Sentences with phrase «by modern football»

According to Brazilian website Uol, Neymar's entourage have already prepared his recovery «headquarters» at his villa, which includes a gymnasium and a machine capable of producing 300 kg of ice a day, similar to those used by modern football clubs.

Not exact matches

Top managers in modern football don't gamble and rely on other teams mistakes, they make sure they have every chance of reaching their goal by building an unstoppable squad even if it costs an extra 60m.
He is afraid that a new manager who takes him over would do wonders with the same squad just by introducing innovative modern day football tactics.
So Wenger, in an interview reported by Metro, decided to push a few buttons himself and knowing how sensitive the Portuguese prat is to criticism of his team's playing style, the Frenchman delivered the perfect response, thinly veiled of course as a general observation on modern football.
We started this transfer window off by being linked to Geoffrey Kondogbia (He opted to go to Inter Milan) then it was on to our good old friend Schniederlin (Who unless you have been living in a cave, has moved to United) accompanied by Vidal (Who we are being told is possibly on his way to Bayern as a replacement for the modern patron of German football Schweinstieger), not obviously forgetting the obvious one that rears its head every window for the last 3 seasons, William Carvalho.
His manager was equally impressed as well, as another report on the Arsenal website explains, by both key facets of what is expected of a full back in modern football, and that is without even mentioning the fact that Bellerin is like a streak of lightning and beat one of Theo Walcott's club speed records this year.
In other news, our team seems to be rounding nicely into form, with a productive off - season and several new additions already settling in, there seems to be a renewed sense of confidence in the air... our well - oiled machine has conducted business again early this year, so we can just sit back, kick our feet up and watch all those other suckers scramble to make panic moves in the 11th hour... of course, we need to tie up a few loose ends but our team of savvy negotiators, under the tutelage of our faithful leader, will perform their usual magic with ample time to spare... I have to laugh when I look around the soccer world and see all those teams look upon us with envy and scorn as they struggle to mimic our seemingly infallible business model... thank goodness the powers that be had the foresight and fortitude to resist the temptations of the modern football era... instead of listening to all the experts and simply taking the easy way out by making the necessary improvements on the field and in the front office, we chose the path never traveled... we are truly pioneers in our field... sometimes you just have to have faith in the people that have always conducted themselves in a respectful and honest fashion... most fans aren't so fortunate, they will never know what it's like to follow a team that treats everyone in and around the club as if they were an extended member of the family... all for one I say... so when you wake up this morning, please try not to gloat when you see rival fans pacing back and forth waiting for their respective teams to pull the usual panic buys, just say nothing and be thankful that it isn't you... like I've always said, this is why you stay the course... this is when the real benefits of having someone in charge for over 2 decades really pays off... have a great day fellow Gunners
No matter how much Arsenal fans want to comfort ourselves by saying that Arsene Wenger did a brilliant job by keeping the Gunners in the Champions League when his transfer budget was basically a piece of string and a winning smile, the fact is that football is all about results, especially in the modern era.
It's great to see such loyalty from players in this modern era of football, especially as the game is so highly driven by money nowadays.
It could be that in modern times the idea of player loyalty is no longer a reliable measure of the new generstion of footballer rather they have delusions of grandeur and are inclined toward being shamelessly mercenary regardless of any goodwill shown by their managers.
Why not just accept we are now well into the 21st century and dinosaurs like you are regarded as strange and totally out of touch with modern football reality by modern fans.
Arsenal are being sabotaged by Wenger through his intransigence and deluded views on modern day football economics.
If we had a decent manager I would wish to keep Ox but Wenger does his best to ruin all promising players by constantly playing so many out of position; by lack of motivational skills and by being so far behind modern football winning methods.
One of the most wonderful stories of modern football is going to be foiled at the last — again — by stupid Real stupid Madrid winning another stupid Champions stupid League.
