...Gol no ângulo
Com imagens catadas na Internet, fornecendo-se as fontes na Referência, sem busca por gols ilícitos ou de mão ao modo que o de Dieguito dos hermanos contra a Inglaterra após o gol... de mão dos fundadores de “The football association” nas Falklands Islands (Ilhas Malvinas, para os caras pálidas).
"Futebol desimportante"
Tratado
geral das grandezas do ínfimo
A poesia está guardada nas palavras — é tudo que eu
sei.
Meu fado é o de não saber quase tudo.
Sobre o nada eu tenho profundidades.
Não tenho conexões com a realidade.
Poderoso para mim não é aquele que descobre ouro.
Para mim poderoso é aquele que descobre as insignificâncias (do mundo e as nossas).
Por essa pequena sentença me elogiaram de imbecil.
Fiquei emocionado.
Sou fraco para elogios.
Meu fado é o de não saber quase tudo.
Sobre o nada eu tenho profundidades.
Não tenho conexões com a realidade.
Poderoso para mim não é aquele que descobre ouro.
Para mim poderoso é aquele que descobre as insignificâncias (do mundo e as nossas).
Por essa pequena sentença me elogiaram de imbecil.
Fiquei emocionado.
Sou fraco para elogios.
Manoel de Barros, por Bula
“Nada
havia de mais prestante em nós senão a infância. O mundo começava ali. Nosso
campo encostava na beira do rio[…]”
“[…] Chambalé nosso técnico impunha regras: só pode
mijar no rio e não pode jogar de botina. Sebastião era centroavante. Chutava no
rumo certo. Sabia as variações da bexiga no vento e botava no grau certo.
Quando alguém enfiava as unhas na pedra abria uma vaga […]”
Manoel de Barros
PELADA
DE BARRANCO (pág. 141)
“[…]
Chambalé nosso técnico impunha regras: só pode mijar no rio e não pode jogar de
botina. Sebastião era centroavante. Chutava no rumo certo. Sabia as variações
da bexiga no vento e botava no grau certo. Quando alguém enfiava as unhas na
pedra abria uma vaga […]”
Manoel de Barros
chambalé
substantivo masculino
VEST
SP tipo de camisola de dormir infantil; chumbalé.
chambalé
substantivo masculino
VEST
SP tipo de camisola de dormir infantil; chumbalé.
...e
não pode jogar de botina:
...e
botava no grau certo:
Reflita
- Manoel de Barros - Poesia a partir da Imagem.
Gosto
dos meninos que transformam o velho em brincadeira, gosto do Palmiro e do
Bernardo. Gosto das Flores no chão, gosto da imagem que mostra poesia, gosto da
desconstrução. Gosto porque só dez por cento é mentira.
A Football Association (em português: Associação
inglesa de Futebol; sigla oficial: FA) é a entidade que controla o futebol na Inglaterra.
Foi criada em 1863 e é a mais antiga associação de
futebol do mundo. Foi a FA quem formulou as regras oficiais do esporte, que
pouco mudaram até os tempos atuais. A FA é membro da UEFA e da FIFA e
tem assento permanente na International
Football Association Board (IFAB).
Todos os times profissionais da Inglaterra devem ser membros da Football
Association. A entidade controla as seleções nacionais masculina e feminina e
governa a Premier League. A Football League, que é composta das 2a,
3a e 4a divisões do futebol inglês se auto-governa.
https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Football_Association
THE
HISTORY OF THE FA
The Football Association, English football’s
governing body, was formed in 1863. ‘Organised football’ or ‘football as we
know it’ dates from that time.
Ebenezer Morley, a London solicitor who formed Barnes FC in 1862, could be called the ‘father’ of The Association. He wasn’t a public school man but old boys from several public schools joined his club and there were ‘feverish’ disputes about the way the game should be played.
Morley wrote to Bell’s Life, a popular newspaper, suggesting that football should have a set of rules in the same way that the MCC had them for cricket. His letter led to the first historic meeting at the Freemasons' Tavern in Great Queen Street, near to where Holborn tube station is now.
Ebenezer Morley, a London solicitor who formed Barnes FC in 1862, could be called the ‘father’ of The Association. He wasn’t a public school man but old boys from several public schools joined his club and there were ‘feverish’ disputes about the way the game should be played.
Morley wrote to Bell’s Life, a popular newspaper, suggesting that football should have a set of rules in the same way that the MCC had them for cricket. His letter led to the first historic meeting at the Freemasons' Tavern in Great Queen Street, near to where Holborn tube station is now.
The FA was formed there on 26 October 1863, a Monday
evening. The captains, secretaries and other representatives of a dozen London
and suburban clubs playing their own versions of football met “for the purpose
of forming an Association with the object of establishing a definite code of
rules for the regulation of the game”.
The clubs represented were: Barnes, War Office*, Crusaders, Forest (Leytonstone), No Names (Kilburn), Crystal Palace**, Blackheath, Kensington School, Perceval House (Blackheath), Surbiton, Blackheath Proprietory School and Charterhouse.
