are inextricably linked to a player who never played in a World Cup. Striker Abedi Pele is widely regarded as one of the greatest African players of all time, scoring 33 goals in 73 appearances for the 'Black Stars' and captaining the side on numerous occasions during his 16-year international career. He could never inspire his team to the finals, however.

The story so far: It may surprise some that Ghana's second consecutive appearance at the finals is only their second ever. They are the most successful team in African Nations Cup history, along with Egypt, with four titles and have excelled at youth level.

Ghana's qualification record does not even boast any near misses, with a fourth-place finish behind Nigeria, Libya and Sudan in qualification for the 2002 finals (which would have seen them miss out on an African Nations Cup place had they not been hosting the tournament) and third place behind Morocco and Sierra Leone for the 1998 finals. And the Black Stars were defeated by Algeria, Liberia, Libya, Guinea, Zaire and Nigeria in qualification for the 1994, 1990, 1986, 1978, 1974 and 1970 finals respectively. The failure in 1994 was the biggest surprise as the 'Black Stars' had narrowly lost the 1992 African Nations Cup final and could boast an impressive strikeforce of Abedi Pele and Tony Yeboah.

But in 2006 they made a first World Cup finals appearance and impressed by emerging runners-up from a tough group and advancing to the second round at their first attempt. After an opening defeat to eventual winners Italy, the 'Black Stars' defeated Czech Republic (2-0) and USA (2-1) before reigning champions Brazil knocked them out at the last 16 stage - the 3-0 scoreline a reflection of Ghana's defensive naiveity in a match in which they had often troubled Brazil in attack.

Qualification: Aside from the hosts, Ghana were the first African team to secure their passage to the 2010 finals when they qualified after winning their first four games of the final round of qualification. But it was certainly not all plain sailing for the 'Black Stars' as they had just scraped through the first group stage, edging out Gabon and Libya for top spot on goal difference, having lost away to both sides, when all three were tied at the end of the group.

In the final round, though, Ghana began to dominate, securing consecutive victories over Mali, Benin and Sudan (twice) without conceding a goal to book their place at the 2010 finals.

Qualifying record (second round): P6, W4, D0, L2, F11, A5, Pts12.

Qualifying record (third round): P6, W4, D1, L1, F9, A3, Pts13.

Most appearances: Richard Kingson (12).

Top goalscorers: Matthew Amoah (5).

TEAM PROFILE GHANA :


The only African side to get out of the group stage at the 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany™ and the first to qualify for South Africa 2010, Ghana are anxious to prove themselves as the cream of the continent. Though this will be only their second appearance at the finals, the Black Stars have enjoyed considerable success at all levels of international football. They have won four CAF African Cup of Nations titles, though none since 1982, as well as two FIFA U-17 World Cups, and they became the first African team to lift the FIFA U-20 World Cup when they beat Brazil on penalties in October 2009. With added experience since their 2006 adventure, where they lost to Italy and Brazil but beat the Czech Republic and USA, Ghana are set to be a major threat at Africa's first FIFA World Cup.

The road to South Africa
Ghana guaranteed their place in the finals after going unbeaten through their opening four matches of the final round. They did not concede a goal in the group until a shock 1-0 defeat at Benin, but that came after they had already qualified. The key stretch for the west Africans came in June 2009 when they won 2-0 away to both Mali and Sudan, with Germany 2006 veteran Matthew Amoah scoring a goal in the first match and both in the second. Ironically, Ghana were shakier in the previous round of qualifying, only topping the group on goal difference over Gabon and Libya after losing a match to both teams.


The star players
Although Ghana lack the attacking firepower of many African sides, they rely most prominently on a world class midfield led by Michael Essien. The Chelsea man usually pairs with Sulley Muntari and captain Stephen Appiah to form a formidable engine room capable of both stifling attacks and creating them. Two of the trio Asamoah Gyan, Junior Agogo and Matthew Amoah usually operate in attack, while the England-based duo of John Mensah and John Paintsil keep the back tight in front of another Premier League player, goalkeeper Richard Kingson.

The coach
With Claude Le Roy's departure after a relatively disappointing third-place finish at the 2008 Cup of Nations on home soil, Milovan Rajevac took over leadership of the Black Stars. A former defender that played his career in Yugoslavia, the Serbian was best known for a brief coaching stint with Red Star Belgrade as well as leading perennial Serbian strugglers FK Borac to their first-ever qualification for a European tournament.

Record

    * Ghana were the youngest team at Germany 2006, with an average age of just under 24 years.
    * Asamoah Gyan scored the fastest goal of the 2006 FIFA World Cup after 68 seconds in their 2-1 win over Czech Republic. It was also Ghana's first-ever goal in the finals.
    * Ghana lost 3-0 to Brazil in the second round of Germany 2006, but they were without the talismanic Michael Essien, who was suspended.

What they said
"This team is very hungry to play in the finals again. My players are aware of what they can achieve, and we have the quality to go far. I am very confident about the future," Ghana coach Milovan Rajevac.