For Gruden, it's more of a mission statement propped up by iconography about how he's gonna bring back OLD TIMEY FOOTBALL to a modern game that's lost its way.
Wenger who had been a God, morphed, under the temptation of huge salary assurances and supreme power gifted to him by an owner and a board without honour and crucially, any understanding of modern football, into a tinpot dictator, ageing and descending into early onset dementia, rather like Robert Mugabe.
They effectively describe the French manager as «overwhelmed» by the current landscape of modern football and he did not adapt (like Ferguson did).
We are not in the 90's or early 2000, modern football is cruel and rough less... The new era of managerial skills has passed him by without making any noise and he missed it.
Twenty years on, their return to the tournament has been underpinned by one of the most parsimonious defences in modern international football.
As reported by Sky Sports, Zoran Mamic has not taken kindly to what Wenger has been saying this week about the doping problem that he believes is present in modern football and the failure of the current UEFA rules to deal with it.
I accept that Barca, for instance were helped by the city authority some years ago, when the bought the training ground for some $ 200m, but the truth is, in the modern football world major success is only possible by tossing huge sums of money about.
One of the least edifying spectacles in modern football is that of managers attempting to deflect criticism for a defeat by making spurious attacks on the opponents who beat them.
It is viewed as the benchmark for modern football stadia with it's bowl design, meaning «bad seats» are difficult to come by when purchasing your Arsenal tickets.
Plus, they have a modern internal structure headed up by a director of football, in addition to a massive global scouting network.
Modern football can feel like a sport dominated by the most complete players, especially in the final third.
While this is partially explained by football's broadcasting boom, the internationalisation of the clubs» commercial operations, their investment into privately - owned and modern facilities, and overall more sustainable management practices, are also key reasons for this growth,» Andrea Sartori, KPMG's global head of sports and the report's author, was quoted as saying by BBC.
Some fans, especially youngsters, left the stadium clearly shaken by events that have no place in modern football.
The world's newest most expensive player — a footballer with the attributes and abilities to live up to his billing as the archetypal modern midfield all - rounder — was muffled by his manager's tactics in almost the complete reverse of Guardiola's impact upon De Bruyne.
Modern football clubs are not run by one person meaning it is important that a Sporting Director is appointed for example, Robert Pires which should enable a smoother transition when Wenger does depart or else it may take years for the void to be filled.
By this I mean is it now an effective concept in modern top level first team football beyond the development period of the academy player.
A tweet published by the United press office confirmed the jaw - dropping rumours that had first emerged on the Daily Telegraph website the previous night: Ferguson, the father of the modern United, the most successful manager in British football history, was stepping down after 26 and a half record - breaking years.»
Rarely does a day go by in the era of modern football when we don't hear of a substantial amount of money being offered for a top quality footballer, be it from the far - eastern Chinese Super League or the Abu Dhabi - funded coffers at Manchester City.
The Barcelona team managed by Guardiola between 2008 and 2012 is seen by many as arguably the best team in the modern era of professional football.
PSG, currently led by Unai Emery, are 11 points clear of Lyon at the top of the Ligue 1 table and progressing well across all competitions — domestic and continental — but as the Italian tactician told the French publication, «one day can change everything» in modern football.
This generation of supporter is spoilt by seeing the best football ever played by modern teams.
And it so seemed that Giwa had his fate as peace returned to Nigerian football last year, with the country achieving unprecedented feats at both domestic, continental and international stages under the leadership of Pinnick, whose modern - day and pragmatic approach to football matters was complemented by the innovative leadership style of Shehu Dikko, who runs the League Management Company.
Case in point: Modern Football, one of the earliest films made by the late Robert Altman (M.A.S.H., Nashville, Gosford Park).
