Thursday, September 20, 2012

40% off in men's shirt, check this out guys!! all the austin reeds men's formal shirts. colour available. hurry up before it is too late.limited time only. as many as 50 designs and colour available. one of the best offer existing now in the men's formal shirts..








http://www.offermyoffer.com/vouchers/detail/austinreed.co.uk/257761

Monday, September 3, 2012

CHRISTIANO SAGA UNFOLDS!!


£25million a year

That's what Ronaldo wants after Spain tax hike



The unhappy forward is desperate to start talks on a fresh six-year deal, even though he has three years to run on his current agreement.
Ronaldo, 27, is on £9.6m a year but, because of Spain’s easygoing tax regime, takes home £7.2m.
He is now demanding take-home pay of £12m a year. Even under existing tax rules, that would mean £14.5m a year gross.
The problem for Madrid is that, in two years’ time, Ronaldo’s tax rate will jump from 24 to 52 per cent.
And it means that in order for him to get £12m after tax they will have to cough up almost £25m a year — £480,000 a WEEK.
Ronaldo has been seeking talks about a new deal since January.
But Madrid chiefs have baulked at the figures he has been discussing, especially with UEFA’S new financial fair play rules due to start in two years’ time too.
Ronaldo has yet to make any formal demands but his camp believe he deserves the world’s best contract, dwarfing those signed by Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka in China.
He has scored an astonishing 114 goals in just 104 games since joining the Spanish giants from Manchester United for £80m three years ago.
And he is all but priceless in terms of the money he generates for the club in merchandising, sales and sponsorship deals.
The Portuguese star has a massive £791m buyout clause in his contract but by revealing his ‘sadness’ after his brace in Sunday’s 3-0 win over Granada, he has opened the door to a possible move next summer.
Selling Ronaldo still seems the most unlikely scenario but it could happen.
This was a battle of wills and Ronaldo blinked first, risking the wrath of fans, team-mates and club president Florentino Perez.
Ronaldo’s relationships in the dressing room are not always ideal.
There is tension between the Portuguese speakers — Ronaldo, Pepe, Marcelo, Fabio Coentrao — and the Spaniards, principally captain Iker Casillas and Sergio Ramos.
The last two are not afraid to have it out with Jose Mourinho and a new bust-up with the boss was leaked to newspaper El Pais only last week following a shock loss to Getafe.
Ramos openly accused Mourinho of protecting his countryman Coentrao when he was to blame for one of Barcelona’s goals in the Super Cup first-leg loss at the Nou Camp.
Mourinho then slammed the team — and, by association, the Spain defender — in public for a gaffe in one of Getafe’s goals.
Madrid’s bigwigs have hinted they will not agree to his demands. saying they see Ronaldo’s stance as “provocative, in a period of mass unemployment and austerity in Spain.”
But Ronaldo said: “I am sad and the people at the club know about it. That is why I don’t celebrate goals. It’s about professional issues. I can’t say any more.”
Madrid promised Ronaldo a new deal in a showdown between the winger, his agent Jorge Mendes, Perez and club marketing director Jose Angel Sanchez last January.
He was then given assurances of talks over a revised deal in the summer, only to sit and watch as Mourinho, Angel Di Maria, Alvaro Arbeloa and Raul Albiol penned new deals.
In June Ronaldo told Madrid daily Marca: “I want to finish my career here but that is something that already depends on other people.”
It then emerged that Ronaldo met Perez and Sanchez again on Saturday and told them he wanted to leave.
If this was his way of seeking attention, it has already backfired spectacularly.



CRISTIANO RONALDO put Manchester giants City and United on red alert after admitting he wants to quit Real Madrid.

A source said: “Yes, Cristiano told president Florentino Perez he wants to leave the club.”
It follows the Portugal superstar’s bombshell on Sunday after scoring twice against Granada.
Ronaldo, 27, did not celebrate either of his goals and said afterwards: “I am sad and the people at the club know about it.
“It’s about professional issues. I can’t say any more.”
Megabucks City and his old club United will keep a close eye on developments – along with Chelsea.

