Nama lengkap Muhammad Syarif , lahir di Bangsa yang besar Indonesia, tepatnya di Ibukota Jakarta yang serba ada ini. Saya lahir pada tanggal 16 maret 1991 anak ke 5 dari 6 bersaudara. Kegiatan sekarang masih betah NGULIAH.
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Anak Jakarta Yang Dilahirkan Di Bangsa Yang Besar Dan Bangga Akan Negeri nya Sendiri Yaitu " INDONESIA "
Selasa, 27 Agustus 2013
Senin, 12 November 2012
UNIVERSITAS BUDI LUHUR UNGGULAN DI JAKARTA
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Kamis, 27 September 2012
resource
Little more than a month into the season, new signing Oscar is already a Stamford Bridge sensation.
I must confess that I took a bit longer to be won over by him - before making up for lost time by coming to the conclusion that he could be the most important player Brazilian football has produced in a while.
I was at one of his very first matches for Internacional, a 3-0 defeat to Fluminense in the Maracana stadium in August 2010. He was brought on after 35 minutes, made a mess of everything he tried and was himself replaced after 57. It hardly matched the hype that was already surrounding him.
Three months later I saw him get a place in the starting line-up against Botafogo. He made little impression and was substituted once more. But before the game I talked to Inter's director Fernando Carvallo, one of the best talent spotters in the Brazilian game. Forget any early impressions, he said. This boy is the genuine article.
If such a knowledgeable source had high hopes, then Oscar was clearly worth a third glance, a fourth and a fifth.
Early in 2011, he started to impress playing for Brazil in the South American Under-20 Championships. The individual plaudits went to Neymar and Lucas Moura, but it was noticeable that Oscar was at the heart of many of the good collective things his side were producing.
But could he cut it with the seniors? He quickly showed he could, scoring three times for Internacional in their Copa Libertadores campaign.
Then came his triumphant World Youth Cup campaign. With both Neymar and Lucas promoted to the full Brazil side, there was more responsibility for Oscar to carry. For all his frailty and sloped shoulders, he bore it well.
He scored all three goals in the final against Portugal. But at least as impressive was his all-round game - and as he has continued to progress over the subsequent year, it is his versatility which catches the eye as much as his ability to score goals - like the one against Juventus last week that sent the Stamford Bridge faithful crazy.
Oscar can drop back and mark. Stronger than he looks, he can win the ball, orchestrate possession from deep, feed the strikers and get beyond them to shoot at goal. Bright and mobile, two-footed and talented, he is a midfielder in the full sense of the word - and it is precisely that which makes him so interesting.
The glory days of Brazilian football - those three World Cup wins between 1958 and '70 - came after they had come up with the idea of the back four, dropping an extra player to the centre of the defence to provide extra security.
A football team is like one organic unit - making changes in one part will inevitably have an effect on another. In this case the burden was borne by the central midfielders. Since the initial idea was to retain two wingers and two strikers, the pair in the middle found themselves with acres of space to cover. So both of them had to be all-rounders, able to attack and defend.
In 1958 and '62 the central midfield pairing was formed by Didi and Zito. 'The Ethiopian Prince,' Didi was the brains of the team, cutting opponents apart with his elegant passing. But he also had to work hard when Brazil lost possession, getting behind the line of the ball and closing down space.
Alongside him, Zito was the enforcer, the hard man who screened the centre-backs. But he could also make an attacking contribution, as he showed when scoring the goal that effectively won the 1962 World Cup. Brazil and Czechoslovakia were level at 1-1 when he both started and ended the move that put his side ahead, running the length of the field to head home at the far post.
Eight years later in Mexico, it was a similar story, with Gerson and Clodoaldo in the roles of Didi and Zito.
Brazil were a goal down in the semi-final against Uruguay. Gerson, the latter day Didi, was not the greatest athlete - he was struggling to find space against the tight Uruguayan marking - so he took a decision. He dropped back to cover and sent Clodoaldo, Zito's replacement for club and country further forward. It was an inspired switch - just before half-time Clodoaldo scored the equaliser.
