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Gennaro Gattuso

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    #76
    Algselt postitas Meireles Vaata postitust
    See miilanimeeste ringkaitse on päris humoorikas, jätkake.
    Varsti tuleb pikem lugu
    jokers to the right
    clowns to the left of me

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      #77
      Algselt postitas Meireles Vaata postitust
      See miilanimeeste ringkaitse on päris humoorikas, jätkake.
      Mis milani? Isegi count astus meie kaitseks vastu.

      Kommentaar


        #78
        Algselt postitas Jasper Vaata postitust
        LOL. Kes sul üldse 'võitleb lõpuni' väidetega ambrasuurile lendas? Kui ma eika poste lugesin kumas sealt minu meelest läbi just sinu varasem jutt a'la 'vähemalt jalgpallis on veel tõelisi inimesi, kes ei karda reageerida ausalt' või ajan ma midagi sassi? Ma saadan sulle selgitava PM-i, muidu sa ei jaga essugi sarnaselt gröönimaa jalgpallurile.
        Kusagilt läheb piir ka. Üks on inimese tahtmine võita, teine on pärast mängu ja mängu ajal lolli mängimine. Mida kuradit aitab meeskonnale kaasa abitreeneriga tõmblemine? Ajad enda närvi ja kaasmängijad vaatavad ka, et nüüd on vennal katus ära sõitnud. Kahjuks on viimase aasta mängud näidanud (minu subjektiivne hinnang), et härra on kaotanud üsna suures osas enda mängijaoskused, aga seda ürita ta korvata lihtsalt sõgeda pullina ringi kimades. No offens, aga imo ületas siin Rino totaalselt hea maitse ja hea võitleja piirid ja tegi endal lihtsalt margi täis.

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          #79
          Kusagil läheb Rino piir ka. See läks sealt, kus 'abitreener'(mu lemmikväljend. kord on Jordan abitreener nagu see oleks mingi staatusenäitaja, kord kõige julmem vend peale Chuck Norrist, kellele ei tohigi midagi vastu öelda) platsile hüppas. Jah sa pead San Sirol platsile jõudmiseks dugout'ist välja hüppama. See subjektiivne hinnang on ka totaalne sitt, millel arvatavasti ka praeguses olukorras sinu hinnang põhineb. Kuigi Cl-is ei ole ta väga hea olnud räägivad kõik, kes tema mängu näinud, ümbersündinud mehest. Aga fak it, ma ei viitsi enam. Vähemalt vello jagab biiti.
          jokers to the right
          clowns to the left of me

          Kommentaar


            #80
            Dannari objektiivsusega tuleb meelde MM, kus De Rossi kukkumine seljatagant udimise peale oli aasta daiv ja 100% samasugune olukord Torrese vastu oli ilmselge viga.

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              #81
              Algselt postitas tempo Vaata postitust
              All in all on Gattusso üks krdi eit. Ole mees ja töötle vastu, mida ta ka kindlasti tegi. Aga kehva närvikava tõttu sõitis katus ära. Ja siis juba kätega hakkas katsuma. Eriti tore on siis pärast meediale rääkida, et "mida kõike koledat talle öeldi". Ehe eit.
              Mees tõmbab just molli ära ju.
              sigpic

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                #82
                Blog: Banned Ringhio deserves respect Although slapped with a four-match ban by UEFA, Serafino Ingardia insists the respectable Gennaro Gattuso isn’t the villain that he has been portrayed as Now that Gennaro Gattuso has been handed a four-match ban by UEFA following his spat with Joe Jordan, there will be those who believe justice has been done.

                Gattuso’s suspension, plus the additional one-match ban that he was due to serve for his booking during the first leg of the Tottenham tie, means he will be out for five European matches – but could theoretically feature in the Wembley Final were Milan to go all the way. Listening to what some had to say the punishment should have been even heavier than that, while both the player and his agent believe the sentence was excessive.

                One thing is for sure, Gattuso’s behaviour as a player and most importantly as a captain of Milan was out of order and the Italy international fully deserves to pay for it. There is no excuse, whatsoever, for what Ringhio did on that infamous Tuesday night at San Siro.

                That said the portrait made of Gattuso by the English media is unacceptable and blatantly bias. A night of madness cannot erase what the Rossoneri midfielder really is – he’s no caveman, he’s one of the most honourable players in the game. Those who know Ringhio personally, but also the majority of his national and international rivals, can confirm that Gattuso is one of the fairest players in today’s game despite his role of midfield pit-bull.