শনিবার, মে ২৯, ২০১০

Germany Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

GERMANY
Group D
Manager: Joachim Low
Star Player : Ballack, Lahm, Klose, Pudolski

LIVE STREAM  GERMANY MATCHES :  


June 13, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group D
Germany vs Australia
at Moses Mabhida Stadium

June 18, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group D
Germany vs Serbia
at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium

June 23, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group D
Ghana vs Germany
at Soccer City Stadium
Show your support for GERMANY
by buying a World Cup Live Channel
and Watch Live Stream Matches!
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Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 16
Best result: Champions (1954, 1974, 1990)
All-time record: 92 games played, 55 wins, 19 draws, 18 losses
Goals for: 190, Goals against: 112
Biggest victory: 8-0 vs. Saudi Arabia in 2002
Biggest defeat: 8-3 vs. Hungary in 1954
Top scorer: Gerd Muller (14 goals)
Most appearances: Lothar Matthaus (25 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: 1974, 2006

Short History: FIFA member since: 1904
Team nickname: Die Nationalelf, Nationalmannschaft
All-time caps leader: Lothar Matthaus (150)
All-time leading scorer: Gerd Muller (68 goals)
Notable achievements: European Champions (1972, 1980, 1996)
Legendary Player: Nicknamed "The Kaiser," Franz Beckenbauer earned 103 caps and captained West Germany to the 1974 World Cup on home soil. Beckenbauer revolutionized the position of the attacking sweeper (known as the libero) and is considered one of soccer's greatest players of all time.



A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Jorg Butt Goalkeeper 1.91m 91 kg May 28, 1974
- Manuel Neuer Goalkeeper 1.90m 80 kg March 27, 1986
- Tim Wiese Goalkeeper 1.93m 91 kg December 17, 1981
- Dennis Aogo Defender 1.83m 82 kg January 14, 1987
- Holger Badstuber Defender 1.89m 78 kg March 13, 1989
- Andreas Beck Defender 1.80m 75 kg March 13, 1987
- Jerome Boateng Defender 1.90m 79 kg September 3, 1988
- Arne Friedrich Defender 1.85m 78 kg May 29, 1979
- Marcell Jansen Defender 1.91m 72 kg November 4, 1985
- Philipp Lahm Defender 1.70m 64 kg November 11, 1983
- Per Mertesacker Defender 1.96m 85 kg September 29, 1984
- Serdar Tasci Defender 1.86m 75 kg April 24, 1987
- Heiko Westermann Defender 1.90m 80 kg August 14, 1983
- Sami Khedira Midfielder 1.89m 81 kg April 4, 1987
- Toni Kroos Midfielder 1.80m 68 kg January 4, 1990
- Marko Marin Midfielder 1.68m 60 kg March 13, 1989
- Mesut Özil Midfielder 1.80m 70 kg October 15, 1988
- Bastian Schweinsteiger Midfielder 1.81m 77 kg August 1, 1984
- Piotr Trochowski Midfielder 1.68m 68 kg March 22, 1984
- Cacau Forward 1.79m 74 kg March 27, 1981
- Mario Gomez Forward 1.89m 86 kg July 10, 1985
- Stefan Kießling Forward 1.91m 78 kg January 25, 1984
- Miroslav Klose Forward 1.82m 74 kg June 9, 1978
- Thomas Müller Forward 1.86m 74 kg September 13, 1989
- Lukas Podolski Forward 1.80m 81 kg June 4, 1985



Want to Know More About Germany ? Read More >>
Appearances at finals:
(As East Germany)
1974 - Second round

(As West Germany)
1954 - Winners
1958 - Fourth place
1962 - Quarter-finals
1966 - Runners-up
1970 - Third place
1974 - Winners
1978 - Second round
1982 - Runners-up
1986 - Runners-up
1990 - Winners

(As Germany)
1934 - Third place
1938 - First round
1994 - Quarter-finals
1998 - Quarter-finals
2002 - Runners-up
2006 - Third place

Overall record at finals: Played 58, Won 37, Drawn 9, Lost 12.

Best performance: Winning the tournament in 1954, 1974 and 1990.

Most appearances at finals: Lothar Matthäus (1982, 1986, 1990, 1994, 1998) - 25.

Most goals at finals: Gerd Müller (1970, 1974) - 14.

World Cup high: Winning the World Cup on home turf in 1974 with a 2-1 win in the final to beat Johan Cruyff's Netherlands, who were famed for their 'total football' and widely acknowledged as one of the greatest sides in history.

World Cup low: Losing in the 1966 final to England after a contentious goal from Geoff Hurst that may or may not have crossed the line at Wembley, depending on your geographical location. It was the opinion of Azerbaijani linesman Tofik Bakhramov that counted, though.

World Cup legend: Franz Beckenbauer was perhaps the finest sweeper in football history. Der Kaiser captained Germany to glory in 1974, managed the team that won the 1990 tournament and, for good measure, helped bring the World Cup to German soil as the key figure in the 2006 bid team.

The story so far: 'Never write off the Germans' is the old refrain - and with good reason. Reaching seven finals in their history, five times as West Germany before the reunification of the country, the Germans have reached the quarter-finals in every tournament since 1982 and are the very model of consistency.


Their first triumph came in the 1954 World Cup in Sweden courtesy of a shock victory over the 'Magical Magyars' of Hungary, despite going 2-0 down to the team of Ferenc Puskas. The odds were upset once again in 1974 when Johan Cruyff's Netherlands went a goal up in the final only to lose 2-1 as West Germany triumphed on home turf. A hat-trick of titles was complete when Andreas Brehme struck with five minutes remaining to defeat Argentina in the final of Italia 90 and confirm Germany as a nation with outstanding World Cup pedigree.

Qualification: Germany enjoyed an unbeaten qualifying campaign under Joachim Loew as they held off the challenge of Guus Hiddink's Russia to secure top spot in Group Four. After starting their campaign in ominous fashion with a 6-0 hammering of Liechtenstein, the key to Germany's qualification was their two victories over Russia, the second of which was a 1-0 win in Moscow in October that guaranteed their participation in the finals in South Africa.