Friday, August 31, 2012

TRANSFER DAY LAST (PREMIER LEAGUE)


TRANSFER deadline day is one of the busiest days in the football calendar 



Here is a list of all the confirmed ins and outs involving Premier League teams.
ARSENAL
Chu-Young Park - Arsenal to Celta Vigo - season-long loan
ASTON VILLA
Jordan Bowery — Chesterfield to Aston Villa — £500,000
CHELSEA
Amin Affane — Chelsea to Roda JC — season-long loan
Thorgan Hazard — Chelsea to SV Zulte Waregem — season-long loan
EVERTON
Bryan Oviedo - FC Copenhagen to Everton - £5m
FULHAM
Kieran Richardson — Sunderland to Fulham — undisclosed
Corey Gameiro — Fulham to FC Eindhoven — four-month loan
Chris David - FC Twente to Fulham - undisclosed
LIVERPOOL
Jay Spearing — Liverpool to Bolton — season-long loan
Charlie Adam - Liverpool to Stoke - £4m
MAN CITY
Nigel de Jong — Man City to AC Milan — £3.5m
Scott Sinclair — Swansea to Man City — £6.2m
Maicon - Inter to Man City - undisclosed
MAN UTD
NEWCASTLE
NORWICH
QPR
Sam Magri — Portsmouth to QPR — undisclosed
READING
SOUTHAMPTON
STOKE
Charlie Adam - Liverpool to Stoke - £4m
SUNDERLAND
Kieran Richardson — Sunderland to Fulham — undisclosed
Danny Rose - Tottenham to Sunderland - season-long loan
SWANSEA
Andrea Orlandi — Swansea to Brighton — undisclosed
Scott Sinclair — Swansea to Man City — £6.2m
TOTTENHAM
Danny Rose - Tottenham to Sunderland - season-long loan
Giovani Dos Santos - Tottenham to Mallorca - undisclosed
Rafael van der Vaart - Tottenham to Hamburg - £10m
WEST BROM
WEST HAM
WIGAN
Roman Golobart — Wigan to Tranmere — one-month loan


GIRLS FROM CHIVES





























Wednesday, August 29, 2012

DEL PIERO


Lennon pursues Italian legend as he savours finest hour in football


Neil Lennon is set to use the Champions League as the lure for a sensational bid to bring Italian superstar Alessandro del Piero to Celtic.
The Parkhead boss celebrated the  greatest night of his managerial career  as goals from Gary Hooper and Victor  Wanyama carried the Scottish champions past Helsingborgs on a 4-0 aggregate.
Armed with a £15million Champions League windfall and the proceeds of Ki Sung Yueng’s sale, the Northern Irishman now hopes to bring three new signings to the club before Friday night’s transfer deadline.And the most incredible of those could be 37-year-old World Cup winner del Piero if chief executive Peter Lawwell agrees to match the £20,000-a-week deal on the table from former Euro foes FC Sion and a rival bid from Australian club FC Sydney.
Lennon refused to comment on the del Piero interest after the game, savouring a pulsating night at Parkhead when his young side earned a berth in today’s group stage draw in Monte Carlo.
Manchester United, Barcelona and Real Madrid all lie in wait as a relieved Lennon said: ‘That’s the best. I’ve been to hell and back the last six or seven weeks. Just trying to get things right for this. It’s a great night for me personally — it’s a great night for the club.
‘But, for me and for the players, it’s a miracle qualifying. The squad is so thin but we have a great core of players and it’s a big night for everyone associated with the club.‘I’m very, very proud of them. It’s not often I pat myself on the back — but I’m going to tonight.
‘It’s one of the hardest challenges I’ve ever had in my life and the pressure going into this game was huge.
‘I’ve never experienced anything like that in my playing days — so much responsibility.
‘But I’m so happy because, in this job, you don’t only make yourself happy — you make other people happy.’
Hopeful that Celtic’s participation on the big stage can restore a measure of respect to the Scottish game after a torrid year, Lennon admitted: ‘I was so nervous — you always think of the things that could go wrong in terms of falling flat on your face.I know it means a lot to the Scottish game to have a team back in the Champions League as well — and that’s important with the atmosphere which has been around the scene here in the last six months to a year.’
Unconcerned by whoever his side get in this evening’s draw, the Celtic boss admits he’s just delighted to be taking part after a four-year absence from the group stages.
‘It doesn’t matter who we get,’ he said.
‘Just for the players to play at the big table again and for the club and the exposure of being a Champions League club is amazing.’
 


