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karolinevassalor · 2 months
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read-alert · 1 month
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Figured that now that I've got a bookblr, I should make a post about the Read the World Challenge I'm doing! I'm reading a book primarily set in every country, doing my best to focus on authors from said country, though I will read diaspora authors if that's not feasible. Also some of the books from early on were from diaspora authors because I was pulling from books I had already read; I'll likely read more books from those countries in the future if I can. I've got 52 countries so far, and I'll list the titles and countries under the cut
USA- Kindred by Octavia Butler- 5⭐️
Canada- The Marrow Thieves by Cherie Dimaline- 5⭐️
Trinidad and Tobago- The Lesson by Cadwell Turnbull- 3⭐️
Brazil- Where We Go From Here by Lucas Rocha trans by Larissa Helena- 5⭐️
Argentina- Tender is the Flesh by Augustina Bazterrica trans by Sarah Moses- 5⭐️
South Africa- The Prey of Gods by Nicky Drayden- 3⭐️
Nigeria- Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor- 4⭐️
Liberia- Dream Country by Shannon Gibney 5⭐️
France- Romance in Marseilles by Claude McKay- 2⭐️
UK- Watership Down by Richard Adams- 5⭐️
Ireland- Big Girl, Small Town by Michelle Gallen- 4⭐️
Qatar- Love from A to Z by SK Ali- 4⭐️
Iran- Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram- 4⭐️
China- The Three Body Problem by Cixin Liu trans by Ken Liu- 5⭐️
Taiwan- Loveboat, Taipei by Abigail Hing Wen- 4⭐️
Japan- Confessions by Kanae Minato trans by Stephen Snyder- 3.5⭐️
Norway- Survival Kit by AH Haga- 4.5⭐️
Germany- The Book Thief by Markus Zusak- 4.5⭐️
India- The Henna Artist by Alka Joshi- 4⭐️
South Korea- The Mermaid from Jeju by Sumi Hahn- 4⭐️
Columbia- One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez trans by Gregory Rabassa- 4⭐️
Ghana- Wife of the Gods by Kwei Quartey- 4⭐️
Turkey- 10 Minutes and 38 Seconds in This Strange World by Elif Shafak- 4⭐️
Russia- Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy trans by Louise Maude- 4⭐️
Sierra Leone- The Memory of Love by Aminatta Forna- 4⭐️
Austria- The Wall by Marlen Haushofer trans by Shaun Whiteside- 5⭐️
Zimbabwe- Nervous Conditions by Tsiti Dangarembga- 5⭐️
Venezuela- It Would Be Night in Caracas by Karina Sainz Borgo trans by Elizabeth Bryer- 4⭐️
Chile- The House of Spirits by Isabel Allende trans by Magda Bogin- 5⭐️
Sri Lanka- Funny Boy by Shyam Selvadurai- 4⭐️
Singapore- How We Dissappeared by Jing-Jing Lee- 4.5⭐️
Malaysia- Queen of the Tiles by Hanna Alkaf- 3.5⭐️
Egypt- A Master of Djinn by P Djèlí Clark- 4.5⭐️
Sudan- Ghost Season by Fatin Abbas- 4.5⭐️
Antigua and Barbuda- At the Bottom of the River by Jamaica Kincaid- 4⭐️
Ukraine- The Lost Year by Katherine Marsh- 5⭐️
Bahamas- Learning to Breathe by Janice Lynn Mather- 4⭐️
Cuba- The Black Cathedral by Marcial Gala trans by Anna Kushner- 4⭐️
Dominica- The Autobiography of My Mother by Jamaica Kincaid- 3⭐️
Bangladesh- Djinn City by Saad Z Hossain- 4⭐️
Mexico- Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia- 4⭐️
Jamaica- Here Comes the Sun by Nicole Dennis-Benn- 4⭐️
Vietnam- Dust Child by Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai- 4.5⭐️
Australia- Too Much Lip by Melissa Lucashenko- 4⭐️
Israel- Against the Loveless World by Susan Abulhawa- 4.5⭐️
Palestine- Mornings in Jenin by Susan Abulhawa- 5⭐️
Costa Rica- Where There Was Fire by John Manuel Arias- 4.5⭐️
Uruguay- Cantoras by Carolina De Robertis- 5⭐️
Dominican Republic- Tentacle by Rita Indiana trans by Achy Obejas- 2.5⭐️
Republic of the Congo- Broken Glass by Alain Mabanckou trans by Helen Stevenson- 2⭐️
Czech Republic- The Spaceman of Bohemia by Jaroslav Kalfař- 2.5⭐️
Honduras- Turtles of the Midnight Moon by María José Fitzgerald- 4.5⭐️
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regkerlon · 2 years
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Mermaid hand mirror
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Assona Iniguez de Navarre Musa ibn Fortun 0717 Fortun ibn Qasi 0725 Aisha bint Abdul 0690 Cassius Abd-al- Aziz ibn Musa ~0695 Egilon de Visigoths 0660 - 0718 Musa Ben Nuseir 58 58 Conqueror of Spaindied in prison in DamascusNote: Al-Walid ibn Abd al-Malik, Caliph of Damascus (705-715), fearing Musa's military success and popularity, recalled Musa to Damascus, where Musa died in prison three years later. In some places, De Castro appears to have this Diego Lainez confused with the brother of his ancestor Fernan Lainez, who bears the same name. Mugawwan ibn Nahur Nahur ibn Yarub Yarub ibn Yashjub Yashjub ibn Nabet Nabet ibn Ishmael Amra Sasaa 0575 Alkama al- Kinaniyya 0602 Mu'Awiya Ben-Al- Mughira ~0820 - 0908 Fortun Garces 88 /1060 - 1115 Jimena Diaz ~0815 Aria Munia 0772 - 0816 Sancho de Gascony 44 44 ~0775 de Aragon ~0681 Loup de Gascony ~0734 Numabela de Cantabria ~0750 - ~0839 Aznar Galindez 89 89 Loup ibn Musa Ayab al- Bulatya Musa ibn Musa Father of "El Cid". Rodrigo Diaz "El Cid" de Vivar, leading the army of Al-Mutamin of Zaragoza, defeats a combined army of the kings of Valencia (Al-Mundhir), Lerida (Al-Hayib), Aragon (Sancho Ramirez) and the Count of Barcelona (Berenguer Ramon II - who is captured).1084The Muslim army of Zaragoza under El Cid defeats the Aragonese. Rodrigo Diaz, defeats the Emir Abd Allah of Granada, who was helped by the Castilian Count Garcia Ordonez.1082Battle of Almenar (Menendez, 1934). Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar manages to encourage both King and army, and leads them in a new attack the following morning.1079Battle of Cabra. The battle starts at dawn and after a hard fight the Castilians are driven from the field. Sancho II of Castile defeats his brother, Alfonso VI of Leon over the Carrion River (9 miles south of the city of Santa maria de Carrion - the capital of the Beni-Gomez - Christian counts of Saldana, Liebana, Carrion, and Zamora). The Castilians under Sancho II and Rodriego Diaz defeat the Leonese and Alfonso flees.1072Battle of Golpejera (early Jan) (Menendez, 1934). The siege is lifted after Emir Al-Muqtadir pays a large ransom and promises tribute.1068The Battle of Llantada was arranged to be fought on 19 July by the banks of the Pisuerga River on the boundary between Leon and Castile (Menendez, 1934). The opposing armies meet and after a protracted struggle Ramiro I is killed and the Aragonese flee (8 May).1067The Castilian army under Sancho II and the Alferez Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar - already known as "El Cid" by this time - besiege Zaragoza (Menendez, 1934). Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar (later known as "El Cid") is probably in the Castilian contingent. The Emir Al-Muktadir of Zaragoza leads his army north accompanied by a Castilian contingent under Prince Sancho (the future Sancho II). During the spring Ramiro I of Aragon besieges Muslim Graus in Zaragozan territory. After taking Valencia in 1094, he passed into legend as "El Cid", interestingly an Arabic title, Sid, "lord, master."1063Battle of Graus (Menendez, 1934). Rodrigo came to fall out of favor and in 1081 became a mercenary, fighting for both Christians and Moslems. Udad ibn Mugawwan 1049 - 1099 Rodrigo Diez de Vivar 50 50 When Alfonso, deposed by his brother, Sancho II of Castile, returned to power in Castile as well Leon, he took on many of Sancho's retainers, including one Rodrigo Diaz (d. "Beyond `Adnan none but the Lord knows and thegenealogists lie". ABT 2643 BC Sekhemkhet (3rd Dynasty - abt 2649-43 BC) ~1020 Sancho Fortun de Maranon sn de Maranon ABT 0610/0620 - >0716 Theodo von Bayern ~0602 Gleisnod b? Salzburg, Austria ~0002 Ilyas ibn Mudar Abt 0002 BC/0010 AD Layla bani Khindif Codhaite 0031 BC Mudar ibn Nizar 0040 BC Al- Hanfa al Riyab Nizar ibn Ma'add Ma'add ibn Adnan Adnan ibn Udad Note: Muhammad the Prophet never traced his ancestors farther than`Adnan, anddeclared that all who went back further were guilty offabrication andfalsehood. ABT 2637 BC Khaba # NSFX: (3rd Dynasty - abt 2643-37 BC) D. ? Raqashi al- Naqimiya Bakr 0335 Murra ibn Ka'b Hind 0305 Kab ibn Luayy ~0320 Makhshiya Lu'ayy ibn Ghalib ~0280 Mawiya Ghalib ibn Fihr ABT 0225/0240 Atika Salma binte-Umro- bin-Rabia ~1010 - 1054 Garcia Sanchez 44 44 King of Pamplona ~0215 Fihr ibn Malik ~0215 Layla 17622 bint Adwan 0948 Foucher de Chartres Qays al-Nadr ibn Kinama Ikrisha bint Adwan ~0662 - 0725 Tassilo von Bayern 63 63 ~0930 Hughes de Chartres D. see for information on how tocorrectly configure a web server for svg files. PLEASE NOTE: If you do not see a GRAPHIC IMAGE of a family tree here but are seeing this textinstead then it is most probably because the web server is not correctly configured to serve svgpages correctly.
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byalung · 6 years
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3rd golden years of PH cinema ('70s)
3rd golden years of PH cinema (’70s)
MARTIAL LAW YEARS – Ironic as it may seem, Philippine cinema flourished during Martial Law years. In fact, the ‘70s up to the early ‘80s are considered the third golden years of the Philippine cinema. (more…)
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todayclassical · 7 years
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January 28 in Music History
1627 Birth of composer Alfonso Marsh. 1645 Birth of German composer Gottfried Vopelius near Zitlau.  1691 Birth of German composer and organist Johann Balthasar König.  1693 Birth of Austrian organist and composer Gregor Joseph Werner in Donau.  1722 Birth of German composer Johann Ernst Bach.  1725 FP of J. S. Bach's Sacred Cantata No. 92 Ich hab in Gottes Herz und Sinn on Septuagesimae Sunday following Epiphany, was part of Bach's second annual Sacred Cantata cycle in Leipzig 1724-25.
1742 Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin, Jonathan Swift; author of Gulliver's Travels, objects to the cathedral singers performing Handel's works while the composer is in that city.
1754 Death of Danish lawyer and writer Ludwig Holberg at 69.  1756 Birth of composer Hans Adolf Friedrich von Eschstruth. 1757 Birth of composer Antonio Bartolomeo Brun. 1768 Death of English organist and composer John Wainwright dies at age 44. 
1781 Birth of castrato Giovanni Battista Vellutti Castrato.
1791 Birth of French opera composer Louis Ferdinand Joseph Herold. 1798 Death of German composer Christian Gottlob Neefe in Dessau. 1806 FP of Etienne Mehul's opera Les Deux Aveugles in Paris.