The classic 4-2-4 system did not last long. Even in 1958 Mario Zagallo was funnelling back from left wing to help out the overworked midfield duo. But for a while afterwards, 4-2-4 influenced the way that Brazilian midfielders developed. The 1982 pairing of Falcao and Toninho Cerezo were also all-rounders.
Then it all changed. Brazil became increasingly dependent on attacking full-backs. Someone had to cover for them. And having purely defensive midfielders in a 4-4-2 meant that there was also space for purely attacking ones. The age of the specialist was born.
For years Brazil's midfield included Gilberto Silva - now winding down his career where he started it, at centre-back - and Kaka, who in reality is a support striker. Even while it was winning trophies, a midfield without midfielders could never capture hearts by producing the flowing football of old.
For all the frequent disappointing results Brazil have had over the last two years, and for all the jeers aimed at coach Mano Menezes, there are grounds for optimism. The midfielder is back. Oscar is proof. So too is Romulo.
If Oscar is an attacking midfielder who can also defend, Romulo is the opposite. Both were on target last week in the Champions League - Oscar, of course, for Chelsea against Juventus, and Romulo for Spartak Moscow against Barcelona - on his 22nd birthday. If this really is the rebirth of the all-round Brazilian midfielder, then we all have something to celebrate.
Comments on the piece in the space provided. Questions on South American football to vickerycolumn@hotmail.com and I'll pick out a couple for next week.
From last week's postbag:
I am always interested when British footballers move abroad. The trend has steadily decreased, so the recent transfer of goalkeeper Mark Cook from Harrogate to Universitario of Peru has fascinated me and I would love to hear your insight into this. I see he made his debut recently and was slightly shaky from what I saw online, but the goal was decent and he could do little about it. What has been the reaction to his arrival in South America and how do you feel he will adapt?
Craig Morton
I'm all in favour of British players moving abroad - it's a great way to broaden their education. There are easier places than South America to do it, though! The Mark Cook case is interesting precisely because it is so rare - which means that he sticks out so much.
For the debut match you mentioned - where he did nothing wrong - one of the Peruvian papers sent a reporter into the stands to hear what was being said. There were reports of anger directed at him, at the fact that he was taking the place of a local, and plenty of uncomplimentary remarks about the ungainly way he moves.
He does look as if he could command his area better than the club's other keepers. But fundamental in this position is communication with the defence. He doesn't speak the language and it was clear in that debut game that the centre-backs were reluctant to pass back to him.
resource :
I must confess that I took a bit longer to be won over by him - before making up for lost time by coming to the conclusion that he could be the most important player Brazilian football has produced in a while.
I was at one of his very first matches for Internacional, a 3-0 defeat to Fluminense in the Maracana stadium in August 2010. He was brought on after 35 minutes, made a mess of everything he tried and was himself replaced after 57. It hardly matched the hype that was already surrounding him.
Three months later I saw him get a place in the starting line-up against Botafogo. He made little impression and was substituted once more. But before the game I talked to Inter's director Fernando Carvallo, one of the best talent spotters in the Brazilian game. Forget any early impressions, he said. This boy is the genuine article.
Oscar is already attracting attention for his all-round midfielder's game. Photo: Empics
Early in 2011, he started to impress playing for Brazil in the South American Under-20 Championships. The individual plaudits went to Neymar and Lucas Moura, but it was noticeable that Oscar was at the heart of many of the good collective things his side were producing.
But could he cut it with the seniors? He quickly showed he could, scoring three times for Internacional in their Copa Libertadores campaign.
Then came his triumphant World Youth Cup campaign. With both Neymar and Lucas promoted to the full Brazil side, there was more responsibility for Oscar to carry. For all his frailty and sloped shoulders, he bore it well.
He scored all three goals in the final against Portugal. But at least as impressive was his all-round game - and as he has continued to progress over the subsequent year, it is his versatility which catches the eye as much as his ability to score goals - like the one against Juventus last week that sent the Stamford Bridge faithful crazy.
