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Dr.

Victor Stanculescu Fondator

Motto:
1. Fotbalul: Stiinta, Arta & Business 1. Dragoste P-tru Fotbalului 2. Credinta in Tine & God 3. Speranta de Maine

Victor@SoccerAcademy OfAmerica.com. 3. Personalitatea

Antrenori, ASOCIATIA Jucatori & Staff 1.Genetica ANTRENORILOR 2.Profesionala 3.Sociala DE FOTBAL FARA FRONTIERE

2. Performanta in Football: Conceptul de Joc Conceptul de pregatire Conceptul de recuperare

Dr. Victor Stanculescu


Football for 21ST Century is:

1. SCIENCE
made by Coaches & Staff

2. ARTmade by the PLAYERS + STAFF

3. BUSINESS =
Professionals + Performances

1631 Whitcomb, Des Plaines, 60081. IL. USA ; Tel: 1-312-823-2166 & Fax: 1-208-575-5453 ; Victor@SoccerAcademyOfAmerica.com ; www.Scribd.com/VictorStanculescu

BULETINUL AAFF 502


From Chicago 01-01-2014 GOOD LUCK &
HAPPY NEW YER 2014
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Content:
1. - page: 03: FIFA: 13 moments that defined 2013 2. - page: 06: FIFA: 10 master-coaches profiles 3. - page: 09: SAA: what they have in common-Profile 4. - page: 10: SAA: What significant on world elite football? 5. - page: 12: FIFA: FIFA Cub World Cup, Morocco 2013 6. - page: 13: UEFA: Bayern Munich winner UEFA 2013 7. - page: 17: The science of INTERDISCIPLINARY in football 8. - page: 19: VISION Romanian Football Federation 2030; 9. - page: 21: Congratulation to ZIDAN! 10. - page: 25: Letter to Thanks President Joseph Blatter. 11.- Declaration of professionalism, thanks to FIFA, President Joseph Blatter, to the FIFA DIGITAL MAGAZINE, TO ALL OF YOU!

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1.-13 moments that defined 2013


(FIFA.com) Friday 27 December 2013

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Getty Images Football has provided countless breathtaking and unforgettable moments over the course of 2013. Here, FIFA.com singles out 13 occasions that helped make this a year to remember in the beautiful game. Messi eclipses icons 7 January Having scored 91 goals in 69 appearances during 2012, Lionel Messis reward came at the start of this year with a record-breaking fourth successive FIFA Ballon dOr. The little Argentinian duly superseded Marco van Basten and Johan Cruyff and achieved a feat he described as just too great for words. Mba sends Eagles soaring 10 February It was a goal worthy of winning any match, and Sunday Mbas CAF Africa Cup of Nations-winning strike brought joy and relief to an entire nation. Nigeria had not won a major trophy in 17 years going

African crown.

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into the continental showpiece, but despite the best efforts of debutant finalists Burkina Faso, Mbas precise volley after flicking the ball over his opponents head proved sufficient to secure the

Bara pass the baton 1 May The trophies would come later, but arguably the defining match of Bayern Munichs remarkable year came in the UEFA Champions League semi-final at the Camp Nou, where already four goals up from the first leg they cruised to a stunning 3-0 victory. It was Barcelonas record defeat in continental competition, and symbolised in spectacular fashion the Catalans replacement by Bayern as Europes supreme footballing force. Fergies farewell 8 May Seventeen days after securing the 13th league championship of his tenure as Manchester United manager, and 27 years after first taking the job, Sir Alex Ferguson stunned everyone by announcing his retirement. He bid a fond farewell to the clubs fans four days later in his 1500th and final match in charge, admitting that he had fulfilled his ambition of going out a winner. Robbens redemption 25 May Having been the villain in the 2012 UEFA Champions League final, when he missed an extra-time penalty against Chelsea, Arjen Robben made spectacular amends in the 2013 decider. The Dutchman emerged as the key player in the all-German Wembley showpiece, setting up the first and then scoring an 89th-minute winner as Borussia Dortmund were beaten 2-1. Wambach surpasses Hamm 21 June Like every womens footballer of her generation, Abby Wambach grew up idolising Mia Hamm, and was in awe of the iconic forward when the two played together. In June, however, the current USA talisman eclipsed her legendary predecessor by moving beyond Hamms world -record goal tally of 158 by striking four times in a 5-0 victory over Korea Republic. Brazils Maracana marvels 30 June A FIFA Confederations Cup final between hosts Brazil and Spain, reigning European and world champions, promised to be a veritable battle of the titans. In fact, it was something of a mismatch, with A Seleo laying down a marker for 2014 with a resounding and thoroughly merited 3-0 triumph in front of raucous and delirious Maracana crowd. Turkish delight for France 13 July The emergence of an exciting new generation of French players, led by player of the tournament Paul Pogba, was capped by victory in the final of the FIFA U-20 World Cup. This Bleuets team proved that they had the mental steel to match their technical skills by emerging triumphant from a decisive penalty shootout against Uruguay, in which goalkeeper Alphonse Areola was the hero with two crucial saves. Galos comeback kids crowned

