Turin, Italy, September 29, 2018 - Brazil and Poland go head-to-head in a World Championship final for the third time in the history of the competition, Sunday at Turin's Pala Alpitour, as the 2018 edition wraps up. Brazil beat Poland in straight sets in the 2006 final in Tokyo, before Poland took revenge with a 3-1 win in 2014 at home in Katowice. Head-to-Head • Poland and Brazil are set for a replay of the 2014 World Championship final, which was won by Poland 3-1 (18-25, 25-22, 25-23, 25-22). • These teams also played the final at the 2006 World Championship, which Brazil won 3-0 (25-12, 25-22, 25-17). • In total, these teams have met nine times at the World Championships. Poland lead the head-to-head with five wins to four. • Brazil have claimed at least one set in all but one World Championship meeting against Poland. The lone exception is a straight set defeat in 1962. • Since the 2014 World Championship, these teams have met four times in world level major tournaments. Brazil won three and Poland one of those matches. • World level major tournaments are World Championships, World League, World Cup, Grand Champions Cup, Nations League and Olympic Games. Brazil • Brazil have reached the final for the fifth time in a row at the World Championships (2002-2018). They played in all World Championship finals in this century. • They won the world title in 2002 (3-2 v Russia), 2006 (3-0 v Poland) and 2010 (3-0 v Cuba) before losing the final in 2014 (3-1 v Poland). They also lost the final in 1982, 3-0 against Soviet Union. • Brazil can become the second team to win the men's world title at least four times, after Russia's six trophies (all six as Soviet Union). • Brazil have won 10 of their 11 matches at the 2018 World Championship, with a 3-1 defeat against Netherlands in the first round being the only exception. They could win 11 for the second time, after 2014 (11). • Brazil have won six matches in straight sets at the 2018 World Championship. They could still reach their number of 2014 (7). • Brazil have won at least one set in each of their last 28 World Championship matches, since a 3-0 defeat against Bulgaria in 2010. • Wallace De Souza is Brazil's top scorer at this World Championship on 143 points. Douglas Souza follows closely on 139. Poland • After reaching the last four for the third time at the World Championships, Poland reached the final for the third time as well. • Poland finished as runners-up in 2006 (v Brazil) and won the world title in 2014 (v Brazil). It also won the title in 1974, when the tournament was a round robin format. • Poland are the first team not named Brazil to reach back-to-back World Championship finals since Italy in 1990, 1994 and 1998. • Poland could become the fourth nation to win successive men's world titles, after Soviet Union (1949-1952, 1960-1962, 1978-1982), Italy (1990-1998) and Brazil (2002-2010). • After losing their first two five-setters at the 2018 World Championship, Poland managed to break the spell against United States in the semifinal (15-11 in the 5th set). In their championship season in 2014, they won all four matches that went the distance. • Bartosz Kurek is Poland's top scorer at the 2018 World Championship on 147 points.
Zaire became the first national team from sub-Saharan Africa to qualify for the World Cup in 1974, but it wasn't a happy debut for the nation now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo in West Germany, as they were beaten 9-0 by Yugoslavia and mocked for defender Mwepu Ilunga's seeming lack of understanding of the rule of football at all. In this short documentary, HITC Sevens explored DR Congo's past through that iconic 1974 FIFA World Cup moment, the real reason Mwepu Ilunga's smashed that free-kick away, and the nation's troubled present.
