Newcastle make bid for Swansea left-back Neil Taylor

Neil TaylorTaylor shone in his first season with SwanseaNewcastle have made an undisclosed bid for Swansea left-back Neil Taylor.The 22-year-old made 30 league appearances last season as the Swans won promotion to the Premier League.

Swans chairman Huw Jenkins said: “We have received a proposal from Newcastle regarding Neil, but it has not been accepted or rejected at this stage.

“We have received a number of bids for Neil’s services and we will be talking it over with him when he returns from a break next week.”

Swansea signed Taylor from non-league Wrexham at the start of last season for a tribunal-fixed fee of £150,000 plus 10% of any future transfer profit.

The highly-rated Wales international agreed a three-year contract at the Liberty Stadium.

Jenkins added: “Neil is a player we brought to the club this season from the Conference with Wrexham with a view to him progressing and developing with us over a number of years.

“The last thing on our minds is to sell anyone over the summer.”

Taylor began his career in the youth set-up at Manchester City before leaving for Wrexham at the age of 15 because of injury.

He made more than 80 appearances over three years for his hometown club.

Taylor was a key figure in the Swans’ promotion-winning campaign, but missed the play-off final triumph against Reading through suspension after being sent off in the first minute of the semi-final first leg against Nottingham Forest.

He earned his first senior Wales cap under John Toshack in a friendly against Croatia in May 2010. and has since won two more.

Hock ready to seize second chance

 

Almost exactly three years ago I wrote a scouting report outlining why young Wigan forward Gareth Hock should be in England’s World Cup squad.

Hock made the squad, but the following season he tested positive for cocaine and was handed a two-year ban.

He is now 27, and this week signed a new five-year Wigan contract, barely a month back in training. That news provoked a mixed response, and some raised eyebrows, among my media peers and fellow fans, but the Warriors have made it clear that the contract is “contingent upon his continuing exemplary performance”.

But how big is the challenge now facing this former international when he returns to Super League next month? It is a challenge not only of convincing his doubters, and opposition-fan hecklers, that he should command respect once more, but of returning to the very summit of this brutal sport.

Hock offloads the ball during Wigan’s Magic Weekend game with St Helens in 209 – photo: Getty

I spoke this week to Ryan Hudson, the Castleford captain, now back at the top of his game after himself serving a two-year drugs ban in 2005.

Hudson was sacked by Bradford without playing a single game of a three-year contract, after he tested positive for the banned steroid stanozolol.

By contrast, Wigan have stood by Hock during his suspension and Hudson believes the Warriors were right to afford the player another chance.

“Anyone can make a mistake but only a fool makes it twice,” he told me. “It’s not what happens, it is how you react and that comes down to who you are as a person, so only Gaz can control how he responds now.”

One thing for certain is that Hock cannot wait to get back on the field. I’ve spent a couple of games on the back row of the press box at the DW Stadium this season, with him sitting in his suit in the row behind. He was feeling every hit, throwing every pass and applauding every score.

“I’m expecting Hock to make a massive impact when he returns,” said Hudson. “I think he’ll find it tough, tougher than he may expect. It might take him a month to get his match fitness, as no amount of training can prepare you for that.

“He’s returning into a much better Wigan side now with more quality players so that should help.”

How tough will Hock find it though? When you serve a two-year drugs ban, you are not even allowed to train with the squad.

Hock has recently cleared to resume training by UK Anti-Doping, even though his ban doesn’t actually expire until June 23. So how on earth do you keep yourself in the right kind of shape to be able to step back in at the top level as soon as the suspension ends?

“Training to return after my ban was like training for the Olympics,” said Hudson, who describes his ban as the toughest two years of his life.

“It is such a long time. Every month is a goal, and you keep setting yourself new goals as when you are playing Super League the goal is just the end of the week.

“I found the game had moved on a little while I served my two-year ban, but it’s like life – life moves on and if you have to take two years out of life for one reason or another then it is very different when you start living your life again.”

Hock’s mental approach to his suspension saw him tackle a drugs rehabilitation programme, while his physical approach has been helped by a personal trainer.