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24 July Atletico Mineiro maintained Brazils recent stranglehold on the Copa Libertadores, but they did it the

hard way. In both the semi-final and final against Newells Old Boys and Olimpia respectively, they recovered from 2-0 first-leg defeats by winning the second legs by an identical margin and triumphing in the resultant penalty shootouts. In the decider, Matias Gimenezs decisive miss from the spot handed O Galothe first South American crown of their 105-year history. Angerer to the rescue 28 July Germanys latest UEFA Womens EURO title might have been their sixth in succession, but it was heavily indebted to one player. Veteran goalkeeper Nadine Angerer maintained her nations grip on the trophy by saving from the penalty spot not once, but twice, in a tight 1-0 final win over Norway. Bale breaks the bank 1 September The longest-running transfer saga of the European summer was finally concluded on deadline day, whenGareth Bale moved from Tottenham Hotspur to Real Madrid on a six-year deal. The fee was never made public and remains the subject of conjecture, with Spurs claiming a record-breaking 100m and Real suggesting the price was 91m short of the record set by Bales teammate, Cristiano Ronaldo in 2009. Beyond doubt is the fact that it was, by some distance, 2013s biggest transfer. Lippi, Evergrande make history 9 November No Chinese team had ever won the AFC Champions League before Guangzhou Evergrande rewrote the records last month with a nervy 1-1 draw with FC Seoul that secured the title on away goals. The tense triumph also saw Evergrandes coach, Marcello Lippi, become the first man to win the Asian club title, the European equivalent and the FIFA World Cup. Ronaldo caps qualifiers 19 November While there was drama across the various play-offs that brought an end to qualifying for the 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil, there was no debate over the star performer. Cristiano Ronaldo, having struck the only goal of the first leg against Sweden, settled his all-star duel with Zlatan Ibrahimovic with a stunning hat-trick in Stockholm and reaffirmed his status as one of this generations truly great players. Have Your Say These are just a few of the moments that have helped shape 2013. What has been your footballing highlight of the year? Click Add your comment to let us know...

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2.- FIFA Presents the Ten Coaches, ten Philosophies


Our title:

FIFA presents the ten (best) coaches, ten (hundred) philosophies

(FIFA.com) Thursday 28 November 2013

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Getty Images Just as coaches are judged by the success they attain, so are tactics seen as their personal calling card. The ten coaches who have made the shortlist for the 2013 FIFA Coach of the Year award all have their own unmistakable styles. Recognized as masters of their trade, they know exactly what is needed to get the best out of their respective teams. Though their approaches may differ, they each have the knack of making 11 players click on the pitch. With just six weeks to go before Zurichs Kongresshaus hosts the 2013 FIFA Ballon dOr Gala, FIFA.com an in-depth analysis of the tactical beliefs of the ten candidates, presented here in alphabetical order. 1. Carlo Ancelotti The former Italy international left Paris Saint-Germain in the summer for Real Madrid, where he has once again shown his ability to handle a star-studded dressing room. Few coaches are as flexible as Ancelotti, who has developed a gift for adapting his tactics to the players at his disposal and to the opposition, which has allowed him to spring a surprise or two over the years. During his reign at PSG, the Italian lined up with a 4-4-2 formation on 29 occasions,

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losing only two of those games. At Madrid, Carletto has been alternating between 4-3-3 and

4-2-3-1. Once asked to describe what really matters to him, he said: Having 11 players who attack when they have the ball and 11 players who defend when they dont. 2. Rafael Benitez The Spaniard is a perfectionist who leaves nothing to chance, enthusiastically implementing computer-generated training programmes and tactical drills prepared right down to the last detail. It is now possible to analyse the strengths and weaknesses of your opponents and your own team in a very objective way, said the current Napoli coach a few years ago. You can use that data to draw up plans: a Plan A, Plan B and a Plan C. A player once asked me if there was a Plan D. And he was right. Theres every reason why you should consider every possible hypothetical situation. He added: Why do people always associate beautiful football with short passes or technical ability? Ive got no time for rigid mindsets. There is no objective definition of beauty on the pitch. Good football is not a question of ideologies, and nor is it the intellectual property of those in the know. Though Benitez generally opts for 4-2-3-1, he is not averse to a rapid reshuffle if the opposing line-up and the situation demands. 3. Antonio Conte Conte is the man behind Juventus recent revival, having guided the Italian giants to back-toback league titles since taking over in 2011. One of the major factors in their recent success is the tactical changes he has introduced, casting aside Juves time-honoured and occasionally rigid 4-4-2 for a more flexible approach in which a 4-2-4 line-up can quickly become 4-3-3 or 3-5-2. He has one exceptional virtue and that is organisation, said his compatriot Ancelotti in heaping praise on Conte for his achievements a few weeks ago. 4. Vicente del Bosque Spains national team has dominated if not revolutionised world football over the last five to six years. Del Bosque took over from Luis Aragones after their UEFA EURO 2008 triumph and set about fine-tuning their near-perfect tiki-taka passing game, which involves the stringing together of countless passes as a means of opening up tightly packed defences. Del Bosque has also made extensive use of the falso nueve (false No9), choosing a talented ball-player to lead the front line rather than an out-and-out centre-forward, the idea being for the player in question to contribute to Spains lengthy passing moves and to drop back into midfield whenever required. La Roja have been fielding a 4-1-4-1 formation for many years now. As part of this system every man, defenders included, is continually on the move, an approach that forces opposing sides to defend a very large space and allows Spains possession-hungry players to build their intricate moves. 5. Alex Ferguson Like Arsene Wenger, Ferguson who this year retired from coaching after winning countless trophies with Manchester United had the luxury of developing a very specific style of play over of long period of time and of seeing his sides implement a specific set of tactics to the letter of the law. The Scottish tactician stuck to a rigid 4-4-2 for many years, though in more recent times he often opted for 4-2-3-1. One of his most memorable coups came when he fielded a 4-2-4-0 formation against a nonplussed Arsenal side in August 2011, a game that ended in an emphatic 8-2 win for his side. 6. Jupp Heynckes

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tapped into the talent of an exceptional if occasionally temperamental squad to create a perfectly drilled unit. In doing so he toyed with a number of tactical approaches before coming

