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Updated Fri, March 23, 2012.
451.www.manchesterdevils.com155
452.momentodofutebol.blogspot.com154
453.calcio.leonardo.it153
454.www.coupedafrique.com153
455.burimi-live.ce.ms153
456.www.the90thminute.com153
457.www.soccerjones.com152
458.ioamolaseriea.blogspot.com151
459.mondocalcio-scommesse.blogspot.com151
460.www.francorossi.com150
461.www.sambenedettesecalcio.it149
462.www.upball.com148
463.arsenalkorner.com148
464.www.ua-football.com147
465.www.teveperuana.com147
466.www.brynefk.no146
467.www.confutbol.com146
468.mirko-fcm.de145
469.supersportlive.com145
470.www.lovefooty.net145
471.www.videosoccer.net144
472.estudiantes.org.ar144
473.www.dipmore.com144
474.www.kil.no143
475.www.worldfootballers.com141
476.www.skcb.cz141
477.twb22.blogspot.com141
478.www.torfabrik.de140
479.www.jbu.dbu.dk139
480.watchlivefootystream.com139
481.ligtvdevim.com139
482.www.manchelivarse.com139
483.www.ffnews.de138
484.kanonirs.ru138
485.burimi-live.tk138
486.footballfollower.com138
487.www.slavistickenoviny.cz137
488.www.serieaweekly.com137
489.milanac.ru136
490.www.myfootballforum.com134
491.www.007soccerpicks.com134
492.www.fussball-pur.de133
493.row51.blogspot.com133
494.www.southamericanfutbol.com133
495.id.totalbola.com133
496.www.bigsoccer.com132
497.www.allaboutfcbarcelona.com132
498.www.mcalcio.com132
499.bundesliga-livestream.blogspot.com132
500.thesoccerinsiders.com130
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467. www.confutbol.com

Rating: 146 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.confutbol.com' on the other websites

www.confutbol.com

Futbol online - Television Online gratis - futbol en directo

Description: con confutbol.com puedes ver todos lo canales de television por internet gratis. Puedes ver futbol online, baloncesto de la nba a través de internet. Mira todos los partidos de la liga española de futbol, la liga inglesa y mucho más gratis

