Saturday, August 16, 2008

Tomasz Kuszczak, Goalkeeper For MU

Tomasz Kuszczak, Goalkeeper For Manchester United Players

Tomasz Kuszczak, Goalkeeper For Manchester United Players

Birthdate: 20 Mar 1982
Birthplace: Krosno Odrzanskie
Position: Goalkeeper
Appearances: 29
Goals: 0
Joined United: 10 Aug 2006
United Debut: 17 Sep 2006 v Arsenal (H)
International Poland

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Friday, August 15, 2008

Edwin Van der Sar - Goalkeeper for Manchester United

Edwin Van der Sar, Goalkeeper for Manchester United

Edwin Van der Sar, Goalkeeper for Manchester United
Birthdate: 29 Oct 1970
Birthplace: Voorhout, Holland
Position: Goalkeeper
Appearances: 144
Goals: 0
Joined United: 01 Jun 2005
United Debut: 09 Aug 2005 v Debreceni VSC (H)
International Holland

image from:
http://www.manutd.com/

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Manchester United Team - FC

Manchester United Team
Manchester United FC Team Season 2007-2008

Manchester United FC Team 2006-2007Manchester United FC Team Season 2006-2007

Manchester United Team 2004-2005

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Manchester United The Album

1. Manchester United - Glory Glory Man Utd (Fight Song) ver 1 (2:30)
2. Manchester United - Song For The Champions (3:44)
3. Manchester United - We’re Gonna Do It Again (3:30)
4. United We Love You - Manchester United (3:14)
5. Manchester United - Come On You Reds (3:26)
6. Manchester United - United Calypso 98 (2:29)
7. Manchester United - Ruud van Nistelrooy (3:52)
8. Manchester United - Lift It High (4:05)
9. Manchester United - Manchester United Vs Frankee F.U.R.B (Hilarious remix) Skit Chelsea - Liverpool - Arsenal (Dirty) (3:46)
10. Manchester United - Glory Glory Man Utd (Fight Song) ver 2 (2:27)

DOWNLOAD MANCHESTER UNITED ALBUM

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Thursday, August 14, 2008

MU - Manchester United Players

Manchester United Players
This is a list of notable footballers who played for Manchester United FC and / or Newton Heath Football Club In general, this means that players have made 100 appearances or more (including appearances as a substitute) in the first class matches for the club. However, some players who have played fewer matches but have made significant contributions to the history of the club are also included (for example, Liam Whelan).


For a list of all the players from Manchester United, major or minor, with a Wikipedia article, see Category: Manchester United FC players. For the current Manchester United first team squad, see the first team squad section of Manchester United FC article.

The players are classified according to the date of their first team debut for the club. Apparitions and objectives are the first team competitive matches only; matches in wartime are excluded.

Read More List of Manchester United Players
from : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Manchester_United_F.C._players

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MANCHESTER UNITED SONGS - ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACKS

MANCHESTER UNITED SONGS

MANCHESTER UNITED SONGS - ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACKS
FREE DOWNLOAD SONGS-MUSIC

1. WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS
tribute to united's champions league triumph in 1999
http://rapidshare.com/files/48697163/we_are_champions_ec_version_1999.rar

2. GLORY GLORY UNITED
http://rapidshare.com/files/48696903/glorygloryunited.rar

3. WE ARE MANCHESTER UNITED
http://rapidshare.com/files/48710643/WE_ARE_MANCHESTER_UNITED.rar

4. THE RED TRIBES
http://rapidshare.com/files/48854347/MANUTD-THE_RED_TRIBES.rar

5. COME ON YOU REDS
http://rapidshare.com/files/62229435/manchester_united_-_come_on_you_reds.rar

6. WE ALL FOLLOW MANCHESTER UNITED
http://rapidshare.com/files/62230615/We_all_follow_Manchester_United.rar

7. LOVE UNITED
http://rapidshare.com/files/62237940/Manchester_United___Love_United.rar

8. MANUTD vs FRANKEE-HILARIOUS REMIX
http://rapidshare.com/files/62230188/Manchester_United_Vs_Frankee_F.U.R.B.Hillarious_remix.rar

