Word: soccers
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...HOSPITALIZED. DIEGO MARADONA, 43, legendary soccer player who led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup championship, with heart and lung problems; in Buenos Aires. Maradona, who survived a heart attack in 2000, fell ill after watching his former club play and was placed in intensive care, where his condition improved during the week. Maradona is best known for scoring two goals?one with his hand?to defeat England in 1986, but his brilliance waned due to cocaine abuse and he retired in 1997. Argentine doctors denied that his hospitalization was drug related...
McBride’s goal was the perfect culmination to the intense back-and-forth match between archrivals Harvard (6-5, 2-3 Ivy) and Yale (5-7, 1-5 Ivy) before 2,423 at Yale’s Soccer-Lacrosse Stadium in New Haven, Conn...
...Secretary-General Kofi Annan's job--with the only difference being that member countries care more viscerally about the decisions you make. Joseph (Sepp) Blatter, 68, the president of the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), rules over the globe's most popular sport and its unruly passions. Soccer is often called "the simple game" or the "beautiful game," but its administration is neither. FIFA deals with issues ranging from wars, riots, corruption and citizenship to the proper application of the offside rule. And that was just last Sunday. FIFA's top spot is easily one of the world...
Blatter fits well into that turbulent mixture, having recently emerged a winner in a nasty internecine battle in which opponents accused him of buying influence and burying big losses related to a botched marketing deal. (Swiss authorities found no wrongdoing.) He then beat back an election challenge from African soccer supremo Issa Hayatou. "Just after the elections, I felt bitter," said Blatter, "but we have to look forward and be optimistic. They lost the power game...
...Africa for the privilege. African nations felt dissed. South Americans are unhappy about the number of spots they get in the tourney. In Europe, the big pro clubs, such as Inter Milan, are demanding money for lending their pricey players to national teams for qualifying rounds. In other words, soccer is back to business as usual, with Sepp in charge. --By Bill Saporito