But Hudson believes such an exile from the game changes you not just as a player, but as a person.

“I learned that as a rugby league player you live your life in a bubble and you shouldn’t really moan about working 10 or 20 hours a week. In the real world people have to run businesses and work 60 or 70 hours a week to get by so we are very lucky,” he said.

“Life is about getting a balance and a perspective. I hope Gaz has learned from what he did and can move on.

“I learned that there is more to rugby league. I believe things happen for a reason and you deal with it and move on.”

Hudson is living proof that a player can bounce back after serving a ban, leading the Tigers’ charge at the right end of Super League. But will Hock be treated differently by his peers when the England international returns to the game as a player known to have used drugs?

My good friend Jamie Bloem, a former South Africa international, served a drugs ban – in fact, Bloemy was the first rugby league player to test positive for performance enhancing anabolic steroid nandrolone. It was never quite the same for him when he returned, but Hudson says Hock will be fine.

“None of the players treated me differently on my return but the fans did and you’d expect that,” he says. “You get the usual grief from opposition supporters but you don’t dwell on it as to live in the past is to stay in the past.”

Whether he gets a rough ride or not, Hock returns with a point to prove and an England shirt to win back and Hudson reckons he’ll do both.

“Hock will be in the England squad at the end of the year, I’m sure of that. He was a quality player before and that won’t have changed. I’d be very surprised if he didn’t make it.

“He will come back fresh and be ready to explode after two years without training. He’ll feel awesome and ready to rip in. He’ll be great for England and good on him.”

My personal view is the same as Hudson’s. Everyone deserves a second chance and Hock is no different. He made a mistake and should be afforded the opportunity to prove it was just that.

England’s Crabtree anticipates new Antipodean test

England’s inaugural International Origin match against the Exiles at Headingley on 10 June should provide the toughest test possible for the home side and their coach Steve McNamara outside of a major competition.

Former New Zealand coach Brian McClennan’s Antipodean all-star squad has been specially shaped to comprise the best, most watchable New Zealand and Australian players in Super League.

Supporters have voted for 13 of the squad, with coach McClennan choosing the rest.

Next Friday sees the birth of an annual fixture which I am convinced will be a success, and speaking to the players involved, they are right behind the concept too.

I called one of the leading lights in England’s powerful pack – giant prop forward Eorl Crabtree – to gauge his sense of anticipation around the fixture.

The 6ft 7in Crabtree has been flying for Huddersfield this season, and is rightly recognised as one of four in-form Giants who have been key to their club’s terrific start to the season.

Eorl Crabtree in England training

Crabtree’s Huddersfield side are level on points with Super League leaders Warrington
‘Big Eorl’ is a real character, an unmistakeably gigantic frame with trademark ridiculous ponytail. The nephew of wrestling great Big Daddy (that was all he got asked about in the early part of his career), he is not a man with whom you would mess. When I rang him this week he was smashing balls off a driving range in Huddersfield with specially lengthened clubs.

“I’m like Tiger Woods, I’m getting gradually worse at this game,” he told me, before we talk rugby league.

“Pulling on the England jersey is when you realise you’re at the top of your game and fulfilling your potential . That fills you with so much pride,” he said.

“It’s great getting to finals and trying to win things with your club but the ultimate goal for every player should be representing his country.”

I spoke to one member of the England squad recently, who told me he was not too fussed about playing for his country, he could take it or leave it. Crabtree completely disagrees.

“This is something I’ve been striving for for a while and I’ve wanted a bit of recognition for the things I’m doing at Huddersfield, and for the fact that Huddersfield are doing so well,” ‘Big Erol’ reflected.

Crabtree also said that he hopes the Exiles concept is just one of many more innovations from the sport’s governing body to try and give the sport more prominence on the international map.

“I think the whole notion of allowing the fans to vote for players is brilliant. We need to do things like this more in rugby league – we need to be a bit different as we are so far behind football we don’t really stand a chance. You have to make an extra effort to draw people in by making it more interesting. ”

Far from being an unnecessary, contrived extra fixture in a full-on season, I view the competitive nature of this as one that can only help strengthen the international game too. And surely that is what we want?

