高分求关于卡卡的英文资料
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发布时间:2022-04-29 23:38
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时间:2022-06-26 03:38
金球奖 European Footballer of the Year award.
世足先生 the 2007 FIFA World Player of the Year
冠军杯 World Cup
Kaka Wins 2007 European Footballer of the Year Award
It's been a fantastic season for AC Milan and Brazil's playmaker extraordinaire and the plaudits just keep rolling in with the announcement that Kaka has convincingly won the vote for the 2007 Ballon D'Or as European Footballer of the Year.
Kaka's 444 points saw him well ahead of Manchester United's Portuguese winger Cristiano Ronaldo in second place who scored 277 points and Barcelona's Argentine striker Lionel Messi who finished third.
These three players are also contesting the World Footballer of the Year competition and in all three cases, their inclusion so high up the list of performers on a world and European stage is well deserved.
Kaka became the eighth AC Milan player to win the Ballon D'Or, which is awarded annually by France Football magazine who poll 96 prominent football journalists, and spoke of his personal delight at winning the trophy: "I want to thank everyone," said Kaka. "It's a very special day for me, a very important day for my career and for all the Rossoneri fans.
"The Golden Ball is an indivial award and for me this is a dream come true. Today I really feel this recognition to be truly mine."
He added: "Perhaps I have been more decisive than Ronaldo and Messi.
"I faced Ronaldo last season while Messi, I believe he has been penalised for not winning a big competition like the domestic tournament or the Champions League."
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http://footyblog.net/2007/12/02/kaka-is-the-european-footballer-of-the-year-ballon-dor/
http://anfieldchat.proboards75.com/index.cgi?board=foreign&action=display&thread=697
http://sniffingtt.blogspot.com/2007/12/kaka-is-european-footballer-of-year-but.html
http://www.google.com.sg/search?hl=en&q=2007+European+Footballer+of+the+Year+award%2C+Kaka&meta=
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King Kaka and Marta crowned(FIFA.com) Monday 17 December 2007
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2007's top players almost predictably both hail from the beautiful game's spiritual home of Brazil. Kaka topped the men's side while Marta scooped the award for the women.
Ac Milan's Kaka, who just days ago snapped up the Ballon d'Or as Europe's top player for 2007, was again the centre of attention on 17 December at the Zurich Opera House. The wide-smiling, elegant midfielder from Brasilia became the fifth Brazilian to be named FIFA World Player of the Year amid boisterous applause and all-around appreciation.
His exploits in helping Milan win both European and world titles played a big role in seeing the thoroughbred midfielder achieve the ultimate success on a night in which he beat out Lionel Messi of Argentina and Barcelona and fleet-footed Manchester United and Portugal trickster Cristiano Ronaldo.
On the women's side of things, sumptuous Umea striker Marta picked up her second player of the year title in succession. She helped drag an amazing Brazilian side to the final of the FIFA Women's World Cup in China in September and is fast emerging as the shining light of the female game.
Rampaging Marta, predictably overwhelmed by the honour, beat out Birgit Prinz of two-time world champions Germany and her own Brazilian team-mate Cristiane.
In the night's other commendations, Barcelona received the FIFA Fair Play award and 'O Rei' Pele picked up the FIFA Presidential Award.
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Already this year Kaka has won the Ballon d'Or award for the European footballer of the year and FIFPro's world player of the year, voted by fellow professionals.
Kaka has had a great year for AC Milan, helping them to win the Champions League.
The Brazilian playmaker said at the awards ceremony in Zurich: "Tonight is a really special night for me - it was a dream for me just to play for Sao Paulo and one game for Brazil. But the Bible says God can give you more than you even ask for."
This year's shortlist contains three young players nominated for the first time.
Kaka, 25, said: "It shows that this is a new era in football, a new cycle is starting.
"They were great players before, but now the new players are starting to make history."
Cristiano Ronaldo, 22, said he was hugely honoured to be short-listed for the award - which has never been won by a Premier League player.
He added: "I was so pleased when I got nominated. The first thing I did was tell the people closest to me.
"It's a real honour for me to be considered one of the three best players in the world."