1812 Birth of soprano Marie Cornelie Falcon in Paris
1813 Death of Bohemian composer Jan Joseph Rösler at age 45.
1817 Death of composer Friedrich Ludwig Emilius Kunzen at age 55. 1828 FP of Franz Schubert's Piano Trio in Bb, Op. 99 D. 898. Ignaz Schuppanzigh, violin, Josef Linke, cello, and Carl Maria von Bocklet, piano.
1830 FP of Auber's opera Fra Diavalo at Opera Comique, Paris. 1832 Birth of composer Franz Wüllner. 
1841 Birth of composer Viktor Ernst Nessler.
1861 Birth of singing coach Isadora Luckstone in Baltimore, 
1868 Birth of Scottish composer Frederic Archibald Lamond in Glasgow. 1868 Birth of Argentinian composer Julian Aguirre. 1869 Death of French composer Prudent-Louis Aubrey du Boulley at age 72. 1873 Death of composer Henry Hugo Pierson at 57. 
1875 Birth of tenor Leon Laffitte in Saint-Genies.
1875 Birth of Mexican composer, conductor and violinist Julian Antonio Carillo Trujillo in Ahualulco, Mexico.  1876 FP of P. I. Tchaikovsky's Serenade mélancolique for violin and orchestra, in Moscow.
1878 Birth of German composer Walter Kollo.
1885 Birth of baritone Jean Athanasiou in Bucharest.   
1887 Birth of Polish-American pianist Artur Rubinstein. 1887 Birth of American composer Lily Theresa Strickland in Anderson, SC.  1891 Birth of Czech conductor and composer Karel Boleslav Jirak in Prague.  1893 Birth of American pianist and composer Elliot Griffos in Boston. 
1894 Birth of soprano Laura Pasini in Varese. 
1896 Death of English organist, conductor and composer Joseph Barnby.
1897 Birth of soprano Fidelia Campigna in Almeria, Andalusia.
1898 Birth of Italian composer Vittorio Rieti in Egypt.  1898 Death of Romanian opera composer Alexandru Flechtenmacher at 74.  1900 Birth of English pianist and composer Michael Dewar Head.
1903 Birth of Ukraniam composer Yuly Sergueievitch Meytus in Elisavetgrad. 
1903 Death of French composer Augusta Mary Anne Holmes at age 55 in Paris.  1903 Death of French composer Jean Robert Planquette at age 54 in Paris.  1904 Tenor Enrico Caruso signs his first recording contract with Victor Records. 1907 Birth of Swiss pianist and composer Constantin Regamey in Kiev.  1910 Death of Spanish composer Jose Garcia Robles at 74. 1913 Birth of Dutch composer Jan Masseus in Rotterdam. 1915 FP of Maurice Ravel's Piano Trio in a. Gabriel Wilaume, violin; Louis Feuillard, cello and Alfredo Casella, piano; in Paris.
1916 FP of Enrique Granados' opera Goyescas. MET Opera, NYC.
1916 Birth of English musicologist and composer Peter Crossley-Holland in London.
1918 Birth of soprano Frances Yeend in Vancouver, Washington. 
1923 Birth of tenor Paul Asciak in Valetta, Malta.
1926 Wedding of composer Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya. 1927 FP of Aaron Copland's Piano Concerto. Boston Symphony conducted by Serge Koussevitzky, Copland was soloist.
1929 Death of Dutch composer Theodorus Hendricus Hubertus Verhey in Rotterdam. 
1930 Death of soprano Emmy Destinn.
1930 Birth of Spanish composer Luis de Pablo in Bilbao.
1932 Death of German-American composer and organist Franz Xavier Arens at 75 in Los Angeles. 
1931 Birth of bass Ezio Flagello in New York. 
1932 Death of composer Irene Wieniawska in London. aka Poldowski and Irene Wieniawska Paul. 
1933 Birth of bass Spiro Malas in Baltimore. 
1933 Death of tenor Adolf Krossing. 
1935 Birth of Russian composer Leonid Grabovsky in Kiev. 1935 Death of Russian composer Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov at age 75, in Moscow.  1936 Birth of English composer Lydia Aylott in Finnigham.
1936 Birth of American composer Robert Suderburg. 1941 FP of Aaron Copland's Quiet City. Little Symphony conducted by Daniel Saidenberg at Town Hall, NYC. From incidental music, he scored for Irwin Shaw's play produced by the Group Theater, 1939 in NYC.
1942 Death of Spanish composer Pablo Luna  Carne at 61. 
1943 Birth of soprano Malvina Major in Hamilton N Z. 
1944 Death of mezzo-soprano Maartje Offers. 
1944 Birth of British avant-garde composer John Taverner in London. 1944 FP of Leonard Bernstein's Symphony No. 1 Jeremiah. Pittsburgh Symphony conducted by the composer, mezzo-soprano Jennie Tourel at the Syria Mosque in Pittsburgh, PA.
1947 Death of Venezuelan-French conductor and composer Reynaldo Hahn at age 72 in Paris.  1949 Death of Swedish composer Gustav Lazarus Nordqvist at 62. 1952 Death of tenor Anton Sekar-Rozhansky. 
1954 Death of bass Allen Hinckley. 
1956 Birth of American composer Richard Danielpour in NYC. 
1959 Death of Austrian conductor and composer Viktor Joseph Keldorfer at 85 in Vienna.
1960 Death of tenor Ettore Parmeggiani. 
1960 Death of Austrian-American pianist-composer Jacques de Menasce at 54 in Gstaad, Switzerland. 
1965 Death of Belgian composer Jef van Durme at 57 in Brussels.  1967 Death of baritone Greek Evans. 
1971 William Bolcom finishes Poltergeist Rag which he dedicated to Teresa Sterne, former concert pianist and producer for Nonesuch Records. Apparently written in a converted garage next to a graveyard in Newburgh, N.Y.