Qualifying record: P10, W8, D2, L0, F26, A5, Pts26.

Most appearances: Philipp Lahm, Mario Gomez (10).

Top goalscorer: Miroslav Klose (7).

Team Profile Germany :
Three-time FIFA World Cup™ winners Germany are usually there or thereabouts when the honours are handed out, and the current national squad will head for South Africa with their sights and expectations set appropriately high. After triumphing in Switzerland in 1954, on home soil in 1974 and in Italy in 1990, the team now coached by Joachim Low are aiming to hoist the most prestigious trophy in the world's favourite sport for the fourth time.

The Germans' consistent success is based on deep reserves of experience, finely-honed tactical know-how, and the ability to rise to the occasion when the chips are down. Their qualifying campaign merely served to emphasise the enduring nature of those attributes. Michael Ballack will be utterly determined to lead his country to a major international title after the runners-up spot at the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan, third on home soil in 2006, and another second place at UEFA EURO 2008 in Austria and Switzerland.

That would not merely be the crowning glory of the Germany captain's already illustrious career, it would elevate him to membership of an elite group of FIFA World Cup-winning captains, legendary trio Fritz Walter, Franz Beckenbauer and Lothar Matthaus. Apart from Ballack, German hopes rest largely on striker Miroslav Klose, a goal-getter with the uncanny ability to hit peak form bang on time for the FIFA World Cup, and former talented youngsters turned senior pros Philipp Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Lukas Podolski.
The road to South Africa
Clinical efficiency and unbending resolve rather than sparkling skill were the hallmarks as Low's men marched to first place in European qualifying Group 4 for the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa. The Germans dropped points only in their home and away meetings with an awkward Finnish side. Klose's hat-trick dragged his side level three times in a 3-3 draw in Helsinki, and Podolski netted a face-saving last-minute equaliser in a 1-1 stalemate in Hamburg. However, that was the final qualifying fixture, and Ballack and company were already guaranteed top spot, as Wales, Azerbaijan and Liechtenstein had all been despatched with the minimum of fuss.

By contrast, in the two meetings with closest rivals Russia, Germany showed all the class that has made them such formidable opponents down the years. In Dortmund, Low's men produced their best attacking half of football since their rousing displays at the 2006 FIFA World Cup and held on to win 2-1. In the crunch return in Moscow on the penultimate matchday, it was almost inevitably Klose who netted the only goal of the game to seal the Russians' first-ever home defeat in FIFA World Cup qualifying. Renowned Sbornaja boss Guus Hiddink mused afterwards on Germany's "utter determination" and named Low's side as contenders in South Africa.
The star players
Chelsea midfielder Ballack rates as the undisputed leader of the team. The 33-year-old national captain has earned 97 senior caps to date and is determined to lead his men to a major trophy after falling at the final hurdle at the FIFA World Cup in 2002 and the EURO in 2008. In all probability, the showdown in South Africa will be Ballack's last chance on a major stage.

Despite his unassuming public persona, Bayern Munich striker Klose comes next in the dressing room hierarchy. His record of 48 goals in 93 internationals puts him third in the Germany all-time scoring chart, behind only living legend Gerd Muller (68 goals) and former GDR goal-getter Joachim Streich (55). Events in South Africa will show whether fellow Bayern men Lahm and Schweinsteiger, and Podolski, who returned home to Cologne from Munich in summer 2009, have what it takes to acquire world-class billing. Diminutive but exceptionally versatile full-back Lahm looks the best bet of the three.

The coach
Joachim Low, Jurgen Klinsmann's assistant at the 2006 FIFA World Cup, long ago emerged from the shadow thrown by the former world-class striker. On stepping up to the top job on 12 July 2006, the 49-year-old named winning EURO 2008 and continuing Klinsmann's attacking philosophy as his primary goals. Neither target has been fully hit, but the SC Freiburg all-time leading scorer has earned huge respect for his calm, knowledgeable and sympathetic manner of dealing with stars, press and public alike. "Meticulous and painstaking hard work is the only way to succeed," he has said, true to his reputation as a skilled tactician and all-round sage of the game, and neatly summing up the soul of German football into the bargain.

Previous FIFA World Cups
- Germany have won the FIFA World Cup three times (1954, 1974 and 1990), a figure bettered only by Brazil (5) and Italy (4).

- Apart from the 1930 and 1950 tournaments, which they did not enter, Germany have contested every FIFA World Cup finals.

Records
- Germany have reached the FIFA World Cup Final seven times, a record they share with Brazil.

- Germany have contested four penalty shoot-outs at the FIFA World Cup finals, winning all of them.
What they said
"We've been very successful in the past, and that's an inspiration to the next generations. You only have to look at Germany's record at major tournaments. We won the World Cup in 1954, '74 and '90, and the European Championship in '72, '80 and '96. We've made it through to finals at least as often. We've grown up with the conviction that Germany are always good enough to reach the Final. We're definitely among a group of countries with a chance of taking the Trophy. We were third at the World Cup and second at the EURO, so our goal for 2010 is to make the Final and win the Trophy." Philipp Lahm, interviewed exclusively by FIFA.com

France Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

France
Group A
Manager: Raymond Domenech
Star Player : Thierry Henry, Anelka, Karim Benzema, Florent Malouda


LIVE STREAM  FRANCE MATCHES : 


June 11, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group A
Uruguay vs France
at Cape Town Stadium

