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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ Media Fix ‹ Videos

Shunsuke Nakamura Wonder Goal

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Shunsuke Nakamura Wonder Goal

Postby Mulboyne » Fri Nov 24, 2006 5:20 am

[YT]v8Xx2UpdvzY[/YT]

Japan has made its reputation by copying everything and then making it even better. Cars, electrical goods and now, it seems, footballers. Shunsuke Nakamura was already dubbed the “Beckham of the Far East” but Gordon Strachan believes the Celtic player can stand scrutiny with the original. How ironic that Sir Alex Ferguson should be the one to suffer from Nakamura’s ability to bend it like Beckham as 60,000 people were held in suspended animation before the elfin playmaker curled the 28-yard free kick over the Manchester United wall and beyond Edwin Van der Sar, to prompt an explosion of noise that shook the east end of Glasgow.
From The Times
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Postby Mulboyne » Tue Apr 24, 2007 4:10 pm

Scotsman: Media frenzy in Japan as favourite footballing son hits new heights
SHUNSUKE Nakamura was the toast of the Japanese media - and local Celtic fans - after scoring the goal on Sunday that won the Scottish Premierleague title and then being named the player of the year by his fellow professionals. A beaming Nakamura was featured on the front pages of most of Japan's national newspapers, along with shots taken from the game in which he scored the decisive goal in a 2-1 win over Kilmarnock, which gave Celtic their second successive title...more...


The winning goal:

[YT]ICOs3wsWjLE[/YT]

Another from the end of March:

[YT]PhJjJ5JfDOI[/YT]
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Postby Oradea » Tue Apr 24, 2007 7:06 pm

Thats ma bhoy.
Never play leapfrog with a Unicorn
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Postby Mulboyne » Wed May 16, 2007 5:44 pm

Guardian: From the rubble to the Ritz for Japan's Nakamura
The Shunsuke Nakamura who ripped off his Celtic shirt and jumped into the crowd at Kilmarnock last month had come a long way from the awkward youth of a decade ago. Nakamura had just scored the goal that secured Celtic a second straight Scottish Premier League (SPL) title and subsequently finished the season as Scotland's double player of the year. As he accepted his Football Writers' award at the weekend, the black-suited Nakamura was unrecognisable from the nervous youngster who had taken Japan by storm in the late 1990s but struggled to speak to foreign journalists. His crowd-diving antics were a world apart, too, from the 2000 Asian Cup, when the midfielder grumbled about having to speak to reporters at all, let alone overseas media.

At the Lebanon tournament seven years ago, the Japan team had to train on a pitch surrounded by bombed-out slums used to shelter Hezbollah fighters. As Israeli war jets buzzed overhead, none of the players looked more nervous than Nakamura -- then a scrawny 22-year-old with little to offer other than a cultured left foot. On a pitch hemmed in by crumbling buildings and strewn dangerously with rubble and twisted metal, Nakamura already stood out as a potentially world-class player.

Japan's then coach Philippe Troussier, however, thought Nakamura too much of a luxury player and was less than impressed with his unadventurous spirit off the pitch in Beirut. "With Nakamura and most of the others, if I left a naked woman tied to their bed for them, they would run from the room screaming," the Frenchman shrugged. "I told them to go out into the city for dinner but they decided to stay in and play computer games. They have no sense of adventure." Troussier ultimately decided he could not afford to risk selecting Nakamura for the 2002 World Cup and abruptly discarded him from his squad, preferring the more robust Mitsuo Ogasawara and causing a public outcry. Nakamura himself responded simply: "It's made me more determined to work harder."

A frustrating spell at Italy's Reggina followed but fast forward to 2007 and Nakamura has shaken off the luxury player tag and become the heartbeat of Celtic. He was voted Scotland's Players' Player of the Year last month after becoming the first Japanese to win back-to-back titles in Europe. The pout has been replaced by a wide smile and the player, now 28, is always ready to share a joke with journalists -- in stark contrast to former Japan team mate Hidetoshi Nakata.

Even during Japan's disastrous 2006 World Cup campaign, Nakamura was one of the first to stand up and take the flak, refusing to hide or make excuses. Nakamura scored nine goals in 35 SPL games this season and one of his trademark free kicks gave Celtic a 1-0 Champions League win over Manchester United, securing a place in the knockout stages. "That was the highlight of my season," said Nakamura. "Not because it was me who scored it but because it was more important we got into the last 16." Wise words from a player Troussier feared might never grow up yet who now has English Premier League clubs queueing up to try to lure him away from Celtic Park.

Watching Nakamura tearing off his shirt and piling into the crowd at Kilmarnock, the abiding impression was that the boy had finally become a man.
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Postby Mulboyne » Sun Sep 14, 2008 9:58 am

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Shunshuke is a Nerd!

Postby Behan » Mon Jul 20, 2009 9:49 pm

His [Brendan Behan's] last words were to several nuns standing over his bed, "God bless you, may your sons all be bishops."
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Postby Mulboyne » Wed Dec 02, 2009 10:36 pm

Image

This might look like an idea born in Japan but a caganer "pooper doll" is Spanish and a traditional Christmas decoration. Here's one of Shunsuke Nakamura who currently plays for Espanyol in Barcelona.
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