Voted coach of the year in Germany in 2013, Heynckes drew on all his experience and sangfroid to guide Bayern Munich to the UEFA Champions League title. The 68-year-old coach

up with a 4-2-3-1 formation capable of playing a lightning-quick passing game, slicing opposing sides open down the flanks, switching the play from one wing to the other and exerting suffocating pressure up front. The style might even be described as tiki-taka 2.0, although the usually reserved Heynckes had this pointed comment to make before handing the reins over to Pep Guardiola: Bayern dont play like Barcelona. Bayern play a more modern, more contemporary and better game. My successor is quite possibly inheriting the best team in the world. 7. Jurgen Klopp There are some very good reasons for arguing that the Borussia Dortmund boss is one of the sources of inspiration for the new German style and one of its leading advocates. A tireless motivator, Klopp who as a player never graced the top flight has acquired a reputation for being a great strategist and has championed the transition from attack to defence and the offensive pressing game like no other coach in German football has ever done. Klopp habitually goes with 4-2-3-1, manning the double pivot position with a hard-running midfielder adept at one-on-ones alongside a more gifted and tactically aware player. 8. Jose Mourin As everyone knows, The Special One organises his teams around a solid, well-drilled defence. The Portuguese, who returned to Chelsea during the close season, is famed for his ability to read games, a gift feared by his rivals, and no one is as adept at setting up sides to prey on the weaknesses of their opponents as the 2010 FIFA Coach of the Year. Mourinho is another proponent of 4-2-3-1, though when his sides are in possession they tend to rely more on the vision of a gifted midfielder than individual skill and the speed of their wide men. 9. Luiz Felipe Scolari It was almost a year ago that Felipo took charge of the Brazil side with the express objective of winning the World Cup on home soil. Though pundits and fans alike were sceptical of his chances of success, they have been won round by Scolari, who guided A Seleo to the world title in 2002. The small but perceptible changes he has made have already had their effect. Scolari has a preference for players who can give their all for 90 minutes and impose themselves on matches thanks to their speed, stamina and power. Founded on solid defensive units manned by high-quality players, Scolaris sides play a direct, high tempo passing game and continually probe for ways to outflank opposing defences. He favours 4-2-3-1, a formation in which the ability of the full-backs to push forward at pace gives the front men space in which to manoeuvre. Scolari also has a top-class finisher at his disposal in Fred, a threat for any defiance and Brazils leading scorer at the FIFA Confederations Cup Brazil 2013. 10. Arsene Wenger The 64-year-old Frenchman has been in residence in the Arsenal dugout since 1996. Regarded as one of the pioneers of the fluid, short-passing game, Wenger has not changed his philosophy much over the years, though the Gunners have swapped their habitual 4-3-3 and occasional 4-4-2 for a 4-2-3-1 formation. This most aesthetic of coaches has always put the accent on flexibility and creativity, using his invariably gifted players in a variety of different formations. A champion of attacking football, Wenger rarely takes the opposition and the tactics they pursue into consideration when setting up his teams.

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3. Coaches without Frontiers presents 10-coaches, 10-common profile


No Coaches 1 Carlo Ancelotti 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Rafael Benitez Antonio Conte Vincente del Bosque Alex Ferguson Jupp Heynckes Jurgen Klopp Jose Mourinho Concept LatinItalian Latin LatinItalian LatinSpanish AngloSaxon AngloSaxon AngloSaxon LatinPortugues LatinBrazilian LatinFrench 6-3 for LATIN Value! Play system 4-4-2/433/4231 Technical Notes Paris Saint Germain+ Real Madrid - 2013 4-2-3-1Napoli: Playing in Plans: ABC 442,433, 424, Juventus (superb 352 !?!? players) 3-1-4-1 (TikyNational Team of taka) Spain 4-4-2, 4-2-3-1, Manchester United 4-2-4, Legend, Football-Sir 4-2-3-1 Modern Bayer Munchenfotbal Germany 4-2-3-1 Borussia Dortmund flexibility Germany 4-2-3-1 Real Madrid and strategies Chelsea - England 4-2-3-1 Total Brazilian National Fotbal Team 4-3-3, 5-5-2, 4Arsenal 2-3-1 England There is no Those are the best system those are club-teams! only formations

Luiz-Felipe Scolari 10 Arsene Wenger Of course there are many other coaches from list!

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4.- WHAT SIGNIFICANT FOR THE WORLD OF FOOTBALL, FOR 21st CENTURY?
For the Period of 2014-2030 (for the next 5 world cups), THE ASSOCIATION OF THE PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL COACHES WITHOUT FRONTIERS)
N0. Most significant aspects of 2013 for the world of football
1 The coaches are divided by professional specialization: in 3-Professional Coaching Dimensional 1.1. Coaches for the NATIONAL TEAMS: First experience -most of them over 50 years; 1.2. Coaches for the CLUB TEAMS: Mixed as age, concept and value 1.3. Coaches for YOUTH: 04-11= Kids; 12-16 = Juniors and 17-21 Years Old, Youth Coaches from around the world are divided in 3-categories by performance Concept: 2.1. LATIN Family Countries Concept specific to South America & Europe, Mexico etc.(Creative skills) 2.2. ANGLO-SAXON specific to the Power, speed and less skills and creative intelligent strategies 2.3. MIXT categories of countries and coaches mixing the LATIN + ANGLO-SAXON CONCEPTS There are 3 Concept of growing Coaches in the world of football: 3.1. Club Coaches Model Anglo-Saxon direct from playing to the coaching, called MANAGERS! 3.2. Club Coaches Model LATIN Passing through the traditional national coaching schools! 3.3. Club Youth Coaches Mixed Teachers, Professional Coaches with former players managers? There are 3=categories of COACH vs. PLAYERS INTERRELATIONSHIPS: 4.1. Super-stars players + Intellectual coach = PARTNERSHIPS PERFECT professionalism 4.2. Super-stars players + Uneducated Coach = DICTATORIALSHIP management-PROBLEMS! 4.3. Average stars players + Average Coaches = Balancing between up & down Performances! The actual-future Performance Secret, is the Professionalism of all involved factors: 5.1. Millionaire Patrons, to buy the most expenses (good) players, permanently needed better & better ! 5.2. A Coaches Strategists: vision of the new concept of playing football: SUPER-STARS TEAMS 5.3. A 3-teams: Super-Pro-Teamwork: Pharmacist, Fitness, Nutrition, Psycho-Social-Strategists, etc. The strange new concept is based on 3/main strategies: 6.1. Controlled factors: Own Team, play concept, the balls possession, opponent pressing, games result, 6.2. Uncontrolled factor Opponent Team, which has the same possibilities to control the game; 6.3. Unexpected factors referee, natural causes, cards, losing the control, or revers, coaches+super-stars! The new concept of playing football is a complex, made by the science, art and strategies of football: 7.1. Super-star to decide through their value the result of the game: Messi, Neymar, Ronaldo, Ibrahimovic, 7.2. A scientific Teamwork to control, maintain and improve the management of $Effort for 3/day games 7.3. A Super-Coach to understand the actual-future of football development, usually, football intellectuals! According to our researchers: there is not playing system: 4-4-2, 4-3-3, etc: 8.1. Those are only the formations for journalist, but once game starts there is another scientific system! 8.2. The Psycho + Biochemistry + Physiologist + Socio Strategic Interdisciplinary science of energy! 8.3. This is developing without knowing or knowing for a part of specialists, like the kids playing alone! We find out that there is a new playing concept of performance: 3X3X3X3=12 Games Factors: *Playing in 3 zone of the field, according to the ball positions in the field: Zone 1, Zon2 2, Zone 3; *Playing in 3-4 groups of players for each of the zone, according to the score, time to play, teams value... *Playing in 3 Efforts: Zone 1= 100% ANAEROBE; Zone 2: 75-50% MIX & Zone 3: 25% AEROBE! *Playing in 3 Super-skills/strategies:

