Azizul Hadiyan; 1994; Malaysian; a dude.
To find my photos, search on Tumblr: Azizul Hadiyan Osman or Azzu's
Likes: Photography, cars, bikes, food, memes, mudkips, My Little Pony, Hello Kitty, 5 different shades of purple, 2 shades of blue.
Loves: Her <3
Blogger: http://tinyurl.com/737b453
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If you’ll excuse the pun and read on…
Over a number of years, football has played with systems and tried to define formations while the brains on the bench tell us that their players aren’t confined to a sole set of instructions, but taking a look at the Premier League this season, it’s looking increasingly more like target men are the focal point of most sides at this moment in time.
Grant Holt, Bobby Zamora, Demba Ba, Kevin Davies, Ivan Klasnic (yes Bolton play with not 1, but 2 target men.), Emmanuel Adebayor, Danny Graham, it’s a list that can stretch even further if I felt like devoting more words to this article.
Analysing the starting eleven’s of the Premier League, you could say that there are currently around 12 or 13 teams that play with, or who occasionally play with a target man. The 4-5-1 formation started to gather pace with the arrival of Jose Mourinho at Chelsea, often criticised for playing a style that would rather keep a clean sheet than score a goal, and this formation gave birth to a brand of ‘super-strikers’. These are forwards who have it all; height, pace, power, strength. Didier Drogba and Fernando Torres, both now at Chelsea are arguably two of the first and the finest ‘super-strikers’ in the past decade or so.
You would have a hard time trying to find a team in Europe who don’t have the option of playing it to the ‘big man’ (well, except Barcelona but you can’t count the Blaugrana into any football equation in today’s world…), but when did we fall out of love with the 4-4-2?
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For those of us who like a more structured existence, a frame is included with your new sprocket hole camera.
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We call him Phil now.
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Looks to Internet Community & Fellow Tech Leaders to Destroy Legislation We All Hate
STOCKHOLM, Sweden. (Dec. 23, 2011) - Mojang has never supported SOPA, the “Stop Online Piracy Act” currently working its way through U.S. Congress.
“Overzealous and vaguely formulated attempts to fight online…