The award is voted on by all national team managers and captains.
http://www.google.com.sg/search?q=FIFA+World+Player+of+the+Year%2C+Kaka&hl=en
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World Cup: Kaká goes to his left to give Brazil a leg up
By Roger CohenPublished: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 2006
BERLIN: Brazil, five times champion and firm favorite to take home a sixth trophy, entered a charged World Cup arena in the German capital's Olympiastadion and defeated a determined Croatian team, 1-0.
The champions had to withstand a threatening Croatian onslaught in the second half to clinch victory. Only the sure hands of the Brazilian goalkeeper, Dida, who has looked fallible at times, kept Croatia at bay.
It took a moment of brilliance from Kaká, a midfielder who plays for AC Milan, to settle the match. Taking a pass from the veteran Brazilian captain, Cafu, in the 44th minute, he swiveled sharply left past two Croatian players on the edge of the penalty area.
Then, after looking up quickly and without breaking his stride, he fired an unstoppable left-footed drive into the top left corner of the net. The goal was conjured from nothing in the grand tradition of Brazilian artistry.
Brazilian supporters, who had been uncharacteristically silent for most of the first half, erupted and the steeply banked stands were transformed into a pulsing sea of yellow and green.
For much of the match, Brazil looked ordinary. Its star striker, Ronaldo, who has scored 12 World Cup goals, the same number as Pelé, is clearly overweight. He was a study in lumbering immobility until he was taken off in the 69th minute and replaced by his fellow Real Madrid player, Robinho. Whether Ronaldo is fit enough to make any impact on this tournament is now an open question.
Alongside him, Adriano of Inter Milan, was also subed. With two of the four members of its glittering attacking quartet - Ronaldo, Adriano, Ronaldinho and Kaká - making scant impression, Brazil was a side drained of its customary brio.
But first World Cup games are always tense occasions and the trophy is generally won by teams who peak slowly in the monthlong tournament.
Brazil will be satisfied - and relieved - to have taken three points, putting it at the top of Group F with Australia, the upstart team it will meet next, in Munich on Sunday.
It was a historic setting for the first game by an experienced Brazilian team that knows a sixth triumph would secure its places in the history books by establishing something close to a monopoly on soccer's highest accolade.
Germany has refurbished rather than rebuilt the stadium completed for the 1936 Olympic Games that opened in Nazi Berlin under Hitler's gaze and to a sea of swastikas. Jesse Owens's name, as well as that of Nazi architects, is still engraved in the stone of the Marathon Gate.
This style, an acknowledgment of the past with a look to the future, has characterized Germany post-Cold War return from Bonn to a refashioned capital in Berlin, and it is an unabashed nation unafraid to be patriotic that is hosting a tournament that will culminate at the final in this stadium on July 9.
Croatia, which finished in third place in the 1998 World Cup in France, a remarkable performance that solidified the nationhood it had won seven years earlier, started with a confidence reflecting the fact it had not been beaten in its previous 10 competitive matches.
Its most prolific striker, Dado Prso, was immediately menacing. A defense that conceded only five goals in its 10 qualifying games for the tournament looked tight. Several stray passes from Ronaldinho, the Brazilian midfielder widely regarded as the best player in the world, reflected his team's apparent unease.
Only in the 14th minute did Brazil test Stipe Pletikosa, the Croatian goalkeeper. First, he tipped over a searing drive from the left back Roberto Carlos, who has a shot of legendary power.
Then, from the ensuing corner, he palmed wide a curling shot from Ronaldinho that was heading for the bottom right corner of the goal. Another corner from Ronaldinho proced a crashing half-volley from the onrushing Roberto Carlos that rocketed just over the bar.
But Croatia was not ready to bow to Brazil, the only non-European team to have won the World Cup in Europe, triumphing in Sweden in 1958.
In the 21st minute, Robert Kovac, the team's best defender, almost burst right through, and in the 37th minute, Niko Kovac, a midfielder, just failed to connect with a swerving free kick from left back Darijo Srna in front of an empty net.
Croatia then suffered a double blow: the departure of an injured Niko Kovac in the 40th minute and, four minutes later, Kaká's extravagant, ice-cool display of marksmanship.
Still, the team came storming out for the second half and repeatedly threatened to equalize. Dida had to be at his best to save shots from Prso in the 50th minute and fellow striker Ivan Klasnic three minutes later.
