1.The best milk after breast milk.2.Does not cause allergies.3.Strengthened sistemimunisasi 4.Alkaline increase its alertness, 5.Concentration & memory.6. Help cure cancer, yellow fever, gastritis, ulcers, asthma (asthma)7. Skin disease, difficulty sleeping.8.Help treat pain, hypertension, heart failure, diabetes, tuberculosis, gout, balanced blood sugar and cholesterol 9.Reinforce a healthy body mass (bones, teeth, muscles, joints, skin, nervous tissue)10. Not due to phlegm restore sexual energy.11. Ageless launch of the digestive system & bowel
Thursday, 16 August 2012
Sunday, 12 August 2012
HOMESTAY MALACCA HISTORICAL ZUHAS
ZUHAS HOMESTAY MALACCA
HISTORICAL
no 13 Jalan Bayan 16,Taman Bukit Katil, Malacca
15 minutes to Malacca Town
10 minutes to Jusco Shopping Centre
with 3 room,2 bathroom
price negotiable
email: zuhassports@yahoo.com
website: zuhassports.blogspot.com
email: zuhassports@yahoo.com
website: zuhassports.blogspot.com
Saturday, 11 August 2012
ITALIAN SUPER CUP.....Juventus beat nine-man Napoli to win Italian Super Cup
(Reuters) – Serie A champions Juventus scored twice in extra time to beat nine-man Napoli 4-2 in an eventful Italian Super Cup at the Beijing National Stadium on Saturday.
An own goal by Christian Maggio and a calm finish by Mirko Vucinic in the first half of extra time gave Juventus the first trophy of the season after Napoli had twice led in normal time at a rain-soaked Bird’s Nest.
Italian Cup winners Napoli lost goalscorer Goran Pandev and Juan Camilo Zuniga in the last 10 minutes of normal time through red cards, while coach Walter Mazzarri was also sent off, for dissent.
Pandev was shown a straight red for abusing a linesman, and Zuniga was dismissed for two bookable offences.
Juventus’ new signing Kwadwo Asamoah showed his worth on his debut by scoring the first goal and setting up the fourth, and he continually troubled Napoli down the left wing.
Juventus, who went unbeaten last season, were dealt a blow on Friday when coach Antonio Conte was banned for 10 months over a match-fixing scandal, but the Turin club showed no signs of pressure as they took early control.
Napoli took the lead against the run of play in the 27th minute through Edinson Cavani. Juventus keeper Gianluigi Buffon came off his line to make a valiant save but the striker slotted in the rebound.
Juventus equalised through Asamoah 10 minutes later, when the Ghana midfielder found the net with a powerful left-foot shot from outside the box.
Napoli restored the lead three minutes later after another defensive lapse from Juventus. Leonardo Bonucci’s attempted clearance hit Pandev, who calmly flicked the ball over an advancing Buffon.
Juventus equalised for the second time when Arturo Vidal converted a penalty in the 74th minute after Vucinic was brought down.
Thursday, 9 August 2012
OLYMPIC WOMEN SOCCER 2012...U.S SOCCER GOLD
Carli Lloyd leads U.S. women past Japan to defend title and win Olympic soccer gold
Carli Lloyd of the U.S. (sitting center) celebrates with her teammates after scoring against Japan. (Reuters)
LONDON – The United States gained sweet revenge on Thursday for one of the most painful women's soccer defeats, beating Japan 2-1 to take the Olympic Games gold medal.
A pair of outstanding goals from midfielder Carli Lloyd was enough to ensure the Americans avenged their defeat by the same opponent on penalty kicks in last year's Women's World Cup final.
Lloyd missed the Americans' first penalty in the shootout on that fateful night in Frankfurt, Germany, but was the difference maker here at Wembley Stadium, scoring with an opportunistic header after seven minutes, then smashing home the second just after halftime. Yet even when Lloyd, who also scored the extra-time winner against Brazil in the 2008 Olympic final in Beijing, put the U.S. up 2-0, this clash was far from done.