Revivamos juntos el encuentro de la temporada 74-75 en contra de Cruz Azul
La F1 durante décadas ha sido el banco de pruebas donde los ingenieros más brillantes ponían a prueba sus ideas más revolucionarias, más innovadoras… y, en ocasiones, más locas… algunas aparentemente absurdas triunfaron pero otras fueron un fracaso estrepitoso. Vamos a hablar de estas En este vídeo hablo de coches de F1 que pretendieron innovar, pero no de pruebas especificas de cosas raras probadas sobre coches más o menos convencionales. Porque sobre todo en temas de aerodinámica ha habido verdaderas aberraciones, como el Brabham BT 26 de 1969 con doble alerón y que corrió en Montjuich, el alerón trasero gigante que probó March en 1975, o un aleroncito delantero en el McLaren M26 del 77 cuando Hunt se quejaba de sobreviraje. O un no menos horrible alerón partido que probo Ferrari en su F126C2 de 1984. En el tema de alerones feos hubo reincidencias, como el de Arrows en el GP de Mónaco de 2002 o las horribles orejitas del Honda RA108 de 2008. Tampoco voy a hablar de coches que no triunfaron por culpa del reglamento, como fue el Brabham BT46“aspiradora”, prohibido tras su primera y única carrera con victoria incluida o el innovador Lotus 88 de doble chasis, prohibido antes incluso de llegar a competir. La idea era magnifica, pues la distancia mínima del coche al suelo debía ser de 6 cm cuando llegó a ser de cero… Así que vamos con nuestra lista de los 10 F1 más raros e innovadores pero que no triunfaron y la haremos por orden cronológico: 1. BRM P83 H16 de 1966. ¿Te parecen suficientes 16 cilindros? 2. Cosworth F1 4WD Proto de 1969. Con tracción total. 3. Brabham BT34 de 1971. El “pinzas de langosta”. 4. Lotus 56B 4WD de 1971. Con turbina y tracción total. 5. March 721 de 1972. Con alerón ovalado. 6. Tyrrel P34 de 1976. El único con 6 ruedas. 7. Ensign 179 de 1979. ¿Hacemos una parrillada? 8. Hesketh 308 de 1974. Con gomas en vez de muelles. 9. Arrows A2 de 1979: Efecto ala en su máxima expresión. 10. Benetton Tyrrel 012 de 1983. El Boomerang que nunca volvió. He disfrutado este vídeo porque ya sabéis que adoro las rarezas y hoy hemos visto unas cuantas, a veces verdaderos abortos de la tecnología, pero otros coches verdaderamente bonitos, como el precioso Arrows A2.
THE RUMBLE IN THE JUNGLE - ALI VS FOREMAN - PARTIE 1/3 : LES DÉBUTS DE DEUX GÉANTS - LE FLASHBACK #6 ABONNEZ-VOUS POUR NE PLUS MANQUER DE FLASHBACK ! https://goo.gl/8EG0MY Aujourd’hui, on vous raconte l’histoire d’un combat de légende. Peut-être le plus connu de tous les temps. L’affrontement de deux champions que tout oppose, dont la rivalité dépasse le simple cadre de la boxe. Deux boxeurs au sommet de leur art, et qui se détestent alors cordialement. Car au-delà du sport, c’est un combat culturel et politique que The Greatest et Big George se livrent ce soir là. Eh oui, vous l’attendiez depuis si longtemps ! On va enfin vous parler du fameux “Rumble in the Jungle”, peut-être l’événement sportif le plus marquant du XXème siècle. Alors on prend notre machine à remonter le temps, direction le 30 octobre 1974 à Kinshasa, au Zaïre, pour le championnat du monde des poids lourds entre Mohamed Ali et George Foreman. Boxing Academy est une chaîne imaginée par vroom originals. Découvrez nos autres chaînes YouTube : - Vous aimez la NBA ? http://bit.ly/LeCrossoverNBA - Vous aimez le CINÉMA et les SÉRIES ? http://bit.ly/LesFanatiquesYT - Vous aimez le RUGBY ? http://bit.ly/LeFrenchFlairRugby Que vous soyez fan de Mohamed Ali, de Mike Tyson, de Floyd Mayweather ou de Canelo, vous trouverez ici tout ce qu'il faut savoir sur le noble art. Narration: Selim El Mellah Écriture: Yannis Ben Brahim et Hossein Adibi Montage: Lilian Normand Production: Adrien Viguier et paul conquet Consultant technique: Jeremy Denis