1972 FP of Scott Joplin's opera Treemonisha. The orchestration by T.J. Anderson, in Atlanta.
1973 Death of singing coach Sergei Radamsky. 
1981 Death of tenor Agostino Lazzari. 
1990 FP of Joan Tower's Flute Concerto. Carol Wincenc and the American Composers Orchestra, Hugh Wolff, conducting, at Carnegie Hall in NYC.
1996 Fire destroys Venice Opera House.
2000 FP of André Previn's Diversions. Previn conducting Vienna Philharmonic in Salzburg, Austria
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phgq · 4 years
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Titans of PH Cinema to be feted during MMFF 2019
#PHnews: Titans of PH Cinema to be feted during MMFF 2019
MANILA -- The Metropolitan Manila Film Festival (MMFF) 2019 will award the most dedicated and hard-working stars in the local film industry, in celebration of 100 years of Filipino cinema, during the MMFF Hall of Fame Awards this month.
In a press conference at the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority headquarters in Makati City on Wednesday, MMFF spokesperson Noel Ferrer said this year’s festival, the 45th anniversary of the MMFF, would give special recognition to past MMFF awardees who have garnered three or more awards in the same category.
The event will be held during the “Gabi ng Parangal” at the New Frontier Theater on December 27, he added.
For their "great support" to the MMFF and contribution to Filipino cinema, four Filipino celebrities will be awarded “Stalwarts of MMFF" -- former president and film actor Joseph “Erap” Estrada, movie pioneer Marichu Maceda, veteran actress Boots Anson-Rodrigo, and National Artist Bienvenido Lumbera.
Other special awardees to be inducted in the MMFF Hall of Fame were divided into several categories.
For the “Director” category, the awardees include Marilou Diaz Abaya, Joel Lamangan, and Jose Javier Reyes.
For “Actor,” the awardees are Anthony Alonzo, Christopher de Leon, and Cesar Montano.
In the “Actress” category, Nora Aunor, Amy Austria, Vilma Santos, and Maricel Soriano will be feted.
For their achievements as “Supporting Actress,” the awardees are Eugene Domingo and Cherie Gil.
For “Screenplay,” the awardees include Roy Iglesias, Ricardo “Ricky” Lee, and Jose Javier Reyes.
For “Cinematography,” the awardees are Rody Lacap, Lee Meily, Carlo Mendoza, and Romeo Vitug.
For “Editing,” the awardees are Vito Cajili, Manet Dayrit, Jess Navarro, and Edgardo Vinarao.
For “Sound,” the awardees are Ditoy Aguila, Michael Albert Idioma, and Rolly Ruta.
For “Music,” the awardees include Dionisio “Nonong” Buencamino, Von De Guzman, Jaime Fabregas, and Jessie Lasaten.
For “Production Design,” the awardees are Rodell Cruz and Joey Luna.
And lastly, for the “Visual Effects” category, Road Runner Network, Inc. will be awarded.
In the same press conference, MMDA General Manager Arturo “Jojo” Garcia said this year’s MMFF parade would be the longest in its history, to span a total of 15.2 kilometers and would last approximately seven to eight hours.
The parade, to be held in this year’s MMFF host city Taguig, would include floats featuring celebrities from the eight film entries in the festival and will be held on December 22. (PNA)
***
References:
* Philippine News Agency. "Titans of PH Cinema to be feted during MMFF 2019." Philippine News Agency. https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1088526 (accessed December 12, 2019 at 04:55PM UTC+14).
* Philippine News Agency. "Titans of PH Cinema to be feted during MMFF 2019." Archive Today. https://archive.ph/?run=1&url=https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1088526 (archived).
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maihonnga · 5 years
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Bảng mã vùng điện thoại quốc tế trên thế giới
Nắm rõ mã vùng điện thoại các nước trên thế giới sẽ giúp bạn thuận tiện hơn trong việc  liên lạc với gia đình, bạn bè, người thân hoặc đối tác ở nước ngoài. Hoặc khi nhận một cuộc gọi từ số lạ không phải tại Việt Nam bạn cũng nhanh chóng biết được đầu dây bên kia đang gói cho mình là ở đâu. Tìm hiểu ngay thông tin trong nội dung dưới đây.
Mã vùng điện thoại các nước trên thế giới mới nhất
Mã điện thoại quốc tế là gì?
Mã vùng điện thoại quốc tế là những số đầu tiên khi các bạn gọi tới các quốc gia khác trên thế giới. Mỗi quốc gia sẽ có một mã riêng và mỗi tỉnh/thành phố cũng sẽ có mã vùng khác nhau. Nếu các bạn muốn gọi ra nước ngoài  bạn cần biết mã vùng của quốc gia đó và số điện thoại của người bạn cần gọi.