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1. - TIMING- 1.1. Control; 2. Watch to find the optimum solution and 3. Decision of intelligent solutions; 2. - PRESSING-with 3-4 player on the active-ball zone - to regain ball (jumping on the opponent superb) 3.- CONCENTRATION & RELAXATION (more OXYGEN, is the secret of life as well as of Football!) 10 Football is for the 21st Century: 10.1. SCEINCE: made by the genetic super-stars players, Intellectual Coaches + Scientific Teamwork! 10.2. ART: made by the super-stars players, born, prepared and perfected to play a relative art football! 10.2. BUSINESS: by FIFAaccepting to replay the strange game situations, to win the best+ another few rules: Playing 70 Minutes effective game, substitute 22 players, etc THERE IS IN ALL WORLD! The big game of football is asking the world: 106 National Teams to play World Cups! To organize the World Cups on three categories; 11.1. CLASS I : 24 National Teams, 11.2. CLASS - II: 32 National Teams: 11.3. CLASS III: 50 national teams Today: only 32 national teams vs. 106 we are proposing, by categories, out of 209 NFA Final REQUEST OF THE FOOTBALL IS THE PROFESSIONALSM FOR ALL PARTICIPANTS: 12.1. EDUCATION for Management Teamwork: Leader, Manager & Administrators; 12.2. EDUCATION for Technical, Scientific & Strategic STAFF, including Referees! 12.3. EDUCATION for Players & Teams from 04 - 40 years!

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TECHNICAL NOTE: 1. This is just a professional exercise, with COACHES WITHOUT FRONTIERS; 2. The games of football development is in a strategic SPECIAL HISTORIC MOMENT: 3. The life cant be developed without SCIENCES, ART AND A FAIR WORLD COMPETITIONS!

4.The

21st Century is dominated by 2 forces:

4.1.Positive Forces, are using all scientific, technical and strategic professional tools; 4.2.Negative Forces, are using all NON- professional ways, TO WIN: (Match Fixing, Bat, Bribing Referees, Opponent players, coaches, manager, patrons, drugs, etc

5. There is not any other form of empowering the sportsmanship, that changing the LAWS OF THE GAME:
5.1. AREPLAY THE GAME STRANGE SITUATIONS IN THE STADIUM: (Protecting the game result, the Referees JOB, and the fairness of winner and of course the future of football)! 5.2. PLAY 70 Minute EFFETIVE TIME - GAME; 5.3. SUBSTITUTION: of 22 players/one game, protecting the health of payers and the pressure on the medical staff to use drugs! 5.4. ELIMINATION for 15 minute of all VIOLENT, AGGRESSIVE AND NON-SPORT BEHAVIOUR! 5.5. THE NEW TEAMWORK = 3+1 REFEREES! + Professionalization (contract)! 5.6. Mandatory all PLAYERS AND STAFF: GENERAL EDUCATION 04-16 YEARS+17-21: PROFESSIONALIZATION and 22-40 = PERFORMANCE!

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5. The FIFA Club World Cup Morocco 2013

Getty Images The FIFA Club World Cup Morocco 2013 begins in just a few days, when the current champions from FIFAs six confederations - plus the host nations current league holders - will battle it out for the coveted title of club world champions. From 11 December, 1. Al Ashly SC (Egypt/CAF), 2. Atletico Miner (Brazil/CONMEBOL), 3. Auckland City FC (New Zealand/OFC), 4. CF Monterrey (Mexico/CONCACAF), 5. Guangzhou Ever Grande FC (China PR/AFC), 6. FC Bayern Munched (Germany/UEFA) and 7. Raja Casablanca (Morocco/Hosts) will begin their quest to be crowned the best club in the world. FIFA.com delves into the history books and statistics to gather the most interesting figures from this tournament. An average of 35,960 fans have attended each of the 75 FIFA Club World Cup matches to date. Two games from the first edition of the tournament in Brazil in 2000 jointly hold the attendance record, when 73,000 spectators watched Vasco de Gama defeat Manchester United 3-1 and Corinthians beat Vasco 4-3 on penalties in Rio de Janeiro.

