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MANCHO’S MAGAZINE

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MANCHO’SMAGAZINE

KIT Spain's traditional kit is a red jersey with yellow trim, accompanied by dark blue shorts and socks while their current away kit is a sky blue shirt with a stripe in the chest area and navy trim accompanied by white shorts with navy trim. The colour of the socks altered throughout the 1990s from black to the same colour as the blue shorts. Spain's kits have been produced by manufacturers including Adidas (from 1982 until 1984), Le Coq Sportif (from 1984 until 1992) and Adidas once again (since 1992).

Their current home kit is a lighter red than usual along with light blue shorts and red socks, similar to the older 2006 kit.[16] A third kit is sometimes used and is usually blue with red and yellow trim. Rather than displaying the logo of the Spanish football federation, Spain's jersey traditionally features the coat of arms of Spainover the left breast. After winning the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the World Cup winners badge was added to the right breast of the jersey and a golden star at the top of the Spanish coat of arms.

STYLE OF PLAYTiki-taka is above all, a systems approach to football founded upon team unity and a comprehensive understanding in the geometry of space on a football field.

Tiki-taka has been variously described as "a style of play based on making your way to the back of the net through short passing and movement, a "short passing style in which the ball is worked carefully through various channels, and a "nonsensical phrase that hascome to mean short passing, patience and possession above all else." The style involves roaming movement and positional interchange amongst midfielders, moving the ball in intricate patterns, and sharp, one or two-touch passing. Tiki-taka is "both defensive and offensive in equal measure" – the team is always in possession, so doesn't need to switch between defending and attacking. Commentators have contrasted tiki-taka with "route one physicality"[19] and with the higher-tempo passing of Arsène Wenger's 2007–08 Arsenal side, which employed Cesc Fàbregas as the only channel between defence and attack. Tiki-taka is associated with flair, creativity, and touch, but can also be taken to a "slow, directionless extreme" that sacrifices effectiveness for aesthetics.

Tiki-taka has been used successfully by the Spanish national team to win UEFA Euro 2008, 2010 FIFA World Cup andUEFA Euro 2012.

Sid Lowe identifies Luis Aragonés' tempering of tiki-taka with pragmatism as a key factor in Spain's success in Euro 2008. Aragonés used tiki-taka to "protect a defense thatappeared suspect [...], maintain possession and dominate games" without taking the style to "evangelical extremes." None of Spain's first six goals in the tournament came from tiki-taka: five came from direct breaks and one from a set play.

For Lowe, Spain's success in the 2010 World Cup was evidence of the meeting of two traditions in Spanish football: the "powerful, aggressive, direct" style that earned the silver medal-winning 1920 Antwerp Olympics team the nickname La Furia Roja ("The Red Fury"), and the tiki-taka style of the contemporary Spanish team, which focused on a collective, short-passing, technical and possession-based game.

Analyzing Spain's semi-final victory over Germany at the 2010 World Cup, Honigstein described the Spanish team's tiki-taka style as "the most difficult version of football possible: an uncompromising passing game, coupled with intense, high pressing." For Honigstein, tiki-taka is "a significant upgrade" of Total Football because it relies on ball movement rather than players switching position. Tiki-taka allowed Spain to "control both the ball and the opponent."

It's a beautiful night ,We're looking for something ….. to doHey babyI think I want to marry you

Is it the look in your eyes?Or is it these dancing shoes?Who cares ……I think I wanna marry you

Well I know this little chapel on the boulevard we can goNo one will…..Oh come on girl

Who cares if we're trashed got a pocket full of cash we can blowShots …. patronAnd it's on girl

Don't say no, no, no, no-noJust say yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah-yeahAnd we'll ………………….If you're ready, like I'm ready

Cause it's a beautiful nightWe're ……..g for something dumb to doHey babyI think I wanna marry you

……………………………..Or is it these dancing shoes?Who cares babyI think I wanna marry you

………………………………………

………………………………………….

……………………………………….