Nếu bạn có nhu cầu gọi điện sang cho một ai hay một người thân nào đó ở quốc gia khác thì bạn phải biết được mã vùng quốc gia đó và thực hiện cuộc gọi với cú pháp:
[00] + [Mã quốc gia] + [Mã vùng] + [Số điện thoại]
Hoặc [+] + [Mã quốc gia] + [Mã vùng] + [Số điện thoại]
Ví dụ:  Bạn cần gọi sang Úc cho số điện thoại di động là 0411555555 thì bạn sẽ quay số từ Việt Nam là: 00 + 61(Mã vùng Úc) + 0411555555 => 00610411555555 hoặc +614110411555555
Mã vùng điện thoại các nước trên thế giới mới nhất
Dưới đây là mã vùng của các quốc gia trên thế giới, bạn có thể tham khảo:
Tên quốc gia
Mã vùng điện thoại của quốc gia
Mã vùng điện thoại các thành phố lớn
Afghanistan+93Kabul (20)
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Jalalabad (60)
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Anguilla+1 264J The Valley (264)**
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Antigua & Barbuda+1 268St. John’s (268)**
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Argentina+54Buenos Aires (11)
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Aruba+297J Oranjestad (8)**
Australia+61Canberra (2)
Adelaide (8)
Brisbane (7)
Cairns (7)
Melbourne (3)
Perth (9)
Sydney (2)
Austria+43Vienna (1)
Graz (316)
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Salzburg (662)
Azerbaijan+994Baku (12)
Gandja (22
Bahamas+1 +242Nassau (242)**
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Bahrain+973Manama*
Bangladesh+880Dhaka (2)
Barisal (431)
Chittagong(31)
Barbados+1 +246Bridgetown (246)**
Belarus+375Mensk (17)
Gomel (23)
Gorki (22)
Belgium+32Brussels*
Belize+501Belmopan (8)
Benin+229Porto-Novo*
Bermuda+1 +441Hamilton (441)**
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Bhutan+975Thimphu*
Bolivia+591La Paz (2)
Sucre (4)
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Santa Cruz (3)
Bosnia & Herzegovina+387Sarajevo (33)
Tuzla (35)
Botswana+267Gaborone*
Brazil+55Brasilia (61)
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Brunei Darussalam+673Bandar Seri Begawan
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Burkina Faso+226Ouagadougou*
Burundi+257Bujumbura (2)
Cambodia (Campuchia)+855Phnom Penh (23)
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Canada+1Ottawa, ON (613)
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Cape Verde+238Praia*
Cayman Islands+1 345George Town (345)**
Central African Republic+236Bangui*
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Chad+235N’Djamena*
Chagos Archipelago+246Diego Garcia*
Chile+56Santiago (2)
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China (Trung Quốc)+86Beijing (10)
Fuzhou (591)
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Nanjing Fujian (596)
Shanghai (21)
Shenzhen (755)
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Colombia+57Bogota (1)
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Comoros+269Moroni*
Congo+242Brazzaville*
Congo, Dem. Rep. of+243Kinshasa (12)
Lubumbashi (2)
Cook Islands+682Avarua*
Costa Rica+506San Jos*
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Côte d’lvoire+225Yamoussoukro*
Abidjan*
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Croatia+385Zagreb (1)
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Cuba+53Havana (7)
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Cyprus+357Nicosia (2)
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Czech Republic (Cộng hòa Séc)+420Prague (2)
Brno (5)
Ostrava (69
Denmark (Đan Mạch)+45Copenhagen*
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Djibouti+253Djibouti*
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Bundesliga Season Preview Part One: Mid-tablers, strugglers and newcomers
VAVEL UK takes a look at nine of the teams hoping for big things this year.
Hertha BSC Team Photo. | Photo: Ottmar Winter/Bongarts/Getty Images.
After a long wait, the Bundesliga finally makes its return this summer and it will be a welcome relief for German football fans after the failure of the Germany squad at the 2018 FIFA World Cup.
Many will be wondering if this is the season that someone finally manages to topple the supremacy of Bayern Munich. The rest will laugh off such delusions. But even if the status quo at the top remains, there’s European places to be won and the dreaded drop to be avoided.
In the first part of our season preview, we look at last season’s lower-half finishers – Hertha BSC, Werder Bremen, FC Augsburg, Hannover 96, 1. FSV Mainz 05, SC Freiburg and VfL Wolfsburg, as well as the newly-promoted pair of Fortuna Düsseldorf and 1. FC Nürnberg.
Hertha BSC
Last season: 10th                       
Manager: Pál Dárdai
Pre-season friendlies: RSV Eintracht 1949 (7-0 W), SC Westfalia Herne (2-0 W), MSV Duisburg (1-0 W), MSV Neuruppin (9-1 W), FK Dukla Prague (3-2 W), Atalanta (3-2 L), FC Liefering (4-1 W), Aiginiakos (7-0 W), Hallescher FC (4-1 W)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 2-1 win vs Eintracht Braunschweig
Opening game: Home to Nürnberg (25 August)
Transfers in: Valentino Lazaro (Red Bull Salzburg), Javairô Dilrosun (Manchester City U23), Lukas Klünter (1. FC Köln), Pascal Köpke (Erzgebirge Aue), Marko Gruji? (Liverpool, loan)
Transfers out: Mitchell Weiser (Bayer Leverkusen), Julian Schieber (Augsburg), Genki Haraguchi (Hannover), Nils Körber (VfL Osnabrück, loan), Maximilian Pronichev (Aue, loan)
The pressures of a failed campaign in Europe helped to stop the upward moment of die Alte Dame under Dárdai, but they rarely slipped much lower than their eventual finishing position of tenth, sitting comfortably in mid-table for the majority of the season.
It’s difficult to foresee things being any worse this time around. Their new signings have been unspectacular but all have the potential to be big hits, with the signings of Dilrosun and Gruji? particularly interesting. The latter, on loan from Liverpool, may even start the opening game against Nürnberg despite only joining training this week. Klünter has also shown promise for Köln whilst Köpke provides another option up top, especially with Davie Selke out for the first couple of months of the season.
Weiser is the only notable departure, meaning that Dárdai will be under no pressure to bed in the new faces straight away, and that should stand them in good stead, especially in the early stages of the season, to push for a third top half finish in four years, provided that last year’s plateau was only a temporarily blip.