The Brazilian defense, marshaled by Lucio, looked porous. It often needed the fine covering of the defensive midfielder Emerson, who had a tremendous game, to fend off the Croatians.
But Brazil also went close. In the 61st minute, Ronaldinho, whose impact on the game grew as it went on, almost did something he does very rarely - score with a header. He came drifting in to meet Cafu's cross from the right wing, but somehow Pletikosa clawed the ball away at his left side.
A brief and surreal interlude marked the game in the 85th minute when a Croatian supporter somehow made his way onto the field. The Germans, who are not at their best with the unexpected, seemed flummoxed. Nobody moved.
Eventually, a single security guard made his way across the field, and the man was escorted off, leaving Brazil to play out the remaining minutes in relative tranquillity.
It was the end of the game, but only the beginning of a long night of samba in a German capital flooded with Brazilian fans.
http://www.google.com.sg/search?q=world+cup%2C+Kaka&hl=en
参考资料:卡卡的个人资料 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kak%C3%A1
热心网友
时间:2022-06-26 03:38
Ricardo Izecson dos Santos Leite (born April 22, 1982), better known as Kaká, is a Brazilian footballer midfielder for Brazil and A.C. Milan.
Kaká was born in Brasília, Brazil to Simone Cristina dos Santos Leite and Bosco Izecson Pereira Leite. He has a younger brother, Rodrigo Ifrano dos Santos Leite (known as Digão), who has followed in Kaká's footsteps by playing football in Italy.
In September, 2000, at the age of 18, Kaká suffered a career-threatening and possibly paralysis-incing spine fracture as a result of a swimming pool accident, but remarkably made a full recovery. The next year, Kaká made his comeback on the pitch, when he came in as a reserve-substitute in the Tornero Rio Final and scored two goals, among them the match-winner, in less than five minutes. He attributes his recovery to God and has since tithed his income to his church.
In 2000, at the age of 17, while he was still in São Paulo FC's youth squad, the club was set to sell Kaká to Turkish 1st division side Gaziantepspor, who turned down the deal after refusing to pay a price of $1.5m for him. Kaká made his São Paulo debut in January 2001, scoring 12 goals in 27 appearances, and 10 goals in 22 appearances the next season. His performance was soon attracting attention from European clubs. AC Milan, fresh from winning the 2003 Champions League, brought him aboard in 2003 for $8.5 million, a fee described in hindsight as "peanuts" by club owner Silvio Berlusconi. Within a month, he cracked the starting lineup, and has remained there since. His Serie A debut was in a 2-0 Milan win at A.C. Ancona. He scored 10 goals in 30 appearances that season, as Milan won the Scudetto and the European Super Cup.
Kaká was an integral part of the five-man midfield in the 2004-05 season, usually playing in a withdrawn role behind striker Andriy Shevchenko. He scored 7 goals in 36 domestic appearances as Milan finished runner-up to Juventus. Despite Milan losing the 2004-05 Champions League final to Liverpool F.C on penalties, he was nonetheless voted the best midfielder of the tournament, and also finished ninth, with 19 votes, in the running for the 2005 Ballon D'Or.
The 2005-06 season saw Kaka score his first hat-tricks in domestic and European competition: On April 9, 2006, he scored his first Rossoneri hat-trick against Chievo Verona. All three goals were scored in the second half. Seven months later, he scored his first Champions League hat-trick in a 4-1 group stage win over RSC Anderlecht. The football world was beginning to take notice of a superstar in the making.
Former AC Milan striker Andriy Shevchenko's departure to Chelsea FC for the 2006-07 season allowed Kaká to become the focal point of Milan's offense. As of May 2, 2007, he is currently the top scorer in the 2006-07 UEFA Champions League with ten goals, which have proved a huge catalyst in steering Milan back to the CL final. One of them helped Milan squeak by Celtic FC 1-0 after extra time in the quarterfinals on a 1-0 aggregate, and three others proved fatal for Manchester United in the semifinals despite Milan losing the first leg. Following the convincing 3-0 second-leg defeat at the San Siro on May 2 that knocked out the English champions, Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson proclaimed Kaká as one of the two best players in the world, alongside his charge Cristiano Ronaldo. The previous month, a panel of experts set up by Italian publication Gazzetta dello Sport proclaimed Kaká as the world's best footballer. Shevchenko also included his endorsement, while suggesting that Kaká deserved to win the Ballon d'Or.
