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10-03-2011, 05:03 PM | #41 |
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
ane baru tau nih gan
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17-03-2011, 10:54 AM | #42 | |
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
Quote:
wah.. sudah menikah aja tuh anak gw kpn yak menikah??? |
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17-03-2011, 12:06 PM | #43 |
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
ntar kalo Fabio mo melakukan hubungan suami istri, si Rafael bisa aja yah yg masuk ke kamar
paling enak mereka dulu SMA/kuliah bisa joki2an pas ujian
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17-03-2011, 12:43 PM | #44 | |
captain
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
eh,ini apa tretnya @Redsbusby bisa dimerge ksini yak??
yang di lounge??hehehe.. tapi gak segeneral ini sih ya? #mendadakgalau nih ahh~ meramaikan tret /^_^)/maap kalo repsol,aheyy dua bocah in action aje,yang off the field disensor Quote:
joki-jokian mah dari jaman bayi kali yah?? udah nikah donk,haha *bangga tapi mau nangis* semoga cepet menyusul~
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17-03-2011, 12:48 PM | #45 |
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
Nggak harus sih menurut gw.. Ini kan lebih umum, sementara yg da silva lebih spesifik, lagian doi berdua kan sekarang di 1 lngkungan yg sama, sama2 ada di tim utama... kalo brothers lainnya di united kan mencar tuh.. Corry, Reece, ama Will kan masih dluar tim utama
tp klo modnya ngerasa harus ya, ok2 aja
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17-03-2011, 01:40 PM | #46 | |
captain
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
Quote:
guwe jadi makin galau mau menebar harta kembur dimana >w< wakakakak.. evans-evans juga donk diungkit dan diungkap *sujud sembah*
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06-06-2011, 05:26 AM | #47 |
first team
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
kira-kira fabio & rafael bisa ampe pensiun gk ya di united?
neville bersaudara aja yg pensiun di united cuma om gary,, mudah"an aja fabio & rafael bisa pensiun di united, & bsa jd andalan di united maupun timnas brazil |
13-08-2011, 01:16 AM | #48 |
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
udh trdisi MU x ya, ad yg brsaudra dlam 1 tim MU...
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22-10-2011, 03:52 AM | #49 |
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
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03-12-2015, 01:32 PM | #50 |
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Re: United 'Bersaudara'
Gary and Phil Neville are football's most famous brothers since the Charltons... and when one turns up, the other isn't far behind
* Gary Neville has taken over as manager of Valencia, with Phil his assistant * Gary has always taken charge, while brother Phil is happy for him to do so * As a child, Phil was the more naturally gifted sportsman, but Gary went on to a more successful football career and has blossomed as a pundit * Phil is clearly delighted to have his older brother with him in La Liga * Pair might not pull it off at Valencia, but it won't be for the want of trying As Gary and Phil Neville join forces again at Valencia, it seems more apt than ever that their powerful brotherly bond was forged on a barracks playing field in Bury. The endless games of football and cricket that they played together as boys unfolded next to the Greater Manchester home of the Second Battalion, Royal Regiment of Fusiliers. And Gary was a drill sergeant from the start. He still is. Apparently, if Phil suggests that they meet up at 6pm, Gary will say 'let's make it 6.15', for no reason other than to assert his authority. Gary (C) and Phil Neville (R) have been reunited at Valencia, where the former has taken over as manager Social media was abuzz on Wednesday not just with news of the older Neville's appointment as Valencia's head coach, but also with snide observations about his capacity always to upstage his younger brother, who is now his second-in-command. But the truth is that ever since those early days on the Barracks playing field, Gary has always taken charge and Phil, two years younger, has always been happy for him to do so. Theirs is not and has never been a relationship fuelled by powerful sibling rivalry, which in a way is surprising, given how intense Gary is about everything he tackles. The key to understanding how they tick, both separately and in relation to each other, lies with their parents. Phil takes after their calm, easy-going mother, Jill. But Gary is much more like their late father, Neville Neville. Phil's twin Tracey, now the coach of the England netball team, is temperamentally somewhere between the two, not as feisty and opinionated as Gary, nor as placid, as hard to pick a fight with, as Phil. When they were growing up, sharing a bedroom until Gary was 19 and Phil 17, their dad brooked no nonsense from them, or from Tracey. Yet he carried out his fatherly responsibilities with almost religious zeal, and one of his main duties, as he saw it, was to nurture their innate sporting talent. Valencia tweeted on Wednesday to welcome Gary Neville as the club's manager until the end of the