Anelka s autobiography definition
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Patrice Evra
French footballer (born 1981)
Patrice Latyr Evra (born 15 May 1981) is a French former professional footballer. Originally a forward, he primarily played as a left-back.[4] Evra served as captain for both Manchester United and the France national team.[5][6] He was named in the PFA Team of the Year on three occasions, as well as the FIFPro World XI and the UEFA Team of the Year. He is often regarded as one of the best full-backs of his generation.[7]
The son of a diplomat, Evra was born in Senegal and arrived in Europe when he was a year old. Evra started his senior career with Italian club Marsala. The following season, he joined Monza, but returned to France a year later to play for Nice where he was converted into a full-back. In 2002, he joined Monaco and was part of the team that reached the 2004 UEFA Champions League Final. Evra's performances for Monaco culminated in a move to English club Manchester United in Januar
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12 Best Soccer Documentaries on Netflix to Stream Right Now - Netflix Tudum
Soccer is the world’s most popular idrott for a reason. Participation in the World Cup is a source of national pride, clubs galvanize local communities, and teams and players transcend the traditional borders of fandom. Sports documentaries focus as much on interpersonal, real-life drama as they do on the plays they chronicle — giving the audience a glimpse of the personalities, motivations, and behind-the-scenes forces that man their stories possible.
If you’re looking to feed your soccer obsession, or just want to learn more about the sport, read on — these docs tell the stories of the legendary clubs, lovable losers, icons, and talented outcasts of soccer. If you’re not a fan yet, you will be soon.
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Anelka: Misunderstood
If you grew up watching Premier League soccer, you’re probably familiar with Nicolas Anelka, the enigmatic and controversial French strejkande who played for Chelsea, Ar
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By Myles Palmer
TWO THINGS :
(1) A Merry Christmas to all our readers – and to Arsenal’s superb squad of players, especially those I sometimes criticise.
(2) Here is the Epilogue of The Professor-Arsene Wenger at Arsenal, which I had to cut for space reasons from the paperback when it was published in September 2002.
If I had updated the Epilogue at that time it would have been slightly different to this version from the hardback in September 2001.
The Professor shares many things with ANR, naturally.It has similar themes,descriptions and analysis.
But, being a chronological book written for mainstream middle class readers, it’s not as quirky or as rambling as ANR.It’s a lot tighter, more disciplined.
This piece is intended mainly for ANR readers who bought the paperback.
The Professor is widely distributed but unreviewed and unpublicised.
It’s doing well in an underground/word-of-mouth way and was reprinted in ear