Showing posts with label top 10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label top 10. Show all posts

20 April 2018

Top 10 Most Expensive Football Transfers (2018)

Neymar já vendeu mais camisas do PSG que Di María em um ano

1. Neymar - Barcelona to PSG for £195mil in 2017.
2. Kylian Mbappe – Monaco to PSG for €158mil in 2018.
3. Phillipe Coutinho – Liverpool to Barcelona for £132mil in 2017.
4. Dembele Ousman – Borussia Dortmund to Barcelona for £97mil in 2017.
5. Paul Pogba – Juventus to Manchester United for £93.2mil in 2016.
6. Gareth Bale - Tottenham Hotspur to Real Madrid for £86mil in 2013.
7. Cristiano Ronaldo – Manchester United to Real Madrid for €80mil in 2009.
8. Gonzalo Higuain – Napoli to Juventus for £79.4mil in 2016.
9. Romelu Lukaku - Everton to Manchester United for £75mil in 2017.
10. Virgil Van Dijk – Southampton to Liverpool for £75mil in 2018.

19 August 2011

Top 10 Most Expensive Football Transfers (2011)



1. Cristiano Ronaldo - Man Utd to Real Madrid - £80m (2009
2. Zinedine Zidane - Juventus to Real Madrid - £65m (2001)
3. Zlatan Ibrahimovic - Inter Milan to Barcelona - £60m (2009)
4. Kaká - AC Milan to Real Madrid - £57m (2009)
5. Luis Figo - Barcelona to Real Madrid - £55m (2000)
6. Fernando Torres - Liverpool to Chelsea - £50m (2011)
7. Hernan Crespo - Parma to Lazio - £48m (2000)
8. Gianluifi Buffon - Parma to Juventus - £47m (2001)
9. Andriy Shevchenko - AC Milan to Chelsea - £40m (2006)
10. Sergio Agüero - Atletico Madrid to Man City - £39m (2011)

Latest Top10 Most Expensive Football Transfers (2018)

24 February 2009

Top 5 Bling Football Boot Players


1. David Beckham - King of Bling

It cost around £600 per pair for his boots and he wears a new pair every game. Adidas have made only 723 pairs and only in his size. He has even had feng shui symbols sewn into his football boots in a bid to improve his football performance. The design which he helped with, is strongly based on David’s interest in Eastern mystic culture, saying “I’m very proud to wear these football boots because they represent the idea of yin and yang.” They are personalized with stitching of the names of his three children, his initials, his favored number 23 and Beckham’s printed signature for the ultimate Bling factor. Beckham put the Bling-Bling into football boots as no one has done before and he reigns supreme as the King of Bling

2. Ronldinho - Prince of Bling

Ronaldinho had two special pairs of football boots containing eight ounces of 24-carat gold with real 24-carat gold applied to the Nike logo. The football boots feature a gold embroidered letter “R” and number 10, the shirt Ronaldinho wears for Barcelona, while the heel of the football boot is embossed with five gold stars in honour of Brazil’s five FIFA World Cup wins

3. Francesco Totti - Signor Bling

After the World Cup finals, Diadora produced the Maximus Italia Gold Special Limited Edition football boot, an all-gold football boot for the World Cup Winner which when worn, needs to be viewed behind sunglasses to avoid the excessive glare and shine

4. Frank Lampard - Bling Kong

Wears personalised Adidas Predator boots with his name and team number stitched into them. Unconfirmed reports claim this is so Lampard knows which football boots belongs to him

5. Djibril Cissé - A Bling of Many Colours

Mis-firing striker Cisse when playing for Liverpool, once came out in odd coloured boots. He changed after half time into a matching pair but into lime green football boots. Known to change his hair colour as easily as his football boot colour

17 February 2009

Top 10 EPL Entertainers


1 - George Best


Best loved nothing better than scoring on and off the pitch. The Northern Irishman was untouchable with the ball at his feet and was adored away from the game. His lifestyle was often criticized but Manchester United would not be the club they are today without him. Quite simply, he set the standard for everyone to follow

2 - Gianfranco Zola

Zola’s love of the game was clear to see from the moment he arrived at Stamford Bridge. The Italian was a free-kick expert but there was far more to his game than the ability to curl a ball. Zola scored breathtaking goals and was one of the main reasons Chelsea lifted trophies under both Ruud Gullit and Gianluca Vialli

3 - Paul Gascoigne

While Gazza can best be described as daft as a brush, the midfielder could do it all with the ball at his feet. A troubled genius he may be, but the former Newcastle and Tottenham ace was one of the few Englishmen to conquer Serie A