Oscar can drop back and mark. Stronger than he looks, he can win the ball, orchestrate possession from deep, feed the strikers and get beyond them to shoot at goal. Bright and mobile, two-footed and talented, he is a midfielder in the full sense of the word - and it is precisely that which makes him so interesting.
The glory days of Brazilian football - those three World Cup wins between 1958 and '70 - came after they had come up with the idea of the back four, dropping an extra player to the centre of the defence to provide extra security.
A football team is like one organic unit - making changes in one part will inevitably have an effect on another. In this case the burden was borne by the central midfielders. Since the initial idea was to retain two wingers and two strikers, the pair in the middle found themselves with acres of space to cover. So both of them had to be all-rounders, able to attack and defend.
In 1958 and '62 the central midfield pairing was formed by Didi and Zito. 'The Ethiopian Prince,' Didi was the brains of the team, cutting opponents apart with his elegant passing. But he also had to work hard when Brazil lost possession, getting behind the line of the ball and closing down space.
Alongside him, Zito was the enforcer, the hard man who screened the centre-backs. But he could also make an attacking contribution, as he showed when scoring the goal that effectively won the 1962 World Cup. Brazil and Czechoslovakia were level at 1-1 when he both started and ended the move that put his side ahead, running the length of the field to head home at the far post.
Eight years later in Mexico, it was a similar story, with Gerson and Clodoaldo in the roles of Didi and Zito.
Brazil were a goal down in the semi-final against Uruguay. Gerson, the latter day Didi, was not the greatest athlete - he was struggling to find space against the tight Uruguayan marking - so he took a decision. He dropped back to cover and sent Clodoaldo, Zito's replacement for club and country further forward. It was an inspired switch - just before half-time Clodoaldo scored the equaliser.
The classic 4-2-4 system did not last long. Even in 1958 Mario Zagallo was funnelling back from left wing to help out the overworked midfield duo. But for a while afterwards, 4-2-4 influenced the way that Brazilian midfielders developed. The 1982 pairing of Falcao and Toninho Cerezo were also all-rounders.
Then it all changed. Brazil became increasingly dependent on attacking full-backs. Someone had to cover for them. And having purely defensive midfielders in a 4-4-2 meant that there was also space for purely attacking ones. The age of the specialist was born.
For years Brazil's midfield included Gilberto Silva - now winding down his career where he started it, at centre-back - and Kaka, who in reality is a support striker. Even while it was winning trophies, a midfield without midfielders could never capture hearts by producing the flowing football of old.
For all the frequent disappointing results Brazil have had over the last two years, and for all the jeers aimed at coach Mano Menezes, there are grounds for optimism. The midfielder is back. Oscar is proof. So too is Romulo.
If Oscar is an attacking midfielder who can also defend, Romulo is the opposite. Both were on target last week in the Champions League - Oscar, of course, for Chelsea against Juventus, and Romulo for Spartak Moscow against Barcelona - on his 22nd birthday. If this really is the rebirth of the all-round Brazilian midfielder, then we all have something to celebrate.
Comments on the piece in the space provided. Questions on South American football to vickerycolumn@hotmail.com and I'll pick out a couple for next week.
From last week's postbag:
I am always interested when British footballers move abroad. The trend has steadily decreased, so the recent transfer of goalkeeper Mark Cook from Harrogate to Universitario of Peru has fascinated me and I would love to hear your insight into this. I see he made his debut recently and was slightly shaky from what I saw online, but the goal was decent and he could do little about it. What has been the reaction to his arrival in South America and how do you feel he will adapt?
Craig Morton
I'm all in favour of British players moving abroad - it's a great way to broaden their education. There are easier places than South America to do it, though! The Mark Cook case is interesting precisely because it is so rare - which means that he sticks out so much.
For the debut match you mentioned - where he did nothing wrong - one of the Peruvian papers sent a reporter into the stands to hear what was being said. There were reports of anger directed at him, at the fact that he was taking the place of a local, and plenty of uncomplimentary remarks about the ungainly way he moves.
