Monday 10 June 2013

You won't regret it!

A combination of Creative7's clips! Includes Neymar's 2012-2013 Skill!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fhPaK-RnII

Sunday 9 June 2013

Important Message!

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Neymar makes FC Barcelona even stronger

Neymar completed his move to Barcelona Monday in a deal that unites the Brazil star with Lionel Messi in a formidable attacking partnership.
Neymar signed a five-year contract with club president Sandro Rosell after choosing Barcelona over Real Madrid in an intense bidding war between the fierce Spanish rivals.
Formalities done, the 21-year-old striker jogged onto the Camp Nou pitch for the first time in his new Barcelona kit bearing the No. 11 and the name "Neymar Jr" on the back.
"I am very happy, very moved to be a Barcelona player and fulfil my dream," Neymar told the tens of thousands of fans who turned out to welcome him.
Neymar made it clear that he knows that, at least for now, he will have to play second fiddle to Messi.
"I want to help the team," he said. "I have come to add my part so that Lionel Messi continues to be the best player in the world."
Neymar's flight from Brazil arrived an hour behind schedule at around 1 p.m. local time. Decked out in solid black with sunglasses and a baseball cap, he took a chartered bus straight to Camp Nou where he took his first photograph in front of the blue and burgundy club insignia.
With the traditional thumbs-up welcome shoot done, Neymar stepped forward and waved over the mob of photographers to the hundreds of fans who had gathered wearing Brazil and Barcelona jerseys and chanting his name. He was then rushed through two medical exams and back to the office to sign the deal.
Even before making it official, Neymar's new teammates had given him their vote of confidence.
Earlier Monday, Barcelona midfielder Andres Iniesta said Neymar is coming "to the best place to grow," and that he expects him to become even better when paired in attack with Messi, the four-time world player of the year.
"He can bring us a lot because he is very talented player," Iniesta said. "He brings his ability to break down defences, to score, and to entertain. He is young. He has a long path ahead of him, and he is coming to the best place to grow."

Long Brazilian line

Iniesta also tried to ease the pressure on his new teammate and allay any concerns fans might have about whether two major stars like Messi and Neymar can play together.
"He is coming to the best possible place for him," Iniesta said. "Let him do what he does best, that is enough. It is great news that we can count on him. Surrounded by the people he will have here, he will get better and better.
"Great players always understand one another. Leo will be make Neymar better, and Neymar will make Leo better."
Dani Alves recalled the long line of Brazilian forwards who have triumphed at Barcelona, including Romario, Ronaldo, Rivaldo and Ronaldinho.
"He will give us a Brazilian touch," countryman Dani Alves said of Neymar. "The others left their mark. I am sure he will, too."
Another question is whether Neymar's arrival will mean the exit of Spain striker David Villa, who also plays on the left flank of Barcelona's attack.
Neymar flew to the Mediterranean city on a private jet with a small entourage, including his father Neymar Silva Santos, that left Rio de Janeiro after the national side's 2-2 draw with England on Sunday. He will return to his home country for the upcoming Confederations Cup, which Brazil is hosting in preparation for the 2014 World Cup.
Neymar led Santos on its greatest run since Pele stopped playing for the Brazilian club in the 1970s. He helped Santos win the 2010 Brazilian Cup, the 2011 Copa Libertadores and three straight Sao Paulo state championships, becoming the team's leading scorer in the post-Pele era with 138 goals in 230 matches.
In 2011, Neymar met many of the members of his new team when Barcelona beat Santos 4-0 in the final of Club World Cup.
Barcelona has not disclosed the financial details of the transfer, but Brazilian media said the Catalan club will pay about 30 million euros for the youngster.
Santos had fielded offers from Barcelona and Madrid and said it was up to Neymar to choose where he wanted to continue his career. Neymar signed an agreement to join the Spanish champions on May 27.

Neymar vs Russia and Chile

Perez: Neymar will improve La Liga


The Real Madrid president has wished the young Brazilian luck as he prepares for his first season with Barcelona despite being disappointed at failing to sign the player himself
Real Madrid president Florentino Perez has wished Neymar luck ahead of his first season with Barcelona, claiming the attacker will improve the standard of La Liga.

The Brazil international was unveiled at Camp Nou on Monday following his €57 million move to the Liga champions, having spurned offers from Madrid in favour of Barca.

Perez conceded Neymar was one of a handful of players he would have loved to have brought to Santiago Bernabeu over the years of his presidency, but believes the 21-year-old's abilities will benefit Spanish football next season. 

When asked which players he regretted not signing during his years as president, Perez told Marca: "Patrick Vieira and Francesco Totti spring to mind. In Ronaldinho's case we hesitated, but we did manage to sign David Beckham that year.

"Neymar is among this group of great players. I hope he succeeds at Barcelona. Anything that improves the quality of the league is good and certainly Neymar represents an improvement.”

Perez was recently re-elected for another tenure at the Bernabeu, and the 66-year-old has vowed to continue in the position for as long as the club desire.

"I don't definitively know," he replied when asked if this could be his final period in charge. "I'll be here as long as I am able and the members want me."

'I feel like a king' - Neymar


The new Barcelona signing has revealed he still glowing following his move to Catalonia and Thiago Silva has tipped his fellow Brazilian to succeed in Europe
Barcelona striker Neymar says his move to Camp Nou has left him feeling "as happy as a king".

The 21-year-old completed his switch to the Liga giants from Santos a fortnight ago and admitted that he is realising a long-time ambition by signing for the Catalans.