#100 Sammy Sosa, Game 1, 2003 NLCS, Chicago Cubs #99 Roberto Alomar, Game 4, 1992 ALCS, Toronto Blue Jays #98 Benny Agbayani, Game 3, 2000 NLDS, New York Mets #97 Joe Rudi, Game 5, 1974 WS, Oakland Athletics #96 Miguel Montero, Game 1, 2016 NLDS, Chicago Cubs #95 Alfonso Soriano, Game 7, 2001 WS, New York Yankees #94 Josh Hamilton, Game 7, 2011 WS, Texas Rangers #93 Roberto Clemente, Game 7, 1971 WS, Pittsburgh Pirates #92 Jose Canseco, Game 4, 1988 ALCS, Oakland Athletics #91 Barry Bonds, Game 2, 2002 WS, San Francisco Giants #90 Mark McGwire, Game 3, 1988 WS, Oakland Athletics #89 Alex Rodriguez, Game 2, 2009 ALDS, New York Yankees #88 Nelson Cruz, Game 2, 2011 ALCS, Texas Rangers #87 Justin Turner, Game 2, 2017 NLCS, Los Angeles Dodgers #86 Manny Ramirez, Game 2, 2007 ALDS, Boston Red Sox #85 Kerry Wood, Game 7, 2003 NLCS, Chicago Cubs #84 Darin Erstad, Game 6, 2002 WS, Los Angeles Angels #83 Trot Nixon, Game 3, 2004 ALDS, Boston Red Sox #82 John Lowenstine, Game 1, 1979 ALCS, Baltimore Orioles #81 Bernie Williams, Game 1, 1996 ALCS, New York Yankees #80 Sandy Alomar Jr, Game 4, 1997 ALDS, Cleveland Indians #79 Tony Pena, Game 1, 1995 ALDS, Cleveland Indians #78 George Vukovich, Game 4, 1981 NLDS, Philadelphia Phillies #77 Jayson Werth, Game 4, 2012 NLDS, Washington Nationals #76 Yogi Berra, Game 6, 1952 WS, New York Yankees #75 Tom Lawless, Game 4, 1987 WS, St. Louis Cardinals #74 Thurman Munson, Game 3, 1978 NLCS, New York Yankees #73 George Brett, Game 3, 1980 NLCS, Kansas City Royals #72 Lenny Dykstra, Game 3, 1986 NLCS, New York Mets #71 Paul Konerko, Game 2, 2005 WS, Chicago White Sox #70 Raul Ibanez (1), Game 3, 2012 ALDS, New York Yankees #69 Raul Ibanez (2), Game 3, 2012 ALDS, New York Yankees #68 David Ortiz, Game 3, 2004 ALDS, Boston Red Sox #67 Todd Pratt, Game 4, 1999 NLDS, New York Mets #66 Ken Boyer, Game 4, 1964 WS, St. Louis Cardinals #65 Brad Ausmus, Game 4, 2004 NLDS, Houston Astros #64 Chad Curtis, Game 3, 1999 WS, New York Yankees #63 Jeff Kent, Game 5, 2004 NLCS, Houston Astros #62 Mike Scioscia, Game 4, 1988 NLCS, Los Angeles Dodgers #61 Kent Hrbek, Game 6, 1987 WS, Minnesota Twins #60 Tony Fernandez, Game 6, 1997 ALCS, Cleveland Indians #59 Juan Uribe, Game 4, 2013 NLDS, Los Angeles Dodgers #58 Tommy Henrich, Game 1, 1949 WS, New York Yankees #57 David Justice, Game 6, 2000 ALCS, New York Yankees #56 Dusty Rhodes, Game 1, 1954 WS, New York Giants #55 Scott Rolen, Game 7, 2004 NLCS, St. Louis Cardinals #54 Mickey Mantle, Game 3, 1964 WS, New York Yankees #53 Robin Ventura, Game 5, 1999 NLCS, New York Mets #52 Max Muncy, Game 3, 2018 WS, Los Angeles Dodgers #51 Steve Yeager, Game 5, 1981 WS, Los Angeles Dodgers
Partida válida pelo Campeonato Esanhol da temporada de 1973/74 disputada pelas equipes do Valencia e do Barcelona
This video details some of the greatest dynasties in Major League Baseball from the 1920s to the 1970s, starting with the New York Yankees "Murderer's Row" of the late 1920s and the St. Louis Cardinals "Gashouse Gang" of the 1930s. The Yankees dynasty of the 1940s and 1950s dominates much of the middle portion of the show, while segments on the 1972-1974 Oakland A's and the 1970s Cincinnati Reds "Big Red Machine" conclude the presentation. Includes interviews with multiple now-deceased Hall of Famers including Leo Durocher, Joe DiMaggio, Yogi Berra, and Dick Williams, along with 1970s stars Rollie Fingers, Sal Bando, Johnny Bench, and Pete Rose. Hosted by Curt Gowdy. This was recorded onto VHS and was part of ESPN's "Baseball's Greatest Hits" series in the late 1980s.