He does look as if he could command his area better than the club's other keepers. But fundamental in this position is communication with the defence. He doesn't speak the language and it was clear in that debut game that the centre-backs were reluctant to pass back to him.
resource :
Real Madrid 3-2 Man City: Why City left Bernabeu empty-handed
Real Madrid 3-2 Man City: Why City left Bernabeu empty-handed
Comments (180)
Leading 2-1 with less than three minutes to go, Manchester City
looked set to become only the third English side to beat Real Madrid at
the Bernabeu.
But instead of beginning their Champions League
campaign with a famous victory, Roberto Mancini's men were left to rue
what might have been.
Karim Benzema's equaliser was quickly followed by Cristiano Ronaldo's dramatic last-gasp winner, leading to a sliding celebration from Real boss Jose Mourinho.
What went wrong for City in their first match in Group D?
BBC football pundit Robbie Savage, speaking on BBC Radio 5 live, analysed a remarkable night.
Real run riot down City's right
Maicon was not at the races at all in the first half at right-back. He was a passenger and it was like City were playing with 10 men. Cristiano Ronaldo kept cutting inside him.Ronaldo's reign
Cristiano Ronaldo's winner for Real Madrid was his 39th Champions League goal - only three fewer than the entire Manchester City squad - in 81 appearances.
In the second half, Vincent
Kompany looked at what was happening and came across to that wing more.
Ronaldo did not have the beating of Kompany and he started to get
frustrated.
But, even so, Marcelo was allowed to come inside more and more, as he did for his goal.
For the Real Madrid winner, City let Ronaldo move inside too easily. He went past Pablo Zabaleta as if he wasn't there.
Zabaleta, who replaced Maicon, needed to stop Ronaldo at source. He was on the bench for most of the game watching Ronaldo take apart Maicon and didn't learn. He should have seen what was happening.
Did City's formation put them under pressure?
It was too easy at times for Real Madrid, especially in the first half. With the 4-3-2-1 formation that City play, with two holding midfielders in Javi Garcia and Gareth Barry, it meant the Madrid full-backs could go forward.English wins at the Bernabeu
Arsenal won 1-0 in a Champions League second-round clash in 2006, with Thierry Henry scoring the winnerLiverpool also won 1-0 in the first leg of a Champions League second-round tie, when Yossi Benayoun scored their winner in 2009
If Mancini wants to play Garcia
and Barry - plus Yaya Toure in that position behind Carlos Tevez - he
has to go out in the transfer window and buy a Xabi Alonso-type player
to do that job.
At the Bernabeu, whenever Garcia or Barry got on the
ball, there were men all around them. Madrid were pressing all over the
pitch.
City were over-run, especially early on, and Real made changes, bringing on Mesut Ozil, Luka Modric and Karim Benzema when they fell behind.
resource : http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/19643626
Wolves: Dave Edwards says they will not fret over Chelsea caning
Wolves: Dave Edwards says they will not fret over Chelsea caning
Wolverhampton Wanderers midfielder Dave Edwards insists that
Tuesday's 6-0 Capital One Cup caning at Chelsea will not affect their
Championship form.
A weakened Wolves side were no match for the Premier League leaders.
But Edwards insists that there will be no hangover when Dave Jones' Sheffield Wednesday visit Molineux on Saturday.
"We've had such a good week in the Championship, we won't take anything out of this game into Saturday," Wolves' stand-in skipper told BBC WM.
"We've got nine points out of nine, with another two home games coming up.
"And a lot of the boys have had a rest. We'll dust ourselves down and put this behind us."
Old gold and black is not the colour at Stamford Bridge . . .