HALA MADRID!


Real Madrid 2 Barcelona 1

(agg: 4-4 Madrid win on away goals)


LUKA MODRIC collected his first medal at Real Madrid — two days after leaving Spurs.

The Croatian midfielder, 26, who never won anything in over four years in north London,
came on as a sub as Madrid claimed the Spanish Super Cup.
It was a much-needed success for Jose Mourinho’s side after failing to win any of their opening three games.
Gonzalo Higuain and Cristiano Ronaldo got Madrid off to a flying start with two goals in the first 20 minutes.
Barca, who had Adriano sent off, equalised through Lionel Messi but Madrid hung on to win on away goals.


47 Mind-Blowing Psychological Facts You Should Know About Yourself


INTERESTING STUFF! CHECK IT OUT!




The 23-year-old has signed a five-year contract with the Bavarian side after the German champions were finally able to resolve legal and tax issues

Bayern Munich have confirmed the signing of Athletic Bilbao midfielder Javi Martinez on a five-year-contract after meeting his €40 million buy-out clause.The 23-year-old has been courted by a host of clubs, including the Bavarians and Manchester City throughout the summer, but the Basque club were adamant that they were not going to let the player leave for less than his release fee.

Bayern themselves were initially hesitant to meet that price, but after confirming that they would be willing to do so a fortnight ago, they have finally got their man.

"Of course this is a large sum of money," club director Karl-Heinz Rummenigge told FCB News. "But the player is indirectly participating in it by giving up a large sum of money.

"It was very complicated. We are very happy that Javi Martinez is finally with us. In recent days, we still needed to resolve tax and legal problems. Fortunately for us, we've succeeded."

For his part, the Spain international has spoken of his delight at finally securing a move to the club after such a protracted saga.

"I am very happy and I'm looking forward to playing for a club with such a history," he toldFCB.tv. "I've had a very long wait, but finally the wait is over."

The midfielder, who can also play at the heart of defence, has signed a contract that expires in June 2017. He has spent six years at San Mames after moving to the club from Osasuna.

DIMITAR BERBATOV is hoping to finally end his Manchester United hell by sealing a switch to Fiorentina.

The Italian side are close to completing a £5million move to bring the Bulgarian striker into Serie A.
Berbatov, 31, is interested in the move, having been all but sidelined at Old Trafford for the past year.
He started only 11 games last season — and just five in the Premier League.
Berbatov is now even further from a first-team starting place following the signing of £22million arrival of Robin van Persie.
Despite an impressive strike rate of 49 goals in 82 league starts he knows he is well down the pecking order with Danny Welbeck and Javier Hernandez also in front of him. And the only option to get regular first-team football again is a fresh start.
Berbatov joined United from Spurs in September 2008 in a £30.75million move.
In all, he has scored 56 goals in 148 appearances, winning the golden boot with Carlos Tevez two seasons ago.
But the writing has been on the wall for him ever since he was left out the squad for the 2011 Champions League Final against Barcelona at Wembley.
Manager Alex Ferguson made it clear midway through last season it was probably time for Berbatov to look for a move for his own good.
His more languid style simply no longer fits in with the high tempo game Ferguson intends to play.