Werder Bremen
Last season: 11th         
Manager: Florian Kohfeldt
Pre-season friendlies: FC Eintracht Cuxhaven (8-0 W), OSC Bremerhaven (5-0 W), 1. FK P?íbram (1-1 D), Duisburg (1-0 W), Köln (1-0 L), Rot-Weiss Essen (1-0 L), Huddersfield Town (1-0 W), Arminia Bielefeld (1-0 W), FC Groningen (0-0 D), VVV-Venlo (1-1 D), Villarreal (3-2 L)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 6-1 win vs VfR Wormatia Worms
Opening game: Home to Hannover (25 August)
Transfers in: Kevin Möhwald (Nürnberg), Yuya Osako (Köln), Martin Harnik (Hannover), Felix Beijmo (Djurgårdens IF), Jan-Niklas Beste (Borussia Dortmund U19), Davy Klaassen (Everton), Claudio Pizarro (Köln), Stefanos Kapino (Nottingham Forest)
Transfers out: László Kleinheisler (FC Astana), Sambou Yatabaré (Royal Antwerp), Zlatko Junuzovi? (Salzburg), Leon Guwara (FC Utrecht), Thomas Delaney (Dortmund), Jérôme Gondorf (Freiburg), Justin Eilers (Apollon Smyrnis), Ulisses Garcia (BSC Young Boys), Robert Bauer (Nürnberg, loan), Lennart Thy (Büyük?ehir Belediye Erzurumspor), Niklas Schmidt (SV Wehen Wiesbaden, loan), Fallou Diagne (Konyaspor)
Last season took an almost clichéd feel. An awful start, which resulted in the current boss being replaced by the young coach of the under 23. He did enough to earn a permanent appointment, and Bremen flourished in the spring to turn attentions from battling relegation to dreams of Europe that never quite came to pass. That was the story of 2016-17 just as much as it was of 2017-18, although the revival wasn’t quite so dramatic this time around.
But can Kohfeldt succeed where Alexander Nouri failed and take Bremen to the next level? There are reasons to be optimistic on the Weser. No matter how much he struggled in England, Klaassen was a glamour signing suited to an upwardly-mobile club, whilst they are so bursting with attacking options that the re-signing of Pizarro is more a sentimental luxury than a necessity.
If they can avoid the early-season blues that have seen both of their previous head coaches, than a return to Europe after nearly a decade could well be possible. They are more reliable at the back then they have been in recent years, with Ji?í Pavlenka a top class goalkeeper. Further forward meanwhile, there will be goals if they can find the right combination around new skipper Max Kruse. All being well, this will be their best season for some time.
FC Augsburg
Last season: 12th
Manager: Manuel Baum
Pre-season friendlies: SC Austria Lustenau (1-1 D), Würzburger Kickers (2-0 W), Middlesbrough (2-1 W), Sportclub Olching (3-0 W), Borussia Mönchengladbach (2-1 L), Newcastle United (1-0 W), Athletic Club (1-0 L)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 2-1 win vs TSV Steinbach Haiger
Opening game: Away at Düsseldorf (25 August)
Transfers in: Schieber (Hertha), André Hahn (Hamburger SV), Felix Götze (Bayern Munich), Fredrik Jensen (FC Twente)
Transfers out: Ioannis Gelios (FC Hansa Rostock), Gojko Ka?ar (Anorthosis Famagusta), Marwin Hitz (Dortmund), Moritz Leitner (Norwich City), Daniel Opare (Antwerp), Marcel Heller (SV Darmstadt 98), Takashi Usami (Düsseldorf, loan), Tim Rieder (Darmstadt, loan), Shawn Parker (SpVgg Greuther Fürth)
Augsburg seem perennial pre-season contenders to go down, but it’s been a while since they’ve been in a genuine relegation dog-fight. Last year was little different, and if they had won more than two games in their last 13 games, they would have ended up a lot higher in the table than they eventually did.
Losing Hitz is of course a blow, leaving Andreas Luthe and Fabian Giefer to battle it out over who plays in goal, but much will be unchanged in front of them this season. Philipp Max is one of the most dangerous players in the league, despite being a left-back, and will have a point to prove having been snubbed by Joachim Löw so far. Further forward, Alfreð Finnbogason will hope to add to his tally of goals last season, despite currently being injured. He’ll have plenty of support too, especially with Hahn returning to his spiritual home.
There is little cause to believe that Augsburg will struggle this season, and if some of the bigger clubs struggle there could even launch another challenge for European football, but mid-table seems to be the most likely destination once again for Baum’s men.
Hannover 96
Last season: 13th
Manager: André Breitenreiter
Pre-season friendlies: Eiderstedt-Auswahl (14-0 W), SV Ramlingen-Ehlershausen (7-0 W), TSV Havelse (4-0), FSV Wacker 90 Nordhausen (2-0 W), PEC Zwolle (3-1 W), Wolfsberger AC (3-2 L), Udinese (5-1 W), Udinese (2-1 W), Athletic Club (2-0 W)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 6-0 win vs Karlsruher SC
Opening game: Away at Bremen (25 August)
Transfers in: Josip Elez (HNK Rijeka), Leo Weinkauf (Bayern II), Takuma Asano (Arsenal, loan), Kevin Wimmer (Stoke City, loan), Genki Haraguchi (Hertha), Walace (Hamburg), Bobby Wood (Hamburg, loan)
Transfers out: Elias Huth (1. FC Kaiserslautern), Felix Klaus (Wolfsburg), Salif Sané (Schalke 04), Charlison Benschop (FC Ingolstadt 04), Kenan Karaman (Düsseldorf), Harnik (Bremen), Sebastian Maier (VfL Bochum), Florian Hübner (1. FC Union Berlin), Manuel Schmiedebach (Union Berlin, loan), Jonathas (Corinthians, loan)
Making their return to the Bundesliga after a year away, a strong start last season gave Hannover the credit in the bank they needed to avoid any serious concerns over possible relegation. Their strong home form helped as way but an unremarkable squad did struggle at times, including a five-game losing streak in the early spring.
Klaus, Sané and Harnik are all big loses, and a lot of their new faces all struggled with their old clubs last season, including the Hamburg duo of Walace and Wood, plus Stoke’s Wimmer, with all three suffering relegation with their clubs. They have kept last season’s top scorer Niclas Füllkrug though, despite strong interest from Gladbach, with speculation that he’s on the verge of signing a new deal.
Any sort of drop off from last season will see Hannover fighting to avoid a return to the 2. Bundesliga, meaning Breitenreiter will face a big test of his coaching skills to get the best out his side. Another 15 goals from Füllkrug would serve them well and they will hope young talents like Ihlas Bebou can take off as well.