June 17, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group A
France vs Mexico
at Peter Mokaba Stadium

June 22, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group A
France vs South Africa
at Free State Stadium

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Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 12
Best result: Champions (1998)
All-time record: 51 games played, 25 wins, 10 draws, 16 losses
Goals for: 95, Goals against: 64
Biggest victory: 7-2 vs. Paraguay in 1958
Biggest defeat: 5-2 vs. Brazil in 1958
Top scorer: Just Fontaine (13 goals)
Most appearances: Fabien Barthez (17 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: 1938, 1998

Short History:


FIFA member since: 1904
Team nickname: Les Bleus
All-time caps leader: Lilian Thuram (142)
All-time leading scorer: Thierry Henry (51 goals)
Notable achievements: European Champions (1984, 2000)
Legendary Player: A veteran of three World Cups (1978, 1982, 1986), Michel Platini ranks among the greatest players of all time. The elegant Frenchman was a brilliant playmaker in midfield who anchored France's national side for years, and led them to victory in the 1984 European Championship. He's the only player to be voted European player of the year three times in a row (1983-85). Helped Juventus win the European Cup in 1985.


Want To Know More About France ? Keep Reading !!

Appearances at finals:
1930 - First round
1934 - First round
1938 - Quarter-finals
1954 - First round
1958 - Third place
1966 - First round
1978 - First round
1982 - Fourth place
1986 - Third place
1998 - Winners
2002 - First round
2006 - Runners-up

Overall record at finals: Played 51, Won 25, Drawn 10, Lost 16.

Best performance: Winners in 1998.

Most appearances at finals: Fabien Barthez (1998, 2002, 2006) - 17.

Most goals at finals: Just Fontaine (1958) - 13.

World Cup high: Ending their wait for World Cup glory on home turf in 1998 as a 3-0 win over Brazil in the final ensured that Zinedine Zidane became a national hero to rival Michel Platini thanks to his two goals.

World Cup low: Losing on penalties to West Germany in the semi-finals in 1982. After seeing Patrick Battiston knocked unconscious by a horrendous challenge from Harald Schumacher that went unpunished, France took a 3-1 lead in extra time only to lose on penalties when Schumacher saved twice.

World Cup legend: Zinedine Zidane, who scored twice in the 1998 final to beat Brazil and was the star of the tournament. Eight years later in Germany, he recaptured his best form to help France reach the final and scored an audacious penalty against Italy, only for his tournament to end in ignominy when he plunged his head into the chest of Marco Materazzi, earning a red card.

The story so far: A third-place finish in Sweden in 1958 aside, France had for a long time been accustomed to early exits on football's biggest stage, but all that was to change in 1982 thanks to a team led by the masterful Michel Platini.

Les Bleus reached the semi-finals in Spain but were defeated in cruel circumstances as Harald Schmacher's Germany progressed on penalties following a 3-3 thriller, with France finishing fourth. Four years later in Mexico, they went one better, defeating Brazil in a thrilling quarter-final before losing to West Germany in the semi-finals and eventually finishing third.

France subsequently failed to qualify for the next two World Cup finals but upon their return, as hosts in 1998, a new generation of stars led them to their first and so far only triumph. Thierry Henry, Zinedine Zidane, Marcel Desailly and Didier Deschamps were among the key performers under Aime Jacquet, but his successor, Roger Lemerre, oversaw a shocking campaign in 2002 as they failed to qualify from their group. In 2006, they surprised many observers by making the final before Zidane ended his career in explosive fashion as Italy eventually won out in a penalty shoot-out.

Qualification: The circumstances of France's qualifiction for the finals are now infamous, with Thierry Henry's handball at the Stade de France infuriating Republic of Ireland, who subsequently demanded a replay of the play-off second leg.

Prior to that controversial night, France had limped in behind Serbia in Group Seven, opening their campaign with a shocking 3-1 defeat to Austria. After beating Serbia and then drawing away in Romania, France secured two 1-0 wins over Lithuania and a narrow victory over the Faroe Islands before drawing at home to Romania and then away at Serbia.

Home wins over Faroe Islands and Austria secured second spot but it was an unconvincing campaign to say the least.

Qualifying record: P12, W7, D4, L1, F20, A10, Pts24.

Most appearances: Thierry Henry, Bacary Sagna (11).

Top goalscorers: Thierry Henry, André-Pierre Gignac (4).

Team Profile France :
France crossed a new threshold in qualifying for the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa™, having never before graced the finals on four consecutive occasions. Les Bleus have become a regular presence in recent years, having earned a reputation as one of world football’s leading teams since the late 1990s. Their fine displays at the first edition in 1930 marked them out as a good side and they have occasionally produced legendary talents, but only in the last decade or so have they evolved into a team that starts every major tournament with serious hopes of winning it.

The generation of players that included Zinedine Zidane, Laurent Blanc, Didier Deschamps and Fabien Barthez finally found a way past the obstacles that had blocked the route of earlier vintages. The fine team featuring Michel Platini, Alain Giresse, Luis Fernandez and Jean Tigana had stumbled at the semi-final stage in 1982 and 1986, but their successors went all the way to lifting the Trophy in 1998.

Despite a drop in standards in 2002 and 2006, France still came agonisingly close to grasping a second global title in the latter tournament, only losing out on penalties to Italy in the Final. The Zidane chapter came to a close that night in Berlin, but Les Bleus can still call upon some of the biggest names in world football, with a seemingly endless production line of young talents having unearthed the likes of Franck Ribery, Karim Benzema and Yoann Gourcuff in recent seasons.