Monday, August 27, 2012





Luka Modric joins Real Madrid


The midfielder, 26, will have a medical in Madrid today before he is unveiled at the Bernabeu.Modric has been a target for Jose Mourinho’s side all summer but Tottenham were reluctant to let him leave on the cheap.But Spurs chairman Daniel Levy has finally caved in with four days of the transfer window remaining, agreeing a deal worth around £30million.And Levy said: “Luka has been a terrific player for us and, whilst we preferred not to part with him, we are pleased that it is to Real Madrid.”Spurs have also announced a ‘partnership agreement’ between the two clubs, although it is unclear what this means.Real Madrid president Florentino Perez Rodriguez said: “The strong relationship and affinity between our two clubs has resulted in the cementing of a longer-term partnership and the successful transfer of Luka Modric.“We are delighted to welcome Luka and look forward to working closely with Tottenham in the coming years.”Modric made 160 appearances for Spurs, scoring 17 goals.And a Real statement said: "Luka Modric has become Real Madrid's first signing for the 2012/13 season."The midfielder was Tottenham Hotspur's main playmaker and one of their greatest stars."Modric has great personality and creativity, which allow him to easily connect with team-mates and organise the team's game."He is also an excellent assist-man and makes sacrifices for the team."Real Madrid now have a very talented and creative organiser in midfield, an offensive player who can assist his team-mates."He can move the ball around intelligently while always working hard and making sacrifices for the good of the team."Modric's move will fund Spurs' pursuit of Brazilians Willian and Leandro Damiao.Willian was yesterday left out of Shakhtar Dontesk's squad for their league game against Karpaty.And coach Mircea Lucescu revealed he was not in the right frame of mind.Lucescu said: "Does anyone of you believe that in his current situation his head produces thoughts in the direction of right thinking?"I wouldn't like him to play and suffer an injury today, but this could happen. He will have some rest, and then we will see what to do with him."We have a week before the transfer window closes, during which, perhaps, everything will be solved."


Thursday, August 23, 2012


QPR are in negotiations with Inter Milan over goalkeeper Julio Cesar as a replacement for the error-prone Robert Green.
The Brazil international was a key part of the Italian side's Champions League win two years ago but now looks set to leave the San Siro.
Samir Handanovic arrived from Udinese this summer and Cesar has been allowed to speak to other clubs about a move.
Tottenham have been heavily linked with the 32-year-old but QPR's technical director Mike Rigg is speaking with Cesar's representatives to see whether a move to Loftus Road can be pushed through.
The news comes just days after summer signing Rob Green's blunder set Swansea on course for a surprise 5-0 victory at QPR.


QPR technical director Mike Rigg has written a formal letter of complaint to Leeds after goalkeeper Paddy Kenny allegedly sent abusive messages to him and chairman Tony Fernandes over the weekend.
The 34-year-old joined the Championship side during the summer after it is understood he asked for a transfer, despite the Hoops hoping he would stay to provide competition for summer signing Rob Green.
The England international endured a nightmare debut following his move from West Ham, with a blunder for the first goal putting Swansea on course to a 5-0 victory in the season's opener.
It is believed Kenny sent abusive text messages to Rigg and Fernandes late Saturday night and in the early hours of Sunday morning, mocking the result and Green's performance.
Rigg is also understood to have received calls up until 3am on Sunday, leading him to make a formal complaint to Leeds.
The accusations are likely to further damage Kenny's status at QPR, who he described as a "tin pot club" on Twitter in recent days.

The Portuguese midfielder was a surprise move this time last year when Chelsea took him from Liverpool on deadline day after missing out on Luka Modric. Andre Villas-Boas was the man who took him to Stamford Bridge and now he wants to buy him for a second year in succession - again as an alternative to Modric who looks set to quit Tottenham for Real Madrid.
8) Matt Jarvis - Wolves to West Ham
The former Gillingham winger wants out of Wolves after they were relegated last seasonand West Ham have already made a bid with £6million plus £3million in add-ons. Wolves are standing firm for £10million, but they should reach an agreement before next Friday.
9) Adam Johnson - Manchester City to Spurs
The ex-Middlesbrough star has always struggled to impress City boss Roberto Mancini and will find chances even harder to come by once they bring in Swansea wide-man Scott Sinclair. He is one of the Premier League's most wanted men with Sunderland, Everton, Liverpool and Newcastle are all keen, but I expect Tottenham to get in first.
10) Michael Dawson - Spurs to QPR
He has been one of Tottenham's most consistent performers ever since he signed from Nottingham Forest in 2005. He was the club's Player of the Year in 2009/10 and has been captaining the side in Ledley King's frequent absences. But he now finds himself fighting for a place with Jan Vertonghen, William Gallas, Younes Kaboul and Steven Caulker. Meanwhile QPR are desperate for defensive reinforcements - especially after their 5-0 drubbing by Swansea on the opening day - and have money to spend. This one could even be done by the end of the day.

