Saturday 19 October 2013

Zinedine zidane

Zinedine zidane 

Zinedine zidane 

Zinedine zidane 

Zinedine zidane 

Zinedine zidane


Zinedine zidane
  • Zinedine Zidane
    Footballer
  • Zinedine Yazid Zidane is a French assistant coach and sporting director at Real Madrid and a retired footballer who played as an attacking midfielder for the French national team, Juventus and Real Madrid.Wikipedia
  • BornJune 23, 1972 (age 41), Marseille, France
    PositionMidfielder
    Number521

    Zinedine Zidane
    Zinedine Zidane 2008.jpg
    Zidane in 2008
    Personal information
    Full nameZinedine Yazid Zidane[1][2]
    Date of birth23 June 1972 (age 41)[1]
    Place of birthMarseille, France
    Height1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
    Playing positionAttacking midfielder
    Club information
    Current clubReal Madrid (assistant coach
    and sporting director)
    Youth career
    1982–1983US Saint-Henri
    1983–1986SO Septèmes-les-Vallons
    1986–1989Cannes
    Senior career*
    YearsTeamApps(Gls)
    1989–1992Cannes61(6)
    1992–1996Bordeaux139(28)
    1996–2001Juventus151(24)
    2001–2006Real Madrid155(37)
    Total506(95)
    National team
    1988–1989France U-174(1)
    1989–1990France U-186(0)
    1990–1994France U-2120(3)
    1994–2006France108(31)
    Teams managed
    2013–Real Madrid (assistant)
    * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
    † Appearances (Goals).
    Zinedine Yazid Zidane (French pronunciation: ​[zinedin zidan], born 23 June 1972) is a French assistant coach and sporting director at Real Madrid[3][4] and a retired footballer[1][5][6] who played as an attacking midfielder for the French national teamJuventus and Real Madrid. Zidane was named best European footballer of the past 50 years by UEFA,[7] and has been described as one of the greatest players in the history of the game.[8][9]
    At club level Zidane won La Liga and the UEFA Champions League with Real Madrid, two Serie A league championships with Juventus and anIntercontinental Cup and a UEFA Super Cup each with both aforementioned sides. On the international stage Zidane won 1998 FIFA World Cupand Euro 2000 with France.
    Amongst his personal accolades Zidane has won the FIFA World Player of the Year three times, and the Ballon D'Or once. He was Ligue 1 Player of the Year in 1996, Serie A Footballer of the Year in 2001 and La Liga Best Foreign Player in 2002. He was awarded the Euro 2000 Player of the tournament and the 2006 FIFA World Cup Golden Ball. He retired from professional football after the 2006 World Cup.

    Early life and career[edit]

    Zidane is of Algerian Kabyle Berber descent. His parents, Smaïl and Malika, emigrated to Paris from the village of Aguemoune in the Berber-speaking region of Kabylie in northern Algeria in 1953 before the start of the Algerian War. The family, which had settled in the city's tough northern districts of Barbès and Saint-Denis, found little work in the region, and in the mid-1960s moved to the northern Marseille suburb of La Castellane. On 23 June 1972, Zidane was born there as the youngest of five siblings. His father Smaïl worked as a warehouseman at a department store, often on the night shift, while his mother was a housewife.[10] The family live a reasonably comfortable life by the standards of the neighborhood, which was notorious throughout Marseille for its high crime and unemployment rates.[11]
    It was in La Castellane that Zidane had his earliest introduction to football, joining in at the age of five in football games that the neighbourhood's children played on the Place Tartane, an 80-by-12-yard plaza that served as the main square of the housing complex.[12] In July 2011, Zidane named former Olympique Marseille players Blaž SliškovićEnzo Francescoli and Jean-Pierre Papin as his idols while growing up.[13][14]
    At the age of ten, Zidane got his first player's license after joining the junior team of a local club from La Castellane by the name of US Saint-Henri. After spending a year and a half at US Saint-Henri, Zidane joined SO Septèmes-les-Vallons when the Septèmes coach Robert Centenero convinced the club's Director to get Zidane.
    Zidane stayed with Septèmes until the age of fourteen, at which time he was selected to attend a three-day training camp at the CREPS (Regional Centre for Sports and Physical Education) inAix-en-Provence, one of several such footballing institutes run by the French Football Federation. It was here that Zidane was spotted by AS Cannes scout Jean Varraud who recommended him to the training center director of the club.