We can rave about how fierce, how entertaining, how brilliant the Super League product we watch each week is, but it is on the international stage where we need to see progress. Something has to be done to make the international game more competitive, rather than an annual face-off between the Aussies and Kiwis, and I see this as a good start.

“The Exiles will be some team,” Crabtree stated. “We could get beat, we could actually get embarrassed if we don’t show up. This is just the kind of competition we need to progress and see which players deserve to play for us.”

I shall be honest, I miss the old Origin games between Yorkshire and Lancashire that admittedly never really took off and were scrapped in 2003. Crabtree said that remains one of his big regrets. “I’m gutted that I never had the opportunity to play for Yorkshire against Lancashire in the old Origin series,” he told me. “I think that is a perfect way to have top England players fighting between themselves for a place in the international team. I’m a proud Yorkshireman and we all love the chance to smash up the Lancashire lads!”

Realistically, I cannot see it happening. Logistically there is arguably not enough room in the fixture list, and the bigger picture is that with the Rugby Football League driving to expand the game into new areas, the game’s bosses would be loathe to refocus on an M62 corridor rivalry. And how do you explain to the top players in Cumbria and London that a Roses Origin match effectively serves as an England trial? Crabtree though is convinced it could work.

“I’m sure there’s a way, and it would be spectacular. If you want it enough there’s a way. The RFL were desperate to make us play an extra game at the Millenium Stadium or Murrayfield and they’ve managed to fit that in without a problem.”

Crabtree’s own inclusion in this England squad is testament to the progress he has made as a player. A bit of a freak show when he burst onto the scene with his enormous frame and flowing locks, the 28-year-old is now a real enforcer, with unexpectedly good hands for a big man. As one of four Giants in McNamara’s thinking, it also shows that Hudderfield’s hard work behind the scenes – as outlined in this blog two years ago – continues to pay off.

A tip of the hat too at this point to Warrington who have six players included, and I am especially pleased for my pal Ryan Atkins who has grabbed his place back after he was dropped from the elite squad.

The headline inclusion for England is Crabtree’s Huddersfield team-mate Danny Brough, a Scotland international at the World Cup in 2008. Now his exquisite kicking game has prompted the England call he hoped for when he announced his change of allegiance.

Danny Brough in action for Bradford

Brough has turned his back on Scotland

“He’s been fantastic – you just give him the ball and he makes the right call,” commented Crabtree, who believes you have to play for one of the big teams these days to get recognised by England.

“The problem when you play for a team that doesn’t finish high up like Danny has been before he came here, is that you don’t get a look in for an international call. That’s happened to me before Huddersfield started going places. That’s the way it is and always has been. I’ve been told before I’ve not made the England squad because I don’t have enough experience and that comes off the back of not playing for a club team that’s competing at the top level. ”

He may well have a point. Super League’s top five clubs account for 21 of McNamara’s 22-man squad, and each of those named in the final 17 on 10 June should expect the game to be a real bruiser

Leuluai denies plan to follow Maguire out of Wigan

Thomas Leuluai
Thomas Leuluai has accumulated 39 tries in 120 appearances for Wigan

Wigan scrum-half Thomas Leuluai has dismissed speculation suggesting that he will quit the DW Stadium to follow coach Michael Maguire back down under.

Reports on Monday claimed that the 25-year-old Kiwi international had asked to be released from his contract a year early to join Maguire at South Sydney.

“I didn’t know anything about it,” he said. “It’s speculation. It’s never been an ambition to return to the NRL.

“When people asked if I was leaving I thought it was pretty funny.”

The South Sydney Rabbitohs are looking for a scrum-half after Chris Sandow snubbed a new deal in favour of a move to Parramatta.

And World Cup, Four Nations and Grand Final-winning Leuluai would appear to fit the bill. But, although Maguire has already announced his departure, the Wigan number seven insists that he is going nowhere for now.