Last season, Suarez was often part of a three man attack in which he was the only element remotely likely to provide a goal. Dempsey, with his prowess in that area, aligned with Fabio Borini who can also provide goals, should take the pressure off the South American, and perhaps even allow him to flourish.
If Rodgers does solve that problem, then Liverpool will be a different team, and if he can add more intelligence to his midfield and flanks (via the full backs), then he can improve on last season, and perhaps even give his side an outside shot at a Champions' League place.
Let's be honest though, that's all it will be - an outside shot, because top six is the more realistic aim. It is so hard for fans to take, but at the moment, the job is all about the process of cutting out the dead wood and replacing it with stronger timbers.
The reality of modern day football with massive long-term deals is that it often takes the length of those contracts to transform a club under a new manager, because it takes that long to get the well paid players out.
Which all means it could be two to three years before we see a real Rodgers team aiming for the top. It would be nice to think he will be given that time - by owners and fans - to at least have a shot at that.

samsung


The site in Austin, Texas is the firm's only semiconductor plant outside its home country, South Korea.
It makes chips for Apple's iPhones and iPads as well as Samsung devices.
The investment will allow the base to make the latest system-on-chip designs in which various technologies are integrated onto the same circuit, helping minimise manufacturing costs.
These include a CPU (central processing unit), GPU (graphics processing unit), memory and other elements.
The Exynos 4 chip found in Samsung's flagship Galaxy S3 handset and Apple's A5X used in the iPad 3 both use transistors using a 32 nanometre fabrication process.
But the factory will be able to make wafers using a superior 28nm process. This means the transistors - or tiny on-off switches that power its processors - can be shrunk in size.
This allows more to be fitted into a chip, with the promise of increased processing power and better energy efficiency.
The firm aims to be able to mass produce the technology by the second half of 2013.
Raw materials
Samsung says the move will take its total investment in the factory to $13bn since 1996, making it the biggest ever foreign investment into Texas.
"We are extremely pleased to extend our presence in Austin and reinforce Samsung's capacity for highly advanced logic products," said Samsung Austin Semiconductor's president Woosung Han.
"The added ability in production will allow our customers to better respond to market needs."
Although it may seem odd that a South Korean company would make chips in the US destined to be sent to Asian assembly plants, one analyst said the move made strategic sense.
"Silicon and the various precious metals involved in making these chips are found in abundance in the desert and arid climates in the US in Nevada, Texas and Arizona," said Chris Green, principal technology analyst at Davies Murphy Group.
"The immediacy of these raw materials helps Samsung offset the higher labour and transport costs involved.
"It's also about diversification. The 2011 Japanese tsunami and earthquake severely impacted the car industry - and that's been a big lesson for the tech industry. By spreading its manufacturing base to several geographies Samsung is better protected against natural disasters, currency fluctuations and other events that could leave it exposed."
The firm announced in April that it also intended to build a mobile device chip plant in China.
Skills base
Austin is home to a tech hub nicknamed Silicon Hills - one of the US's biggest research and development centres outside of Silicon Valley. This has helped provide a skilled workforce.
"The local talent is a huge reason for the plant being in Austin," said Sergis Mushell, head of microprocessor research at the tech analysis firm Gartner.
"Samsung has hired processor architects who have worked for other chip companies in the area such AMD and Texas Instruments.
"Like others Samsung is licensing chip designs from the UK's ARM Holdings and then introducing additional features. You need the skills of a surgeon to be able to play around with the guts and the micro-architecture of these processors - and being in Austin gives Samsung access to the guys who can do that."