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Mead Mohamed, from Iranian club Stephan, scored just 240 seconds after kick-off in his clubs 1-0 win over New Zealands Waitakere United in 2007, a goal that remains the fastest in the history of the FIFA Club World Cup. The quickest-scoring substitutes were Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney and Pachuca midfielder Luis Montes; both scored just 60 seconds after entering the fray during the 2008 tournament in Japan. 220 goals have been scored in the 75 Club World Cup matches played to date, with eight struck in Manchester Uniteds 5-3 victory over Gambia Osaka in 2008 a tournament record. Barcelonas fourtime FIFA World Footballer of the Year Lionel Messy, Pohang Steelers striker Denison and Mohamed Aboutrika of Al Ahly currently head the FIFA Club World Cup all-time goalscorers list with four goals each. Aboutrika has the chance to become the competitions outright leading scorer if he finds the target this year. 196 centimetres is the height of Bayerns Belgian defender Daniel van Buyten, making him the tallest player in this years tournament ahead of Giovanni (195cm) and Victor (194cm), who both play for Atletico Mineiro. Al Ahlys Ahmed Kenawi is the shortest player in any of this years squads, standing 33cm shorter than Van Buyten. 160 players are included in the seven squads at this years FIFA Club World Cup 2013 , representing 31 countries. As you might expect, many of the players come from Egypt, Brazil, China PR, Germany, Mexico,Morocco and New Zealand, but players from Mauritania, Denmark and Fiji also feature in this years squads.Atletico Mineiro is the only club whose squad exclusively contains players from its home country. 46 teams from 23 different countries have featured in the previous nine editions of this tournament. This year, Bayern, Guangzhou Evergrande and Atletico Mineiro are appearing in their first Club World Cup, making it the first time that clubs from Germany or China PR have been represented in the competition. At 38 years of age, Al Ahly centre-back Wael Gomaa is the oldest player at this edition of the tournament, while the youngest is Auckland City goalkeeper Oliver Sail, who has not yet turned 18. The New Zealandteam are also the youngest squad in the competition with an average age of just over 25, with Atletico Mineiro's average of 28 making them the oldest. The 2013 tournament in Morocco is the tenth edition of the Club World Cup and the first time the competition has been held on African soil. To date, the title has only been won by teams from South America and Europe, with four and five wins respectively. In 2010, TP Mazembe Englebert (DR Congo/CAF) were the first and, so far, only team from any other confederation to reach the title decider. Al Ahly and Auckland City have made the most tournament appearances with five each (including 2013). Three players will celebrate their birthdays during this years tournament. Atletico right-back Marcos Rochaturns 25 on 11 December, while Raja Casablanca players Chemseddine Chtibi and Idrissa Coulibaly turn 31 and 26 on 14 and 19 December respectively. If the Moroccan side win their opening match against Auckland City, Chtibi will be rewarded with a birthday encounter against Monterrey

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6.FC Bayern Mnchen

Getty Images The past Bayern Munich have been the undisputed number one in German football for decades. The men in red are comfortably the nations most successful club with 23 championship titles, 16 German Cup triumphs, and the best record in European competition. For all that, the Bavarians have yet to contest a FIFA Club World Cup, although they twice won one of the predecessor trophies, the Intercontinental Cup, in 1976 and 2001. The present The 2012/13 campaign saw records tumble left, right and centre as Munich stormed to unprecedented success. In the Bundesliga's 50th anniversary season, Bayern set a host of new benchmarks and also became the first German club ever to win the fabled treble of the domestic league and cup double and the UEFA Champions League. After two seasons without silverware, the current success will by no means sate the club's hunger for honours, and they are determined not only to become the first team to retain the crown in Europe's elite club competition, but also to break their duck in the FIFA Club World Cup. The future Despite a season of the superlatives, Munich are not resting on their laurels. It was announced in January that in-demand coach Pep Guardiola would take the helm for the new campaign. Mario Goetze, widely regarded as one of the greatest talents in the German game, has been enticed from chief domestic rivals Borussia Dortmund, and deals to secure the long-term loyalty of key figures such

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as Philipp Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Franck Ribery are already in place. The ambitious target is to top even the record-breaking 2012/13 campaign and launch a new long-term era of success. Facts and figures Former stars Franz Beckenbauer, Sepp Maier, Gerd Muller, Lothar Matthaus, Michael Ballack, Oliver Kahn, Paul Breitner, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Stefan Effenberg Key players Manuel Neuer (goalkeeper), Philipp Lahm (defence), Bastian Schweinsteiger, Franck Ribery, Thomas Muller, Arjen Robben (all midfield), Mario Mandzukic (forward) Qualifying statistics Germany's most successful club grew in strength as the UEFA Champions League campaign went on, showing scintillating class at times in the knockout stages. Bayern disposed of Arsenal and Juventus in the Round of 16 and quarter-finals respectively, before entering a semi-final tie with Barcelona as underdogs for the first time. Jupp Heynckes team stunned the footballing world and sent out an ominous message of intent with a 7-0 aggregate victory over the Catalan giants, as Bayern progressed to their third Champions League final in the space of four years. And in the first allGerman final in Europes top competition, the Bavarians edged out Bundesliga rivals Dortmund 2 -1 at Wembley. The numbers game 3 - Bayern lost just three of their 53 competitive matches in 2012/13, at home to Bayer Leverkusen in the Bundesliga, and against Arsenal and BATE Borisov in the UEFA Champions League.

