Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Do you think Zidane is fit to receive the golden ball ?

I don't think so


Because Cannavaro played better

Do you think Zidane is fit to receive the golden ball ?
Yes, as a soccer player he was phenomenal. I don't think it should be disqualified for the red card. Cannavaro was awesome though, but the Italian game didn't run through him as much as Zidane. If you noticed, everytime down the pitch the French would look to Zidane first. I know there is a difference in the positions, but I think the Italian team was better all-together, but Zidane was the best player in the cup.
Reply:cheap italian mafia shut up
Reply:Zidane was the only pro who showed his stuffs on the soccer field. Since the beginning of the second round, the guy work the soccer field like he owned it. He was everywhere you could possibly think. Most of his attack were dangerous for the opponents. His was a fuse and he ignited the field. His move with the ball was incredible and most of the french goal happen due to his offensive attacks. You would not even hear the name Cannavaro mentioned if the referee did not stole the quarter final match from the Australians and hand it over to the Italians. This was pure robbery. By the way, Zidane is not only fit to receive the golden ball, he deserves a whole lot more.
Reply:Cannavaro played better???!! sorry, are we watching the same world cup???? Did u c france-brazil?? i guess not, did u c france-spain? i guess not. Zidane is a Legend man.
Reply:Absolutely not. After what he did in the final, he shouldn't even be taken into consideration for it. Someone who receives the golden ball should, first of all, be fair play.
Reply:Zidane did not deserve the golden ball and he should be banned for life for his uncivilised display in the final, whatever the provocation, he should not have acted like that. FIFA should withdraw the golden ball. What a shame to the game of football.
Reply:None of the italians could match his brilliance which is why that ITALIAN **** called him a terrorist. he deserved the golden ball simply because of his brilliance. We all should respect his role in destroying all the opponents on his way to final.


he gave that italian what he deserved.
Reply:I think the asker's one of the billions who suddenly became interested in football during the World CUP 2006. Zidane showed that football belongs to fine arts. People'll forget Cannavaro day after tomorrow. Materazzi's rather a bit lucky. We'll remember him as an a...
Reply:wake up zidane deserves it alot! hes a legend and a hell of a player
Reply:no wayyyyyyyy. Zinedine Zidane is one of the best....he plays awesum! far better than cannavaro.
Reply:Not this year but he's retiring so just let him have the damn award. Cannavaro is not retiring this year so he can always come back and have his moment if he really deserves it
Reply:NO, not at all. The winner of the Golden Ball should be an example of an outstanding soccer player. Zidane is obviously a sore, sad loser and showed what a** h***** the French can't help but be.





With so much talk about fair play this cup, it's ridiculous that FIFA let Zidane have the ball.
Reply:Yes, he is the best since Maradona, and he tries to create Jogo Bonito, not destroy football with boring ultra defense football(aka Italy). There was any other better than him in this flat WC. Teves could have done it but the Argentinian coach was too conservative and kept him as a sub, wait until the next cup teves-Messi, now that is going to be class
Reply:Yes i think he does...In my opinion he played pretty well maybe not in the last macth but in all the others...overall he did a good preformance...Oh by the way he did recieve the golden ball lol say it in the news today :)
Reply:Cannavaro would have been a good choice too, but Italy really started playing defensive ball in the last games. Zidane meant more to his team than Cannavaro, and he performed brilliantly.
Reply:100% fit and about time too
Reply:Absolutely! He is the best player since Pele!
Reply:Zidane can play better and control a small green pea than any other italian player can a football. ZZ deserves the golden ball and should also get a golden boot which he should embed up Meganazi's a-ss.





Italians should get a golden sleeping pill for being the most boring team ever.
Reply:I thought it was a toss up between Zidane and Klose.. Cannavaro was overrated by the media because Italy made it to the final.. if Italy got knocked out in the Quarters nobody would have ever heard much of him
Reply:well even if he was send off by the red card, no one can or should wipe all his previous effort due to one silly mistake he made... plus.. he is the great midfield magician.. no one plays like Zidane.


Cannavaro came close and i am happy that Cannavaro got the silver, Pirlo got the bronze.. the golden ball just belongs to Zidane without a doubt
Reply:"There is a reason Zinedine Zidane suffers from premature baldness. Genius footballer, generous nature, gentle man, his maker must have thought it only fair to show some evidence of imperfection.....





No other player from a catchment area that embraces an entire continent has captured the imagination quite like Zidane. He is mesmeric. Watching him dance over the grass leaving a flurry of opponents in his wake has been, in the words of the man from L'Equipe , like falling in love. Nobody says it quite like the French.





The French are proud of Zidane because he is a good man as well as a great player. Always has been. Fame has changed his life but not him. Back home he is so well known and liked by virtually his entire nation that everybody - from manager, team-mates and supporters right through to the President of the Republic - uses his nickname, Zizou.





Of Algerian stock, Zidane hails from a poor quarter of Marseilles. His parents sacrificed his father Smail's meagre wage to buy him boots and gave him an unbringing he described as 'hard but fair, which taught me respect, humility, sharing'. He perfected his mellifluous style in the streets: flowerpots for goalposts, a plastic bottle for a trophy, he played endlessly with his friends....





He clings to his roots, and his roots cling to him. During the World Cup a smouldering portrait of their very own Zizou was blown up to cover the wall of an entire building on the Corniche overlooking the Mediterranean.





His first club was Cannes, an hour's drive along the Riviera coast road. They spotted him at 13 and invited him to join their academy, a successful school which also produced Johan Micoud and Patrick Vieira. By 16 he was in the first team (staggered to pocket £500 per match, which he handed over to his parents, of course).....





Comparisons with Platini were increasingly frequent. 'It's too heavy a heritage to carry,' he countered back then. 'I am Zinedine Zidane and people have to understand I will never be Michel Platini. I am not a leader of men and I never will be.' He used to be, to borrow a French phrase, a béni-oui- oui, someone whose shyness means it's easier to be monosyllabic and say yes, yes all the time...





The affiliation between Platini and Zidane goes back to the moment Zizou celebrated his 12th birthday with the honour of being ballboy at the Vélodrome when France met Portugal in the 1984 European Championship. He was watching his country in the flesh for the first time, enchanted as Platini plundered a dramatic winner to take France to the final. Fourteen years on the roles were reversed. Platini was on the sidelines, captivated by the sight of the rightful successor to his distinguished No 10 shirt scoring to win the World Cup....





In Euro 2000 France, and their conductor, have reached a higher plane. Compared to the World Cup there is more poetry in his performances. More absolute control. More of those tricks where he rolls his studs over the ball to keep possession. He is hard to dispossess not because of body strength, but crafty close control. It's like moving a ball of wool an inch to the left and watching a kitten paw at the vacated space. The manager who took him to Juventus, Marcello Lippi, described it as his skill for making complicated things easy....





But the point about Zidane's brilliance is, not only is he a joy to the eye, he is also ruthlessly efficient. Lemerre no doubt likes to see him wow the crowd with a clever turn, but he loves to see him slice open the opposition's defence with a devastating pinpoint pass.





If Italy have the legs to continue damming more fluid opponents with their wall of resistance Zidane will be the man expected to fashion the breakthrough. Playing regularly in Serie A means he is not overawed by the smothering cloak of an Italian defence. Psychologically, he knows he can rise above that and impose his skills....."





sorry for the long post. but i wanted you to read EVERY WORD. aand please next time educate yourself before making comments like that.....

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