Thursday, June 27, 2013

How Xavi Almost Retired From La Roja

The Barcelona midfielder told coach Vicente del Bosque that he wanted to quit the national team but was persuaded to carry on until the World Cup in Brazil, when he will be 34.

Spain were on top of the world. La Roja had humbled Italy in a one-sided final at Euro 2012 to become the first international team to claim consecutive continental championships and a World Cup win in the middle. History had been written once again by this era-defining group and there was a feeling of joy throughout the Spanish squad. But then, Xavi unleashed a bombshell: he had decided to retire from international football.

The midfielder has had to alter his game in recent seasons due to the rigours of Achilles tendon problems in both feet which means he is constantly playing in pain, cannot train properly between matches and is unable to complete back-to-back fixtures in short succession as he could in his younger years. Training these days involves recovery work and special exercises with the physios to cope with the tremendous toll on his ageing frame, while he cannot cover the same amount of ground as he once was able to - despite retaining a fierce competitive spirit. At 33 and with an injury which will not go away, surgery an unattractive option and no real cure, he must plough on. Growth factor treatment has helped the problem, but Xavi knows his time at the top is drawing to an end and he told Del Bosque: "I want to quit Spain.”

Luckily for la Roja, Del Bosque had other ideas. In an interview with El Pais last year, the Salmantine said Xavi was "more important than the coach" and in dialogue with the same paper this week, the player himself described the moment he told his boss that he was planning on retiring from international football. "I told Del Bosque that I wanted to call it a day and he said: 'What? Has depression got you?' And he said: 'You have to play at the World Cup in Brazil - how can you miss out on that?'"

That was enough to convince Xavi to go on for two more years and his next objective is to claim the Confederations Cup - a trophy neither he nor Spain have ever won. "Because of my age this will be my last [Confederations Cup] - and because you have to win an important tournament to be in it. We are very excited because it is a cup Spain doesn't have and one missing from this generation."

Xavi has been somewhat overshadowed by Barcelona team-mate Andres Iniesta for club and country over the last year, yet he remains the pulse and the heartbeat of the two teams; the 33-year-old completes more passes than any other player on his or the other side, controlling the tempo and the possession play which has brought such spectacular success to the Blaugrana and la Roja.

But the midfielder is aware he can only push his body so far and, unlike team-mate Carles Puyol, he has been able to adapt his game to cope with age and the additional physical problems he has suffered in recent seasons. Before he breaks down, he would rather stop altogether.

Xavi is also starting to contemplate life after football. The midfielder will marry journalist Nuria Cunillera this summer (on July 13) and the two may also consider starting a family soon, which could have a bearing on the player's international future. "I will think about having a child but when I am away from home less," he once said.

The 33-year-old's current contract at Barcelona runs until 2016 following an extension signed in January and will take him up to the age of 36. Time will tell if that deal is fulfilled, but the World Cup looks like being Xavi's fond farewell in Spain colours, especially as Del Bosque departs after the showpiece in Brazil.

Before that, though, the two can make history by claiming the Confederations Cup and, more importantly, by adding another World Cup to la Roja's remarkable recent collection of silverware. But had Del Bosque not convinced Xavi to continue after last summer's fabulous 4-0 win over Italy, this Spain side would have lost its leader out on the pitch for both Brazil-based battles. As it turned out, however, football fans and admirers of la Roja can continue to enjoy Xavi's special skills for some time to come.



Sunday, June 16, 2013

Do You Remember?

Sebastian Deisler. Remember him? Most people might not or for some, might never have heard him before. Personally, Desiler was the beginning of what we witness before our eyes now of German football. He was the next big thing before the emergence of Phillip Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Thomas Muller, Mario Goetze, Mesut Ozil and other German prodigies. 

The beginning of Sebastian Deisler’s meteoric rise to stardom may also just have been the beginning of his eventual downfall, for it is with the heaviest of burdens in Germany that a player is labelled the next Franz Beckenbauer.

Having began his football career at the age of 6, Deisler represented both FV Turmringen and Borussia Mönchengladbach at underage level, before signing professional terms with the latter. German football needed a shot of invigoration at the turn of the 21st century. Michael Ballack was seen as a sure thing, playing a pivotal role in a strong Leverkusen side that was challenging both domestically and on the continent. Bastian Schweinsteiger was still forging an impressive youth career, and Miroslav Klose was still a few years shy of his late coming of age. The media couldn’t help but turn to Deisler, who had raised eyebrows in his debut season for which Mönchengladbach were doomed to relegation. It was then coach Friedel Rausch who predicted that the creative midfielder’s name would one day be heralded among the likes of Der Keiser himself, Beckenbauer.

Following Mönchengladbach’s relegation, Hertha Berlin came calling, offering Deisler the chance to hone his skills in the Champions League at 19 years of age. However, his time at Berlin was plagued by injuries. A ruptured cruciate ligament and a torn synovial membrane restricted Deisler to just over 70 appearances in his 3 seasons at the club.

However, this didn’t stop Bayern Munich securing Deisler for just over €9 million above the reported interests of over 25 other clubs around Europe. Deisler was attacked by both the media and his former fans for not having disclosed to them earlier the signing on fee of just under €10 million he received from Munich (DEM 20 million at the time) while injured during his final season at Hertha.

Sadly, “Supertalent” (as he had come to be affectionately known) continued to be ravaged by injuries that saw him make just 86 appearances in his 5 seasons at Munich. Michael Ballack’s departure for pastures new at Chelsea signalled a new hope for Deisler’s future at Munich, and many saw him as the German captain’s successor. However, a reoccurence of the knee injury he suffered in Berlin dashed any hopes Deisler had of not only becoming Munich’s talisman, but also of representing his country at their World Cup on home soil.