Players

FC Bayern Mnchen

Bastian SCHWEINSTEIGER Stefan EFFENBERG Michael BALLACK Franz BECKENBAUER Pep GUARDIOLA Franck RIBERY Philipp LAHM

Squad List Goalkeepers


1 22 32 Manuel NEUER Tom STARKE Lukas RAEDER

Defenders
4 5 13 15 17 21 26 27 DANTE Daniel VAN BUYTEN RAFINHA Jan KIRCHHOFF Jerome BOATENG Philipp LAHM Diego CONTENTO David ALABA

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Midfielders
6 7 8 11 19 23 25 34 37 39 THIAGO Franck RIBERY Javier MARTINEZ Xherdan SHAQIRI Mario GOETZE Mitchell WEISER Thomas MUELLER Pierre HOJBJERG Julian GREEN Toni KROOS

Forwards
9 14 Mario MANDZUKIC Claudio PIZARRO

Coach GUARDIOLA Pep

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7.SOCCER ACADEMY OF AMERICA & AFTER CELEBRATING IN 1993, THE BORN OF THE THREE DIMENSIONALL FOOTBALL PERFORMANCE; ON 2013, WE CELEBATING THE FOUR DIMENSIONAL FOOTBALL SYSTEM ON 2013, WE REALIZED ONE OF THE MOST WODERFUL PROFESSIONAL DREAM, TO START THE COACHES WITHOUT FRONTIERS, CENTER OF INTERDISCIPLINARY FOOTBALL PREPARATION FOR THREE CATEGORIES OF SPEIALISTS: Coaches for YOUTH: 04-21 YEARS; Coaches for CLUBS: 21-40 YEARS; Coaches for NATIONAL TEAMS: ALL AGE NOW, WE ARE HAPPY TO PRESENT ONE OF THE STUDIES, WHICH ALREADY PRESENTED, BUT, THIS TIME, AS BEING PART OF THE NEW 21 CENURYS PEFORMANCE CONCEPT

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7.= INTERDISCIPLINARY IN FOTBAL


The science of sciences of life in generally and of football life, particularly!
GLOBAL VIEW + COACHS PROFESSIONAL MAP + MANAGEMENT OF A PROFESSIONAL WEEKLY ACTIVITY /GAME

Nr. I.1.

Football Sciences. WHO WE ARE


4-D of basic football performances

First
Player: 1.Genetic Code 2.Personality 3.Performances Anglo-Saxon: 1.Business 2.Player Value 3.Science-Coach Head Coach 1.Personality 2.Education 3.Culture

Second
Family: 1.2 Parents & family 1.3.Economic status 1.3. Social status Latin: 1.Science+Coach 2.Player Talent 3.Business (1+2) Teamwork: 1.Leaders; 2.Technical 3.Scientific

Third
School:Education 1.General educ, 2. Professional 3.Performance Mix (1+2): 1.Player-Talent; 2. Business 3. Coach+Life Location: 1.Continent 2.Country 3.Club/Team

Fourth
Fotbal+Society: 1.Country-Club 2. Team-Caegory 3.Coach+Team Amateur1. No Concept; 2.Play-Pleasure 3.Talent Value? Performance 1.Tradition; 2. Past Glory 3. Present ($)

2.

4-D of Performance Concept

3.

The Value of the Scientific + Art & Business Football

II.-

4.

5.

6.

OUR PERFORMANCE CONCEPT: Playing System/ Concept: 1. Attack, 2. Defense + 3. S. Plays Training System/Concept: 5 = Laboratories 10 = Laboratories; 15-20 Laboratories Recovery: 1. Concept; 2. System; 3. Programs.

Play-3- Zones Zone 1: 1-15m Zone 2: 15-30m. Zone 3: 30-50m Individual: 1. Meental 2. Physical 3. Skills Time factor: 1. Byologic Time 2. Football time 3. Last results Last game Analysis: 1. Result: Why? 2. Injries+others 3. Games Place MENTAL HEALTH: 1. Spiritual 2. Professional 3. Social/Family Controlled Factors: 1.Concept 2.Estate 3.Value PUBERTY vs. FOOTBALL: 1.Past: 04-11 2.Past: 12-16 3. Past 17-21

Playing: 3-4 players 1.1-2-3-4 players 2.Play2 groups X3pl 3.Play3groups/team EnergyManagement 1.Deposit 2.Spend 3.Recovery Priorities: 1.Mental 2.Physical 3.Sport Estate Days between The 2 games: 1. 7 days 2. 5 days 3. 4-3 days PHYSICAL HEALTH: 1.Estate Health 2.Energy-recovery 3.Spending energy Uncontrolled Factors: 1.Value 2.Estate 3.Concept EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE: 1.Temperament 2.Character 3. Life Attitude

Using 3 Efforts Zone 1: 100%; Zone 2: 75-59% 3.Zone 3: 25% PLYIN Concept: 1.Attack 2.Defense 3.Set Plays Strategies: 1.Before Effort 2. During Effort 3.After Effort Content Program: 1. Evaluation 2. Diagnosis 3. Plan-program FAMILY VS. HOBIES: 1.Social Hobies 2.Family Problems 3. Happy to Play Unexpected Factors: 1.Yellow-Red card 2.PlayTime & Scor 3. Place -Tradition Accomplishment Of his life/fotbal 1.Integrity 2.Actual-Future 3. Life Value: + -

+3-GStrategies: 1.Timing 2.Pressing 3.More Oxygen Opponent: 1.Coach 2. Players 3. Concept Social factor 1.Family 2.Hobies 3.Education Game development: 1.Communication 2.Negativ-Pozitiv 3. Positiv-Winner NEGATIVE FORCES: 1. Money? 2. Energy? 3. Football? Referees Factors: 1.Concept 2.value 3. Fairness TO BE OR NO TO BE: 1. Super-Class 2. Average 3. No Class!

III.-

IMPLEMENTATION
Weekly PlanDevelopment Strategic Program. Strategy of Strategies: Positive Forces Vs. Negative Forces Game Strategies: The Factorial Analysis

7.

8.

9.

10.

TO BE OR NOT TO BE SUPER-STAR

CONCLUSION

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I. II. III. IV.

FACTORS 40 ASPECTS 120 Pro-Coach-Map 1 Factorial Analysis ?

10 10x3=30 Total vision COACH

10 10x3=30 Science-Concept PLAYERS

10 10x3=30 Pro-Creativity OPPONENT

10 10x3=30 PRO-ART REFEREES

8. = ROMANIAN FOOTBALL FEDERATION after a very difficult period of his history (25 years) ITS TIME TO CHANCE:
1. The first was going OUT, the former Head of Coaching School; The second to go, has been already the President of PROFESSIONAL LEAGUE; Then, the following to go, its already trying to get the 4-th time the national coaching position, but, its too late, wrong social & sport model, No Education, Bad Social habits, no science, art and professional strategies! Communist Concept! The president, already announced that on March2014, he will never participate to the NEW ELECTION after his already 25 Years Coaches without frontiers and Soccer Academy of America was already presented on the SCRIBD, and now, the first needs to grate the new VISION-ERA: 2014-2030, FOR THE NEXT 5 WORLD CUPS!