9. RYAN GIGGS WE LOVE YOU
http://rapidshare.com/files/62687885/_Ryan_Giggs_We_Love_You.rar

10. OHH AHH CANTONA
http://rapidshare.com/files/62688302/Ooh_ahh_cantona.rar

11. CANTONA CANTONA No.7 SHOOTING STAR
http://rapidshare.com/files/62688682/Cantona_Cantona_No_7_Shooting_Star.rar

12. DRY YOUR EYES BECKS
http://rapidshare.com/files/62689614/Dry_Your_Eyes_Becks.rar

13. LIFT IT HIGH
http://rapidshare.com/files/62690149/lift_it_high.rar

14. CALYPSO
http://rapidshare.com/files/62690641/Calypso.rar

15. RED RESPECT
http://rapidshare.com/files/62691454/Red_respect.rar

16. GLAZERS GONNA DIE
http://rapidshare.com/files/62691672/Glazers_Gonna_Die.rar

17. CHAMPIONES
http://rapidshare.com/files/62692298/championes.rar

18. DAVID BECKHAM
http://rapidshare.com/files/62696885/David_Beckham.rar

19. THERE'S ONLY ONE UNITED
http://rapidshare.com/files/62697862/There_s_Only_One_United.rar

20. MOVE MOVE MOVE
http://rapidshare.com/files/62698890/Move_Move_Move.rar

21. MANCHESTER UNITED REMIX
http://rapidshare.com/files/62869929/Manchester_United_Remix.rar

22. UNITED WE LOVE YOU
http://rapidshare.com/files/62870236/United_We_Love_You.rar

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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Manchester United Football Club - FC

Manchester United Football ClubManchester United Football Club is an English football club, based at Old Trafford stadium in Trafford, Greater Manchester, and is without doubt the most popular football club in the world, [2] with more than 330 million fans from around the world [ 3] [4] - nearly 5% of the world's population. [5] The club was a founding member of the Premier League in 1992 and has played in the top division of English football since 1938, with the exception of the 1974-75 season. Average attendance at the club have been higher than any other team in English football for all but six seasons since 1964-65. [6]


The club is the second most successful in the history of English football and by far the most successful of recent times, after winning 20 major honours since the beginning of Alex Ferguson's reign as manager in November 1986. [7] They are Premier League champions reign, and England have won the top division 17 times, one short of Liverpool's record 18 league titles. In 1968, they became the first English club to win the Cup in Europe, beating SL Benfica 4-1. They won a second European Cup as part of an unprecedented treble in 1999, before winning their third in 2008, 40 years, almost to the day after their first. The club also holds the record for most FA Cup with 11 titles. [8]

Since the late 1990, the club was one of the richest in the world with the highest income of any football club, [9] and is currently ranked as the richest and most valuable football club, with a value of £ 897 million (€ 1,333 million / $ 1.8 billion) from May 2008. [10] Manchester United was a founding member of the defunct G-14 group of Europe on the first football clubs and its replacement, the Association of European clubs.

Sir Alex Ferguson was manager of the club since November 6, 1986. The current club captain is Gary Neville, who succeeded Roy Keane in November 2005.

Content from :
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manchester_United_F.C.

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Manchester United F.C. Managers

Manchester United ManagersList of Manchester United F.C. managers


The following is a list of managers of Manchester United Football Club and their major honours from the beginning of the club's official managerial records in 1892 to the present day. As of the start of the 2007–08 season, Manchester United have had 18 full-time managers.

The most successful person to manage Manchester United, to date, is Sir Alex Ferguson, who has so far won ten Premier League titles, five FA Cups, two League Cups, eight Community Shields, two UEFA Champions League titles, one UEFA Super Cup, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and one Intercontinental Cup in his 21-year reign as manager. The club's longest-serving manager is Sir Matt Busby, who had two spells managing the club from 1945 to 1969 and from 1970 to 1971, totalling 24 years, 338 days.