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Nigel de Jong 'crossed a line' with Hatem Ben Arfa tackle, says Bert van Marwijk
Holland coach Bert van Marwijk claims Manchester City midfielder left him with no choice but to drop him from national squad.
telegraph.co.uk
Northern Ireland v Italy - live!
Hit F5 for the latest, use that auto-refresh thing, join this, and email scott.murray@guardian.co.uk, but don't give him the small talk, give him the big talk2 min: It's a strong start by Italy, though, Cassano bombing down the right and winning a corner. Brunt at the near post heads clear. Northern Ireland have hardly touched the thing yet.And we're off! Northern Ireland set the ball rolling, playing in their classic green shirts. The azzurri ain't so azzurri, in their away white tops. The ball's quickly gifted to Italy, but Borriello attempts to play keepie-uppie with his hand down the right and that'll be the Irish with the thing again.The teams are out! They wait to take the pitch by the side of the main stand. The features of Italian captain Andrea Pirlo - glamorous, rugged, windswept - look ever so slightly incongruous with the functional metal-blue corrugated-iron wall running behind him. Eventually everyone's let onto the grass. The Italian national anthem is pumped out, a brisk march which can't help positively reeking of the extremely dubious can-do attitudes of the 1930s. The Northern Irish anthem is, of course, that dirge. But there's a rare old atmosphere in this place tonight, and everybody's up for God saving Her.Referee: Tony Chapron (France).Italy: Viviano, Criscito, Bonucci, Chiellini, Cassani, De Rossi, Pirlo, Mauri, Pepe, Cassano, Borriello.Subs: Sirigu, Marchisio, Bovo, Palombo, Zambrotta, Pazzini, Rossi.Northern Ireland: Taylor, McAuley, Hughes, Craigan, Jonathan Evans, Brunt, Baird, Davis, McCann, Feeney, Healy.Subs: Tuffey, Clinghan, Corry Evans, Lafferty, McGinn, Patterson, Gorman.Kick off: 7.45pm.Older Italians will also be mindful of this:This defeat at Windsor Park knocked Italy out of the 1958 World Cup, the only time they've failed to make it. (They didn't enter in 1930.) Sent off in the match was the naturalised Italian Alcides Ghiggia, who had previously scored the winner in the 1950 World Cup 'final' for Uruguay.Of course, man for man they should still dispose of Northern Ireland without too much fuss. But ask yourself this. What price a country who can afford to leave the comically disruptive ninja skills of Kyle Lafferty on the bench? Also, the Italian central defensive partnership of Leonardo Bonucci and Giorgio Chiellini has been shipping goals for fun at Juventus, so they'll not relish facing "rejuvenated" Sunderland reserve David Healy, hat-trick hero of that famous Euro 2008 qualifying win over eventual champions Spain. Nigel Worthington has been giving Healy the big talk; this would be a fine evening for a return to the sort of form that saw the striker score a record 13 goals in that last Euro qualifying campaign.Or is it? Now there's this Euro 2012 qualifier, and Italy aren't really up to much. They've only recorded two wins in the entire calendar year of 2010, although both of those came in their first two qualifiers last month, a 2-1 win in Estonia and a brave 5-0 tonking of the Faroe Islands. Their pool of genuine top-drawer acts, usually so deep, contains Andrea Pirlo, arguably Antonio Cassano, and, er, that's about it, really. And Italy very rarely run cricket scores up against supposed lesser sides, so the Irish needn't be too feared here. Still, new boss Cesare Prandelli, formerly of Fiorentina, has got the azzurri smiling again, and after that World Cup campaign, that's no mean feat.It's been a quite a week for Northern Irish sport. On Monday, Portrush's finest, Graeme McDowell, won the decisive match in the Ryder Cup to land the trophy for Europe. His team-mate Rory McIlroy, from Holywood, County Down, had earlier contributed a crucial half-point during the day's singles. And then, later in the week, at the Commonwealth Games in Delhi, the team picked up a silver and a bronze, a haul that put them only three places in the medal table behind Nauru, the world's smallest republic. But the golf's enough for one week, isn't it?Euro 2012Northern IrelandItalyMinute-by-minute reportScott Murrayguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney out for three weeks with ankle injury
Wayne Rooney might have agreed a new contract but he will still be out for three weeks with an ankle injury.
telegraph.co.uk
Sydney FC wield the axe
Sydney FC coach Vitezslav Lavicka will wield the axe with Stuart Musialik and Liam Reddy on the chopping block.
foxsports.com.au
Gaël Clichy: Ending Arsenal trophy drought has become an obsession
France's chaotic World Cup has only added to the Arsenal defender's burning desireEverybody knows what France did last summer and, equally, everybody knows what Arsenal's players have not done for the past five seasons. Take a World Cup meltdown or a club trophy drought in isolation and they represent potent motivational forces. Combine the two for Gaël Clichy and it is a wonder that he does not begin to froth at the mouth.The defender is, among others things, the ultimate test of a journalist's short-hand and, as he bombs along at speeds in excess of 200 words per minute, he radiates excitement and enthusiasm. The 25-year-old from Toulouse is an infectious kind of guy, engaging and articulate in his second language and ever quick to challenge perceptions, particularly those that have built around Arsenal.It is when he slows, though, to offer a simple response that he kicks open the door to his soul. Clichy is Arsenal's longest-serving player, a small but important part of the "Invincibles" Premier League triumph from 2003-04, who then missed out on the FA Cup victory of 2005 because of injury. He wants so desperately to find a cure to the emptiness that has come to characterise the end of Arsenal's seasons. "It has become an obsession," he says simply.Clichy has heard the explanations a thousand times, the put-downs, and the doom and gloom. Arsenal can be a beautiful team but they fall short against the biggest opposition when it matters most. They can look