- September 2012: Chelsea 6-0 Wolves . . . 3-0 down after 17 minutes
- November 2011: Chelsea 3-0 Wolves . . . 3-0 down at half-time
- October 2010: Chelsea 2-0 Wolves
- November 2009: Chelsea 4-0 Wolves . . . 3-0 down after 22 minutes
- March 2004 : Chelsea 5-2 Wolves
One source of comfort for
Wolves, sixth in the Championship, as they analyse their biggest defeat
since March 2007 (a 6-0 home defeat by Southampton) was that Edwards
considered all the goals were avoidable.
"The cynic in me says that all six we could have dealt better with," he added.
"Most of the goals were of our own doing and we should be a lot better than that.
"You know set pieces is somewhere you can match a team like Chelsea and to give them three from set pieces is very disappointing.
"But we made some silly mistakes and shot ourselves in the foot right from the start.
"As soon as it gets to 3-0 down you're looking at damage limitation.
"Three out of the last four times we've played here we've been three down in no time. And it's hard to come back from that."
While it was a disappointing team effort from Stale Solbakken's side, Edwards did at least have the honour of skippering Wolves for the first time.
"To lead the team out at Stamford Bridge is a great thing," he said.
"I feel a great deal of pride to have worn the armband."
resource : http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/19732469
england
If you want to know how good Dan Ashworth is, consider the fact he is
having to serve almost a year's notice before taking up his new
director of elite development job
at the Football Association.
West Brom believe it could take that long to find
someone capable of replacing their sporting and technical director - and
the FA is willing to wait for the 41-year-old because he is rated so
highly.
This is the second time the FA has turned to The Hawthorns to make a major appointment inside six months and Ashworth might prove to be even more important to England's long-term prospects than manager Roy Hodgson.
Ashworth will oversee youth development, coaching and the high-performance facilities at St George's Park - the FA's new national football centre at Burton - all with the overarching aim of improving the performance of the national team.
His line manager, Sir Trevor Brooking, said: "Dan certainly won't be lacking things to do."
Youth development
Ashworth, who headed up Peterborough's academy set-up and was later Cambridge United's centre of excellence director before joining West Brom in 2004, will help to develop and implement a "technical script" for the FA.This might sound like empty jargon but it will set out how England teams play, from Hodgson's senior side down to the under-11s.
The emphasis will be on playing the ball out from the back and keeping possession - qualities England teams have not always had in abundance.
"The game is getting more technical and there is a focus on decision-making, skill and creativity," said Brooking, the FA's director of football development.
The hard part will be making this script become reality.
Implementing the "elite player performance plan", which is designed to make club academies more accountable, should help.
Dan Ashworth factfile
- Born: 6 March 1971
- Playing career included stints for Norwich youth team and Wisbech
- 2000: Becomes academy director at Peterborough
- 2001: Appointed Cambridge United's centre of excellence director
- March 2004: Leaves post at Cambridge United to assist Aidy Boothroyd with running West Brom's own centre
- June 2004: Takes charge of West Brom's youth ranks
- December 2007: Seconded to be West Brom's sporting and technical director
- July 2008: Made permanent in position - overseeing first team, scouting & recruitment, medical & sports science and academy
- September 2012: Made FA's director of elite development
A senior coach at each academy
will be interviewed and have to provide a performance plan outlining
their facilities, coaching and philosophy.
The level of funding given will depend on the status
the club's academy is awarded. The audits took place this summer and
Ashworth oversaw West Brom's application for category A status.
Brooking said: "Dan has been through the process and can advise the clubs with the benefit of first-hand knowledge."
Ashworth will also oversee coaching of England teams below the seniors and under-21s. The FA wants him to take a "holistic approach", meaning players will be taught more than just technical skills, but also developed physiologically, socially and psychologically.
The former Norwich City youth team player was an education and welfare officer at Peterborough before becoming a youth coach and then head of the club's academy.
Peterborough director of football Barry Fry worked closely with him and said he had excellent credentials when it came to youth development.
"It was an excellent academy, with Dan very much at the forefront," Fry told BBC Sport. "He brought through players like Matthew Etherington, Simon Davies, Shaun St Ledger, Adam Drury and Mark McKeever, which tells you all you need to know.