2.

3.

4.

5.

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VISION: 2014-2030 For the Romanian Football Federation 5 World Cups!


No. To adjust to the world 21st Centurys Observations performance, we need to accept:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. National Football Technical, Scientific and Strategic Center, like every ELITE NATIONAL F.A.! There is a need of a Technical, Scientific and Strategic Specialized in the footballs frontiers of sciences. There is a need of National VISION for minimum 5 World Cups in advance: 2014-2030, for all aspects! THE NATIONAL CONCEPT OF PERFORMANCE: for NATIONAL TEAMS, CLUBS AND YOUTH! NO COACH WITHOUT: GENERAL, Professional and Performance Educations on the football staff PYRAMID No player without 3-schools: 1. General: 4-16 any; 2. Professionalization; 17-21 and 3: Performance:22-40 WEEKLEY Technical, Scientific & Strategic Digital National = Football magazine/Newsletter, free of charge On-line, OBINAR Electronic National Conferences for all categories of football; weekly, monthly, annually! Adjustment of the new LAWS OF THE GAME to the national football concept. Exchanging experiences, specialists, teams, coaches, players, with all around the world national federations. . REVITALIZE the actualfuture for 25years Concept! There is a national FRF College for Football! Attacking in the same time all aspects of world football To be written and well known by 4-95 years people Nature make us same, but education make differences! We need of passing from social-animal to Performer! Communication is the main goal of new life/performance By categories of specialists we need Communication! Adjusting to the new life its a human-champions need! There is not secret for world of football! Why not?

Technical Note: 1. The presented material is a remembering to be taken into consideration for the 2014 and of course for the period of minim 5 world cups- 2030! 2. Turn back to the last 20 years! There is a chance to change the life, by accepting THE EDUCATION, changes almost everything regarding LIFE AND FOOTBALL LIFE! 3. We are talking about the NATIONAL TECHNICAL, SCIENTIFIC & STRATEGIC Centers, starting fresh scientific, technical and strategic education for all participants, without exception! 4. There is a need of education for the new generation!

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9. = CONGRATUALTIONS TO THE SUPER-STAR ZIDAN This is a perfect professional dialogue for players and coaches
Last year the world football media announced a world event: Mr. Blank and Mr. Zidan started a Master-School of sport/football management, just to be ready for the highest coaching performances! This is the reason, we presented him, as a new intellectual of the football game! How many super-stars were refused to go back to Compensatory School, to become? 1. Performance Coach; 2. National FA Manager, President, TD, etc... 3. Leader in the world football organizations; 4. Journalist, commentators! THE LESSON TO BE LEARNED BY THE WORLD AND PARTICULALRLY, ROMANIANS, and IS SIMPLE: back to school to become as prestige, the same you were as players! Dr. Victor Stanculescu FIFA Instructor

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Zidane: Brazil has always inspired me


(FIFA.com) Friday 20 December 2013 = Share Brazil have figured prominently on Zinedine Zidane's path to greatness. His brace against A Seleao in the 1998 FIFA World Cup Final and his performance in the quarter-final classic versus the same opposition in 2006 helped secure him a special place in the footballing pantheon. Zizou renewed acquaintances with his old foe during the Final Draw on 6 December 2013 in Costa Do Sauipe, when Brazil's fate and their chances of lifting the FIFA World Cup on home soil rested quite literally in the France legend's hands. FIFA.com had the opportunity to chat to the former midfield maestro about his World Cup memories and his unique relationship with the land of Pele. FIFA.com: How does it feel to see the footage from the 2006 World Cup quarter-final againstBrazil, in which you starred? Zinedine Zidane: It's a nice feeling. Truth be told, I don't often watch videos of my matches, but the good memories quickly come flooding back. There was magic in the air that day out on the pitch; both my team-mates and I felt it. We really did have a wonderful generation of players. It was a special time. Was that the crowning performance of your career? So they say, but to be honest I'm not so sure. It's right up there with my best displays. But what does "crowning" mean, anyway? I really don't know. I think there were a few others that rivalled it, at least in my opinion. But there is no denying Brazil were a team that inspired you. As well as that match in 2006, the final in 1998 is another obvious example. You could say Brazil were your best enemy. It's odd. When I talk about Brazil with some former players, they see them as a top footballing nation, but that's about it. But in my case, they always inspired me. Against them I always managed to raise my game and so did my team-mates. Every time we faced A Seleao, we felt like we were capable of anything. We were always the underdog, but that's often when you produce your best efforts. That's the way it worked out for us.

The people have given me the impression they admired what I did against them, when you might have expected them to greet me with stones!
Zinedine Zidane on the reaction of the Brazilian people to him, after some memorable FIFA World Cup performances You virtually humiliated Brazil over the course of those two matches, yet the Brazilian people don't seem to hold it against you. Do you feel at home in Brazil? I think "humiliate" is going a bit far. We won and that's all there is to it. [ Smiles] But it's true, I don't get the sense they harbour any grudges. Every time I've come here, the people have given me