It was a high-quality contest throughout, the kind you might expect from the two teams who are undoubtedly the finest in the women's game right now. In the end there was little to choose between them, but the nerve of the U.S., plus some small yet welcome morsels of fortune, got them over the line.
This was an Olympic title (America's third straight) that head coach Pia Sundhage's team started speaking about within minutes of letting a World Cup that was theirs for the taking slip through their grasp. It was seen as the only way to make up for that disappointment, and redemption was duly completed.
Japan may be left to rue the slow start that left it with an uphill battle. With neither side fully into its rhythm, the Japanese defense was caught surprisingly off-guard. Tobin Heath made a strong run down the left side and fed the ball to Alex Morgan, whose floated cross was directed right toward her forward partner, Abby Wambach.
But just as the ball lost a little momentum as it approached the tall striker, Lloyd dashed in and launched a powerful header into the net for a 1-0 lead. It as a wake-up call for Japan, and goalkeeperHope Solo soon found herself under pressure.
At 16 minutes, Nahomi Kawasumi sent over a swirling cross from the left, and Yuki Ogimi's header was pushed onto the crossbar by Solo. The rebound fell to Ogimi, who could only smash it well off target.
Japan was cursing the woodwork again midway through the period, as captain Aya Miyama's drive could not be reached by Solo and hit the bar.
If the Americans were a little fortunate to still be ahead going into the break, Lloyd's second goal was a timely boost to their confidence. Lloyd finished off a sparkling run with a fierce strike past the outstretched arms of Miho Fukumoto, and the gold medal was surely wrapped up. Or so it seemed.
Japan did not become world champion by giving up, and the players displayed impressive resilience. With 63 minutes gone, the U.S. could not recover from a mad scramble in its own penalty area and saw its cushion halved. Homare Sawa, the player of the tournament in the World Cup, was starting to stamp her authority on the game, but it was Ogimi who got the goal for Japan to send nerves jangling for Sundhage's side.
And when substitute Mana Iwabuchi went clear on goal with eight minutes to go, it looked like another nail-biting period of extra time could be in the cards. Solo remained strong, though, pushing away a solid effort to retain the lead.
A crowd of 80,203 – a record for Olympic soccer – packed into Wembley, one of the sport's most iconic venues, on what was a tremendous night for the women's game regardless of the scoreline.
That would have been of little consolation to the Americans had they lost, but this is a team that has a habit of rising to a challenge of Olympic proportions. The final whistle sparked scenes of delirious celebration as those demons from 13 months ago were well and truly exorcised.
Monday, 6 August 2012
U.S. women's soccer team The U.S. women's soccer team continue their Olympic winning streak, beating France, Colombia and North Korea in their group G matches and New Zealand in the quarterfinals.
USA's Alex Morgan (R) celebrating scoring the fourth goal over Canada to win the women's semi final soccer match at the London 2012 Olympic Games at Old Trafford in Manchester, August 6, 2012.
OLYMPIC FINAL BADMINTON CHONG WEI FALLS TO LIN DAN
Heartbreak as Heartbreak as Chong Wei falls to Lin Dan
Monday August 6, 2012
LEE Chong Wei came agonisingly close to winning the gold but the Wembley curse ensured that China’s Lin Dan once again ruled the roost.
Chong Wei had hoped to make history as the first Malaysian to win an Olympic gold but it was Lin Dan and China who wrote themselves into the record books. Lin Dan as the first man to win the Olympic crown twice while China made an unprecedented sweep of all five titles at stake.
It was more agony for Chong Wei, who had to play second fiddle to Lin Dan yet again, losing 21-15, 10-21, 19-21 in a 79-minute thriller.
Lin Dan had also denied the Malaysian in the World Championship title at the same venue last year.
Chong Wei’s hope of laying to rest the Wembley demons will have to wait a while longer but there will be no Olympic redemption as London 2012 was his last Games.