Managerial history

From 1878 to 1914, the team was selected by a committee whose secretary had the same powers and role as a manager has today. There were four secretaries during this period, A. H. Albut, James West, J. Ernest Mangnall and John Bentley.

Ernest Mangnall was the first man to bring any major silverware to the club, winning the club's first ever Football League Championship in 1908. This was followed by the FA Cup the following season, and another league title in 1911. Despite this success, though, he left the club a year later to join local rivals Manchester City. John Bentley took over as club secretary, but was replaced two years later by Jack Robson, who became the club's first full-time manager. He remained in the post for seven years, but resigned in December 1921 after succumbing to a bout of pneumonia.[1]

Robson was followed soon after by John Chapman. However, in Chapman's first season at the club, they were relegated to the Second Division for the first time since 1906. Three years in the Second Division followed, before promotion back to the First Division. After guiding the club to 9th place in the league and the FA Cup semi-finals in 1925–26, Chapman received a telegram from the Football Association on 8 October 1926 informing him of his suspension from management for the rest of the season; no reason was given.[2] Half-back Lal Hilditch took over for the remainder of the season, before Herbert Bamlett took permanent control.

Bamlett was manager for four years, but was unable to muster any success, the club's highest position during his reign being 12th.[3] The club was relegated to the Second Division again in 1931, and Bamlett was replaced by club secretary Walter Crickmer. This was Crickmer's first of two spells as manager of the club, retaining his position as secretary all the while. It lasted only a season, though, as he failed to return the club to the First Division. In June 1932, Scott Duncan was appointed as manager, but in his second season in charge he led the club to what remains a club record lowest League position; 20th in the Second Division. The club held faith in Duncan though, and he managed to get the club back into the First Division by 1936. However, the club was relegated again the following year, and Walter Crickmer resumed control until the end of the Second World War.

Before the end of the war, the club approached Matt Busby, who had just turned down the opportunity to join the coaching staff at Liverpool, on the grounds that he wanted more responsibility over the playing side of the club than merely the selection of the team.[3] United allowed Busby the responsibilities he requested, and in his first five seasons in charge he guided the team to four second-place finishes in the league, before finally winning his first title in 1952. He soon set about replacing many of the more experienced players with a group of youths who came to be known as the "Busby Babes". This team went on to win two league titles in 1955–56 and 1956–57, as well as reaching two FA Cup finals. Unfortunately, the careers of many of the players were cut short by the Munich air disaster, which also left Busby fighting for his life.[4]

While Busby was in hospital recovering from the injuries he sustained in the air crash, his managerial duties were left to his assistant, Jimmy Murphy. After Busby recovered, he set about rebuilding his side, and within five years, in 1963, he had won the FA Cup for the first time in 15 years. This was followed up by two league titles in three years, and then the greatest prize in European club football, the European Cup. He continued as manager for one more year after this success, leaving his managerial duties to club trainer Wilf McGuinness. McGuinness struggled in his new post, however, and Busby was convinced to return for the second half of the 1970–71 season.[4] However, he retired from football permanently that summer, and was succeeded that summer by Frank O'Farrell. O'Farrell's stay was short-lived, though, as his inability to control George Best's extravagances forced the board to sack him with three years still to run on his contract.[5]

O'Farrell's replacement was to be Scotland's newly-appointed coach, Tommy Docherty. Docherty left the Scotland job after only a month in charge, and his first task at United was to keep the club in the top flight. He managed it once, but he was unable to pull it off again and the club was relegated in 1973–74. They bounced straight back up the following season, though, and in their first season back in the top flight, the team cruised to a third place finish and yet another FA Cup final. The next year, they went one better, beating Liverpool in the final to claim his first and only trophy at Old Trafford. It was soon discovered, however, that Docherty was having an affair with the wife of the club's physiotherapist, and he was immediately fired,[6] replaced by Queens Park Rangers' manager Dave Sexton.