  • Tiger woods

    Tiger woods

    Tiger woods

    Tiger woods

    Tiger woods

    Tiger woods


    Tiger woods

  • Tiger Woods
    Golfer
  • Eldrick Tont "Tiger" Woods is an American professional golfer whose achievements to date rank him among the most successful golfers of all time. Wikipedia
  • BornDecember 30, 1975 (age 37), Cypress, California, United States
    Full nameEldrick Tont Woods
    SpouseElin Nordegren (m. 2004–2010)


    Full nameEldrick Tont Woods
    NicknameTiger
    BornDecember 30, 1975 (age 37)
    Cypress, California
    Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
    Weight185 lb (84 kg; 13.2 st)
    Nationality United States
    ResidenceJupiter Island, Florida
    SpouseElin Nordegren (2004–2010)
    ChildrenSam Alexis (b. 2007)
    Charlie Axel (b. 2009)
    Career
    CollegeStanford University (two years)
    Turned professional1996
    Current tour(s)PGA Tour (joined 1996)
    Professional wins106[1]
    Number of wins by tour
    PGA Tour79 (2nd all time)
    European Tour40 (3rd all time)[2][3]
    Japan Golf Tour2
    Asian Tour1
    PGA Tour of Australasia1
    Other16
    Best results in Major Championships
    (Wins: 14)
    Masters TournamentWon1997200120022005
    U.S. OpenWon200020022008
    The Open ChampionshipWon200020052006
    PGA ChampionshipWon1999200020062007
    Achievements and awards
    PGA Tour
    Rookie of the Year
    1996
    PGA Player of the Year1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2013
    PGA Tour
    Player of the Year
    1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2013
    PGA Tour
    leading money winner
    1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2013
    Vardon Trophy1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2013
    Byron Nelson Award1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009
    FedEx Cup Champion20072009
    (For a full list of awards, see here)
    Eldrick Tont "TigerWoods (born December 30, 1975)[4][5] is an American professional golfer whose achievements to date rank him among the most successful golfers of all time. Currently the World No. 1, he has been one of the highest-paid athletes in the world for several years according to Forbes.
    Woods turned professional in 1996, and by April 1997 he had already won his first major, the 1997 Masters in a record-breaking performance. He first reached the number one position in the world rankings in June 1997. Through the 2000s, Woods was the dominant force in golf, spending 264 weeks from August 1999 to September 2004 and 281 weeks from June 2005 to October 2010 as world number one. From December 2009 to early April 2010, Woods took leave from professional golf to focus on his marriage after he admitted infidelity. His multiple infidelities were revealed by several different women, through many worldwide media sources.[6] This was followed by a loss of golf form, and his ranking gradually fell to a low of No. 58 in November 2011.[7][8] He snapped a career-long winless streak of 107 weeks when he captured theChevron World Challenge in December 2011.[8] After winning the Arnold Palmer Invitational on March 25, 2013, he ascended to the No.1 Ranking once again.
    Woods has broken numerous golf records. He has been world number one for the most consecutive weeks and for the greatest total number of weeks of any other golfer. He has been awarded PGA Player of the Year a record eleven times,[9] the Byron Nelson Award for lowest adjusted scoring average a record eight times, and has the record of leading the money list in ten different seasons. He has won 14 professional major golf championships, the second highest of any player (Jack Nicklaus leads with 18), and 79 PGA Tour events, second all time behind Sam Snead.[10] He has more career major wins and career PGA Tour wins than any other active golfer. He is the youngest player to achieve the career Grand Slam, and the youngest and fastest to win 50 tournaments on tour. Additionally, Woods is only the second golfer, after Jack Nicklaus, to have achieved a career Grand Slam three times. Woods has won 18 World Golf Championships, and won at least one of those events in each of the first 11 years after they began in 1999. Woods is the only golfer to win The Silver Medal and The Gold Medal at The Open Championship.

    Background and family

    Woods with his father Earl in 2004
    Woods was born in Cypress, California, to Earl (1932–2006) and Kultida (Tida) Woods (born 1944). He is the only child of their marriage, but does have two half-brothers, Earl Jr. (born 1955) and Kevin (born 1957), and a half-sister, Royce (born 1958) from the 18-year marriage of Earl Woods and his first wife, Barbara Woods Gray.[11] Earl, a retired lieutenant colonel and Vietnam War veteran, was of mostly African American, as well as caucasian, and possible Native American and Chinese, ancestry.[12] Kultida (née Punsawad), originally from Thailand (where Earl had met her on a tour of duty in 1968), is of mixed ThaiChinese, and Dutch ancestry.[13] He refers to his ethnic make-up as "Cablinasian" (asyllabic abbreviation he coined from CaucasianBlackAmerican Indian, and Asian).[14]
    Woods' first name, Eldrick, was coined by his mother because it began with "E" (for Earl) and ended with "K" (for Kultida). His middle name Tont is a traditional Thai name. He was nicknamed Tiger in honor of his father's friend Col. Vuong Dang Phong, who had also been known as Tiger.[15]
    Woods has a niece, Cheyenne Woods, who played for Wake Forest University's golf team and turned professional in 2012, making her pro debut in the LPGA Championship.[16]