The road to South Africa
They may not have done it in style, but France just about satisfied the demands of their supporters by booking themselves a place in South Africa. It took an extra-time goal in their play-off with Ireland to give them a 2-1 aggregate win and finally send them through, and that came after they had finished second in qualifying Group 7 of the European Zone.

Pipped to first spot by Serbia, frustrated by Romania and given problems by Lithuania, Raymond Domenech’s charges kicked off their bid with a damaging 3-1 loss in Austria, but they later rallied to secure a 1-1 draw in Serbia despite being reduced to ten men and finding themselves trailing early on. After that, they saw out the section with a 5-0 success against the Faroe Islands and a 3-1 victory over Austria. Pessimists will focus on the team’s troubles in securing a ticket to the main event, while optimists will recall that they also flirted with disaster ahead of Germany 2006, before going on to reach the Final.


The star players
Since Zinedine Zidane, Fabien Barthez, Claude Makelele and Lilian Thuram all called time on their international careers in 2006, a new selection of senior figures has stepped forward. With Patrick Vieira having long struggled with injury, sole France 1998 survivor Thierry Henry has taken the captain’s armband, with William Gallas the leader at the back and both Jeremy Toulalan and Lassana Diarra indispensable in midfield. Meanwhile, the emergence of Yoann Gourcuff, the talent of Franck Ribery and the rejuvenation of Nicolas Anelka have given the coach a variety of options in attack, where Karim Benzema, Andre-Pierre Gignac, Florent Malouda and Loic Remy will also be hoping to feature.

The coach
The French public have come to regard Raymond Domenech as a paradox unto himself since he took the reins in 2004. Praised for his communication skills when he first arrived, his perceived weaknesses in that domain were leapt upon after France failed to shine at UEFA EURO 2008. Domenech has yet to lift silverware with Les Bleus, but he is now the country’s longest serving national coach and can point to a FIFA World Cup Final appearance as the highlight so far of a career that has had a steady upwards trajectory.

Mulhouse and Lyon were his starting points in the club game before he entered the national fold to coach the Under-20s, after which a worthy record with the U-21s won him a crack at the senior side. As a player, he was a combative defender who won the French league title with Strasbourg in 1979 and Bordeaux in 1984, in addition to the French Cup with Lyon in 1973 and Paris Saint-Germain in 1982, plus a total of eight caps in the 1970s.

Previous FIFA World Cups
Les Bleus have appeared in 12 final tournaments, winning on home soil in 1998. Regular actors on the greatest stage of all, France also managed third-place finishes in 1958 and 1986, as well as fourth spot in 1982.

Honours

- 1 FIFA World Cup (1998)

- 2 FIFA Confederations Cup (2001, 2003)

- 2 UEFA European Championships (1984, 2000)

What they said
"The objective was to qualify. We knew it wouldn’t be easy, but I never had any doubts. We’ve had difficulties for two years now, but everyone kept believing and they were justified in doing so. We grabbed hold of the right to take part in something exceptional – a World Cup in South Africa.” Raymond Domenech, France coach

England Matches Live Streaming Online Sopcast in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

England
Group C
Manager: Capello
Star Player : Wayne Rooney

LIVE STREAM  ENGLAND MATCHES :
June 12, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group C
England vs United States
at Royal Bafokeng Stadium

June 18, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group C
England vs Algeria
at Cape Town Stadium

June 23, 2010 @ 14:00GMT Group Stage Group C
Slovenia vs England
at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium

CLICK TO WATCH LIVE ENGLAND MATCHES

Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 12
Best result: Champions (1966)
All-time record: 55 games played, 25 wins, 17 draws, 13 losses
Goals for: 74, Goals against: 47
Biggest victory: 3-0 vs. Poland and Paraguay in 1986 and 3-0 vs. Denmark in 2002
Biggest defeat: 4-2 vs. Uruguay in 1954
Top scorer: Gary Lineker (10 goals)
Most appearances: Peter Shilton (17 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: 1966
Short History:
FIFA member since: 1905
Team nickname: Three Lions
All-time caps leader: Peter Shilton (125)
All-time leading scorer: Bobby Charlton (49 goals)
Notable achievements: Under-21 European Champions (1982, 1984)
Legendary Player: One of the seminal figures in English soccer, Bobby Charlton was a key member of the England squad that won the epic 1966 World Cup in Wembley Stadium. Charlton scored a record 49 goals in 106 appearances for England and was voted European player of the year in 1966.