1. FSV Mainz 05
Last season: 14th
Manager: Sandro Schwarz
Pre-season friendlies: DJK SV Phönix Schifferstadt (12-0 W), Rhein-Nahe Auswahl (10-0 W), VfB Ginsheim (5-1 W), KFC Uerdingen 05 (2-1 W), Royal Charleroi Sporting Club (2-0 W), Köln (5-3 L), West Ham United (1-1, lost on penalties), Athletic Club (0-0, won on penalties), Fiorentina (0-0, lost on penalties), Celta de Vigo (2-1 W)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 3-1 win vs Aue
Opening game: Home to VfB Stuttgart (26 August)
Transfers in: Phillipp Mwene (Kaiserslautern), Jean-Philippe Mateta (Olympique Lyonnais), Pierre Kunde (Atlético Madrid), Moussa Niakhaté (FC Metz), Aarón Martin (Espanyol, loan)
Transfers out: Jonas Lössl (Huddersfield), Suat Serdar (Schalke), Leon Balogun (Brighton & Hove Albion), Marin Sverko (Karlsruhe, loan), Abdou Diallo (Dortmund), Kenan Kodro (FC Copenhagen), Nigel de Jong (Al Ahli SC), Yoshinori Muto (Newcastle), Aaron Seydel (Holstein Kiel, loan)
Mainz were perhaps fortunate that there were worse teams than them in the league last season. They spent most of the Rückrunde in the play-off spot, and couldn’t string two wins together until the matchdays 32 and 33, although those wins over RB Leipzig and Dortmund were enough to keep them up, although they finished with their worst points tally since they went down under Jürgen Klopp in 2007.
Nevertheless, they didn’t panic into sacking Schwarz and they clearly thing enough of him to give him a second crack. It won’t be any easier though. Serdar, Balogun and Muto will all be missed, whilst there are several injury concerns already. They will be hoping their new players will take off, although Niakhaté couldn’t have had a worst start, getting sent off in three minutes in the cup against Aue.
Alexandru Maxim had one of his better days in that game, scoring twice, and a good season from the Romanian will help their cause. 20-year-old Ridle Baku will be one to watch after he burst onto the scene late last season, scoring twice in his first three league games for the club. It will be tough for him, and the other youngsters, to thrive if Mainz struggle though.
SC Freiburg
Last season: 15th
Manager: Christian Streich
Pre-season friendlies: FC Waldkirch (15-0 W), SC Lahr (8-2 W), Kehler FV (7-1 W), TuS Efringen-Kirchen (14-2 W), FC Ravensburg (9-1 W), Swansea City (3-0 W), Regio-Auswahl (2-1 W), RC Strasbourg Alsace (3-2 L), Real Sociedad (1-1 D)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 5-3 win on penalties (after 2-2 draw AET) vs Energie Cottbus
Opening game: Home to Eintracht Frankfurt (25 August)
Transfers in: Mark Flekken (Duisburg), Dominique Heintz (Köln), Luca Waldschmidt (Hamburg), Philipp Lienhart (Real Madrid), Gondorf (Bremen), Brandon Borrello (Kaiserslautern)
Transfers out: Julian Schuster (retired), Marc Oliver Kempf (Stuttgart), Georg Nierdermeier (Melbourne Victory), Fabian Schleusener (SV Sandhausen, loan), Mats Møller Dæhli (FC St. Pauli), Rafal Gikiewicz (Union Berlin), Jonas Fohrenbach (SSV Jahn Regensburg¸ loan), Aleksandar Ignjovski (1. FC Magdeburg), Mohamed Dräger (SC Paderborn 07, loan), Karim Guédé (Sandhausen), Lucas Hufnagel (SpVgg Unterhaching), Vincent Sierro (FC St. Gallen, loan), Patric Klandt (Nürnberg), Jonas Meffert (Kiel), Caglar Söyüncü (Leicester City)
After surprisingly qualifying for Europe in their first season back in the Bundesliga, last season was always going to see a drop-off, especially after losing several key players. In the end they did well to stay up, finishing just above the relegation play-off place, with the goals of Nils Petersen crucial for maintaining their Bundesliga status.
There was never any question of replacing Streich, a cult favourite and the longest-serving coach in the league. It is easy to see last season as a hangover from the one before, and with some canny new recruits brought in over the summer to freshen up the team, they will be confident of being closer to mid-table security this time around.
To do so though, they have to tighten up at the back, and handle the departures of Kempf and Söyüncü at the same time. They cannot depend entirely on the goals of Petersen, with Waldschmidt, Janik Haberer and the fit-again Florian Niederlechner needed to take their share of the responsibility. If they fail in those key goals, as well as rectifying their awful away form, they could very easily drop out of the league again.
VfL Wolfsburg
Last season: 16th (won play-off)
Manager: Bruno Labbadia
Pre-season friendlies: Veltins-Auswahl (8-1 W), KSV Baunatal (7-0 W), Lupo Martini Wolfsburg (3-0 W), Norwich (1-1 D), Lyon (2-1 L), AFC Ajax (3-0 W), Napoli (3-1 W)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 1-0 win vs SV Elversberg
Opening game: Home to Schalke (25 August)
Transfers in: Marcel Tisserand (Ingolstadt), Klaus (Hannover), Pavao Pervan (LASK Linz), Wout Weghorst (AZ Alkmaar), Daniel Ginczek (Stuttgart), Jérôme Roussillon (HSC Montpellier)
Transfers out: Max Grün (released), Daniel Didavi (Stuttgart), Landry Dimata (RSC Anderlecht, loan), Victor Osimhen (Charleroi, loan)
With Hamburg out of the way, Wolfsburg are in prime position to become the league’s biggest perpetual crisis club. It is still only three years since they finished second and won the DFB-Pokal, two since pushing Real Madrid all the way in an UEFA Champions League quarter-final, but they finished the last campaign facing a play-off for their Bundesliga survival for a second year in a row.