-- NYTimes The Larry Gagosian Effect — Wall Street Journal World's Biggest Museum Opens in China — Studio 360 Top Exhibitions of 2010 — The Art Newspaper Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/27/11 Ed Ruscha at the Modern Museum of Fort Worth — CBS New: Sunday Morning (Video) Simpsons Takes Shots at Dallas Football, Arts District — FrontRow A work in progress: The Dallas Arts District gathers trophy buildings, but still searches for urban vitality — Chicago Tribune James Turrell mound at Rice University - Glasstire Richard Serra, Pushing the Boundaries of Drawing — ARTnews Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/27/11 Ed Ruscha Street Photography — LATimes Stephen Colbert Exposes Himself to Art (the Appropriate Way)-- NYTimes (Video) Jerry Saltz on Andy Warhol's Portraits of Liz Taylor — NYMag Eduardo Souto de Moura, Architect from Portugal, Wins Pritzker — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/20/11 Neiman Marcus to feature artwork in Windows — FrontRow MAC director resigns — Glasstire Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/20/11 Jerry Saltz: How a Joyride in Gavin Brown's Volvo Became Art — NYMag Walker Art Center to Acquire Merce Cunningham's collection — Art in America Cultural Complex in Santiago di Campostela is expensive mistake - The Art Newspaper Toshiko Takaezu, Ceramic Artist, Dies at 88 — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 03/13/11 Artpace San Antonio — YouTube Crow Collection To Expand, Add Asian Sculpture Garden — FrontRow Donor's Son Sues Dallas Museum Over Art Collection, 25 Years Later — NYTimes Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/13/11 Abramovic wins two - year copyright battle — The Art Newspaper Scents and Sensibility, Artists use scent to create new experience in museums — ARTnews Spark: How Creativity Works, by Julie Burstein, Kurt Andersen — Amazon.com (Book) Michelangelo's David «could collapse due to high - speed train building» — Telegraph Recent Art News - National - International Week of 03/06/11 Norman Foster to Design Huge Hong Kong Cultural District — NYTimes Recent Art News - Texas Week of 02/27/11 AMOA leaving downtown, focusing on Laguna Gloria — Austin 360 Recent Art News - Texas Week of 02/13/11 Amon Carter's Director of Education Named National Educator of the Year — Amon Carter Museum Blanton curator heads to National Gallery of Art — Austin 360 Director Dana Friis - Hansen departs from the Austin Museum of Art — The Austin Chronicle Dallas Architecture Forum wins AIA National Collaborative Achievment Award — Dallas Archicture Forum Recent Art News - National - International Week of 02/13/11 Egyptian Archeological Sites Were Looted, Says Antiquities Minister — NYTimes Tracey Emin, the visionary, emerges as Margate's answer to William Blake — Guardian What's The Matter With Kansas... This Time?
The entire show consists of six different chapters, each showing different relation between the body and the space, from a large 8x2 meter charcoal studies depicting football hooligans fighting, four paintings of the skaters in a modern art museum breaking a series of paintings by Ellsworth Kelly, six black paintings representing the infinite space beyond the surface of the abstract paintings, a cast resin sculpture and a drawing of Colonel Kurtz from Apocalypse Now, all the way to the interactive app that allows viewers to interact with the works on view.
The title (here rewritten using the artist's personalized spelling) refers to a 1963 book by legendary American football coach Homer Rice, which details his variation on the so - called T - formation, the precursor to most modern offensive formations in the sport.
Other performances include a staged event off an icebreaker in the Arctic Circle; simultaneous films of two groups, one in Trafalgar Square, London, and one in Senate Square, Helsinki (linked up by mobile phone); events in Tate Modern and Tate Britain; a performance at Arsenal Football Grounds; and a re-enactment of a painting on the effects of drinking wine in St. Etheldreda's, a medieval crypt in London.
A version of his cinematic portrait of Zidane — a black and white film in which the camera follows just the footballer in the space of a 90 - minute game and which was shown to great acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival — has also been bought by Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art.