"He was so good at spotting talent and a lovely man who got on great with the kids and their parents, which is very important."
Improving coaching
The FA wants the £120m St George's Park to be an "educational hub", where players and coaches from around the country come to learn.On Ashworth's watch, an online resource for coaches will be set up at thefa.com, including videos showing examples of good training sessions.
What they say about Ashworth
"Dan took a lot of the burden off me - the chairman was visionary in appointing him," Tony Mowbray, former West Brom boss"He was so good at spotting talent and is a lovely man," Barry Fry, Peterborough director of football
"Dan has worked tirelessly for this club over the past eight years," Jeremy Peace , West Brom chairman
Coaches will also be encouraged to watch England youth teams being trained and listen to lectures in the 90-seat auditorium.
Ashworth has a Uefa pro licence - European football's
highest coaching qualification - and worked as a coach at Peterborough.
Fry said: "I remember Dan was a very good communicator and I know the lads found his sessions interesting and stimulating.
"He'd encourage them to come up with ideas and solutions themselves, rather than telling them what to do.
"Then he's gone on to oversee academies and recruit coaches."
High performance
West Brom have a new, state-of-the-art training centre housing a hydrotherapy pool with underwater cameras and an anti-gravity treadmill.Players' performances in training are analysed using GPS tracking and computer software and rehabilitation from injury is carefully monitored. It cost £500,000 and was overseen by Ashworth.
Brooking said: "The facilities at St George's are amazing. The job now is to recruit the staff to match."
Ashworth will also oversee scouting, video analysis and the setting up of a vast player database.
He certainly knows a thing or two about scouting. Ashworth said he used to watch about 300 matches a season at West Brom and he secured some bargains for the club, including Graham Dorrans (£100,000), Youssuf Mulumbu (£175,000), Jonas Olsson (£800,000) and McAuley and Jacob (both free).
This was a big reason why the Baggies had the second-lowest wage bill in the Premier League last season and debts of only £2m.
Diplomacy
"No matter how good our facilities, we can't function without the help of other organisations such as the Premier League, Football League and League Manager's Association," admitted Brooking."He's a good man-manager and that's very important. We are trying to be a supportive organisation. We need everyone to buy into what we're doing.
"Dan has worked at a Football League and a Premier League club, and he knows how a club owner's mind works."
It is hard to think of a more demanding job in football, or one demanding so many different skills. Brooking had originally wanted to pair Ashworth with Gareth Southgate, who had been working as head of elite development, but the former England international quit the FA this summer.
"Dan has so many different skills and areas of experience and he's relishing this opportunity," Brooking said.
The former West Ham and England player hopes Ashworth will soon be in place to start the long process of turning round English football.
resource : http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/19678859
Rafael to become Man Utd stalwart - Rio Ferdinand
Rafael to become Man Utd stalwart - Rio Ferdinand
Rio Ferdinand has tipped team-mate Rafael Da Silva to become a "top" defender for Manchester United.
The Brazilian has had a strong start to the season,
scoring the equaliser in United's 2-1 win at Liverpool on Sunday.
He emerged as the first-choice right-back after Chris Smalling and Phil Jones picked up long-term injuries.
Ferdinand, however, says the 22-year-old has an "emotional" edge to overcome before establishing himself.
Rafael factfile
Born: 9 July 1990, Rio de Janeiro, BrazilClubs: Fluminense, Manchester United
Man Utd appearances: 94
Brazil caps: 2
"Rafa is his own worst critic," Ferdinand said.
"He is emotional and sometimes when he makes a mistake
he has to make up for it immediately. That comes out in his game at
times.
"When I was his age I was a lot like that. I used to be more interested in what was happening in the attacking part of the game and further up the pitch than defensive play.
"With experience that will disappear and you will see a top right-back."
Rafael moved to Old Trafford from Fluminense in 2008, along with twin brother Fabio, who is currently on loan at QPR.
He signed a new four-year contract in July and has clocked up 94 appearances for the club, including four Premier League starts so far this season.
resource : http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/19728260
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