4 - Eric Cantona

When he wasn’t kung-fu kicking fans or talking about seagulls, Cantona did the business on the pitch as Manchester United won trophy after trophy. The Frenchman was as mad as they come but truly gifted. He stunned United fans by hanging up his boots in 1997 to pursue an acting career

5 - Cristiano Ronaldo

In years to come, Ronaldo is sure to feature higher in lists like this. The Portuguese Winker may not be popular with anyone outside of Manchester but he has cemented his reputation as one of the world’s greatest players. Under the guidance of Alex Ferguson, Ron has developed into the best goalscoring winger around

6 - Glenn Hoddle

Hoddle was one of the classiest midfielders around. His range of passing was phenomenal and, most importantly, the Tottenham legend knew how to score a goal. To put it simply, this man could do it all. After proving himself in France with Monaco, he enjoyed spells as player-boss at Swindon and Chelsea

7 - Ryan Giggs

The wing wizard seems to have been around forever and he’s still going strong. The only thing you can say against Giggsy is that he is one of the best Englishman never to play for his country. Instead of choosing the Three Lions, the Manchester United ace opted for Wales. While international success has eluded him, Giggs has won the lot with United

8 - Thierry Henry

Henry is the best player to ever pull on an Arsenal shirt. The striker’s sublime skills made him the club’s highest goalscorer but his time in London ended without what he coveted most glory in the Champions League. The Frenchman, who started his career as a winger, is one of the greatest foreign players to grace the Premier League

9 - Peter Beardsley

There are few players who can be described as legends but Beardsley fits the bill perfectly. He picked up 59 caps for England, forming a devastating strike force with Gary Lineker. But he is best remembered for spells with Newcastle, Liverpool and Everton. Pure and simple, Beardsley played for the love of the game

10 - Matt Le Tissier

It’s safe to say Le God is one of the greatest players to never win a major trophy. The talented striker hammered home long-range stunners for fun and was Southampton through and through. Despite opportunities to join bigger clubs, Le Tissier spent his entire career with the Saints

Top 10 Foreign Managers Flops In EPL


By Sandy Macaskill

Luis Felipe Scolari is not the first foreign manager to fail in England and probably not the last

1 - Juande Ramos, Tottenham Hotspur, 2007-08


The Spaniard won the Carling Cup, so he cannot be called a complete failure. But having sold Dimitar Berbatov and Robbie Keane saw Ramos take Tottenham to their worst ever start to a league campaign

2 - Alain Perrin, Portsmouth, 2005

Perrin replaced Zajec in April 2005, and was immediately nicknamed "Reggie" by the media and Pompey fans after the character Reginald Perrin from "The Fall and Rise of Reginard Perrin". He succeeded in keeping the club in the top flight, but was sacked the next season, just eight months into the job after achieving only 4 wins from 20 games

3 - Velimir Zejic, Portsmouth, 2004-05

Zejec arrived at Portsmouth in 2004 as an executive director, but the Croat was forced to take over temporary control of team affairs in November when Harry Redknapp resigned. Five months later he reverted to his intended director's role, following the arrival of Alain Perrin, but that was not an end to the troubles. He resigned from his position at Fratton Park on October 2005 due to personal reasons

4 - Jacques Santini, Tottenham Hotspur, 2004

Santini was one of the lucky ones, as he resigned rather than being pushed. Nevertheless, the Frenchman 's time at the club, which spanned just 13 games, must still considered a flop

5 - Gianluca Vialli, Watford, 2001-02

Having made wholesale changes to the club's coaching staff and made a number of signings which broke the club's wage structure, his team lost 19 of their 46 games and finished 14th. Vialli was sacked, and he ended up suing the club over the payment of the remainder of his contract

6 - Egil Olsen, Wimbledon, 1999-00

It was under this Norwegian's aegis that Wimbledon's 15-years in England top-flight ended. Olsen was sacked in May 2000, a decision that outraged Vinnie Jones - who bear in mind never ever played under the Norwegian because "I never got a chance to chin him"

7 - Attilio Lombardo / Brolin, Crystal Palace, 1998

Despite having no coaching experience, Lombardo was appointed joint player-manager in 1998 with fellow player Tomas Brolin and they presided over the club's relegation that season. Lombardo might have been one of the club's most skillful players ever, but promotion to coach was like being "run over by a lorry"