“I’m off contract next year,” he said. “We’ll see what happens then.

“I came over here in 2004 and have really enjoyed it,” added Leuluai at the first Exiles training session ahead of Friday’s clash with England at Headingley.

“Wigan are a great club. It’s a privilege to play with them and play hard for them.”

Gareth Bale wins BBC Wales Sports Personality award

Tottenham Hotspur star Gareth Bale has been honoured as the 2010 BBC Cymru Wales Sports Personality of the Year.

The 21-year-old succeeds fellow Welsh footballer Ryan Giggs and was presented with the award by Spurs great Clive Allen at Tottenham’s training ground.

Bale beat Commonwealth champion bowler Robert Weale into second and 400m hurdles champion Dai Greene to third.

Blue Square Bet South champions Newport County were named Team of the Year in the awards ceremony at Celtic Manor.

Sean McGoldrick‘s achievement of reaching the bantamweight final at the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi has been recognised as the Newport boxer won the Carwyn James Junior Sportsman of the Year.

Gareth Bale

Gareth Bale is the second footballer to win the award in successive years

McGoldrick lost to Sri Lankan Manju Wanniarachchi in the Delhi 2010 final to claim a silver medal, won of Wales’ 19 medals at the Commonwealths.

Jade Jones was named Carwyn James Junior Sportswoman of the Year after the Flintshire youngster won the under 55kg Taekwondo gold medal winner at the Singapore Youth Olympics in August.

Welsh golfing legend Brian Huggett, who starred in six Ryder Cups and skippered Europe in 1977, was honoured for his outstanding career with a Lifetime Achievement award at the ceremony which fittingly overlooked the host course for the 2010 Ryder Cup.

And junior football coachLisa Jones, of Penydarren Boys and Girls football club in Merthyr, won the Welsh Sports Unsung Hero award after eight years as a volunteer.

But Bale won the top award in the BBC Cymru Wales viewers’ poll after a sensational year for Tottenham in the Champions League and Premier League.

The £10m left-sided star has scored 13 goals for club and country in a phenomenal 2010 as the Welsh international helped Spurs qualify for the European Cup.

Bale was then hailed as “amazing” by Spurs boss Harry Redknapp” after two sensational performances against reigning European champions Inter Milan in the Champions League – a hat-trick in a 4-3 defeat at the San Siro before inspiring Tottenham to a 3-1 win in the return fixture.

Click to play

Gareth Bale ‘honoured’ by BBC Wales award

The 27-times capped Welshman is widely-regarded as one of the finest young footballers in the world and his achievement is the ninth time a footballer has won the BBC Cymru Wales Sports Personality of the Year award in its 56-year history.

Bale could not be at the awards ceremony in Newport because the Cardiff-born player was with Tottenham’s squad in the Netherlands ahead of their Champions League clash with FC Twente.

But he did tell BBC Cymru Wales: “It was a great honour just to be put up for the award so to win it is something special.

“I remember when I was a younger I was up for the young sports personality award and to be up for this now, shows how much I have come in the last couple of years.

“I’m not quite sure how to sum up my 2010 because I have not really dwelled on it, I have just got on with it.

“It has been a great year for me playing week in, week out, I’ve scored a few goals and the team qualified for the Champions League so there have been a lot of highlights but I’m just concentrating now and building for the future.”

Bale, who arrived at White Hart Lane from Southampton in 2007, concedes he had a “rough time” at the start of his Spurs career as he suffered almost 18 months on the injury list after foot surgery and knee problems.

He then endured an unwanted record of playing 24 Premier League games without being on the winning side before Spurs’ win over Burnley in September 2009.

Now his stunning performances of the left-flank, tormenting some of Europe’s top defenders, have attracted the attentions of rivals clubs and Bale has been linked with a £60m move away from White Hart Lane.

“I do look back on certain things that have happened and it has been a great year for me,” Bale concluded.

“Looking back on some things I think ‘wow’ and a year ago I did not think I would be doing stuff like that.”

