Ten Weird and Interesting Facts About Players At World Cup 2014

Ten Weird and Interesting Facts About Players At World Cup 2014

Here is a list of ten of the weirdest things you have ever heard about players at FIFA World Cup 2014 in Brazil.

 

Of all the players playing in South America for the tournament, these ten players, perhaps, have the strangest stories in the game.

 

10. Charles Itandje – Cameroon

Charles Itandje
Charles Itandje

Did you know that the Cameroonian custodian is the only professional footballer to be sacked for laughing?

That is what happened to him at Liverpool in 2010. The punishment was so harsh because he was caught chuckling about something during a memorial service for the victims of Hillsborough.

9. Dejan Lovren – Croatia

Dejan Lovren
Dejan Lovren

Did you know that Croatia defender Dejan Lovren runs his own fashion label?

Well, what we really mean by fashion label is he sticks a logo onto shirts, hats and hoodies and promotes them by taking grainy iPhone snaps of his teammates while wearing them. Luka Modric and Franck Ribéry have been the most prominent customers for Lovren’s Russell Brown brand, whose symbol is an owl. Apparently, the bird stands for “power and perfection”.

8. Carlos Salcido – Mexico

Carlos Salcido
Carlos Salcido

Did you know that Carlos Salcido once partied with a transsexual hooker?

There are many ways a player could have celebrated Mexico’s victory over Colombia four years ago, but canoodling with a transsexual prostitute in a Monterrey hotel room was probably one of the dumbest. Salcido, then at Fulham, was fined $50,000 (£30,000) for his troubles, yet he fled London for Mexico in 2011, claiming a robbery at his house made his family feel unsafe.

7. Jason Davidson – Australia

Jason Davidson
Jason Davidson

Did you know Australia’s Jason Davidson used to get physically beaten at training?

That is what happened while he was at Japanese club Seiritsu Gakeun, where he spent three years during his formative years. The punishment for not bowing to club officials properly was to be struck in the face, and once when a player reported late to training he and the rest of the squad were forced to have their heads shaved.

6. Memphis Depay – Holland

Memphis Depay
Memphis Depay

Did you know Memphis Depay nearly turned his back on football for a career in rap music?

When he was first making his breakthrough into the Eredivise club’s starting line up, the young winger was so into his rap music that then manager Fred Rutten ordered him to make a choice between a career in music or a career in football.

5. Reza Ghoochannejhad – Iran

Reza Ghoochannejhad
Reza Ghoochannejhad

Did you know that the Charlton Athletic striker has ambitions to be part of a philharmonic orchestra when he retires?

Where most footballers are into rap and RnB, the Iranian star has taken a decidedly different route when it comes to his aural tastes. Known as “Gucci”, he and his family left Tehran for the Netherlands when he was just eight years old, where he learnt to play the violin, which he now does every day with the ambition of becoming a classical musician when he retires.

4. Park Chu-young – South Korea

Park Chu-young
Park Chu-young

Did you know that Park Chu-young is not so much a talented footballer but just a good chap?

Usually players make it to the World Cup sweating, bleeding and crying their way through seasons with hard graft and sometimes a spot of luck. However, despite featuring much at all this season, Korea’s Park Chu-young has made it into the squad for being, well, a bloody nice fella. When quizzed how he could justify choosing a footballer who had played just seven minutes of league football for Arsenal in three years, the Korea manager, Hong Myung-bo, said: “He gets on well with the rest of the squad.”

3. Carlos Bacca – Colombian

Carlos Bacca
Carlos Bacca

Did you know that Carlos Bacca nearly walked away from the game at an early age?

Just seven years ago, at the age of 20, the Colombian had hung up his boots to divide his time between his two jobs as a bus conductor and as a fishmonger on the seafront. However, a team called Junior de Barranquilla sought to offer him a trial and a chance to get himself back up the ladder. “Thank God they took me”, said Bacca.

2. Albert Adomah – Ghana

Albert Adomah
Albert Adomah

Did you know that Adomah was once paid for by the BBC’s favourite commentator.

As a bored 15-year-old, Albert Adomah wandered down to Ravenscroft Park in west London where he asked if he could get involved “The Streetwardens Football Project”. After a short stint with Barnet, where the BBC’s most famous voice John Motson sponsored him, he rose through the ranks to become a key figure in Ghana’s qualifying campaign and will now get to strut his stuff at the biggest tournament on earth.

1. Fabian Schar – Switzerland

Fabian Schar
Fabian Schar

Did you know that Fabian Schar has a taste for numbers?

Football is full of stereotypes, whether perpetuated on purpose or by a media that doesn’t quite understand the culture of a country, but in Switzerland’s case it is most definitely a self fulfilling stereotype. FC Basel defender Fabian Schar may be a tainted centre-back, but he is also a qualified banker and but for being plucked from fourth-division obscurity by Basel, would probably be behind his desk now offering somebody some sound financial advice.

Source: caughtoffside.com