Sexton remained in the United job for four years, but was unable to produce any silverware, and was replaced in 1981 by Ron Atkinson. Atkinson was able to rekindle the club's cup success, leading his side to two FA Cups in his five year tenure. He also oversaw a series of respectable finishes in the league, but after his disastrous start to the 1986–87 season, he was sacked.[7] His replacement, Alex Ferguson, had, in recent years, become the first manager to break the dominance of Rangers and Celtic in the Scottish league for over 15 years, winning the Scottish First Division title with Aberdeen three times in six years, as well as finishing as runner-up twice.

Since his appointment, Ferguson has been credited with the distinction of making some of the most shrewd purchases in the club's history, including the signings of Peter Schmeichel and Eric Cantona, each for less than £1.5m.[8] With these signings, combined with the club's many experienced players, Ferguson brought the league title back to Old Trafford for the first time in 26 years. In the following decade, he won the Premier League title another six times, including a hat-trick of titles from 1999 to 2001, a feat that no other manager has yet achieved with the same club.[9] In 1999, he also led the club to an unprecedented Treble of Premier League, FA Cup and UEFA Champions League. Since then, he has added another three league titles to his trophy haul, despite a number of promises of retirement.[10] Ferguson won his tenth Premier League title in the 2007–08 season, and followed this up with his second Champions League title ten days later.

Content from:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Manchester_United_F.C._managers

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2004-2005: The Glazer takeover ManUtd

Manchester United Team 2004-20052004-2005: Malcolm Glazer-The Glazer takeover of Manchester United

In 2004-05, Manchester United finished third in the Premiership for the third time in four seasons. They were knocked out of the Champions League by AC Milan in the second round and the League Cup by Chelsea in the semifinal, and lost the FA Cup to Arsenal on May 21st. Although they had spent a considerable amount on players in the preceding seasons, many of them were disappointing, such as Juan Sebastián Verón, Kleberson, Diego Forlan, Eric Djemba-Djemba and Mark Bosnich. There were also those who criticised the sale of David Beckham to Real Madrid.

In late 2004, the American businessman Malcolm Glazer made a bid to take over the club. The bid was extremely controversial due to his plan to borrow large amounts of money to buy the club and then transfer the debt onto the club itself. United supporters made several anti-Glazer demonstrations before matches and the supporters' organisations Shareholders United and IMUSA encouraged supporters to buy shares in the club to prevent a takeover, but these attempts were unsuccessful and Glazer acquired control of the club on 12 May 2005. Supporters demonstrated outside the ground that evening and again when the Glazers first visited the stadium.

Under the shadow of this controversy, United went to the Millennium Stadium to defend the FA Cup amid threats of protests and possible crowd trouble. Throughout the game, United dominated the match but lost after the penalty shootout. This capped off a disappointing season where they finished third in the league, far behind the champions, Chelsea. Many supporters refused to renew their season tickets in protest at the Glazer takeover, and some formed a new club, F.C. United of Manchester, to watch instead.

content from :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Manchester_United_F.C._(1999-present)

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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Manchester United - ManUtd Logo

Manchester UnitedManchester United - ManUtd - MU default Logo Team Wallapaper

MANCHESTER UNITEDManchester United - ManUtd - MU Logo Team with background

MANCHESTER UNITED WALLPAPERManchester United - ManUtd - MU default Logo Team with black background

Manchester United LogoManchester United - ManUtd - MU default Logo Team with red bakground wallpaper


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Monday, August 11, 2008

Sitemap Manchester United - MU Players Blog

August

Manchester United Team - FC
Manchester United The Album
MU - Manchester United Players
MANCHESTER UNITED SONGS - ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACKS
Manchester United Football Club - FC
Manchester United Managers
The Glazer takeover manutd
Manchester United Logo

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