Gareth Bale

Gareth Bale
Gareth Bale July 2010.jpg
Bale at Tottenham training in 2010
Personal information
Full name Gareth Frank Bale[1]
Date of birth 16 July 1989 (age 21)
Place of birth Cardiff, Wales
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)[2]
Playing position Defender/Winger
Club information
Current club Tottenham Hotspur
Number 3
Youth career
2005–2006 Southampton
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2006–2007 Southampton 40 (5)
2007– Tottenham Hotspur 77 (12)
National team
2005–2006 Wales U17 4 (1)
2006 Wales U19 1 (0)
2006–2008 Wales U21 13 (3)
2006– Wales 27 (3)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 19:23, 10 May 2011 (UTC).
† Appearances (Goals).

‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 4 February 2011

Gareth Frank Bale (born 16 July 1989) is a Welsh footballer who plays for Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur and the Wales national team. Bale began his professional career with Championship side Southampton in 2005 and was transferred to Tottenham two years later.

 Early life

Bale was born in Cardiff to parents Frank, a school caretaker, and Debbie, an operations manager; he attended Eglwys Newydd Primary School at Whitchurch. He is the nephew of former Cardiff City footballer Chris Pike. It was while at this school he first came to the attention of Southampton at nine years old, when he was playing in a six-a-side tournament with his first club, Cardiff Civil Service Football Club. Growing up his football hero was fellow Welshman and Manchester United legend Ryan Giggs.

Bale then attended Whitchurch High School in Cardiff. This is where, as well as football, he played rugby and hockey and was a distance runner. As a 14 year old he ran the 100 metre sprint in 11.4 seconds. Because of his superior skills, the school’s PE teacher, Gwyn Morris, had to write special rules. These restricted Bale to playing one-touch football and not using his left foot. Whilst at Whitchurch, Bale trained at Southampton’s satellite academy in Bath, although there was initially some doubt if Southampton would give him a scholarship due to his height.

Despite being only 16 at the time, he helped the school’s under-18 side win the Cardiff & Vale Senior Cup. He left school in the summer of 2005 with a Grade A in PE amongst his GCSE results. In his final year at school, he was awarded the PE department’s prize for services to sport. In the presentation, Morris commented:

“Gareth has a fierce determination to succeed and has the character and qualities to achieve his personal goals. He is one of the most unselfish individuals that I have had the pleasure to help educate.”

CLUB CAREER

 Southampton

On 17 April 2006, at the age of 16 years and 275 days, Bale became the second youngest player ever to play for Southampton (after Theo Walcott, who was 132 days younger) when he made his debut in the Saints’ 2-0 victory against Millwall. On 6 August, Bale scored his first league goal, a free kick, to level the score at 1–1 against Derby County. The final score at Pride Park was 2–2

He scored again, at St. Mary’s, against Coventry City in the team’s second game of the 2006–07 season with another free kick. Bale further developed his reputation as a free kick specialist when he struck the post from one against West Bromwich Albion.By 16 December 2006, Bale’s goal count had risen to five, thanks to a late equaliser against Sunderland and free-kicks away to Hull and at home to Norwich City.

In December 2006, he won the Carwyn James Award for the BBC Wales Young Sports Personality of the Year, and was named the Football League Young Player of the Year on 4 March 2007. This capped what was described in the local press as an “incredible” first full season as a professional footballer in which he was one of the Saints’ “most creative players even (though operating) from the left-back position whilst his defending improved immeasurably as the season progressed.”

His final game for Southampton was in the first leg of the Championship play-off semi-final against Derby County on 12 May 2007. Bale suffered an injury during the second half, preventing him from appearing in the second leg. In total, he made 45 appearances for Southampton, scoring five goals.

 Tottenham Hotspur

On 25 May 2007, Bale signed a four-year deal with Tottenham Hotspur with Spurs paying an initial £5 million for Bale, potentially rising to £10 million based on appearances and success. However, Tottenham paid Southampton an early settlement payment of £2 million in 2008 to reduce the final fee to £7 million and allow the Saints the immediate cash that they desperately needed.