                He is no villain nor Mafioso and he is not the dirty player he was made out to be. With only one red card in 104 European matches and one yellow card every three games, his record speaks louder than accusations and stereotypes.

                Ringhio made a mistake and is ready to pay for it without appealing against the UEFA decision. His head-butt on Jordan was perhaps the ugliest episode in his entire career. But talking about head-butts, it is difficult not to compare the Gattuso-Jordan clash with the Zinedine Zidane-Marco Materazzi confrontation.

                The retiring French star was only given a three-match ban for his mistake in the 2006 World Cup Final. And unlike Gattuso, almost five years after the incident, Zizou is yet to apologise for his actions. Furthermore, Zidane was quickly forgiven in the name of his immense talent while Materazzi inexplicably became the culprit. Even more shockingly the Italian defender was banned for two games and fined after being found guilty of provoking Zidane.

                Lo Squalo Jordan smoothly escaped similar punishment and may be a harder man than Gattuso, as he was grotesquely described, but he was undoubtedly involved in provoking the player’s anger. Following the final whistle, Gattuso, who played the second half with a deep cut to his knee which needed 12 stitches, shook hands with Harry Redknapp and was about to talk to Jordan when he inexplicably went mental again.

                Whatever was said by Jordan during and after the match does not justify Gattuso’s reaction though. As a captain and a veteran Ringhio should have known better. But what does that make of Jordan, an ex-Milan player, who returns to San Siro to allegedly abuse the captain of his former team?

                It wasn’t really a class act from an old man and a Coach, not even if you compare it to the foolish reaction of a young-ish player. Jordan should have treated the Rossoneri player with respect, also considering that his achievements as a footballer are peanuts compared to Gattuso’s glorious career.

                Regardless of who is the most successful and who would have the better in a potential ring fight, it has to be said that both men didn’t look good on the night. Gattuso, though, is the only one suffering the consequences even if one bad day at the office will not overshadow the fact that he is and always will be a calcio and Milan legend.

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                  #83
                  ot: millal hakatakse karistama neid trennipoisse ja treenereid, kes (vhakk vidiost näha ju) valimatult sõimavad vilemehi ja ka teisi pallitagujaid jne?
                  see ei ole minu süü, et sa okaspuu oled

                  "joon palju ma tahan, aga ikka ta ei saa minust aru"

                  "Football is a simple game based on the giving and taking of passes, of controlling the ball and of making yourself available to receive a pass. It is terribly simple."

                  Kommentaar


                    #84
                    Algselt postitas Daz Booob Vaata postitust
                    ot: millal hakatakse karistama neid trennipoisse ja treenereid, kes (vhakk vidiost näha ju) valimatult sõimavad vilemehi ja ka teisi pallitagujaid jne?
                    mine


                    ma jäingi hiljaks ... faking 101 vasta juba!!!
                    jokers to the right
                    clowns to the left of me

                    Kommentaar


                      #85
                      How much do you know about Gennaro Gattuso?

                      He's a footballer - obviously if you're reading this you know that much; he's a World Cup winner - if you weren'tborn on the 21-st century you probably know this; he's a two time Champions League winner - you may have caught his heroics on multiple Tuesday or Wednesday nights in the 21st century; he's a patriotic Italian - you may have caught how he sings his anthem . But what kind of a player is he? Everybody knows he's passionate, many would say he's tough but fair, meanwhile a lot of people would suggest that he's a dirty player like Materazzi always looking for trouble with the opposition, getting carded every match for fouling like say Marco Tardelli. You watched him on Tuesday night and you saw proof how he was going over the line and starting trouble all over the pitch, or did you?

                      Graeme Souness named him 'a dog at best'. Something can't be as close to the truth as well as far away from it. Rino is a dog, a pitbull who hunts down the opposition, because he acts like a dog but not in the bad sense of the word rather than the good. He grew up in a dog-eat-dog world of Calabria. People from society classes like where he's from often haven't learned a lot of manners. They learn how to behave in this world with their conscious. The first rule you learn not to get yourself in trouble is not to start trouble. The second rule is if someone starts trouble with you - make sure he never wants to start trouble with you again. That is exactly how Ringhio carries himself on the pitch.



                      Barking dog doesn't bite.