IS LOUIS NANI GOING OUT OF TRAFFORD???

























Incredible one week, appalling the next; nobody does unplayable quite like Nani. 

The personification of Manchester United's unmatchable peaks and damaging troughs last season, the Portuguese is consistently Old Trafford's Mr Inconsistent. As such, 
Zenit St Petersburg's interest and potential big-money bid for the winger, like Nani himself, brings with it a headache for Sir Alex Ferguson. After all, this is a player who had the joint-highest combined goals and assists record in the Premier League two seasons ago, with nine and a remarkable 18 respectively, as well as scoring eight and assisting 10 in 2011-12.

Four months ago today, as United drew 4-4 with Everton in one of, if not the defining match of last season's Premier League title race, Nani showed such ruthlessness. With a goal, two assists and a destructive performance against Tony Hibbert, the 25-year-old was at his devastating, though too infrequent best. 

Yet on Monday, against Hibbert again and at the other end of the East Lancs Road, the Everton full-back got his revenge. 

Substituted for Ashley Young after 77 largely excruciating minutes, Nani was a shadow of the player who so impressed at the Theatre of Dreams in April, and again for Portugal at Euro 2012. Attempting eight crosses without a single one finding their intended target, such are the frustrations that come with the winger. It is five years since the Cape Verde-born man moved to Manchester from Sporting's prolific academy in Alcochete, travelling with the unfair and frankly ridiculous millstone of being 'the next Cristiano Ronaldo' and although there have been undoubted improvements, decision time on Nani is, you sense, fast approaching. 


With less than two years until the end of his contract, Nani has already gone public over his future at the club, admitting in June that his agent Jorge Mendes, the man who brought the 25-year-old to Manchester United, along with Ronaldo, Anderson and Bebe, was in talks with Old Trafford officials over a new contract. Two months on and there is little to suggest that the £125,000-a-week contract he craves is any closer to being sanctioned. 

"I am really happy but I don't know about my future," he told RTP. "Now I will study opportunities. Football is not only about England or Spain. It is possible to enjoy success in other countries."

Financially, a sale of anything upwards of £20m would make sense for United. Recouping the majority, if not all of the fee paid out for Robin van Persie would potentially clear funds for the combative midfielder the club still obviously requires more than anything else. 

Indeed, Glazernomics and its effect on United's strength in the transfer market remains at best a guessing game, but without any lucrative departures so far this summer, coupled with the arrivals of Robin van Persie, Shinji Kagawa, Nick Powell, Alexander Buttner and, as of Tuesday night, Angelo Henriquez, the Old Trafford outfit will be spending around £40m net this year - close to the largest outlay in the club's history. A quality addition to central midfield would be unlikely. Accruing a large fee for Nani would see the club bring in double figures from a player sale for only the third time under the Glazer ownership, following the exits of Ruud van Nistelrooy and Ronaldo to Real Madrid in 2006 and 2009 respectively.

With over £50m spent on potentially crippling interest repayments in the year ending June 2011, the temptation to cash in will be great. Needs must after all.

Beyond the opportunity to raise capital, be it reinvested or not, the acquisitions of Van Persie and Kagawa in particular raise the question of where Nani fits in to United's starting XI from here. To include both alongside Wayne Rooney and Danny Welbeck would leave no room for a static 4-4-2. 

With Antonio Valencia a near-surefire starter, Nani's opportunities are surely going to lessen in 2012-13. For United, whose vastly top-heavy squad was exposed at Goodison Park with Michael Carrick forced into defence, leaving him missed in midfield, selling the Portuguese and replacing him elsewhere could prove the ultimate balancing act, for the books and the squad.

"I can have a spectacular game but nobody guarantees me I will be starting the next match. It shatters your confidence," said the winger to I in 2009. "People expect more from me and it's not easy."

Three years on and United are still waiting for more. Nani may often be unplayable, but he's by no means unsellable.