Labbadia guided them to victory against Kiel, but beforehand he hadn’t been much more effective than Andries Jonker or Martin Schmidt before him. Above him, Jörg Schmadtke and club legend Marcel Schäfer have been installed in administrative roles, and between the three of them it will be interesting to see if things will be any different this year.
Excluding Tiseerand, who are already been on loan, Ginczek is the only new signing that isn’t an unknown quantity in German football, and they will be hoping he will give them the goalscorer they so desperately lacked last season, even before Mario Gómez left, despite his injury problems and modest recent record. Others, most significantly Maximilian Arnold, will know more is expected of them as well. Will they avoid the bottom three this year? Possibly, but not many are convinced.
Fortuna Düsseldorf
Last season: 1st (2. Bundesliga)
Manager: Friedhelm Funkel
Pre-season friendlies: Sportfreunde Eisbachtal (9-1 W), VfB Wissen (10-0 W), TSV Meerbusch (9-0 W), FC Wegberg-Beeck (5-0 W), Watford (3-1 L), Al-Hilal (2-0 W), Fiorentina (1-1 D), FC Remscheid (8-0 W), NEC (3-0 W), VfL Benrath 06 (13-0 W)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 5-0 win vs TuS Rot-Weiss Koblenz
Opening game: Home to Augsburg (25 August)
Transfers in: Benito Raman (Standard Liège), Alfredo Morales (Ingolstadt), Jean Zimmer (Stuttgart), Karaman (Hannover), Diego Contento (Girondins de Bordeaux), Kevin Stöger (Bochum), Aymen Barkok (Frankfurt, loan), Marvin Ducksch (St. Pauli), Davor Lovren (Dinamo Zagreb II), Matthias Zimmermann (Stuttgart), Dodi Lukebaki (Watford, loan), Takashi Usami (Augsburg, loan)
Transfers out: Kemal Rüzgar (Altinordu), Jerome Kiesewetter (released), Julian Schauerte (KAS Eupen), Axel Bellinghausen (retired), Lukas Schmitz (Wolfsberger AC), Marlon Ritter (Paderborn), Emmanuel Iyoha (Aue, loan), Justin Toshiki Kinjo (Thespakusatsu Gunma)
Not many people were tipping Düsseldorf for promotion last season but Funkel and his team got the balance right as, along with fellow Bundesliga newcomers Nürnberg, they proved to be one of the best and most consistent teams in the league to return to the top flight after five years away. They won the second-tier title in dramatic fashion though, beating Der Club in the final day showing with a stoppage time goal from Kaan Ayhan.
It is little secret that they are operating with one of the smallest budgets in the league but they have strengthened their side smartly. Raman, Zimmer and Lovren have now signed permanently after loan spells last year, whilst Usami is back for another. They have signed some of the best performers in the 2. Liga last year in Stöger and Ducksch, the league’s top scorer whilst on loan with Kiel. Lukebaki looks a promising performer for them as well.
Do they have enough to survive though? They certainly have flair, and a strong team spirit, and often the latter can be enough. Most sides who survive in their first season in the Bundesliga are those that bounced back within a year or two, and it will be a big step up for side without huge amounts of Bundesliga experience. Düsseldorf look as likely as anyone to go down, but they have the talent to avoid that fate.
1. FC Nürnberg
Last season: 2nd (2. Bundesliga)
Manager: Michael Köllner
Pre-season friendlies: FSV Erlangen-Bruck (5-2 W), SV Seligenporten (3-0 W), Halle (2-1 L), Regionalauswahl (4-0 W), Würzburg (4-0 W), TSV 1860 Rosenheim (4-1 W), Bologna (1-0 L), Real Valladolid (1-0 W)
DFB-Pokal First Round: 2-1 win vs SV Linx
Opening game: Away at Hertha (25 August)
Transfers in: Törles Knöll (Hamburg II), Kevin Goden (Köln U19), Christian Mathenia (Hamburg), Timothy Tillmann (Bayern II, loan), Bauer (Bremen, loan), Klandt (Freiburg), Yuya Kubo (KAA Gent, loan)
Transfers out: Möhwald (Bremen), Laszlo Sepsi (released), Miso Brecko (released), Enis Alushi (released), Thorsten Kirschbaum (Leverkusen)
Nürnberg are back in the Bundesliga, again. Germany’s ultimate yo-yo club are back after a four-year spell in the second tier for a ninth separate spell in the top flight. They suffered the usual blip after losing the Relegation play-off with Frankfurt two years ago, but after Köllner came into ensure they avoided going the other way, he proved to be the man to lead them back to the promise land as they finished second in his first full season in charge.
Unsurprisingly, many are tipping them to suffer a record ninth relegation, and there does seem to be doubt over whether they are equipped well enough to survive, especially as they are not financially strong enough to have been able to make any high-profile signings. Mathenia and Bauer do add some Bundesliga experience though, whilst Ond?ej Petrák is the sole survivor from the 2013-14 relegation season.
Most of the squad have been solid performers in the 2. Bundesliga, and if Enrico Valentini can prove as effective on the wing, Mikael Ishak can rediscover the scoring form he had before getting injured in February and the entire squad can prove to be greater than the sum of the parts, they’ll have every chance of staying up. It’s likely to be an almighty scrap, however.
Der Beitrag Bundesliga Season Preview Part One: Mid-tablers, strugglers and newcomers erschien zuerst auf XBET.TIPS.
Source: https://www.xbet.tips/bundesliga-season-preview-part-one-mid-tablers-strugglers-and-newcomers/
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karolinevassalor · 2 months
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Okay so the 1th round winner was Abel :D congrat for the lovely krusnik. The DILF Leon got the second place and Hugue got the bronze medal!
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So, get ready for the second round!
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karolinevassalor · 28 days
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So *drums* we arrived to the finals of the Trinity Blood poll -for the gentleman at first.
:)
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