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CampNou(Catalanpronunciation: [kamˈnɔw], New Field, often referred to in English as The Nou Camp is a football stadium in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain which has been the home of Futbol Club Barcelona since 1957.
File:Campnou colors.jpgThe Camp Nou seats 99,786,reduced to 96,336 in matches organized by UEFA, making it the largest stadium in Europe and the 11th largest in the world in terms of capacity. It has hosted numerous international matches at a senior level, including two UEFA Champions League finals and the football competition at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
Camp Nou
Camp Nou aerial (cropped).jpg
Full name L'Estadi Camp Nou
Former names Estadio del FC Barcelona (1957–2000)
Built 1954–1957
Opened 24 September 1957[1]
Renovated 1995, 2008
Expanded 1982
Owner FC Barcelona
Operator FC Barcelona
Surface Grass
Scoreboard Yes
Architect Ardian Beqaj
Josep Soteras
Lorenzo García-Barbón
Capacity 93,053 (1957–1980)
121,749 (1980–1993)
115,000 (1993–1999)
98,772 (2005–2010)
99,354 (2010–2012)

99,786 (2012–)[2] (96,636 in UEFA Competitions)[1]
Executive suites 23
Record attendance 120,000 (Barcelona-Juventus, 5 March 1986)[3]
Field dimensions 105 m × 68 m (115 yd × 74 yd)[1]
Tenants
FC Barcelona (1957–present)
1992 Summer Olympics

Champions League - Drogba joins Galatasaray, targets Champions League

Galatasaray have signed Didier Drogba from Shanghai Shenhua, the club announced to the Turkish Stock Exchange.

Didier Drogba joins Galatasaray (Reuters) 

 

The former Chelsea striker, who had asked to leave the Chinese club after they failed to pay his reported £200,000 per week salary, has signed an 18-month contract with the Istanbul giants.
Galatasaray's statement to the stock exchange specified Drogba would earn 6 million euros for his season and a half at the club, a signing-on fee of 4m euros and 15,000 euros per match played.
The club added that the Turkish Football Federation had requested an international transfer certificate from the Chinese FA.
"The opportunity to play for this great club was an offer that I could not turn down," Drogba said.
"I am looking forward to playing in the Champions League again, against the best clubs in Europe," added the Ivory Coast captain, who scored the decisive penalty when Chelsea won last season's final.
LigTV, the official broadcaster of the Turkish league, had prematurely announced the deal just before the Galatasaray-Besiktas derby, but it appears an agreement in principle had already been struck.
It is the second massive deal for the Turkish giants this January with Wesley Sneijder having already signed from Inter Milan.
Drogba had been playing in China with Shanghai but his future there was plunged into doubt amid reports of unpaid wages.
He signed a two-and-a-half-year deal after leaving Chelsea last June, but the Shanghai-based Oriental Sports Daily said the 34-year-old was owed wages in the wake of a long-running equity row at the club.
Drogba applied for permission in November to leave Shanghai on loan before the January transfer window, but FIFA refused the request.
He then returned to Chelsea to train at his former club in a bid to stay sharp for the African Cup of Nations, where he is currently in action for the Ivory Coast.
At a time when leading players have been departing the country in their droves, the French domestic game could do with a lift right now.
Watching the ailing champions, Montpellier, struggle to victory on Saturday at home to Sochaux, in front of swathes of empty seats and on a pitch utterly destroyed by the winter weather, was not the answer.
But at a time like this it is worth remembering that a very credible challenger to Paris Saint-Germain is set to emerge in the summer. To find them you need to go 350 kilometres east from Montpellier along the Mediterranean coast and down into Ligue 2. Yet the club in question have in the recent past been one of Europe's most glamorous, and they are set to become so again.
Bottom of Ligue 2 at the end of 2011, AS Monaco have recovered since then thanks to the investment of Russian billionaire Dimitri Rybolovlev, a man worth $9.5 billion according to Forbes magazine. Just over a year on from his takeover, the club from the principality are joint top of the table and on course for a return to Ligue 1.
Like PSG, they were expected to run away with their league this season but, again like PSG, that has not happened. Instead, Claudio Ranieri's side trail leaders Nantes - another famous club looking to return to former glories - on goal difference.
Since being humiliatingly knocked out of the French Cup on penalties by third-tier Bourg-Peronnas at the start of December, Monaco have won just twice in six league games. On Saturday they needed an 89th-minute equaliser from Brazilian defender Adriano to draw 2-2 with Guingamp at the Stade Louis II.
Nevertheless, they are four points clear of third-placed Caen, and have not been lower than third all season. It would still be an almighty surprise if they failed to win promotion now.
Rybolovlev's investment makes the return to Ligue 1 of Monaco, who won the last of their seven league titles in 2000, an exciting prospect for neutrals, but their would-be rivals do not necessarily agree. A PSG mk II, if you will, is a threat to the Lyons and Marseilles of this world, especially when there are only two automatic Champions League places on offer in Ligue 1.
Norwegian Tor-Kristian Karlsen, who recently left his post as executive director general, told L'Equipe earlier this season that Monaco "do not consider PSG to be a model for our development. At Monaco we form young players."
It is true that they might not be buying the likes of Zlatan Ibrahimovic, but they still spent 11 million euros on 18-year-old Argentine Lucas Ocampos from River Plate in the summer. He is "one of the best young players in the world," in the eyes of coach Claudio Ranieri, despite only scoring his first league goal for the club earlier this month.
Ranieri has spoken with excitement of the "very ambitious" project at the club, but there are doubts as to whether he will be kept on, whether he wins promotion or not. Indeed, there have even been rumours that Jose Mourinho - whose Porto side did of course beat Monaco in the 2004 Champions League final - could be approached. It seems unlikely, but then the quality of life and money on offer might be tempting.
And that financial power is a source of major concern for the clubs currently in Ligue 1. As Francois Hollande's socialist government seeks to push through legislation that would tax earnings over 1m euros at 75 per cent, the fear is that it will become impossible to compete with Rybolovlev's Monaco.
Independent Monaco is a tax haven, a status that already, in theory, gives the football club an advantage when it comes to signing players. Being exempt from the 75 per cent tax rule would make that advantage far greater.
Many of their rivals have demanded that AS Monaco agree to adhere to the same, French, tax system. "When you take part in a game, the rules need to be more or less the same for everyone," Marseille president Vincent Labrune told L'Equipe.
Ibrahimovic's 14m yearly net salary will in real terms cost PSG a great deal more than that, but the same contract would not cost Monaco much more than the net sum. It is an almighty imbalance, and is at the core of their rivals' concerns. But Ligue 1 still needs Monaco, and they can't come back soon enough.
Andrew Scott