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the impression they admired what I did against them, when you might have expected them to greet me with stones! [Laughs] Incidentally, the other day I bumped into Mario Zagallo, who was the Brazil coach back in 1998, and I was very touched by something he said. He told me that if he could have picked one non-Brazilian to play in his team, he would have chosen me. Coming from Zagallo, The Professor, that's quite a compliment. In a way, you could say your game was steeped in Brazilian football. Absolutely. When I was a kid and I used to play with my friends from the neighbourhood, we would stage mock World Cups. Who do you think everyone wanted to play as? Brazil. So it's a country that's always been part of my life... And then the dream came true: I played in the World Cup for real and I had the chance to face Brazil. So I said to myself: "This is it! Go out there and enjoy it. What's the worst that can happen? Even if you lose, no one will be mad at you. Do your best and have fun. And if you can beat Brazil, it will be quite something to look back on at the end of your career." [Smiles] What are your earliest memories of Brazilian football? The 1982 World Cup, without a shadow of a doubt. I was ten at the time and I can still picture the likes of Socrates, Zico and Julio Cesar wearing that yellow shirt There were so many stars in that team. Which Brazilian player influenced you the most? There are too many to list. But, having had the chance to rub shoulders with him, for me the best has got to be Ronaldo, whom I played with at Real Madrid. What sort of words spring to mind when you hear the name "Brazil"? Celebration, joy, happiness, the yellow shirt! Class, pure bliss. And the people know their stuff, too. I think it's going to be a fantastic tournament full of fantastic players. France will be there. What did you make of their qualifying campaign? They qualified that's the good news. France is a country that quite simply has to be at the World Cup. What happened in qualifying is in the past now: what's important is that we'll be there. That's what it comes down to.

There was magic in the air that day out on the pitch; both my team-mates and I felt it.
Zidane on France's 1-0 win over Brazil at Germany 2006

Do you think having triumphed in adversity could help them overcome challenges further down the road?
Definitely. Qualifying is the hard part. And when you've been through an experience like that, you tell yourself: "We made it!" After that it's a whole new competition. There are still the warm-up games to come and the tournament proper kicks off six months after qualifying ends... That's when you have to be ready, both physically and mentally. It will be a different mindset. I hope they are ready when June comes around.

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How do you rate Les Bleus' chances at the upcoming World Cup? They have a good chance. The players are already gearing up for it... But, like I said before, they will have to be ready when the moment of truth arrives. We can speculate about how good they are now, but it's in six months' time that they will need to be firing on all cylinders and prepared to do something big. They have what it takes: France have the players to make an impact. How does it feel to win a World Cup? What does it mean on a personal level? The World Cup is the icing on the cake. It's the pinnacle: something that can't be topped. Every player dreams of playing in the tournament and very few manage it. Then when you get there, the goal becomes to go as far as possible, to reach the final, to try to win it, to score And when you've done all that, you feel on top of the world! It's every footballer's biggest dream. And what does winning a trophy like that mean for a country? It's huge. We experienced what it meant to people back in 1998. Even though we were in our own little bubble in Clairefontaine, we could see what was going on outside. It's incredible how football can bring people together. That's what we managed to do: at one point, however fleetingly, we were able to create that sense of communion among the people out on the street. For a while, at least, we could claim to have created something unique through sport. What do you expect the Brazil World Cup to serve up? Like everyone, I'm expecting a party atmosphere. Brazil is the country of football, it's as simple as that. Even if the sport was invented in England, Brazil has contributed so much to its development. This World Cup is unmissable. If you had to choose one to play at, this would be it. Do you see anyone as favourites? It'd be nice if a European team won in South America, but I don't see anyone in particular as favourites. There are no more minnows at this stage. There used to be a big gulf between the big guns and the rest, but that gap has really narrowed. Share

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10.= ASSOCIATION OF COACHES WITHOUT FRONTIERS, Open letter to: EXCELLENCY JOSEPH BLATTER FIFA PESIDENT:
From: Chicago: 01-01-2014

1. Thanks very much on behalf of the world football players, specialists-in education, the frontiers of football scientists, FOR YOUR CONTRIBUTION to the world of football development and perfection! 2. In order to avoid the degeneration of the game, please, go ahead with the second step of implementation, USING THE RE-PLAY OF THE STRANGE GAME SITUATIONS! 3. This is the Gods wish, choosing you to do this wonderful gift to the world of 21st Century Football Development and Perfection! Thanks you Excellency and MAY GOD BLESS YOU!
Dr. Victor Stanculescu FIFA Instructor

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FIFA Strategic Committee supports goal-line technology


(FIFA.com) Friday 20 December 2013 =

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Foto-net

On the eve of the FIFA Club World Cup 2013 final, FIFAs Strategic Committee met in Marrakech today under the chairmanship of FIFA President Blatter. The use of goal-line technology, which was successfully deployed again at this years FIFA Club World Cup and is much appreciated by referees, was praised by the committee, including European Club Association (ECA) Chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and FIFPro Secretary General Theo van Seggelen. Furthermore, the two outstanding items of FIFAs governance reform process limits on age and terms of office, both of which will be on the agenda at next years FIFA Congress were discussed at todays meeting. An important part of the meeting was devoted to areas relating to the protection of the game, in particular the fight against discrimination and racism, match manipulation and doping. Among the other topics discussed today were the use of video evidence for disciplinary matters only possible after the game and the promotion of womens football. FIFAs Strategic Committee brings together most of footballs stakeholders, including the confederations, member associations, clubs, coaches, players, leagues, commercial affiliates and broadcasters. ..Share

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DECLARATION OF PROFESSIONALISM:
1. Thanks to FIFA, Confederations and all National Football Association, making FIFA & FOOTBALL- becomes: The second United Nations in Football 2. Congratulation of FIFA for the wonderful celebration of 2012+ 2013 Best AWARD for Teams, Coaches, Players, Select Team of 2012+ 2013 3. Tanks to the Coaches without Frontiers for interest to get these information from FIFA! 4. Coaches without Frontiers Association, declare that the presented materials, on the Scientific, Technic & Strategic Football, are not subject of commercialization! 5. WE HAVE PUBLISHED 502-Coaches Technical, Scientific & Strategic BULLETINES; 6. This is the 78 materials presented on 01-01-2014, in: www.Scribd.com/VictorStanculescu

For Coaches Association without Frontiers Dr. Victor Stanculescu Victor@SoccerAcademyOfAmerica.


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