«The Gang: Photographs by Catherine Opie,» Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, UK, October 4, 2014 — February 15, 2015 «Only Miss the Sun when it Starts to Snow,» Peder Lund, Oslo, Norway, June 21 — September 13, 2014» 2013 «In and Around LA,» Julius Shulman Institute, Los Angeles, CA, February 16 — March 24, 2013 «Catherine Opie,» Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA, February 22 — March 28, 2013 2012 «Twelve Miles to the Horizon: Sunrises and Sunsets,» Long Beach Museum of Art, CA, October 5, 2012 - March 24, 2013 «BROADWAY BILLBOARD: Catherine Opie, Untitled (Stump Fire # 4),» Socrates Sculpture Park, New York, NY, September 9, 2012 - March 31, 2013 «Catherine Opie: High School Football,» Mitchell - Innes & Nash, New York, NY, March 10 — April 14, 2012 2011 «Catherine Opie,» Stephen Friedman Gallery, London, UK, November 23, 2011 — January 28, 2012 «Catherine Opie: New Zealand; Zero to Something,» projectspace B431, Elam School of Fine Arts, New Zealand, August 9 — 13, 2011 «Catherine Opie: Empty and Full,» Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA, April 12 — September 5, 2011; catalogue «Catherine Opie: Football Landscapes,» Peder Lund, Oslo, Norway, January 15 — February 26, 2011 2010 «Catherine Opie,» Portland Art Museum, Portland, OR, October 23, 2010 — February 6, 2011 «Catherine Opie: Figure and Landscape,» Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA, July 25 — October 17, 2010 «Catherine Opie: High School Football Players,» Sabine Knust Galerie Maximilian Verlag, Munich, Germany, May 20 — June 10, 2010 «Venezia / Venice,» Studio Guenzani, Milan, Italy, May 19 — July 30, 2010 «Catherine Opie: Twelve Miles to the Horizon,» Regen Projects II, Los Angeles, CA, April 24 — May 22, 2010 «Catherine Opie: Girlfriends,» Gladstone Gallery, New York, NY, March 19 — April 24, 2010 2008 «Catherine Opie The Blue of Distance: Photographs from Alaska,» Stephen Friedman Gallery, London, UK, October 14 — November 14, 2008 «Catherine Opie: American Photographer,» Guggenheim Museum, New York, September 26, 2008 — January 7, 2009; catalogue «Catherine Opie,» Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA, April 10 — May 17, 2008 2006 «1999 & In and Around Home,» Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT, January 22 — May 14, 2006; traveled to The Orange County Museum of Art, CA, June 4 — September 3, 2006; Cleveland Museum of Contemporary Art, OH, September 29 — December 30, 2006; Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, NC, February 11 — April 29, 2007; catalogue «Catherine Opie: Chicago,» Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Chicago, IL, May 20 — October 15, 2006 «Catherine Opie: American Cities,» Gladstone Gallery, New York, NY, September 8 — October 14, 2006 2004 «Catherine Opie: Children,» Studio Guenzani, Milan, Italy, October 27 — December 4, 2004 «Catherine Opie: Surfers,» Gorney, Bravin & Lee, New York, NY, March 13 — April 10, 2004 «Catherine Opie: Surfers,» Stephen Friedman Gallery, London, UK, January 22 — February 21, 2004 «Catherine Opie: Surfers,» Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA, January 10 — February 14, 2004 2002 «Catherine Opie: Icehouses,» Studio Guenzani, Milan, Italy, October 2 — November 6, 2002 «Catherine Opie: Icehouses,» Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA, May 11 — June 15, 2002 «Catherine Opie: Skyways and Icehouses,» Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN, April 28 — July 21, 2002; catalogue 2001 «Wall Street,» Stephen Friedman Gallery, London, UK, November 30, 2001 — January 19, 2002 «1999,» Galeria Presenca, Porto, Portugal, November 10 — December 20, 2001 «Wall Street 2000 - 2001,» presented by Antik in cooperation with Gorney, Bravin & Lee, New York, NY, November 3 — December 10, 2001 2000 «Catherine Opie: In between here and