 2007-08

He played his first game for Spurs in a friendly against St. Patrick’s Athletic on 12 July 2007, but was substituted on the 80th minute with a minor dead-leg. He made his competitive debut for Tottenham Hotspur on 26 August away against Manchester United. In just his second Spurs appearance, he scored his first goal for Tottenham in the 3–3 draw with Fulham on 1 September when he latched on to Robbie Keane‘s flick, charged down the left flank unopposed and coolly slotted past goalkeeper Antti Niemi. Bale went on to score again against Arsenal in the North London Derby, scoring a free kick inside the near post. He then scored in the League Cup home tie against Middlesbrough,[23] making it three goals in four starts for the then 18-year-old. He also set up Spurs’ goal against Anorthosis Famagusta in the UEFA Cup.

Bale was substituted after sustaining an injury resulting from a tackle from Fabrice Muamba in the league fixture against Birmingham City on 2 December 2007. A scan revealed that Bale had suffered ligament damage to his right ankle, consigning him to an extended period on the sidelines. Spurs’ sporting director Damien Comolli announced in February 2008 that Bale would miss the rest of the season through injury.

 2008-09

He signed a new four-year deal with the club in August 2008. Bale was given the number 3 shirt for the 2008-09 season, which left previous number 3 Lee Young-Pyo without a squad number. After some poor performances, Bale was dropped in favour of Benoît Assou-Ekotto and the latter remained first-choice for most of the season.

 2009-10

After playing a record 24 Premier League games for Spurs without being on the winning side, Bale’s first ever involvement in a Premier League victory came against Burnley on 26 September 2009 – more than two years after signing for Spurs – when he came on as an 85th minute substitute.

In June 2009, Bale underwent surgery for a knee injury, ruling him out for over two months. He missed pre-season matches and it was projected that he would miss the first few weeks of the 2009–10 season. On 26 September, he made his comeback as a substitute in the Spurs’ 5–0 thrashing of Burnley. However, he endured a frustrating time on the bench as Benoît Assou-Ekotto was in good form. When Assou-Ekotto was sidelined with an injury, manager Harry Redknapp decided to give Bale a chance and he impressed in the Spurs’ FA Cup third-round 4–0 win over Peterborough. He finally tasted victory for the first time as a starter in a league game in the 2–0 win over London rivals Fulham on 26 January 2010. His good form continued and he was named Player of the Round after helping the Spurs to a 3–1 win in the sixth round replay of the FA Cup against Fulham.In April 2010, Bale scored another goal against Arsenal after a pass from Defoe he tapped the ball past the Arsenal keeper. Three days later, Bale slammed in Tottenham’s second with his weaker right foot in a 2–1 victory over leaders Chelsea and was named Man of the Match. He was named Barclays Player of the Month for April. He signed a new four-year contract at White Hart Lane on 7 May 2010 as a reward for helping the club reach the Champions League qualification place.

 2010-11

On 21 August, Bale scored twice in a 2–1 win at Stoke City, the second of which was a head-high volley into the top right hand corner of the goal. On 25 August, Bale set up all four goals to help Spurs overcome Young Boys 4–0 (6–3 agg.) in a Champions League play-off at White Hart Lane. Although Assou-Ekotto had already returned from injury, Bale continued his good form and cemented his place in the starting eleven, moving forward to left wing to accommodate Assou-Ekotto at left back. On 29 September 2010, Bale scored his first Champions League goal for Tottenham in a 4–1 home win against Dutch champions FC Twente in their second game of the group stages. In recognition, he was named Welsh Player of the Year by the FAW. On 20 October, Bale scored his first senior hat trick against European champions Internazionale at the San Siro in the Champions League. Tottenham lost the match 4–3, having been 4–0 down inside the first 35 minutes and playing with ten men for over 80 minutes of the match after goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes had been sent off in the eighth minute for a professional foul on Inter’s Jonathan Biabiany. In the return match at White Hart Lane on 2 November, Bale provided a man of the match performance, setting up goals for Peter Crouch and Roman Pavlyuchenko to earn Spurs a memorable 3–1 win.