8 - Christian Gross, Tottenham Hotspur, 1997-98

Gross found it difficult at Spurs from the word go. Arriving into Heathrow Airport, the Swiss had to rely on the Tube to get to his first press conference as manager. A 6-1 defeat to Chelsea on his home debut, however set the tone for his tenure. And when Spurs lost two of their opening three matches of the 1998-99 season, Chairman Alan Sugar ended Gross's contract, blooming the media for destroying his reputation

9 - Ossie Ardiles, Newcastle, 1991-92 and Tottenham Hotspur, 1993-94

The Argentine lasted 12 months at St James' Park before being sacked, leaving Newcastle at the bottom of the second division. Ardiles joined Spurs in 1993, but despite the bringing in Jurgen Klinsmann, Ilie Dumitrescu and Gheorghe Popescu in summer 1994, he was sacked in October with Tottenham battling relegation

10 - Jozef Venglos , Aston Villa, 1990-91

The Slovakian manager was the first manager not from Britain or Ireland to take charge of a top-flight club in England, although he did not last long. His record of 18 different clubs in a career spanning 32 years reveals that he has not lasted long wherever he has gone

14 February 2009

10 Top Earning Players


No. 1
David Beckham
Age: 33
Nationality: English
Club: Los Angeles Galaxy
Earnings (m): $48.9, 24.4 pounds, 35.7 euros

No. 2
Ronaldinho
Age: 28
Nationality: Brazilian
Club: AC Milan
Earnings (m): $32.6, 16.3 pounds, 23.8 euros

No. 3
Thierry Henry
Age: 31
Nationality: French
Club: Barcelona
Earnings (m): $25.1, 12.5 pounds, 18.3 euros

No. 4
Ronaldo
Age: 32
Nationality: Brazilian
Club: Corinthians
Earnings (m): $21.2, 10.6 pounds, 15.5 euros

No. 5
Cristiano Ronaldo
Age: 24
Nationality: Portuguese

Club: Manchester United

Earnings (m): $18.5, 9.2 pounds, 13.5 euros


No. 6
Kaka
Age: 26
Nationality: Brazilian
Club: AC Milan
Earnings (m): $17.7, 8.8 pounds, 12.9 euros

No. 7
Fabio Cannavaro
Age: 35
Nationality: Italian
Club: Real Madrid
Earnings (m): $17.5, 8.7 pounds, 12.8 euros

No. 8
Andriy Shevchenko
Age: 32
Nationality: Ukranian
Club: AC Milan
Earnings (m): $17.5, 8.7 pounds, 12.8 euros

No. 9
Steven Gerrard
Age: 28
Nationality: English
Club: Liverpool
Earnings (m): $17.1, 8.5 pounds, 12.5 euros

No. 10
John Terry
Age: 27
Nationality: English
Club: Chelsea
Earnings (m): $17.0, 8.5 pounds, 12.4 euros

13 February 2009

Top 10 Most Expensive Football Transfers (2009)


  1. Zinedine Zidane - Juventus to Real Madrid - £45.62m (2001)
  2. Luis Figo - Barcelona to Real Madrid - £37m (2000)
  3. Hernan Crespo - Parma to Lazio - £35.5m (2000)
  4. Gianluifi Buffon - Parma to Juventus - £32.6m (2001)
  5. Robinho - Real Madrid to Manchester City - £32.5m (2008)
  6. Christian Vieri - Lazio to Inter Milan - £32m (1999)
  7. Andriy Shevchenko - AC Milan to Chelsea - £30.8m (2006)
  8. Dimitar Berbatov - Tottenham Hotspur to Manchester United - £30.75m (2008)
  9. Rio Ferdinand - Leeds United to Manchester United - £29.1m (2002)
  10. Gaizka Mendieta - Valencia to Lazio - £29m (2001)

12 February 2009

10 Fundamental Football Facts

  1. Did you know that the power of your shoot is not determined by your muscles? Instead, having good technique is the most important thing
  2. Being a master on free styling will not necessary increase your performance on the field
  3. Football is about 90% thinking and 10% physical
  4. Learning how to kick the ball by using your both feet may increase your performance by 50%
  5. The position of your non-kicking leg will determine the direction of the ball
  6. Carbohydrates is your most important food while playing football
  7. If you want to be a dribbling master you will need to perform your moves without looking at the ball
  8. It is easier to perform difficult dribbling moves while having your knees slightly bent
  9. Juggling is a great way for improving your overall football skills
  10. While defending, don’t keep your focus on the ball too much. Instead, monitor the movement of your opponent and don’t let him receive the ball and do something useful with it