无码中文字幕一Av王,91亚洲精品无码,日韩人妻有码精品专区,911亚洲精选国产青草衣衣衣

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Sports / Soccer

Five facts

(China Daily) Updated: 2014-08-13 07:28

Model European citizen

Born in Poland to a footballing father, Josef, and handball international mother, he was brought up in France till he was eight-years-old, his father played for Auxerre, then joined his footballing father in Germany where he had moved. Klose said in an interview in 2008 he did not wish to be known as either Polish or German but as European.

Ultras leave him cold

Klose was less than amused when at a Rome derby in 2011 between his present club Lazio and AS Roma the fascist section of fans who follow the former brandished a banner with his name on it and the insignia SS - the elite and fanatical military followers of Adolf Hitler. "Sport and politics are two separate entities. I also feel disgusted that my name should be associated on the same banner as the SS," he said.

Benediction from Pope

Klose, a devout Roman Catholic, achieved a dream of his to meet the Pope when he had a general audience with the now retired German Pope Benedict XVI in 2012 at the Vatican. They held a long conversation by the standards of such meetings with the Pope being Bavarian and Klose having played for Bayern Munich before moving to Lazio.

Poles advances rebuffed

Poland did try to convince him to play for the country of his birth when then Polish coach, Jerzy Engel, went to see him at his club, Kaiserslautern. However, Klose declined the offer. "I have a German passport and if things are still running this way I have a chance to play for Rudi Voeller (the then German coach)," he said.

Klose puts his hands up

Klose may look like he would kill his mother to get the ball over the line but in fact he made a rare sporting gesture with regard to a 'goal' he was awarded for Lazio against Napoli in September 2012. A scrappy effort saw the final touch come off the striker and he celebrate. However, such was the virulent reaction from the Napoli players to the referee giving the goal that the match official thought something was off and consulted his linesmen. They had seen nothing so, as a last resort, he asked Klose and the 'European' admitted the goal should not stand as it had gone in off his hand.

Agence France-Presse

(China Daily 08/13/2014 page24)

Most Popular
What's Hot
Highlights
Special
...