lightweight and frivolous. Where is the clinical edge? Where is the winning mentality? If the criticism exasperates Arsène Wenger, then it also grates like fingernails on a chalkboard with the players."When you play for a club like Arsenal," Clichy says, "you don't lack the mentality. You are a winner. To be at the top level, whether it's NBA, NFL or whatever, you are a winner. If we play for Arsenal instead of another club in another country with smaller teams, it's because we have the winning mentality. After, it is other things that make the difference."Those things, according to Clichy, are the minutiae, which can include the bounce of the ball, a split second's hesitation or the taking of a simple chance. He argues that the league match at Chelsea three weeks ago, which finished in a 2-0 defeat, would have played out differently if his team had accepted presentable early opportunities.Then, there are the factors such as games after an international break against opponents who have few internationals, general fatigue and, invariably in Arsenal's case, injuries. Clichy's friend and team‑mate Theo Walcott once mused that he wished injuries "could be turned off, like in a PlayStation game", so that we could truly see which was the best team over the course of a season. It routinely feels as though Arsenal carry more injuries than their rivals."You don't want to hide behind this but come on," Clichy says. "At Chelsea, we missed Van Persie, Fábregas, Walcott, who was on fire, and Vermaelen. Take off Drogba, Lampard, Malouda and Terry from Chelsea and it's a different story. The fact is we've been without some massive players and it's quite difficult to cope. Football is sometimes not just as simple as 'you are the best team so you are going to win'."Clichy believes that Arsenal are a "stronger side, with greater strength on the bench", compared to last season, when they remained in contention for the title in April, only to finish 11 points off the pace. This time out, he feels, it is a question of keeping the faith and hoping that fate deals them better cards. When you are so close in your own mind, the torturous yearning surely intensifies.Tomorrow's visit to Manchester City is significant on many levels, not least as it pits two contrasting business models against one another. Wenger has long championed balanced books, sustainability and gradual development; City intend to blow that and everything else out of the water with their eye-watering spending power."Arsenal are one of the only big clubs in the world that is not losing any money," Clichy says. "With less money, we are managing to get to semi-finals, for example, and with young players. We have to give credit for this."Of course, this is not enough for people, football is about trophies and, in terms of trophies, we are not there yet. We need to win trophies but it is certain that Arsenal will be challenging for many years."Clichy's competitive instincts, though, tend to hold sway. He welcomes the influx of fresh quality to the Premier League that City's petrodollars have permitted, reasoning that "you always want to play against the best" and he finds himself stimulated by the project at Eastlands."City have to be considered as title contenders," he says. "The question is not: 'Can they compete?' They have to compete. People don't accept how Arsenal are not performing and so City cannot spend all this money and just keep on finishing fifth or sixth or whatever. The pressure is on for them. They have built an incredible squad but now they must deliver."For Clichy, the challenges keep on coming. In the Premier League, there is not only City and the more established top clubs but a larger and increasingly robust chasing pack. And at international level, there is the small matter of fashioning a new dawn under Laurent Blanc after the shame and regret of the World Cup finals.Clichy went to South Africa with four caps to his name and dreams before his eyes. He returned as one of France's humiliated band of brothers, who sparked outrage with their ill-conceived decision effectively to go on strike in protest over Nicolas Anelka's expulsion from the squad.Clichy's tournament was not all bad. He started in France's final group tie against South Africa and nobody can take away from him the fact that he has played at a World Cup. But his reflections on South Africa centre upon it being "a good experience in a bad way"."It's a new generation, a new chapter now," Clichy says. "We're trying to give our best and get back the fans because that's important. As a professional footballer you need something to drive you and the disappointment of the World Cup does that. I have a double objective this season – to do well for Arsenal which, in turn, will hopefully allow me to do well for France."Arsenal's quest for success continues to be built on the squad's togetherness. It was tested in the close-season with the latest instalment of the Cesc Fábregas-Barcelona saga but Clichy's take on whether the team has to win a trophy to keep the likes of the captain and Robin van Persie next summer is interesting."It's too easy just to leave if the team doesn't win things," Clichy says. "The challenge is to stay and help the team achieve glory. And who can assure that by leaving, you are guaranteed trophies?"We have the examples of Alex Hleb, of Mathieu Flamini [who left for Barcelona and Milan, respectively]. Maybe you win a few trophies but you only play 10 games. And nobody can be assured that by going to a certain club, you are going to win the Champions League."Cesc is like Thierry Henry when he was here or Patrick Vieira, who was wanted by Real Madrid. You know as a team you are doing something right when great clubs are after your best players, you know that you have a truly amazing player. Besides, nobody can question the commitment of Cesc. Whatever he is thinking – when he puts on the shirt he is 100% committed and he was our best player in his first five games this season. That showed the character of the guy."Single-mindedness. Professionalism. Obsession. It is what drives the very best. Clichy now wants the reward.ArsenalDavid Hytnerguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk