Monday, March 14, 2022

Kaka football player bio

Kaka

Kaka

Kaka

Kaká, named Ricardo Izecson dos Santos Leite, (born April 22, 1982, Brasília, Brazil), is a Brazilian soccer player (Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) of the Year). 2007.

Kaká was indebted to his younger brother Rodrigo, who at a young age could not pronounce Ricardo and could only handle "Caca." Kaká was seven when the family moved to São Paulo. A passionate football fan, he was taken over by São Paulo FC the following year. At the age of 15, he was offered a contract, but his progress was interrupted three years later by a serious spinal cord injury (which continued with a swimming accident), which threatened his career. However, he recovered and started playing for his first team in January 2001. That year he scored 12 goals in 27 games as an attacking midfielder. In 2002 he played for the first time on the Brazilian national team, playing against Bolivia, and later that year Brazil won the World Cup.

Kaká's growing exposure to the world stage sparked interest from leading European clubs, and in August 2003 AC Milan signed him for $ 8.5 million. He made his first appearance in Italy next month with a 2-0 win over Ancona. Kaká was equally skilled at initiating and ending attacks, and his strong environmental skills were developed with Milan. Kaká finished eight and seven, respectively, in voting for FIFA Player of the Year in 2005 and 2006 before winning almost every prestigious award in 2007, when he was named European Player of the Year and FIFA Player of the Year. In addition, Milan won the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) Champions League in 2007.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

marion jones basketball wallpapers

marion jones basketball
marion jones basketball
marion jones basketball
marion jones basketball
marion jones basketball
marion jones basketball

Marion Jones former world champion track and field athlete personal life & images

Jones was born to Marion (who is Belizean) and George Jones (who is African American) in Los Angeles, California. She holds dual citizenship with the United States and Belize (her mother's home country). Her parents split when she was very young, and Jones' mother remarried a retired postal worker, Ira Toler, three years later; Toler became a stay-at-home dad to Jones and her older half-brother, Albert Kelly, until his sudden death in 1987. Jones turned to sports (running, pickup basketball games, and anything else her brother Albert was doing athletically) as an outlet for her grief, and by the age of 15 she was routinely dominating California high school athletics both on the track and the basketball courts.

Jones is a 1997 graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. While there, she met and began dating one of the track coaches, shot putter C.J. Hunter. Hunter was forced to resign his position at UNC due to university rules prohibiting coach/athlete dating. Jones and Hunter were married October 3, 1998, and trained for the Sydney 2000 Summer Olympics with their new athletic coach Trevor Graham. Graham would later gain notoriety for his role in providing both athletes with Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative (BALCO) designer steroids ("The Cream" and "The Clear"), undetectable at the time, as well as providing a sample of BALCO's most successful product ("The Clear") to the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA), where it was identified as tetrahydrogestrinone (THG) and a detection method was developed.

In the run-up to the 2000 Olympics, all eyes were on Marion Jones, who had announced at a press conference during her pre-Olympic book-signing tour that she intended to win gold medals in all five of her competition events at Sydney. Lost in the hoopla and the publicity was a low-key announcement that Jones' husband C.J. Hunter had quietly withdrawn from the Shot Put competition due to a knee injury, though he was allowed to keep his coaching credentials and attend the games to support his wife. However, just hours after Marion Jones won her first of the planned five golds, the IOC announced that Hunter had failed no fewer than four pre-Olympic drug tests, testing positive each time for the banned anabolic steroid nandrolone. Hunter was immediately suspended from taking any role at the Sydney games, and he was ordered to surrender his on-field coaching credentials. At a press conference where Hunter broke down in tears as a subdued Marion Jones sat by his side, Hunter denied taking any performance enhancing drugs at all, much less the easily-detected nandrolone (which showed up in all four tests in amounts over 1000 times normal levels); Victor Conte of BALCO, who was regularly supplying "nutritional supplements" to Graham's athletes, blamed the test results on "an iron supplement" that contained nandrolone precursors and tied previous positive nandrolone tests from Jamaican sprinter Merlene Ottey and British sprinter Linford Christie to the same supplement. As late as 2004, Hunter was still denying the charges and was attempting to gain access to the results to see if they could be analyzed further. Jones would later write in her autobiography, Marion Jones: Life in the Fast Lane, that Hunter's positive drug tests hurt their marriage and her image as a drug-free athlete. The couple divorced in 2002.

On June 28, 2003, Jones gave birth to a son (Tim Montgomery Jr.) with then-boyfriend Tim Montgomery, a world class sprinter himself. Because of her pregnancy, Jones missed the 2003 World Championships, but spent a year preparing for the 2004 Olympics. Montgomery, who did not qualify for the 2004 Olympic Track and Field team due to poor performance, was charged by USADA, as part of the investigation into the BALCO doping scandal, with receiving and using banned performance enhancing drugs and sought a four-year suspension for Montgomery. Montgomery fought the ban but lost the appeal on December 13, 2005, receiving a two-year ban from track and field competition; the Court for Arbitration of Sport (CAS) also stripped Montgomery of all race results, records, medals, etc., from March 31, 2001 onward. Montgomery later announced his retirement. The investigation into Montgomery's illegal substance use once more called into question Marion Jones' own protests about not using steroids and never having been tested positive for steroids, especially in light of former trainer Trevor Graham's increasingly visible role in the BALCO case.

On February 24, 2007, Marion Jones married Bajan sprinter and 2000 Olympic medalist (bronze, 100 m sprint) Obadele Thompson. Their first child together was born in July 2007. She gave birth to daughter Eva-Marie on June 28, 2009.
Marion Jones Medals
Marion Jones Running
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Marion Jones Tears
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Marion Jones Fashion
Marion Jones Jumping With Joy

Thursday, December 8, 2011

yelena isinbayeva pole vaulting pictures with different angle






Yelena Isinbayeva biography & pics

Yelena Gadzhievna Isinbayeva (born 3 June 1982) is a Russian pole vaulter. She is twice an Olympic gold medalist (2004 and 2008), five-times a World Champion, and the current world record holder in the event. As a result of her accomplishments, she is widely considered the greatest female pole-vaulter of all time.

Isinbayeva has been a major champion on nine occasions (Olympic, World outdoor and indoor champion and European outdoor and indoor champion). She was also the jackpot winner of the IAAF Golden League series in 2007 and 2009. After poor performances at world championships in 2009 and 2010, she took a year-long break from the sport.

She became the first woman to clear the five-metre barrier in 2005. Isinbayeva's current world records are 5.06 m outdoors, a record Isinbayeva set in Zurich in August 2009, and 5.00 m indoors, a record set in February 2009. The former was Isinbayeva's twenty-seventh pole vault world record.

Isinbayeva was named Female Athlete of the Year by the IAAF in 2004, 2005 and 2008, and World Sportswoman of the Year by Laureus in 2007 and 2009. She was given the Prince of Asturias Award for Sports in 2009.
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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

randy orton tattoos







Randy orton Wallpapers & Mini Biography

As a third-generation Superstar, Randy didn't grow up in an ordinary wrestling family, he grew up an Orton. His earliest years included time with some of the greatest performers sports-entertainment has ever seen; his grandfather, "The Big O" Bob Orton, Sr., his father, "Cowboy" Bob Orton and his uncle, Barry O.
Randy made his WWE debut in 2002 on SmackDown, and his natural talent and charisma were recognized by Triple H and Ric Flair, who extended an invitation to the young star to join Evolution. As part of Evolution, Orton enjoyed one of the longest Intercontinental Championship reigns in recent history. Orton also became known as "The Legend Killer" and he put WWE on notice that no Hall of Famer, Legend, or Superstar was safe.

Every time Orton steps in the ring, he makes history. He became the youngest World Heavyweight Champion of all-time in 2004 when beat Chris Benoit for the strap at SummerSlam. The victory ushered in the "Age of Orton" in the world of sports- entertainment. In 2006, he teamed with Edge, forming Rated-RKO, and the duo captured the World Tag Team Championship.

For this Triple-Crown winner domination is inevitable, victory is ensured, legacies will be advanced and glory will be obtained. It's his destiny and it's only just begun.