A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Robert Green Goalkeeper 1.88m 93 kg January 18, 1980
- Joe Hart Goalkeeper 1.90m 80 kg April 19, 1987
- David James Goalkeeper 1.96m 88 kg August 1, 1970
- Leighton Baines Defender 1.70m 74 kg December 11, 1984
- Jamie Carragher Defender 1.86m 76 kg January 28, 1978
- Ashley Cole Defender 1.73m 63 kg December 20, 1980
- Michael Dawson Defender 1.88m 76 kg November 18, 1983
- Rio Ferdinand Defender 1.89m 82 kg November 7, 1978
- Glen Johnson Defender 1.78m 70 kg August 23, 1984
- Ledley King Defender 1.91m 82 kg October 12, 1980
- John Terry Defender 1.88m 76 kg December 7, 1980
- Matthew Upson Defender 1.85m 72 kg April 18, 1979
- Stephen Warnock Defender 1.73m 75 kg December 12, 1981
- Gareth Barry Midfielder 1.84m 78 kg February 23, 1981
- Michael Carrick Midfielder 1.83m 74 kg July 28, 1981
- Joe Cole Midfielder 1.75m 63 kg November 8, 1981
- Steven Gerrard Midfielder 1.85m 83 kg May 30, 1980
- Tom Huddlestone Midfielder 1.80m 80 kg December 28, 1986
- Adam Johnson Midfielder 1.75m 63 kg July 14, 1987
- Frank Lampard Midfielder 1.83m 76 kg June 21, 1978
- Aaron Lennon Midfielder 1.65m 63 kg April 16, 1987
- James Milner Midfielder 1.85m 77 kg January 4, 1986
- Scott Parker Midfielder 1.70m 67 kg October 13, 1980
- Theo Walcott Midfielder 1.76m 68 kg March 16, 1989
- Shaun Wright-Phillips Midfielder 1.68m 64 kg October 25, 1981
- Darren Bent Forward 1.80m 73 kg February 6, 1984
- Peter Crouch Forward 1.98m 75 kg January 30, 1981
- Jermain Defoe Forward 1.70m 65 kg October 7, 1982
- Emile Heskey Forward 1.85m 82 kg January 11, 1978
- Wayne Rooney Forward 1.78m 78 kg October 24, 1985
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Want to Know More About England ? Continue Reading >>

Appearances at finals:
1950 - First round
1954 - Quarter-finals
1958 - First round
1962 - Quarter-finals
1966 - Winners
1970 - Quarter-finals
1982 - Second group stage
1986 - Quarter-finals
1990 - Fourth place
1998 - Second round
2002 - Quarter-finals
2006 - Quarter-finals

Overall record at finals: Played 55, Won 25, Drawn 17, Lost 13.

Best performance: Winners in 1966.


Most appearances at finals: Peter Shilton (1982, 1986, 1990) - 17.

Most goals at finals: Gary Lineker (1986, 1990) - 10.

World Cup high: Geoff Hurst completing his hat-trick during England's 4-2 win over West Germany in the July sun at Wembley in 1966.

World Cup low: England's first finals appearance, losing 1-0 to the USA's part-timers in Belo Horizonte, Brazil.

World Cup legend: Bobby Moore, captain in 1966, defensive organiser and the provider of two of Geoff Hurst's goals in the final.

The story so far: English fans may not like to hear it, but that win as hosts in 1966 has since taken on the appearance of an aberration. Many - mostly Englishmen - expected them to defend their crown in 1970, but their quarter-final exit there has become their default setting. Having only entered the tournament after 1950, they have since missed out on qualification for three tournaments.

Italia 90, under the guidance of Bobby Robson, saw a tearful penalty exit at the hands of Germany, who have gained revenge for their defeat in the 1966 final a number of times since. That semi-final remains England's best showing on foreign soil.

Qualification: Progress to South Africa could not have been in starker contrast to the Euro 2008 qualification campaign. Under Steve McClaren, Croatia were England's nemesis, with defeats suffered home and away. Fabio Capello's team, largely made up of the same players, destroyed the Croats 4-1 in Zagreb and 5-1 at Wembley. Granting Wayne Rooney the central role and providing a big striker in Emile Heskey to play off paid dividends as England won nine out of ten qualifiers.

Qualifying record: P10, W9, D0, L1, F21, A3, Pts27.

Most appearances: John Terry, Frank Lampard (10).

Top goalscorer: Wayne Rooney (9).

Team Profile England :
Dubbed English football's ‘golden generation', only to fall flat at UEFA EURO 2004 and the 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany™, South Africa 2010  may well be the last chance of international silverware for some of the most well-known faces in the world game.

However, he appointment of Fabio Capello appears to have brought fresh vigour to the Three Lions' squad, many of whom have a point to prove after lacklustre displays when it mattered most under Sven-Goran Eriksson and Steve McClaren. With the tournament due to take place in the South African winter, conditions which should suit the English players and style, so excuses will be at a premium should Wayne Rooney and Co fall short once more.

The road to South Africa
Following the disappointment of missing out on a place at the UEFA EURO 2008, England bounced back in emphatic fashion in qualifying for South Africa. Indeed, they stormed to no fewer than nine wins from ten Group 6 games, scoring a European Zone high of 34 goals in the process, with their only defeat coming in Ukraine with qualification already secured.

The star players
Leading from the front in terms of both goals and commitment was Manchester United forward Rooney, who responded to shouldering the main responsibility for England's attacking threat by finding the net nine times in as many games. Also chipping in were midfield duo Frank Lampard and Steven Gerrard, who hit four and three goals respectively. Rangy front-man Peter Crouch certainly made the most of limited opportunities by grabbing four goals in as many appearances, while Tottenham team-mate Jermain Defoe underlined his finishing prowess with three strikes in just 135 minutes on the field.

The coach
Winner of Serie A with AC Milan, AS Roma and Juventus, as well as a two-time La Liga champion at Real Madrid, Italian disciplinarian Capello wasted little time in instilling a renewed work ethic and squad spirit in an England squad packed with big-name stars and equally large egos. Qualification for South Africa 2010 with two games to spare and a solitary competitive defeat speak volumes for Capello's impact in his relatively short time in charge.

Previous FIFA World Cups
England have appeared at 11 previous editions of the global showpiece, including their debut at Brazil 1950. Victors on home soil in 1966, their best performance outside their own shores came under the late Sir Bobby Robson at Italy 1990, when a side featuring the likes of Gary Lineker, Chris Waddle, Paul Gascoigne and David Platt reached the last four only to lose out on penalties to eventual winners West Germany.