*Civil Service FC, who now play in the Southern Amateur League’s Senior Division One, are the only surviving club of the eleven who signed up to be FA members at that first meeting in 1863, when they were listed as the War Office. Civil Service FC are also celebrating their 150th anniversary in 2013.
The clubs represented were: Barnes, War Office*, Crusaders, Forest (Leytonstone), No Names (Kilburn), Crystal Palace**, Blackheath, Kensington School, Perceval House (Blackheath), Surbiton, Blackheath Proprietory School and Charterhouse.
*Civil Service FC, who now play in the Southern Amateur League’s Senior Division One, are the only surviving club of the eleven who signed up to be FA members at that first meeting in 1863, when they were listed as the War Office. Civil Service FC are also celebrating their 150th anniversary in 2013.
**This club has
no connection with the present Championship club.
There could be no authority without laws and six meetings took place in 44 days before the new Association could stand on its own feet. The FA was formed at the first. Its rules were formulated at the second. (There was an annual subscription of a guinea and alterations to rules or laws were to be advertised in sporting papers.) A useful discussion on drafting the laws took place at the third.
There could be no authority without laws and six meetings took place in 44 days before the new Association could stand on its own feet. The FA was formed at the first. Its rules were formulated at the second. (There was an annual subscription of a guinea and alterations to rules or laws were to be advertised in sporting papers.) A useful discussion on drafting the laws took place at the third.
‘Football’, they
thought, would be a blend of handling and dribbling. Players
would be able to handle the ball: a fair catch accompanied by ‘a mark with the
heel’ would win a free kick. The sticking point was ‘hacking’, or kicking an
opponent on the leg, which Blackheath FC wanted to keep.
The laws originally drafted by Morley were finally approved at the sixth meeting, on 8 December, and there would be no hacking. They were published by John Lillywhite of Seymour Street in a booklet that cost a shilling and sixpence. The FA was keen to see its laws in action and a match was played between Barnes and Richmond at Limes Field in Barnes on 19 December. It was a 0-0 draw.
Bryon Butler wrote in an Official History published in 1991: “The FA’s early influence on the game at large was not dramatic or even widespread. Its membership was small and its authority and laws were often challenged and sometimes ignored. But its motives and ambitions were so honourably based that, like growing ripples on a still pond, its standing grew perceptibly. It was a period of high ideals and ready compromise”.
The laws originally drafted by Morley were finally approved at the sixth meeting, on 8 December, and there would be no hacking. They were published by John Lillywhite of Seymour Street in a booklet that cost a shilling and sixpence. The FA was keen to see its laws in action and a match was played between Barnes and Richmond at Limes Field in Barnes on 19 December. It was a 0-0 draw.
Bryon Butler wrote in an Official History published in 1991: “The FA’s early influence on the game at large was not dramatic or even widespread. Its membership was small and its authority and laws were often challenged and sometimes ignored. But its motives and ambitions were so honourably based that, like growing ripples on a still pond, its standing grew perceptibly. It was a period of high ideals and ready compromise”.
The move which probably did most to broaden the
outlook of The FA and spread its influence over a wider field was made at a
meeting at the office of The Sportsman newspaper on 20 July 1871. The
announcement of the birth of ‘The Football Association Challenge Cup’ ran to
just 29 words: “That it is desirable that a Challenge Cup should be established
in connection with the Association for which all clubs belonging to the
Association should be invited to compete”.
Referências
https://cdn.images.dailystar.co.uk/dynamic/1/photos/505000/620x/58b89cdbdfaa0_falklandsislands.jpg
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/f2bb87b8-d00b-49ec-8c3e-57aac62c631c
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/e6b60bdf-198f-4552-b7d4-477ccbec3cca
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/1f596441-033c-441d-a59e-9d6cbf96a118
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/59d4573e-8fcd-4245-b3d5-f0110a760123
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/e68f1bd2-30be-400e-b164-e0f0fa607974
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/0a0518f7-aa21-4317-b07a-77090d5b0e0d
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/c56726ed-afb5-4aad-9878-c7eab7a1c489
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/7c0ab1cd-c09a-4284-b28f-1c27fda1b8ba
blob:https://web.whatsapp.com/f2bb87b8-d00b-49ec-8c3e-57aac62c631c
https://youtu.be/n8TxMclSbJ8
https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Football_Association
http://www.thefa.com/-/media/www-thefa-com/images/news/fahistory800a.ashx?cw=1048&ch=590&resizemode=crop&jq=50&hash=49738426420639258A47B0347115CFDF0BA9D051
http://www.thefa.com/-/media/www-thefa-com/images/thefa/general/fa-minute-book-620.ashx?la=en&h=349&w=620&hash=D4FD05FBB0982E595B2EC1B04438FE9785EB548A
http://www.thefa.com/-/media/www-thefa-com/images/news/competitions-and-leagues/fa-cup/2015/feb/original-fa-cup-1910-620.ashx?la=en&hash=C4ED487EA8111DF515CD83E4802ADD4382670600&h=349&w=620
http://www.thefa.com/about-football-association/what-we-do/history
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