                      Rino is very emotional and vocal but his actions are mostly towards the referee and strictly talk. When going gets rough, he gets rough. Well to be honest he's pretty rough from the start but that doesn't include the 'trying to start trouble and foul opposition' reputation that is often given to him. He always (as always as a human and a footballer can) tries to get the ball. That's why he is in so high regard as a defensive midfielder. Steven Gerrard even referred to him 'as scary as a kitten' and I believe the Liverpool captain is right though there's a literary exaggeration. But when the opposition starts to put in harsh fouls, too much hands or whatever else he will respond. Even if you don't do it directly to him rather than his teammates - he will respond, because the dog always looks out for his keeper.

                      Now you comfortably tell me he went into a mad dog stage on Tuesday. Let's try to
                      understand the game through his point of view?

                      Starting with what happened to his keeper on Tuesday? One of his best friends in the team, Christian Abbiati, was escorted from the pitch with neck splint (pitbulls hate neck splints). You and me saw from television that the challenge which resulted the injury was nothing special - it happens all the time, in fact Crouch accidentally had caught Abbiati's face even before that. No biggie. But Rino might have not seen it, even if he did it's hard to judge on the pitch just as the real villain on the night, Mathieu Flamini, was unaware how rough his challenge was asking the reporters if it 'was really that bad'.

                      Minor stuff like Pienaar handling Gattuso also happened in the first half. This is everyday stuff in football - handling opponent, few harsh fouls and few elbows will be part of every game. To someone like Gattuso they will start to set the tone. Especially if he sees his keeper taken out on a stretcher and his striker getting fouled near the area and getting elbowed inside the area while not receiving any calls from the referee. Meanwhile we all saw how Gattuso was captaining a ship that just wasn't in the moment - Milan was tedious, slow and unmotivated
                      and beginning to look frustrated.

                      The breaking point came with Flamini's tackle on Corluka. The referee couldn't red card Flamini(who's nickname is rightfully Mad Dog) since he felt a dept from the Ibra situation. Flamini didn't know how harsh was the challenge and tried to spark his teammates who responded by distastefully mobbing an injured player since he was on the way of their momentum. This episode sent the two sides into full out war. There was no 'let's get this done as professionally as we can and let the best team win'. Ringhio(Gattuso nickname that means growl in Italian) had his teeth out and was ready to bite.
                      jokers to the right
                      clowns to the left of me

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                        #86
                        Graham Poll about Peter Crouch 'He's a real pain and he's getting away with too much.'

                        It's evident that Milan got a little rebuke from their coach at half-time and possibly their captain. As Zlatan describes Gattuso "If I'm relaxing I know that Rino will be behind me giving me the motivation and adrenaline I need. When Rino doesn't play, the dressing room is silent and nobody talks. But when Rino is there, he talks to everyone and gives everyone the motivation they need. He arrives with an incredible determination. On the field he's an animal, without him we cannot do it." So they came out with a new attitude and a little different game plan. Milan came out for a win and started to penetrate Tottenham's area. Gattuso was comfortably sitting on the backseat dealing with Tottenham counters. Since the pressure was pretty big the Londoners tried to find their tall forward with clearances and he had to face off with Gattuso. The game was built very physical and so both players were as rough as they could meanwhile hands came into play as well. So the same elbow that sent Gattuso's teammate to the hospital found way to his face and it was time to bite. Crouch was not getting away from Rino at San Siro and he let Crouch know how he felt about the tall man's shenanigans by smacking him back and then shoving him when the Englishmen tried to tell what he thought about it.

                        Then Joe Jordan interfered to protect his team and since Crouch might not have enough
                        and character to take on raving Gattuso(70kg vs 76kg). He was having a go at Gattuso as he entered the pitch. I know you'll say it was only a yard in but he stepped over a crucial line. An unwelcomed guest entered the dog's yard. What do pitbulls do in this situation? They hunt down the trespasser and bite them even if they give an inch for teeth to reach. They protect their territory at all costs. It's not about if the guy is a senior, or an assistant-coach or a Milan legend(all of which are mildly laughable if you asked me) at that moment.

                        Gattuso won't give you an inch and that what makes him as a player. That's why Sir Alex Ferguson has admired him so much and should he have succeeded signing him on the summer of 2006. I'm confident the outcome of the AC Milan - Manchester United would have been different. Ferguson had to settle finding someone else meanwhile Rino held back everything you could throw at him. Did you notice United only won the first game after Gattuso had to limp off with an injury (Redknapp also seriously thought about going after him after he managed Rino in one charity match:"“Gattuso was fantastic in the dressing room and, because of being his ‘manager’ on that night against the Rest of the World, I gave it serious thought. But it never quite worked out.”)

