Wager Mage
Photo: king Siberia
Sheffield Wednesday's David Hirst, who drilled a 14.8-yard howitzer against the crossbar at a whopping 114mph during a 4-1 defeat at Arsenal on September 16 1996.
Ronaldo has scored 701 goals at all club competitions while Messi has 695 – making them the leading goal scorers at club level in football history....
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Innocent Idibia Innocent Idibia known as 2face was the first Nigerian to receive the award alongside his colleague D'banj. They won the award in...
Read More »"There was a great hullabaloo over Obafemi Martins' goal against Spurs last month, timed at 84mph, with Telegraph journalist Henry Winter speculating that it could take the crown," writes Archi Campbell. "However, I remember a goal by David Trezeguet for Monaco against Man Utd in the Champions League quarter-finals of 1998 that was timed at 96mph. This would also be faster than Nicky Summerbee's 87mph shot on Record Breakers, which is often given as the fastest shot ever. Was Trezeguet's shot really that fast, and if so, why does everyone seem to ignore it?" "There's no official record," explained the Football Association's historian David Barber when quizzed, but we knew our readers weren't going to be palmed off so easily. Therefore, armed with a toothcomb, our archives and a handy list of humdingers measured on the Sky Sports Replay 2000 tracking machine, we can provide you with the most authentic - if unofficial - list of heavy hitters at our disposal. First off, three things: Martins' goal is only the ninth hardest shot recorded; Summerbee's effort was obviously not in a competitive match so we'll ignore it; and Trezeguet's thunderbolt at Old Trafford can only have been ignored because it was in European competition - but it was recorded at 96mph, putting him third on our list. Pipping Trezeguet, however, is David Beckham (the only player to appear twice in our top 10), who smashed home a 97.9mph effort of his own against Chelsea on February 22 1997. That might top our list of powerful goals, but there is one harder shot - recorded by Sky's fancy device - that puts it well and truly in the shade. Step forward ... Sheffield Wednesday's David Hirst, who drilled a 14.8-yard howitzer against the crossbar at a whopping 114mph during a 4-1 defeat at Arsenal on September 16 1996. Therefore, our top 10, as it stands, is ... 1) David Hirst - 114mph (for Sheffield Wednesday @ Arsenal on September 16 1996) 2) David Beckham - 97.9mph (for Man Utd v Chelsea on February 22 1997) 3) David Trezeguet - 96mph (for Monaco @ Man Utd on March 19 1998) 4) Richie Humphreys - 95.9mph (for Sheffield Wednesday v Aston Villa on August 17 1996) 5) Matt Le Tissier - 86.8mph (for Southampton v Newcastle on January 18 1997) 6) Alan Shearer - 85.8mph (for Newcastle v Leicester on February 2 1997) 7) Roberto Carlos - 85.2mph (for Brazil v France on June 3 1997)
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Read More »The one case we did track down of a player having his name correctly written on both sides of his shirt was in fact former Middlesbrough striker Hamilton Ricard, who had been playing for Danubio in Uruguay before he was sentenced last month to three years in prison for killing a man in a car accident. Danubio are sponsored by Ricard - a brand of chocolates - and although player names are not printed on shirts in Uruguay, the sponsor's logo is blazoned across both the chest and back of Danubio's strip, meaning that Ricard's name is, indeed, on both sides of his shirt.
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Read More »"Did Pele and Di Stefano ever play in the same match, either on the same or opposing sides?" asked Alan Sheridan in 2001. Yes they did, Alan - on the opposite sides of a friendly match between Real Madrid and Santos which took place on June 17 1959 in the Santiago Bernabéu. At the time Alfredo Di Stefano, aged 32, was at his peak of his powers having just led Real Madrid to their fourth European Cup in a row. Pele, meanwhile, was just 18 - although he was already a star after scoring six goals in the World Cup the previous year. In the end, experience triumphed over youth as Madrid won 5-3 with goals from Mateos (3), Gento and Puskas. However Pelé did manage to get on the score sheet for the Brazilians, along with Pepe and Coutinho. "I'm not 100% sure but that may be the only time they coincided in a football field," said Antonio Gonzalez.
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