season The boys' football and cricket commitments did not sit easily with his job as a lorry driver, but for his regular journeys to Northamptonshire he would routinely leave the house at 4am, in order to be back in time to take them to training, or to watch them play. As Gary records in his 2012 autobiography, Red, his father's determination to wring every ounce out of every day has rubbed off on him, too. Their parents inculcated in them the overriding belief that family comes first. The two brothers would never drop the L-word, 'love', on one another, yet in Red, Gary also writes that when they were both making their way at Manchester United, if he had to give up his place in the team to anybody, 'I'd always prefer it to go to Phil more than anyone in the world'. He seems as honest a man as he is intense, so there is no reason to doubt him when he downplays any talk of sibling rivalry. On the other hand, Phil once told me a revealing story. When they first played against one another in the Premier League, in a 1-1 draw at Old Trafford shortly after Phil had joined Everton, the ball whizzed just past his head during a break in play. 'When I looked round he was walking away pretending it wasn't him. I said, "Gaz, what did you kick the ball at me for?" He said, "You've been there, Phil. You come to Old Trafford, you go over to your manager, you're drinking your drink, swanning around. I thought, I'm not having that." So he smacked the ball at me.' It's hard to imagine that a man so easily riled did not, as a teenager, take a fair bit of umbrage at the manifest superiority of his younger brother both academically (unsurprisingly, Gary was a rebel at school, while Phil unerringly toed the line), and on the sports field. In his book, Gary is generous about the way sporting excellence came easier to Phil than it did to him. But is there, in the following passage, just the teeniest hint of enduring bitterness? 'I struggled to make the county team; he played for England Schoolboys at every level, going down to Wembley in his smart blazer, the cream of the crop.' In cricket, the difference was even more marked. Gary was decent enough to play for North of England Schoolboys, batting at three with a lad called Michael Vaughan at four. But for Lancashire under-14s Phil was the stand-out player in a team that also included Andrew Flintoff. Revealingly, he refers to Flintoff even now not as Freddie, but 'Flinty' - the nickname that dates back to their teens. For quite a while, cricket looked like the younger sibling's destiny. At 15, Phil was playing with seasoned adults for Lancashire Seconds, and in Gary's unwavering opinion, 'if it hadn't been for football he could have gone on to play cricket dozens of times for England at every level, there's absolutely no doubt about that.' The pair both have a stake in Salford City FC, which will surely be a regular talking point in the coming months But Phil's abundant promise as a teenager is clearly a sight easier for Gary to deal with now than it was then. 'He was a class act with gifts that set him apart from me,' he writes. 'Like millions of young boys, I dreamt of being a footballer. In my imagination I was the next Bryan Robson. But I wasn't even the best sportsman in my own family.' In adulthood, to a very large extent, those childhood discrepancies have been exactly reversed. Phil is a high-achiever by almost any standards except those of his big brother. He played 59 times for England, but Gary played 85, becoming England's most capped right back and leaving a hole that for years has been difficult to fill. Phil, by contrast, while a terrific servant for his country, is still rather unfairly remembered for the costliest of mistimed tackles, which gave away the penalty against Romania that sent England home from Euro 2000. At Manchester United, meanwhile, when Gary was a certain starter under Sir Alex Ferguson, Phil wasn't always sure where he stood. That's why he joined Everton, who did well enough during his time there, but back down the East Lancs Road, Gary was still collecting silverware. And then they both became television pundits, and it seemed somehow typical that Gary should become almost everyone's favourite analyst while Phil at times floundered, being widely lampooned for his one-note co-commentary during the England v Italy match in last year's World Cup. It was as if all the magic fairy dust with which Phil had been anointed in boyhood, had somewhere along the line transferred to Gary. But none of that matters to Phil. And folk can say what they like about Gary upstaging him yet again, he's clearly delighted to have his brother alongside him in La Liga, where they can talk about Salford City, the team they co-own with Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes and Nicky Butt, and maybe occasionally reminisce about the old days at the Barracks playing field in Bury. But mostly they will knuckle down and try to make a success of the Valencia job. They might not pull it off. But they're Nevilles, so it certainly won't be for the want of trying. Code:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-3343348/Gary-Phil-Neville-football-s-famous-brothers-Charltons-one-turns-isn-t-far-behind.html
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