                        What happened after the whistle was disgraceful. Rino immediatly acknowledged it and apologized. Meanwhile we can't rule out if it was uncalled for since we don't know what words Joe Jordan threw at him. Some might say since he apologized he realized his wrongdoings and I should judge him guilty as well but I don't. I know he felt guilty for loosing it and because he let down his teammates and maybe headbutting(hairbutting anyone?) but does he really regret hitting a guy that was in his face the whole night? Zidane still doesn't regret his action against Materazzi and it's not because Rino and Zizou are bad people rather than Zizou's background on the streets of Marseille Rino's upcoming in Calabria.

                        Media.

                        It's amusing to read how (English)media corresponds to the game. Part of them are using terms like 'assistant coach' for it to sound like general. A status you just don't touch. Meanwhile do people really think Joe Jordan is a well-mannered assistance to Harry Redknapp? Or is Football Weekly's comment about his job being mostly to wind up the opposition for 90 minutes closer to the truth?

                        They try to give him a status of Milan legend since he helped Milan out of Serie B forgetting he
                        was in the only team in Milan's history to be relegated for not getting enough points on the
                        pitch. Someone went as far as saying Jordan's career puts Rino into shame ... How is that even
                        remotely comparable to all the titles Rino has won for rossoneri and Italy? The wind-up merchant's place seems more compatible to me since what help do you give to a manager who's tactics are 'just run the fuck around'.

                        Other side of the media reminds Joe Jordan's glory days. Most of it is how he was the nastiest
                        prick of the game(no-one judging him like Rino) who ran around without his front teeth(allow me to point out that this might happen when you run your mouth too much, though I'm unaware his exact dental history). Somebody everyone should have been scared of. Forgetting that the (self)righteous will/shall not be afraid of anything. They glorify a man who helped Scotland to WC meanwhile forgetting the circumstances of how he did it. He handled in opposition the ball in the opporition area and somehow convinced the referee that instead of him it was the Wales player's hand and got a penalty for it. Dirty cheat. Speaking of it what has Crouch done in WC? He has scored a single goal and managed to do that only by pulling the opposition from hair. That's innovative but still a dirty cheat game. What has Rino done for his country? Oh, just won some golden trophy in Berlin. How? With performances that will be higlighted to anyone in defensive midfielder position for years. When you fall on ten man(Italy vs Australia) playing along with Rino Gattuso at his best is like 11 vs 11.

                        What do you say to a kid or a drunken friend who wrestles too much with your dog and ends up bitten? 'You were asking for it'. Maybe not Joe Jordan for that matter rather than the circumstances. The dog wasn't just mad, he was driven mad. His keeper got hurt, he was manhandled by Pienaar, he was almost stud-tackled by Palacios, he had Van Der Vaart in his ear with whatever we didn't hear but judging from Rino's gesture it was some bollocks, he was captaining a team that needed to show some grit, he had a hard-ass Scot jump into his face - did you say it was all him?

                        Everybody is calling Rino names. Names you wouldn't give to your dog. Because if you know the real character of the dog, it's not his fault. It's the owner or in this case the circumstances. I'm not trying to victimize Rino, because eventually he stepped over the line as well, but I'm trying to make you think. Next time you see Rino play look if he's stirring up everything or is it the other way around. Next time you see Joe Jordan on the sideline watch if he's advising Redknapp or just looking for an angle to provoke the opposition. Next time you see Peter Crouch go for a header watch where his hands are at - he's always(as always as a human or a footballer can be) climbing on the other guy and it isn't the ordinary fight for the ball in modern football rather than his characteristic move. And next time you hear Souness speak ask yourself how does his words cope with his actions on the pitch.
                        jokers to the right
                        clowns to the left of me

                        Kommentaar


                          #87
                          Good dog.

                          Dogs like to play and wrestle as does Gattuso. He's your biggest friend. He's loyal and will stick with you through thick and thin. David Beckham describes him with these words '“Gattuso is the *biggest character I’ve ever played with. How you perceive him on the pitch is exactly how he is. Before coming to Milan I’d played against him a few times – and he’s definitely one of those guys who you just never want to face. He’s a player you always want on your team. He’s like Roy Keane used to be at United. He’s such a *character. And he’s not just like that for one or two days – he’s like it every day of every week. It’s characters like that who make a team.” Pets also make Becks laugh: “He is always at Milanello, and he never wastes an opportunity to joke around, especially with Pato, and player like him is fundamental in the dressing room. No one makes me laugh like he does.”