On 4 November, Bale stated that he intended to remain at Tottenham for the remainder of his recently-signed four-year contract, despite reported interest from other clubs. On 19 March 2011, Tottenham announced Bale had extended his stay at the club until 2015.

On 17 April 2011, Bale was honoured with the PFA Player of the Year award, as voted for by his peers. In doing so, he became the only fourth Welsh player to win the PFA Player of the Year award (the others are Ian Rush, Mark Hughes and Ryan Giggs).

 Style of play

On 2 November 2010, after a Champions League group stage match against Internazionale, teammate Rafael van der Vaart said, “Everyone is scared of him [Bale]. Maicon is one of the best right-backs in the world — he killed him.”

In a report of the same match, Spanish newspaper El Mundo said: “Bale combines the height and build of an 800-metre runner like Steve Ovett with the acceleration and directness of a rugby winger like Bryan Habana. And, when he gets to the byline, he delivers curling crosses like a Brazilian. Big words? Yes, but that’s what Bale is like – easily the greatest sensation in the opening month and a half of the Champions League. Ask Maicon what he thinks after the two exhibitions Bale turned in against Inter. Yesterday he left Maicon for dead and then a wily old fox like Lúcio was left in his wake like someone trying to follow the vapour trail of an aeroplane. Three goals and two assists — against the European champions. His performances have been stunning.”

 International career

Bale was selected by Wales at the end of the 2005–06 season and made his international debut on 27 May 2006. He first appeared as a substitute in a 2–1 win over Trinidad and Tobago, making him the youngest ever player to play for Wales. Bale, who was just 16 years and 315 days, assisted the winning goal scored by Robert Earnshaw.

Brian Flynn commented that Bale was potentially a future star of the game, comparing his technical ability to Ryan Giggs. On 7 October 2006, Bale became the youngest player ever to score a goal for the full Welsh national team in the Euro 2008 qualification match against Slovakia with a trademark free kick. He scored his second goal for Wales in a 3–0 win over San Marino on 28 March 2007.

Bale was eligible to play for England through his grandmother, but he stated in 2007 that:

“It is an honour to play for Wales… Nobody ever got in touch with me personally from England, only through my agent.”

After a long injury lay-off, he returned and started in the World Cup qualifier against Finland on 10 October 2009. On 14 October, he played a part in Wales’ final World Cup qualifier by setting up David Vaughan to score the opening goal against Liechtenstein and won the free kick that led to the second, Aaron Ramsey‘s first at senior level.

In December 2010, Bale was awarded the BBC Cymru Sports Personality of the Year trophy.

 2012 London Olympics

Bale, who meets the age criteria to play in the 2012 London Olympics, said he would “love to play in the Olympics” for the Great Britain Olympic football team, in defiance of the Welsh FA.[55]

International goals

Scores and results list. Wales’ goal tally first.
Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1. 7 October 2006 Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, Wales  Slovakia 1 – 2 1 – 5 Euro 2008 qualifying
2. 28 March 2007 Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, Wales  San Marino 2 – 0 3 – 0 Euro 2008 qualifying
3. 12 October 2010 St. Jakob-Park, Basel, Switzerland  Switzerland 1 – 1 1 – 4 Euro 2012 qualifying

Martin, ‘Xavi Small’ and ‘New Zidane’ France

 

Getty ImageBeritabola.com Jakarta – In France 4-1 victory over Ukraine, there is one name that stole the attention and direct comparisons with Zinedine Zidane. He is a debutant, Marvin Martin.

In Donbass Arena, Dontesk, Tuesday (06/07/2011), Martin does appear bright. Shown as a substitute when the score was still 1-1, the 23-year midfielder successfully brought Les Bleus win.

Shown for the first time a senior French national team, Martin who plays for the club Sochaux dedicate two goals and one assists for the French, though he had just come down to the minute 76.

“From the beginning I was very well received. I’m so encouraged, it makes a big difference,” Martin told me TF1 reported by ESPN Star.