And it wasn’t from want of trying. Chong Wei had looked set to finally end the Lin Dan hoodoo when he to raced to victory in the first game.
But in the end, Lin Dan’s staying power and mastery made all the difference as Chong Wei sank to the court in tears. He had finished second best again having lost to the Chinese ace in Beijing four years ago.
Being Malaysia’s only double Olympic medal winner was small consolation as Chong Wei had been determined to deliver the gold.
Chong Wei later apologised to Malaysians for his failure.
“I tried really hard and am sorry not to have won. I played better than I did in Beijing or the World Championships but it seems that I’m destined to play bridesmaid to Lin Dan.
“I’m sorry for not getting the gold for the people of Malaysia,” he said.
Lin Dan said it had been a lot harder winning this time.
“A lot of sacrifice and hard work went into this. Chong Wei is a worthy opponent and I have a lot of respect for him,” he said.
“I look forward to resuming my rivalry with him. We will meet again in a league competition in China at the end of the month.”
Chong Wei said this was to have been his last Olympics although he intended to carry on for the moment.
“I plan to go on until the 2014 Asian Games. I also intend to win the World Championship and Commonwealth Games before calling it a day,” he said.
Chong Wei, who had almost missed the Games because of the ankle injury, faded a little from the middle of the second game, allowing Lin Dan’s magnificent range of strokes to flourish.
When Chong Wei’s final shot dropped long, Lin Dan, often described as the best player the game has seen, sprinted round the stadium, ripped off his shirt and wept in celebration, saluting the crowd as he held the Chinese flag.
Chong Wei cut an inconsolable figure as he sat alone on the empty court.
Neither is likely to play another Olympics. As a farewell to the Games, the final provided almost everything that could have been hoped for.
Friday, 3 August 2012
BADMINTON OLYMPIC 2012..LEE CHONG WEI MEETS LIN DAN IN FINAL
PRIDE COUNTRY AND PEOPLE OF MALAYSIA
Chong Wei meets Lin Dan in final
LONDON: Datuk Lee Chong Wei has ensured that Malaysia returns home with a medal after he stormed into the final of the men’s badminton singles with a convincing 21-13, 21-14 win over China’s Chen Long at the Wembley Arena.
He will meet China's Lin Dan on Sunday. The top Chinese shuttler easily beat South Korea's Lee Hyun Il 21-12, 21-10 in the other semi-final.
Chong Wei won the silver medal at the Beijing Olympics in 2008 when he lost in the final to Lin Dan.
Then Chong Wei was the world number one while the Chinese at number two. This time the role is reversed with the Chinese having taken over as the number one in June.
His silver in Beijing was the only medal won by Malaysia in the 2008 Games.
With the silver medal in the bag, Chong Wei said that his aim is the gold.
“I treated tonight’s match as my last and went all out. I did not want to play for the bronze.
“My performance was a surprise to me too as I was able to stay in control and the match strategy worked well.
“I want to go for the gold medal. I have nothing to lose and I do not feel there is much pressure on me. I had promised to make the final and I have delivered.
“To the Malaysians I make this promise – I will do my very best to win that gold. Nothing else matters,” he said.
Wednesday, 1 August 2012
BADMINTON OLYMPIC 2012 LEE CHONG WEI
LONDON: Lee Chong Wei stormed into the quarter-finals of the London Olympics men’s singles badminton event at the Wembley Arena on Wednesday with a much-improved performance against Simon Santoso of Indonesia.
The Malaysian did not show any signs of the ankle injury affecting him and wrapped up the last 16 match 21-12, 21-8 in 34 minutes.
Chong Wei will now meet India’s Kashyap Parupalli in the last eight. Kashyap defeated Sri Lankan Niluka Karunaratne 21-14, 15-21, 21-9 to book his quarter-finals berth.
Chong Wei has played the world No. 21 ranked Indian twice before - in the Denmark Open in 2011 and 2010 Commonwealth
Games - and won in straight sets both times.
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