"Yes, I am very happy to have completed my move [to Barcelona]. This has always been a dream for me," he told Telefoot.

"My feeling is no doubt one of great happiness. I have followed the ideal path and now I'm happy as a king."

Meanwhile, the forward's Selecao team-mate Thiago Silva believes his countryman will not be overawed by the prospect of lining up alongside the continent's finest players every week.

"He will playing with the best team in the world and I think he will be fine," he said. 

"He will be surrounded with quality and he is prepared to meet this challenge. He will not be afraid of playing alongside the biggest names in world football."

The Full Volley: Neymar gives Barcelona a necessary scoring alternative to Messi


Lionel Messi scores too many goals.
In the past two seasons alone he's scored over 150 goals in all competitions. Any detailed analysis would conclude that that's a lot of goals.
The main objective of soccer is to score more than the opposition, so heady goal tallies shouldn't be a problem. The issue is that Barcelona is becoming increasingly reliant on Messi.
Ever since David Villa broke his leg in the 2011 Club World Cup, Barca has lacked a significant scoring alternative to the Argentine. The second-highest team scorer in La Liga the past two seasons has hit 11 (Cesc Fabregas this season, Alexis Sanchez in 2011-12). Compare that with Villa's 18 in 2010-11, Zlatan Ibrahimovic's 16 in 2010 and, the last Barca player to outscore Messi, Samuel Eto'o's 30 in 2009.
Here's the percentage of Barcelona's league goals scored by Messi by year: 22 percent in 2008-09, 35 percent in 2009-10, 33 percent in 2010-11, 44 percent in 2011-12, 40 percent in 2012-13. Note that the year when he contributed the largest share, 2012, Real Madrid won the title.
Four league trophies in five years is spectacular. Barcelona has also reached the semifinal stage of the Champions League five years running, a record. Messi has scored 40 percent of his team's Champions League goals four years in a row, including during the 2011 triumph.
Jordi Alba, with two goals, was second on Barcelona for UCL goals. The four years prior, the second-highest Barca goalscorer in Europe hit four or five (Pedro 2010-12 and Thierry Henry in 2009).
Tito Vilanova has streamlined the Barcelona attack through Messi. When you have the best player in several generations, ride him. However, as the comprehensive 7-0 aggregate loss to Bayern Munich in the Champions League semifinal attested, the other 10 guys matter.
Injury hobbled Messi against Bayern. The Catalans could have used a secondary option.
Enter Neymar.
The club shelled out 57 million euros to sign the next great Brazilian star. Barca doesn't normally shy away from high price tags on strikers (Ibrahimovic, David Villa, Sanchez) and had extra incentive here. First, other clubs, reportedly including Real Madrid, wanted Neymar this summer. Secondly, only certain players fit into Barcelona's system.
Any supplemental scorer brought in needs not only to gel with Barca's precise passing style but also has to provide goals from wide positions. Messi, the best player in the world, already called dibs on the middle.
Neymar excels starting from a wide left position with leeway to bear down on goal. He won the golden boot in Brazil three years in a row and scored nearly a goal a game since the start of 2012.
By far the biggest challenge of the 21-year-old's career will be to make sure Barcelona doesn't have to overspend on yet another striker next season.

The sophomore slump

How do you replace David Beckham?
The LA Galaxy, with an extra Designated Player spot in hand, tried with Real Madrid's Ricardo Kaka. They tried a fellow Englishman, but Frank Lampard signed a contract extension with Chelsea instead. Even with former AEG CEO Tim Leiweke in the fold, the following act proved elusive.
Next attempt: a reported $8 million bid for Giovani Dos Santos.
Galaxy president Chris Klein said the club would aggressively pursue a third DP this summer, and $8m would likely be more than any MLS team has paid in a transfer fee.
For the Galaxy, Dos Santos ticks every box. He's young (24), coming off the best season of his career (six goals and seven assists in La Liga), hugely popular with the Latino market as a key Mexican international and nominally available. Fittingly with Gio's luck, his best club season came during a relegation campaign, with Real Mallorca going down on the last day of the season.
Unfortunately for Los Angeles, MLS probably doesn't appeal to Dos Santos at this stage of his career. The former Barcelona prodigy found his way again last season following a pitiful stint at Tottenham (and subsequent loans to Ipswich Town, Galatasaray and Racing Santander). A team in Spain's top flight will likely offer him employment, with Valencia linked.
That last DP roster spot will start burning a hole in Klein's back pocket soon.

Gambling with house money

Radamel Falcao may be the best pure striker in the world. Last year his 40 goals in all competitions led Atletico Madrid to the promised land of the Champions League.
So naturally he joined a newly promoted team in France that, even when it made it to the Champions League final in 2004, didn't average much more than 10,000 people per game.
AS Monaco presents an interesting career choice. Owned by Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev, the principality club doesn't have to pay taxes on wages. The rest of France coughs up 75 percent for salaries over 1m euros.
So if Monaco and, say, Paris Saint-Germain chase the same player and offer him a similar wage packet, the overall cost to PSG would be four times as much as it would setback Monaco.
That sort of math has already convinced Ricardo Carvalho and Porto duo James Rodriguez and Joao Mourinho to join Falcao.
Monaco should finish in the European places its first year back in Ligue 1. Later, it will likely challenge PSG, which only bowed out of the Champions League quarterfinals to Barcelona on away goals. France could become substantially more prominent on the continental soccer scene just as Falcao stretches out the tail end of his prime.
And if not? Well, it's not much of a gamble: he'll still be filthy rich.