- Scherrer Maxwell Cabelino Andrade 35, commonly known as Maxwell, is a Brazilian professional footballer who currently plays as a left-back for French Ligue 1 club Paris Saint-Germain.
- He is a left footed product of the Dutch school of football (he joined Ajax at age 19), and can play in any position on the left wing having played at full back, left midfield and as a wide striker.
- Asked who his footballing hero was, Maxwell said: “I always wanted to be Romario. Everything he did on the pitch I would always do at home after.” He later met Romario in Rio de Janeiro and immediately asked for his autograph.
- His older brother Gustavo died at age 24 from a car accident in 2002, an event which profoundly affected him. He has a tattoo on his arm in honor his memory. Speaking about his death, Maxwell once said: “The loss of my brother in this life is all relative. For him, I would like to be as strong as possible and to win prizes. That thought gives me strength. He is always with me, that I feel.”
- Maxwell who is a Baptist admits to being a religious person: ” I like going to church. Faith is very important for me. I also read the Bible, that is my favorite book.”
- His favorite free time activity includes fishing, a hobby he shares with close friend and former team mate Zlatan Ibrahimovic.
- He suffered his worst injury on April 21, 2005 during Ajax’ Amstel Cup semi-finals against Willem II. Maxwell avoided a tackle by jumping but landed awkwardly twisting his right knee. He tore a cruciate ligament and was out of the team for 8 months. This game would become his last for Ajax as he would be sold to Inter the following year.
- He has won every available club trophy in his career.
- He is the most decorated active footballer in the world, having won 36 trophies in his career.
- Maxwell is known to be Zlatan Ibrahimović’s closest friend and Bromance mate they were teammates at Ajax, Internazionale Milan, Barcelona and PSG. There are several anecdotes about him in Ibrahimović’s autobiography, I am Zlatan.
April 11, 2017
Argentina have sacked Edgardo Bauza after eight matches as coach, with the team facing an uphill for automatic qualifying places for next year’s World Cup.
La Albiceleste are currently fifth in the 10-team South American qualifying group, with only the top four assured of qualifying for the tournament in Russia.
Finishing fifth would mean a play-off against a team from Oceania.
Bauza, was appointed in August and guided his side to three wins, two draws and three defeats.
AFA president Claudio Tapia said “We’ve told Bauza he’s ceased to be the national team coach,”
“The national team is playing badly and everyone knows it.”
Bauza’s final match was a 2-0 defeat to Bolivia, which came about 5 hours after captain Lionel Messi was given a four-match ban for verbally abusing an official.
Argentina have four games left in qualifying, with their next match against third-placed Uruguay on 31 August.
Last time Argentina failed to qualify for a World Cup was in 1970.
A shambolic display from the gunners on Monday football night gave Crystal palace their 5th win in 6 games. An unchanged XI from an arsenal side that beat West Ham last week fell to the sword last night at Selhurst park.
Amid all the controversies surrounding the club and with just 7 points in their last games Arsenal cut an aimless and devoid of guile performance in the London derby, an overwhelming Crystal Palace performance full of purpose and controlled aggression was enough to hand maximum points to the Eagles. Goals from Andros Townsend, Yohan Cabaye and Luka Milivojevic’s penalty kick; Arsenal was both bullied and outplayed by a team that before the game were only three points above the relegation zone.
Crystal Palace took the lead after 18 minutes, when a large gap opened up on the left side of the Arsenal defence. Yohan Cabaye slipped a neat pass to Wilfried Zaha, despite slipping in the process, still found a way to square for Townsend to score.
After that, the game was characterised by intermittent Arsenal attacks that threatened, but Palace always seemed to have a defender there to get in the way of the final pass. Danny Welbeck and Alexis Sanchez both went close with efforts from either side of the penalty area; the home defence looked open at times, but Sakho made some crucial interventions, continuing the fine form he has displayed since joining Palace on loan from Liverpool in January.
At the other end, the Palace forward line was sharp, hungry and always threatening, helped partly by an accommodating visiting defence, but broadly because Zaha, Christian Benteke and Townsend were effectual.
Palace started the second half on top 1-0 and had the ball in the net after five minutes, when Benteke pushed home a rebound in the 6-yard box but was flagged offside.
Arsenal tried to find their way back into the game, but even after Wenger made an uncharacteristically early change, bringing on Olivier Giroud and Aaron Ramsey before the hour mark, Palace doubled their lead about 20 minutes into the second half. Again it was Townsend and Zaha who combined, with the latter firing in a low cross from which Cabaye looped an inventive finish inexperienced Arsenal goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez.
Five minutes later, it was 3-0. Referee Michael Oliver pointed to the penalty spot without hesitation when Townsend went down in the area as Martinez and Hector Bellerin challenged. While replays suggested the Palace man dived, from the referee’s angle it looked like a clear penalty. Milivojevic fired home from 12 yards, and Wenger looked on with a sorry face.
Goals by Andros Townsend, Yohan Cabaye and Luka Milivojevic were followed by furious chants from Gooners on the terraces that the players aren’t “fit to wear the shirt.”
After the game captain for the night Theo Walcott faced the Sky Sports cameras spoke about his assertions on the game.
“The biggest thing would be letting the fans down tonight,” the 28-year-old told Geoff Shreeves.
“We all did. That’s not Arsenal at all. I thought we’d bounced back well against Man City and West Ham at home but tonight wasn’t us at all.
“We’re very disappointed in the dressing room, as the fans are as well because we’ve let them down tonight. We need to respond. That’s only going to come from hard work that we take into Monday [against Middlesbrough].
“Everyone is entitled to their opinion. We don’t have a problem with that. We want to try and do a job. We don’t go out there to lose games. We try the best we can but tonight it just didn’t happen. Like I said, all we can do is apologise.
“They just wanted it more. You could tell. You could sense that from the kick off. It was an uphill battle towards the end there. Like I said before this isn’t Arsenal at this moment in time.
“We thought we’d got out of this little patch, hopefully we’ve not fallen straight back into it. Judging by that performance tonight it looks like we have.”