there,» curated by Rochelle Steiner, The Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO, October 6 — November 26, 2000 «Catherine Opie,» The Photographers» Gallery, London, UK, August 9 — September 24, 2000; traveled to the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL, November 18, 2000 — February 18, 2001; catalogue «Catherine Opie: Large Format Polaroids,» Thread Waxing Space, New York, NY, May 12 — June 10, 2000 «Catherine Opie,» Artpace, San Antonio, TX, April 6 — July 2, 2000 «Catherine Opie,» Partobject Gallery, Carrboro, NC, April 1 — May 27, 2000 «Catherine Opie,» Gorney Bravin + Lee, New York, NY, March 18 — April 15, 2000 «Catherine Opie,» Susan Inglett, New York, NY, February 24 — April 1, 2000 1999 «Catherine Opie: A Survey,» Woodstreet Galleries, Pittsburgh, PA, September 3 — October 16, 1999 «Domestic,» Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA, April 17 — May 22, 1999 1998 «Mini-Malls,» Jay Gorney Modern Art, New York, NY, March 21 — April 25, 1998 1997 «Catherine Opie,» Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, October 5, 1997 — February 8, 1998 «Houses and Landscapes,» Ginza Art Space, Shiseido, Tokyo, Japan, February 25 — March 31, 1997 «Portraits and Houses,» Susanne Hilberry Gallery, Birmingham, MI, 1997 1996 «Houses and Landscapes,» Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA, April 27 — June 1, 1996 «Houses and Freeways,» Jay Gorney Modern Art, New York, NY, February 24 — March 30 «Freeways,» Feigen Gallery, Chicago, IL, 1996 1995 «Portraits,» enterprise, New York, NY, 1995 «Portraits,» Parco, Tokyo, Japan, 1995 «Portraits,» Galeria Massimo De Carlo, Milan, Italy, 1995 «Portraits and Freeways,» Richard Foncke Galerie, Ghent, Belgium, 1995 1994 «Portraits,» Regen Projects, Los Angeles, CA, June 4 — July 2, 1994 «Portraits,» Kiki Gallery, San Francisco, CA, 1994 «L.A. Freeways,» Jack Hanley Gallery, San Francisco, CA, November 19 — December 13, 1994 1991 «Being and Having,» 494 Gallery, New York, NY, 1991 1990 «A Long Way from Paris: Photographs from MacArthur Park, Metro Rail, and Their Surroundings,» Beyond Baroque, Venice, CA, 1990 1989 «Master Plan,» United States Post Office, Valencia, CA, 1989 «Master Plan,» Mills College, Oakland, CA, 1989 Selected Group Exhibitions:
Could a football player who suffers brain damage from repetitive concussions caused by a style of play that is encouraged and enabled by the modern helmet sue the helmet manufacturer and win under Massachusetts law?
It would most likely be up to a jury to consider whether modern day football helmet has any design defects and, in weighing that question, a Massachusetts jury would be asked to weigh several factors: - the gravity of the danger posed by the current football helmet design - the likelihood that head injury will result from the use of the helmet - the technical feasibility of a safer alternative design - the financial feasibility of that alternative design, and - any other consequences likely to result from the alternative design However, even if a jury were to conclude that there exists a cost - effective design that would be more effective in preventing head injuries than the current football helmet design, the manufacturer might still have a few defenses under Massachusetts law: the so - called Vassallo defense and Correia defense.
Editor's note: Our Twitter followers will be aware that yesterday afternoon, the Inspiring office was taken over by football fever as we united nations (London, Manchester and Berlin) through the powers of modern day technology for our very own Brazil 2014 Sweepstake!
While the city embraces its cultural roots by hosting rodeos and chili cook offs, it is also show another side with its support for modern sports like semi-pro football, disc or «Frisbee» golf and long distance cycling.
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