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2012 UCI Cyclocross World Championships – Junior Men – Daily Peloton


Daily Peloton
2012 UCI Cyclocross World Championships – Junior Men
Daily Peloton
By Staff Recent World Cup winner, Mathieu van der Poel of the Netherlands continued his winning streak dominating the action today win the Junior Cyclocross World Championship in Koksijde. Van der Poel attacked in the final laps in the sand and rode
Mathieu van der Poel takes worlds Junior CX titlevelonews.competitor.com

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2012 UCI Cyclocross World Championships – Junior Men – Daily Peloton

January 28, 2012 By : rioworld Category : featured Tags:, , , , , , , ,
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Pauwels and Van den Brand win the Cyclo-cross World Cup overall – Boxscore News


Boxscore News
Pauwels and Van den Brand win the Cyclo-cross World Cup overall
Boxscore News
The Patrick UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup concluded in Hoogerheide, the Netherlands. Kevin Pauwels (Sunweb-Revor) defended his overall lead on a muddy course with style by grabbing his fourth win in the series. In the Women's category, Daphny van den Brand
Kevin Pauwels wins the 8th Elite Men's World Cup round, along with overall bettor.com (blog)
Kevin Pauwels uses teamwork to take Hoogerheide World CupVeloNation
Updated: It's Vos and Pauwels Again in Hoogerheidevelonews.competitor.com

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Pauwels and Van den Brand win the Cyclo-cross World Cup overall – Boxscore News

January 23, 2012 By : rioworld Category : featured Tags:, , , , , , , , , ,
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Vos in charge at world cup CX in Hoogerheide – velonews.competitor.com


VeloNation
Vos in charge at world cup CX in Hoogerheide
velonews.competitor.com
By Dan Seaton Hoogerheide, Netherlands (VN) – For the second time in as many weeks Dutch riders nearly swept the UCI World Cup, claiming both race victories and overall titles in in the Junior, Under-23, and Women's categories.
Kevin Pauwels uses teamwork to take Hoogerheide World CupVeloNation

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January 22, 2012 By : rioworld Category : featured Tags:, , , , , , , , ,
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From World Cup winner with Spain to bench-warmer at Benfica – What has … – Goal.com

From World Cup winner with Spain to bench-warmer at Benfica – What has
Goal.com
In 12 months, he went from starting for Spain in the 2010 World Cup final against the Netherlands to finding himself on the fringes at Benfica after a free transfer from Villarreal. But Capdevila's Greek tragedy began during the 2010-11 term,

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From World Cup winner with Spain to bench-warmer at Benfica – What has … – Goal.com

January 14, 2012 By : rioworld Category : featured Tags:, , , , , , , , , , , ,
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This World Cup is the Real Deal – Manawatu Standard


Manawatu Standard
This World Cup is the Real Deal
Manawatu Standard
“It's probably as busy as the early pre-World Cup days,” he said. “The last few days have been good.” People from as far away as the Netherlands had been keen to catch a glimpse of the cup. “When they heard we had it they wanted to come in,” Mr Berg

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This World Cup is the Real Deal – Manawatu Standard

December 29, 2011 By : rioworld Category : featured Tags:, , , , , , , , ,
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Selecão Classics: Brazil vs Argentina 1982 World Cup