Kaká made his Seleção debut in January 2002 against Bolivia. He was part of the 2002 FIFA World Cup-winning squad, but played only 19 minutes, all of which were in the first round match against Costa Rica. During the final against Germany, coach Luis Felipe Scolari was reportedly about to send Kaka on as a substitute, but he never made it into the game as the referee didn't notice him waving on the sidelines to enter the pitch.
In 2003, Kaká was the captain for the Gold Cup tournament, where Brazil finished as runner-up, as did Kaka with a second-best three goals. He was also named as one of the competition's top eleven players by position. On June 29, 2005, he scored in a 4-1 defeat of Argentina in the 2005 Confederations Cup final, hitting a rocket into the upper right-hand corner of the net. He finished in joint tenth place in the voting for the 2004 FIFA World Player of the Year award, and finished two spots higher the following year.
Kaká started in his first FIFA World Cup Finals in 2006, scoring his first and only goal in a 1-0 victory over Croatia in Brazil's opening match. Unfortunately, he was unable to keep up his momentum for the remainder of the tournament as Brazil were ingloriously eliminated by France in the quarterfinals. Despite his mediocre World Cup form, he maintained his starting position among new Brazil coach Dunga's new squad of younger talent for Brazil's post-WC friendly matches. On September 3, 2006, he scored one of his most brilliant goals for Brazil, receiving the ball off a deflection from an Argentina corner kick and taking the ball down three quarters of the field to score.
On May 12, 2007, citing an exhaustive schele of Serie A, Champions League and national team play, Kaka openly bowed out of the upcoming 2007 Copa América. "I haven't had a break for three seasons. I won't have the form to achieve what is expected of me at an international level." Dunga took the optimistic route, declaring that while he was disappointed about Kaká's decision, his absence would subsequently free up a roster spot for a lesser-used player.
In 2005, two days before Christmas, Kaká married 19-year-old Caroline Celico at the Reborn in Christ Church. She was born on July 26, 1987 to Rosangela Lyra, the director of Dior in Brazil, and entrepreneur Celso Celico. She and Kaká met in 2001 while she was a student and he was playing for São Paulo. The wedding drew 600 guests, including fellow Brazilian footballers Cafu, Ronaldo, Adriano, Dida, Júlio Baptista, and then-Brazil coach Carlos Alberto Parreira. Caroline is currently attending university in Milan, where she plans to earn a business degree.
A devout evangelical Christian, he wore an "I Belong to Jesus" T-shirt ring Milan's Scudetto celebration in 2004 and after Brazil's defeat of Germany in the 2002 WC final, and had the same phrase, along with "God Is Faithful," stitched onto the tongues of his boots. During the postmatch celebration after Brazil's 2005 Confederations Cup victory, he and several of his teammates, among them backup keeper Gomes and defender Lúcio, wore T-shirts with "Jesus Loves You" printed on them in various languages.
Kaká is a member of the "Athletes of Christ" organization. His goal celebration consists of him pointing to the sky as a sign of thanks to God after every goal, and is proud that he was a virgin when he married. His favourite music is gospel, and his favourite book is the Bible.
His nickname is pronounced as it is spelled, with stress on the second syllable. It is a commonly-used term of endearment of "Ricardo" in Brazil. In Kaká's case, however, it was born from his younger brother Rodrigo's calling him "Caca" e to his inability to pronounce the word "Ricardo"; it eventually evolved into Kaká.
He has served as an Ambassador Against Hunger for the United Nations' World Food Programme since November 2004, the youngest to do so at the time of his appointment.
He turned down the chance to take over the #10 jersey for Milan following Rui Costa's departure in 2006, despite the clamoring of many Milan fans that he should wear it.
Kaká owns a PlayStation Portable; his favorite games include FIFA 07, Tiger Woods PGA Tour 07, and NBA 07.
He was once described by Pelé as having "Brazilian technique combined with European strength."
Kaká was sworn in as an Italian citizen on February 12, 2007. He is ineligible to play for Italy, though, having already played for Brazil.
热心网友
时间:2022-06-26 03:39
上他的官网看不就可以了。。
蓝道说。。你说的是瑞星卡卡上网助手。。。