Records

The 1-0 loss in Ukraine on 10 October 2009 ended a run of ten consecutive victories in FIFA World Cup qualification, which England had begun with a 1-0 win over Austria in Manchester on 8 October 2005.

The Three Lions' leading scorer in qualifying, Wayne Rooney, was at his most dangerous between the 72nd and 76th minutes of play, during which period he scored no fewer than four times.

What they said
"I think we've put the record straight, to some extent.  Since the manager arrived, there has been nothing but hard work, our confidence has come on a million miles in the way the team is playing. Today typified everything about us in this campaign. It is the first step and we've qualified now but there's still a long way to go." England midfielder Frank Lampard, following the 5-1 home win over Croatia which sealed qualification for South Africa 2010.

শুক্রবার, মে ২৮, ২০১০

Denmark Matches Live Streaming Online in Fifa World Cup 2010, HD Quality

Denmark
Group E
Manager: Morten Olsen

CLICK BELOW TO WATCH LIVE DENMARK MATCHES

Number of Previous World Cup Appearances: 3
Best result: Quarter-finals (1986)
All-time record: 13 games played, 7 wins, 2 draws, 4 losses
Goals for: 24, Goals against: 18
Biggest victory: 6-1 vs. Uruguay in 1986
Biggest defeat: 5-1 vs. Spain in 1986
Top scorer: Preben Elkjaer-Larsen and Jon Dahl Tomasson (4 goals)
Most appearances: Michael Laudrup and Thomas Helveg (9 matches)
Hosted the World Cup: Never

LIVE STREAM  DENMARK MATCHES :

June 14, 2010 @ 11:30GMT Group Stage Group E
Netherlands vs Denmark
at Soccer City Stadium
 
June 19, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group E
Cameroon vs Denmark
at Loftus Versfeld Stadium

June 24, 2010 @ 18:30GMT Group Stage Group E
Denmark vs Japan
at Royal Bafokeng Stadium

Short Team History:
FIFA member since: 1904
Team nickname: Danish Dynamite, Olsen's Eleven
All-time caps leader: Peter Schmeichel (129)
All-time leading scorer: Poul Nielsen (52 goals)
Notable achievements: European Champions (1992)
Legendary Player: Michael Laudrup had a brilliant career in the 1980s, highlighted by stints with Juventus, FC Barcelona, Real Madrid and Ajax. He is regarded as one of the most gifted playmakers of his era.

A 30-man squad was announced on May 12 and the final squad of 23 has to be submitted to FIFA by June 1
- Stephan Andersen Goalkeeper 1.91m 76 kg     November 26, 1981
- Kim Christensen Goalkeeper 1.85m 82 kg     July 16, 1979
- Jesper Christiansen Goalkeeper 1.92m 88 kg     April 24, 1978
- Thomas Sorensen Goalkeeper 1.96m 89 kg     June 12, 1976
- aniel Agger Defender 1.88m 79 kg     December 12, 1984
- Lars Christian Jacobsen Defender 1.81m 74 kg     September 20, 1979
- Simon Kjaer Defender 1.90m 82 kg     March 26, 1989
- Per Kroldrup Defender 1.94m 91 kg     July 31, 1979
- Patrick Mtiliga Defender 1.67m 63 kg     January 28, 1981
- Mikkel Beckmann Midfielder 1.83m 76 kg     October 24, 1983
- Thomas Enevoldsen Midfielder 1.81m 74 kg     July 27, 1987
- Christian Eriksen Midfielder 1.75m 65 kg     February 14, 1992
- Jesper Gronkjaer Midfielder 1.81m 70 kg     August 12, 1977
- Daniel Jensen Midfielder 1.80m 73 kg     June 25, 1979
- Martin Jorgensen Midfielder 1.79m 75 kg     October 6, 1975
- Thomas Kahlenberg Midfielder 1.85m 69 kg     March 20, 1983
- Michael Krohn-Dehli Midfielder 1.70m 70 kg     June 6, 1983
- William Kvist Midfielder 1.84m 80 kg     February 24, 1985
- Christian Poulsen Midfielder 1.82m 76 kg     February 28, 1980
- Jakob Poulsen Midfielder 1.82m 72 kg     July 7, 1983
- Simon Poulsen Midfielder 1.87m 76 kg     October 7, 1984
- Dennis Rommedahl Midfielder 1.75m 63 kg     July 22, 1978
- Michael Silberbauer Midfielder 1.83m 77 kg     July 7, 1981
- Nicklas Bendtner Forward 1.91m 78 kg     January 16, 1988
- Søren Larsen Forward 1.93m 86 kg     September 6, 1981
- Jon Dahl Tomasson Forward 1.82m 74 kg     August 29, 1976 
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Appearances at finals:
1986 - Second round
1998 - Quarter-finals
2002 - Second round

Overall record at finals: Played 13, Won 7, Drawn 2, Lost 4.

Best performance: The quarter-finals in 1998.

Most appearances at finals: Michael Laudrup (1986, 1998) - 8.

Most goals at finals: Preben Elkjaer-Larsen (1986), Jon Dahl Tomasson (2002) - 4.

World Cup high: Beating defending world and European champions France 2-0 in 2002 to complete an inspired run that saw them top their group.

World Cup low: Spain's Emilio Butragueño scoring four goals in their first appearance at the finals in 1986, where they lost in the knockout stages 5-1.