Warning: this article is really, really long.  Is there anything that haunts Brazilian football more than the specter of their famous 1982 team?  It’s not just that they were loaded with stars.  (They were.)  Or that their coach, Tele Santana, is credited with bringing back “flair” to the national team.  (He did.)  1982 was the apex of “football as romantic expression.”  Of style over substance.  Of the road versus results.  The very fact that the team lost is almost proof of their virtue, as if they eschewed such ignoble ambitions like “winning,” or such robotic practices like “doing whatever it takes to win” in favor of pure artistry.  As the saying goes, it’s not the destination that matters…it’s the journey.  Analyzing the truth behind this is hard to do, especially if we view the past through canary-colored glasses.  (I know, I know, I’ve used this line before.  I can’t help it.)  For one thing, there’s no doubt that the team did not place style over results, nor did their fans at the time.  The team as a whole was crushed after their quarterfinal loss to Italy, vainly trying to provide answers to shell-shocked journalists, muttering banalities like “this was the day that football died.”  If the players really were committed to some fantastic ideal, that it was less about what you did and more about how you did it , they would have left the pitch with their heads held high rather than with their heads bowed.  Still, there’s at least some truth to the notion, considering that to this day, the world remembers Zico’s Brazil more than they do the eventual winners, Paolo Rossi’s Italy.  Unless you’re an Italian, anyway.  Brazil ’82 was an event, something like a Woodstock, or a JFK assassination.  You remember where you were when you watched them.  Decades later, men and women who were in their teens back then still say things like, “I saw them, I was there .”  Brazil ’82 played with such an intuitive understanding, with such selflessness, with such audacity and playfulness, it really was like watching a group of eleven men united for a Cause.  The fact that they were defeated turned it into a Lost Cause, and anyone who knows anything about history knows that a Lost Cause is the most idealized, romanticized, and lamented thing of all.  So why does Brazil ’82 haunt us so much?  Because it can never be achieved again.  Because it will never be attempted again.  Because we have romanticized it to become, not just a group of eleven players who played a certain way simply because that was the way they happened to be best at, but to a group of eleven players united against the evils of pragmatism, defense and cynicism.  As soon as you turn the past into a fantasy, it becomes an unreachable ideal; a golden age we use as a backdrop to our current problems, a way to frame more modern debates.  A fallacy we use as an arguing tool when discussing everything that’s wrong with our team/country/planet today.  We see it most in the two premier arenas for irrational thought: sports, and politics.  Why does Brazil ’82 haunt us so much?  Because they represent both a stylistic and philosophical past that the Selecão have turned away from.  The fact that neither the style nor the philosophy are truly tenable today is beside the point.  We are primarily dissatisfied creatures.  I’ve read that some experts consider this an evolutionary trait – our own inherent tendency towards dissatisfaction is what keeps us, as a race, from becoming stagnant or complacent.  It drives us to move onward and upward.  It compels us to achieve.  But we have to have a way to justify our dissatisfaction.  Brazil 1982 is the way we justify our dissatisfaction in the fact that, despite Brazil’s tradition of winning World Cups and South American Cups and Confederations Cups almost at will for the last 20 years, there were road bumps along the way.  Moments when the team embraced an uglier nature.  Moments where the Cause was abandoned, and the team was willing to do whatever it took to win at any cost, which, when you think about it, brought them down to earth from their lofty perch.  It made the team – and Brazil as a whole – just like everybody else.  But is this dissatisfaction legitimate?  Or, stated another way, is it worth it?  Has Brazil really abandoned the Cause?  Was there ever any Cause at all?  I answer “no” to both questions, and the reason why is because they are really the same question.  Brazil never really abandoned any Cause to play beautifully, or creatively, or with flair, or what have you, because there was never any Cause to begin with.  For almost 100 years, Brazil, in general and by nature, has produced players more technically skilled than the rest of the world.  Along with that technical skill comes the inevitable desire to experiment.  Anyone who has talent in anything wants to explore his or her boundaries, wants to test the limit of that skill.  That is where creativity comes from.  Hence, the Brazilian teams were for many decades not only more technically adept than their competitors, but also more creative, experimental and playful as well, which is the inevitable outlet of that technical skill.  There has been perhaps no greater display of this fact than in the 1982 World Cup.   Thus, there was never any “Cause” to play beautifully.  Playing beautifully, to Pele, Didi, Garrincha, Gerson, Rivelino, Jairzinho, Tostao, Zico, Socrates, Falcao, and Cerezo was natural .  So too did the players of future generations, but in their case, they were raised in a world that knew what Brazil ’82 was soon to discover: the world itself was changing, and what was “natural” soon just wouldn’t be enough.  Thus, any change in style has been the result of external factors, not internal ones, and any change in philosophy is merely revisionist history.  An application of wishful thinking after the fact.  To me, all this is obvious, because: A) Brazil ’82 lost B) Brazil ’82 took that loss hard C) Brazil ’82 went into the World Cup stating their intention to win, not to “play beautifully, and then if we lose, so be it.”  D) The reasons why Brazil ’82 lost were immediately apparent to just about everyone, and the changes that resulted from the loss (or rather, the changes that began to result) were because Brazil wanted and expected to win .  E) Thus, if Brazil wanted to win , and changes would have to take place in order to do so, those changes in and of themselves were natural .  So Carlos Alberto Parreira’s Brazil, or Scolari’s Brazil, or even Dunga’s Brazil, were not any less “Brazilian” than 1982.  They just look different.  Because being “Brazilian” in 2011 is not the same as being Brazilian in 1982.  The world is different, and Brazilian football has to change with it.  Brazil still produces players of great technical ability, with great creativity and imagination, but the rest of the world produces players like that too, and the game itself has evolved to where the world now demands other skills as well in order to succeed.  Brazil has developed those other skills, and have learned to temper their existing ones in order to fit them both together, to achieve the exact same end that Brazil has always sought: to win.  The point of all this is to say that no longer should Brazil, or Brazilian players, or Brazilian fans, be haunted by the 1982 World Cup team.  No longer should they be expected, or forced, to live up to some imaginary ideal.  Rather, we should look at 1982 for what it is: a chance to learn some extremely valuable lessons, both in how to play, and how not to play.  Because make no mistake, Mano Menezes and company could learn volumes from Tele Santana and crew.  But these lessons are not stylistic and they are not philosophic.  They are technical.  They are tactical.  Now let’s cover what those lessons are.  ———– World Cup 1982 If you want to look at it that way, we could call the Brazil vs Argentina  the equivalent of a Round-of-16 match.  But in ’82, there were actually two group stages, a first and a second round, before the proper knock-out stages.  It was here where Brazil and Argentina met, though the paths the two teams took to get there were very different.  Brazil were a team in their prime.  Their campaign actually got off to a nervy start, falling behind 1-0 to the Soviet Union, but the scare was to be a short one.  Brazil dominated for most of the game, equaling in the 75 th minute from a spectacular shot by Socrates, then going ahead 12 minutes later through Eder.  The next match was against Scotland.  Again, Brazil fell behind, but in the words of Scottish defender Alan Hansen, this merely stirred the Selecão up.  ”…we annoyed them by scoring first, and I very quickly learned a couple of things.

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Selecão Classics: Brazil vs Argentina 1982 World Cup

December 20, 2011 By : rioworld Category : Top Stories Tags:, , , , , , , , ,
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