Serie A - Rivals condemn Juventus ref rant

Leaders Juventus left a sour taste among their Serie A rivals after furiously criticising a referee who failed to award them a penalty at the weekend.

2013, Conte, Guida, Juventus-Genoa, Ap/LaPresse

AC Milan coach Massimiliano Allegri said that without faith in the referees it would be better to stop playing and Napoli goalkeeper Morgan Di Sanctis also hit out at Juve.
"If you don't believe in the good faith of the referees...it's better to stop," Allegri told Italian media.
Juve were held 1-1 at home by lowly Genoa on Saturday and believed they should have been given a penalty in stoppage time when Andreas Granqvist kicked the ball on to his hand.
Coach Antonio Conte, whose side are three points clear of second-placed Napoli, was livid and said referee Marco Guida told him he "was not ready" to award the penalty.
"I accept being told 'we made a mistake and we're sorry' but I can't accept being told 'I don't feel like I could give it'," explained Conte.
"If the assistant and the fourth official both say it was a penalty then the referee can't say 'I wasn't able to give it'. That isn't football," he said before adding the incident was "shameful".
The most controversial remark came from Juventus sporting director Giuseppe Marotta who made a reference to the fact Guida comes from the Naples region.
"In the 94th minute a referee from the Naples region found himself in a difficult situation," said Marotta.
That comment was badly received especially as it was far from clear whether Granqvist's handball was intentional.
Genoa president Enrico Preziosi described Conte's reaction as "arrogance" and demanded action.
Di Sanctis also said Juve's comments should be investigated.
"All the gossip by the Juventus team, in my opinion, should be analysed in great detail and I hope those responsible will do so," said Di Sanctis.
Napoli coach Walter Mazzarri, whose team won 2-1 at Parma on Sunday, preferred to stay out of the row.
"I am not interested in talking about this," he said. "Once it (the season) is over I will express my opinion."

Serie A - Nocerino denies exit reports

Milan midfielder Antonio Nocerino has dismissed suggestions that he could sign for Napoli.

Antonio Nocerino Torino Milan 2012 AFP

It is reported Milan could consider a swap deal for Napoli's Switzerland international Blerim Dzemaili, formerly of Bolton Wanderers.
However, Nocerino says there is little prospect of a January transfer.
“I’m happy at Milan,” he said. “Then, if the club decide to put me on the market, we’ll sit down and discuss it together.
“I don’t think that I’ll be leaving in January. At the end of the season we’ll evaluate what I’ve done well and badly.”
Nocerino joined Milan at the start of the 2011-12 season from Palermo and has scored 13 goals in 68 appearances for the Rossoneri.

 

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