“I go without feeling the pressure and try to give the best. I’m glad. I’m very happy, had become part of the core team and has also made ​​two goals,” he continued.

Together with Sochaux, Martin also has appeared in last season’s slick. So okenya, the player with a 1.7 m high was nicknamed ‘Little Xavi’ by his team-mates.

However, Martin now began to get a new comparison after making his debut in the national team has been compared to that Zidane is France’s legendary players.

“I already know you guys (journalists) would make the comparison. I hope he (Martin) had a career like Zidane,” said France coach Laurent Blanc.

Comparison of birth because in his debut for the national team, Zidane also made ​​a pair of goals while down a substitute in France’s counter-action of the Czech Republic. The party held on August 17, 1994 that ended 2-2.
(DTC / krs)

Strange Big Toward Disaster

Weird strange incident occurred ahead of a major disaster in fact exist; ah a sign from the creator of this nature to let the man be a big event (read.:: Signs ::.). Happened Before the Big Disaster Note for the record will show the strange events of the coming catastrophe is a test case for the existence of the creator, Allah Almighty says in the Quran letter Yunus verse 24

The likeness of the earthly life, is like water which We send down and the sky, then grows by proliferation from the water plants of the earth, of which there are eaten by humans and animals. Until, when the earth was already perfect beauty, and wear jewelry, and owner-permliknya think that they definitely menguasasinya, suddenly came to her doom us in the night or day, and We shall make like plants that have been disabit, as if it has not never grow yesterday. Thus do We explain the signs of power to those who think (Yunus: 24)

Thesis and test cases above, forming a continuous cycle occurs and again and again, when life grows, it will eventually perish perish when people do not realize keberaradaanNya. The classic example is n.Musa era, when the powerful pharaoh, before he perished, surely, the pharaoh had received various kinds of strange events, starting with the long drought and scarcity of fruits (qs Yunus: 130) and then up to the most phenomenal bizarre incident ie

So We sent to them a hurricane, locusts, lice, frogs and blood as clear evidence, but they are still arrogant and they were a sinner. (Al-A’raaf: 133)

The signs are sent to the pharaoh is a form of warning of impending major event (destruction), which when it was taken as the real lesson, pharaoh will be spared from destruction, but firuan would deny His existence:

So after we removed the penalty from them until the time limit that they got to him, suddenly they would deny it. (Al-A’raaf: 135)

Once broken from the warnings of God Almighty, then came the destruction it as the real thing after a bizarre incident that occurred:

Then we punish them, so We drowned them in the sea because they rejected Our signs and they are the people that neglect the verses we had. (Al-A’raaf: 136)

At present, when the prophets no longer exist, the universe as a generic cycle may appear a bizarre incident after incident when will the arrival of a major disaster that will happen. Slightly different purposes between the previous era when the prophets are still missing, the strange events that occurred before the major disaster is a simple manifest from his warning.

Tempe Bumbu Kremes

Ginger Nuts Cake

Material:

100 grams margarine
50 grams butter
100 grams of sugar flour
1 1 / 2 teaspoon instant coffee, dissolved 1 teaspoon hot water
1 egg white
2 egg yolks
200 grams cake flour
30 grams cornstarch
1 / 2 teaspoon baking powder
1 tablespoon ginger powder
100 grams cashew nuts, roughly chopped

Glazing materials:

1 / 2 egg whites
100 grams of brown sugar
1 teaspoon ginger powder

Method:

Preheat oven to 160 degrees Celsius.
Beat margarine, butter, sugar and flour 30 seconds.
Enter the beaten egg while average.
Add water coffee. Beat again.
Enter the flour, cornstarch, baking powder, and ginger powder as he sifted and mix evenly.
Form balls rather large.
Press each circle on top with cashew nuts until the nuts attached to the top of the cake and the cake became flat shape.
Oven 35 minutes with a temperature of 160 degrees Celsius until cooked.
After the cakes cool, make the glaze.
Beat the egg whites until fluffy.
Enter the ginger powder and brown sugar gradually until smooth.
Spray glaze over cake.
Oven again until cooked.