                          Becks also see him fair but irritating when he talks about his debut as England captain - a
                          match decided by Gattuso's goal: “He told me not to dive in the box because we weren’t in a swimming pool. We both remembered this incident. Rino is a player that you do not like much when he is your opponent, as he can be irritating. He is always on you, and doesn’t allow you to do much. I will always remember that match, not only because of Gattuso, but also because it was my first game as England captain.” Gattuso carried the weight of the captain as well and though some may wanted to see him stripped of vice-captaincy(Milan's first choice is Ambrosini at the moment) it's manager's decision who said following:"No, I never thought to take away the captaincy because he took responsibility. He made a mistake but his career shows what a player he is and what man he is. After the game he apologized to the team, to me, and teammates, also remember that he finished the game with 12 stitches in his knee: Rino deserves the armband."

                          I know Gattuso. I know him probably better than you. I watch him play every weekend and I can even recognize him from his running technique. My judgment on him is not based on some basic prejudice of Italian footballer or classical defensive midfielder who is expected to play dirty though it might be clouded with the colors I hold dear to my heart. I don't know every detail of his life but above everything I'm confident I know the most important thing - how he thinks. Simply because I think the same. He starts the game with a spark that is meant to light up his team while it can turn into an inferno. That's the only way players like him can be - they are on the edge all the time. As H. S. Thompson puts it "The edge, there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over" meaning you don't get Roy Keane's dragging captaincy without the occasional red card resulting offence. You don't get a Maradona without him going balloons once in a while. Gattuso once told Steve Nash 'if he doesn't play like a madman he's Serie C.'

                          Even if what he did was wrong I can't judge him since I've done the same. I've showed a coach who was in a place he shouldn't have been and I've physically assaulted someone who was too vocal about an unwarranted disqualification. I too regretted the hit because it was my friend and he wasn't really standing, but I don't regret that a bigmouth was confronted. And years later he also admitted he was way over the line. I want you to judge the action rather than the man and see if your judgement correlates with your own actions(hi Graeme
                          Souness). Hopefully everyone involved will make their conclusions like in my case - he was the last guy I hit(about 10 years from now).

                          Maldini is my hero for being perfect - a man I can never be. Rino is a guy who is a fan himself. He is one of us - RINO UNO DI NOI.



                          Thank you for investing your precious time time to read through, invest some more to think it through as well.

                          A video dedicated to Tuesday night:


                          Another good video about what Rino is about
                          jokers to the right
                          clowns to the left of me

                          Kommentaar


                            #88
                            ma saan aru, et sa oled omasooihar, aga räägid äkki enda postitusest täpsemalt?
                            see ei ole minu süü, et sa okaspuu oled

                            "joon palju ma tahan, aga ikka ta ei saa minust aru"

                            "Football is a simple game based on the giving and taking of passes, of controlling the ball and of making yourself available to receive a pass. It is terribly simple."

                            Kommentaar


                              #89
                              Algselt postitas Daz Booob Vaata postitust
                              ma saan aru, et sa oled omasooihar, aga räägid äkki enda postitusest täpsemalt?
                              kallis emme-issi lumehelbeke(kui juba hellitusnimedeks läks), mul on viie leheküljeline lugu toimunust. asi vajab roppu linkimist and shieet. kas siin foorumis pole 10k tähemärgi piirangut?

                              või sa ei saanud aru, et ma saatsin su posti persse?
                              jokers to the right
                              clowns to the left of me

                              Kommentaar


                                #90
                                sain aru küll, mida sa osavalt imiteerisid, aga ei saa aru selle põhjusest... et on siis vaja enda energiat taolisele asjale kulutada? ma saan aru, et joomisele aga... mina küsin ausalt-siiralt-sinisilmselt, sina aga vastad nagu mingi "räppar" - ligi 8k postitusega võiksid ju midagi õppida-jagada.

                                edit/ot2: millepärast sisuliselt eelmist postitust on vaja tsiteerida?
                                see ei ole minu süü, et sa okaspuu oled

                                "joon palju ma tahan, aga ikka ta ei saa minust aru"

                                "Football is a simple game based on the giving and taking of passes, of controlling the ball and of making yourself available to receive a pass. It is terribly simple."

                                Kommentaar

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