If we wake up and you wanna break up that's coolNo, I won't blame youIt was fun girl

Don't say no, ……………Just say yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah-yeah

And we'll go, go, go, go-goIf you're ready, like I'm ready

Cause it's a beautiful night,We're looking for something dumb to doHey babyI think I wanna marry you.

Is it the look in your eyes?Or is it this dancing shoes?Who cares baby,I think I wanna marry you.

Just say I do,Tell me right now baby,Tell me right now baby, babyJust say I doTell me right now baby,Tell me right now baby, baby

Oh it's a beautiful nightWe're looking for something dumb to doHey babyI think I wanna marry you

Is it the look in your eyes?Or is it this dancing shoes?Who cares babyI think I wanna marry you

Read more: Bruno Mars - Marry You Lyrics | MetroLyrics

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8. A-Plus Math

HUESCA Huesca is a beautiful city located in Aragon, in northern-eastSpain. This place has approximately 50000 inhabitants. One ofthe best things of Huesca is the festivities of San Lorenzo,from 9 to 15 August. In these festivities, you can play in the fairto long hours in the night. Also, in the afternoons, there arebullfights and people go with friends and have a good time.

MODERN HUESCA

Huesca celebrates its most important annual festival inAugust: the festival (or fiesta) of San Lorenzo (Saint Lawrence),a native of Huesca martyred in 268 AD. The anniversary of hismartyrdom falls on August 10. The fiesta starts on 9 August andfinishes on the 15. Many of the inhabitants dress in green andwhite for the duration of the fair.

San Lorenzo, born in Huesca, was a deacon in Rome andmartyred by the Romans, burnedon a grille (at least according tolegend). Hence the grille is thesymbol of San Lorenzo. It can beseen in a number of decorativeworks in the city.

Huesca is also the birthplaceof film director Carlos Saura and his brother Antonio Saura,contemporary artist. There is an international film festival heldannually.

The writer Oscar Sipan, winner of several literary prizes, wasborn in Huesca in 1974. The celebrated illustrator Isidro Ferrer,though born in Madrid, lives in the city.

TOURISM

The mountain range and valleys of the Pyrenees are the biggest tourist resource in Aragón and one of the main ones of the Peninsula. A great natural and forest reservation, with summits of more than 3000 meters, the Pyrenees are an ideal place for practising skiing, adventure sports and other activities related to tourism in the mountains.

The areas of the National Park of Ordesa and the Natural Parks of Guara and Posets-Maladeta are particularly interesting,as well as the Aragonese part of the pilgrimage route to Santiago, which enters Spain through the mountain port of Somport, descends to Canfranc on its way to the valley of the river Aragón, where it reaches Jaca (the town where the earliest Romanesque cathedral of Spain is found) and continues until it meets with the route ofRoncesvalles in Puente la Reina deJaca.

The Muslims were stopped byCarlomagno (Charles the Great) inthe Pyrenees and here theChristian Kingdoms were born, small kingdoms from which the Reconquest would arise after 800 years of fighting to expel the Moorish Kingdom from the peninsula. A great legacy of numeroushistorical remains is left in the Pyrenees: castles, hermitages, churches and strong towers are reminders of this epic time of frontier wars.

An excellent train links Zaragoza with Huesca and northwards.The highways to the main valleys are generally in good state. Thetunnel by lorry through the Somport, which is under construction at the moment, will dramatically speed up the communications with France.

In Huesca the inadequacy of agriculture as an economic resource has caused the population to concentrate in the main towns of the province, and to abandon their original villages, except in the valleys of the north, which have adapted to the new mountain tourism.

Huesca provincial capital has about 50.000 inhabitants, it is the most industrial city in the county and it agglomerates most of the political and administrative institutions.

Jaca is one of the main cities of the Pyrenees, with good communications and with an important artistic heritage. Fraga, which stands by the course of the river Cinca is a town of Romanorigin, erected by the ancient road that used to connect Lérida and Celsa. Barbastro is the capital of the district of the Somontano, origin of the wine industry of the same name.

Work done by Marcos Mancho 2ºB