Combined with Deisler’s injury problems were concerns over his ability to cope with the pressure of the hype and expectation he had crafted. He was diagnosed with depression in 2003, just a year after arriving at Munich, and missed several months to receive treatment. Deisler suffered a relapse of his condition again in 2004. Munich president Beckenbauer admitted the club had concerns over Deisler’s personality, but never expected it to be such a problem.
A brave 2 year battle to reignite his career proved futile, and Sebastian Deisler retired from football in January 2007. “All the fun and joy has gone out of my game. I dont want this torture anymore.” he told reporters. His reasons for retirement seem to echo the sentiments one would expect from a player in his late 30′s, made all the more disheartening by the fact Deisler was only 27 years old when he hung up his boots. “In the end I was empty. I was old and I was tired. I went as far as my legs could carry me, and I could not go any further.”

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Man of Steel Red Carpet

Hey folks, check out the Red Carpet Premiere Interview Special for Man of Steel!


Man of Steel TV Spots

Hey folks, here are some tv spots for the Man of Steel. In case you missed it. Enjoy! 











Man of Steel Reviews

I was very skeptical when it was announced Zack Snyder would helm the new Superman movie. I'm not a huge fan of his mostly CGI movies. 300 and Sucker Punch to name a few. But when it was also announced that Christoper Nolan would be the Executive Producer to the man from Krypton, it gave me chills. After the success of the Dark Knight trilogy, I was really anticipating the outcome of Man of Steel. And yeah, when the first trailer was out, it had Nolan's touch written all over it. Man of Steel opens in Malaysia tomorrow. Read the scoop of the movie below for the first batch of reviews. 

The Hollywood Reporter 
To the oft-asked question of whether or not the world is really starving for yet another superhero origin story, Man of Steel simply responds by serving up what could be as much spectacle and action — minute-by-minute, frame-by-frame — as any movie anyone could think of. Zack Snyder’s huge, backstory-heavy extravaganza is a rehab job that perhaps didn’t cry out to be done but proves so overwhelmingly insistent in its size and strength that it’s hard not to give in. Warner Bros.’ new tentpole should remain firmly planted around the world for much of the summer. 

Super Hero Hype 
Man of Steel is great. It takes stories that we all thought we knew and looks at them through a different prism, creating a solid superhero story that stands apart from all of the others. Though the acting is solid all around, many of the characters don't naturally fit in, but when the film offers amazing fights and comic book levels of destruction, most fans won't mind that at all. 

ScreenCrush 
‘Man of Steel’ isn’t perfect. There’s an emotional beat that is supposed to have resonance, but you’ll probably be thinking, “who’s she?” (The answer, undoubtedly, is “someone whose earlier scenes got cut out.”) There’s also a dopey decision that a character makes, a beat that only an actor of Kevin Costner‘s quality can save. Also, the world-building in ‘Man of Steel’ is so good that the movie lends itself to some hardcore nitpicking of a “how did they know English?” variety. But when your scrutiny has to go that deep, you know you have a solid blockbuster on your hands. 

Crave Online 
Man of Steel is a movie we need right now, and while normally such blanket statements refer to films of great portent or contemporary significance, I’m not convinced that Man of Steel is either of those things, not really. It’s a remarkable piece of popcorn entertainment with a few lofty issues on its mind that are simply expressed beautifully throughout the film. It’s an impressive retelling of a story that is generations old, and that somehow feels fresh here, without sacrificing the greatness that began with Action Comics #1. It could, to use the common parlance, be referred to as “awesome.” But awesome no longer means “awesome.” Awesome means “strikingly cool.” Man of Steel is awesome in that it inspires a sense of genuine awe. That, dear readers, is something of value by its lonesome. 

Digital Spy UK 
Man of Steel is not quite the perfect movie. Snyder's deployment of handheld camerawork works to create an intimacy between viewer and action, but this aesthetic jars horrendously with the 3D conversion (see in 2D if you can). Character loses focus in favor of action in the final third and there are also shades of Clark's character that go unexplored (for instance his split identity and deeper relationship with Lois). These threads are left tantalisingly open for a sequel, though. The foundations are firmly in place for what could be exciting further adventures of Superman. 

Ain't It Cool News 
MAN OF STEEL is the Superman movie we have been waiting for. Full of action, emotion, and spectacle, this is Zack Snyder’s finest work so far, and I prefer David Goyer’s work here to his work on Nolan’s Batman films. This was the harder job, by far – to make Superman relevant again, and to give him life beyond the page. It is true to the comics, to the films, to everything we love about this character. When I dreamed of heroes as a child, dreamed of taking flight, I saw this movie in my mind’s eye. Zack Snyder has pulled from the dreams of millions of fans, and brought us something to cheer for. MAN OF STEEL soars on the winds of those visions. I imagine fans will lose their damn minds over this movie, and deservedly so. What the future holds for DC on film, I cannot know, but MAN OF STEEL lays the foundations for something quite extraordinary. I can’t wait to see what’s next. 

SlashFilm 
Yes, folks, Man of Steel delivers. It’s a phenomenal film and an even better set up for what we hope is a huge, DC Universe. 

Movies.com 
Man of Steel has a whole ton of pride, as do both its heroes and villains. Pride in where they came from and how its shaped them. The film is very much about what it means to be home and feel home, and even though it's about an alien man who flies through the air shooting lasers out of his eyes, there's nothing you won't be able to relate to in this. 

The action is also pretty boss and fairly frequent (the Smallville sequence alone is loud and meaty), and there are some moments that are easily comparable to the best stuff from any recent superhero movie (including The Avengers). But where Man of Steel really succeeds is in its power to connect, emotionally and spiritually, with its audience. That's a rare trait for a giant movie like this with an incredible amount riding on its sucess, but that's what also makes it the best Superman movie to date.