Suwon - Recent posts
Viewing all posts which authors have tagged ‘Suwon’.
You can also subscribe to this tag's feed.
Note: There is a print link embedded within this post, please visit this post to print it. |
Subscribe: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
In this week's review section, minnows on the brink, how to reach a final and not make friends,
and Leeds humbled at home. You can listen to these and other stories on our weekly podcast and can
find explanations of key vocabulary in bold below, or highlighted in blue.
Note: There is a print link embedded within this post, please visit this post to print it. |
Subscribe: Predictions
On this week's predictions languagecaster focuses on games from Italy and England, including two
London derbies.We also take a look at the Asian Champions League and the European version, too.
The Asian Champions League doesn't get much pub this side of, well, Asia, especially not when
playing on the same day as the European Champions League. A quick way to rectify this injustice is
to start a massive brawl in a regional semifinal. The genesis is as ludicrous as the concept
itself:
With two players down in the box (for genuine reasons), one for each side, Suwon was attacking
the Al-Sadd goal.
It has been a topsy-turvy season in the K-League so far. Asian champions Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma have
been kept off the bottom of the standings only thanks to the dreadful form of Gangwon FC. Suwon
Bluewings find themselves in one of their annual slumps in form while champions FC Seoul have
improved since earlier in the season but still can't quite break free of the middle level.
Postado em 7/6/2011 s 12:02 por Equipe Trivela.com
No sorteio das quartas de final da Liga dos Campeões da Ásia, realizado nesta terça-feira,
destaque para o confronto entre o Jeonbuk Motors, da Coreia do Sul, e o Cerezo Osaka, do
Japão.
O Jeonbuk eliminou o Tianjin Teda, da China, nas oitavas de final com uma vitória por 3 a 0,
enquanto o Cerezo Osaka, do técnico brasileiro Levir Culpi, superou o rival Gamba Osaka, vencendo
por 1 a 0.
This has got legs Ji-Sung Park has revealed the secret behind his boundless energy: frog juice. The
Manchester United midfielder's father trekked from their home in Suwon to Go-heung county to buy
frogs for one of the world's least-appealing protein drinks. Park and his dad were concerned that
his slight frame could stop his footballing [.