World Cup legend: Michael Laudrup. Named Denmark's best ever player in 2006, the midfielder retired on a high after helping the side to the quarter-finals in 1998.

The story so far: It took a long time for one of FIFA's founding members to make their mark on a World Cup, which they eventually managed in 1986. A 5-1 humiliation by Spain after making it into the knockout stages gave them a platform to win the European Championship in 1992, but a talented squad was not seen again in a World Cup until 1998, where they said goodbye to Peter Schmeichel and the legendary Laudrup brothers - Michael and Brian.

That squad reached the quarter-finals, where they lost 3-2 to Brazil. England then knocked them out in 2002 and, despite having a rich history in the European game, 2010 will mark only their fourth World Cup appearance.

Qualification: Losing only once, in the final game to Hungary - when qualification was already assured - progress was unexpectedly easy in a seemingly tough group. Beating local rivals Sweden 1-0 both home and away made things a lot easier, but the wheels were put into motion with a stunning last-gasp comeback to beat Portugal 3-2 in September.

Given solidity from the fine performances of Christian Poulsen in midfield and the pairing of Simon Kjaer and Daniel Agger in defence also proved invaluable in the latter stages.

Qualifying record: P10, W6, D3, L1, F16, A5, Pts21.

Most appearances:
Christian Poulsen, Dennis Rommedahl (10).

Top goalscorer: Soren Larsen (5).
 
TEAM PROFILE DENMARK:
After a six-year absence, Danish Dynamite is once again set to explode on the elite world footballing scene. The Scandinavians missed out on both the 2006 FIFA World Cup™ in Germany and UEFA EURO 2008 in Austria and Switzerland, but the FIFA founder members blazed an impressive trail en route to a berth in South Africa next summer.

The Danes will now be looking to extend their creditable record at three previous finals appearances, where they reached the Round of 16 twice and the quarter-finals on the other occasion. Denmark's first tilt at the trophy was in 1986 in Mexico, where they progressed to the last sixteen. The core of that team then went on to register the nation's greatest footballing triumph with the 1992 UEFA European Championship crown in neighbouring Sweden.

The small but totally football-mad nation went on to further success in the period after that. At the 1998 FIFA World Cup France, the Danes were a shade unlucky to lose to eventual finalists Brazil in the quarter-finals, before England proved too strong in the Round of 16 at the 2002 tournament in Korea/Japan. Denmark played some of the most attractive football at UEFA EURO 2004 in Portugal, but came up against the in-form Czech Republic in the quarter-finals and lost 3-0.

With their long absence from the major stage now poised to end, captain Jon Dahl Tomasson and his men are keen to cut a dash in South Africa. Should head coach Morten Olsen be spared the injury woe which threatened to derail his side's qualification campaign at one point, the undoubted quality in the squad means the Scandinavians must be a good bet for a shock or two in South Africa.

The road to South Africa
The Danes saw off big-name rivals Portugal and Sweden in European qualifying Group 1 to top the group with just one defeat in their ten matches.

Campaign highlights included a 3-2 win and 1-1 draw with the Portuguese Selecção das Quinas, where convincing team performances saw the Danes take four points off the group favourites and earn themselves the decisive advantage. The crucial win in Lisbon featured an astonishing three goals in the last ten minutes. Denmark also beat neighbours and keen rivals Sweden home and away by the only goal of the game on both occasions.

Hungary ultimately caused Olsen's men more trouble than any other group opponents. After opening with a goalless draw against the Hungarians, the 1992 European champions lost 1-0 in their final group fixture, although it was a dead rubber by this stage.

The star players
Denmark's key players are largely drawn from big-name European clubs including the likes of Juventus, Arsenal, Liverpool and Werder Bremen. National captain Tomasson currently leads the Feyenoord forward line after a career featuring spells with AC Milan and Villarreal.




Olsen's core of players with wide international experience includes defender Daniel Agger (Liverpool), midfield trio Daniel Jensen (Bremen), Christian Poulsen (Juventus) and Dennis Rommedahl (Ajax), and striker Nicklas Bendtner (Arsenal).

The coach
Morten Olsen will complete a decade as Denmark head coach at the finals in South Africa. He took the helm in 2000, guiding Danish Dynamite to the 2002 FIFA World Cup and UEFA EURO 2004. He has yet to indicate whether he will extend his current contract, set to expire after the 2010 tournament.

A more than solid performer in the long-lost position of libero, Olsen's clubs included Cologne and Anderlecht, where he recorded his greatest success as a player when the Belgian outfit claimed the UEFA Cup in 1993. Olsen was 40 before he hung up his boots and began a coaching career, including spells with Cologne and Ajax.

Previous FIFA World Cups
- South Africa will be Denmark's fourth appearance at the FIFA World Cup finals

- The Danes made the Round of 16 in 1986 and 2002, and the quarter-finals in 1998


Records
- Denmark triumphed at the 1992 UEFA European Championships, going on to claim the FIFA Confederations Cup in 1995.

- The Scandinavians' Olympic record features three silver medals (1908, 1912, 1960) and a bronze (1948)

What they said
"World Cups are always special. The fact it's the first time in Africa is fantastic because it's bringing it closer to the people there, but every World Cup has its own unique flavour and appeal. I remember seeing how excited Asia was in 2002 to have it and what a fantastic experience that was for everyone. For me and for all the players, competing at the World Cup is the ultimate; it's the biggest honour for any player." Morten Olsen, Denmark coach, interviewed exclusively by FIFA.com
 
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