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News on 2010 FIFA World Cup (Quarter-finals) Results on July 3, 2010 - Germany 4 and Argentina 0

2010 FIFA World Cup schedule (Quarter-finals)

Saturday - 3 July 2010 - 16:00
Cape Town
Argentina Match 59 Germany - Germany 4 and Argentina 0

Saturday - 3 July 2010 - 20:30
Johannesburg (EP)
Paraguay Match 60 Spain

source taken from: http://en.wikipedia.org/

Round of 16
Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Final
















26 June – Port Elizabeth










Uruguay 2

2 July – Johannesburg

Korea Republic 1

Uruguay (pen.) 1 (4)

26 June – Rustenburg


Ghana 1 (2)

United States 1


6 July – Cape Town

Ghana (a.e.t) 2

Uruguay

28 June – Durban


Netherlands


Netherlands 2

2 July – Port Elizabeth

Slovakia 1

Netherlands 2

28 June – Johannesburg


Brazil 1

Brazil 3


11 July – Johannesburg

Chile 0

Winners of Match 61

27 June – Johannesburg


Winners of Match 62

Argentina 3

3 July – Cape Town

Mexico 1

Argentina 0

27 June – Bloemfontein


Germany 4

Germany 4


7 July – Durban

England 1

Germany

29 June – Pretoria


Winners of Match 60

Third place

Paraguay (pen.) 0 (5)

3 July – Johannesburg
10 July – Port Elizabeth

Japan 0 (3)

Paraguay
Losers of Match 61

29 June – Cape Town


Spain

Losers of Match 62

Spain 1
source: (Thank you and credits to
http://en.wikipedia.org/
and all sources for the information and pictures)

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3 Guppies Died of Fin Rot after 24 hours staying in their new home - What is the treatment for Guppies fin-rot?



Another new home for my remaining 7 guppies plus one baby guppy. Please, please don't die anymore.....

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News on 2010 FIFA World Cup on July 2, 2010 - Netherland win over Brazil ( Netherland 2 Brazil 1)


Wesley Sneijder of the Netherlands celebrates scoring the game-winning goal against Brazil.
(Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)

Netherlands shocks Brazil 2-1

By ANDREW DAMPF, AP Sports Writer
3 hours, 6 minutes ago

PORT ELIZABETH, South Africa (AP)—Don’t call the Dutch underachievers anymore.

Not after the way the Netherlands rallied to upset five-time champion Brazil 2-1 in the World Cup quarterfinals Friday.

After waking themselves up at halftime, the title that has eluded the Dutch for all these years is now just two wins away.

“For 45 minutes we went full throttle,” said Wesley Sneijder. “We were rewarded.”

One of the shortest players on the field, Sneijder put the Netherlands ahead in the 68th minute on a header—a thrill so huge he ran to a TV camera, tapped the lens and stuck his face in for a close up.

“It just slipped through from my bald head and it was a great feeling,” Sneijder said.

He was in the middle of the post-game party, too, as his teammates swarmed him when the final whistle blew. John Heitinga picked up Sneijder and slung him over his shoulder as Netherlands captain Giovanni van Bronckhorst, a Brazil shirt in hand, leaped up and rubbed Sneidjer’s closely shaved head.

The result was a case of role reversal for both sides.

The top-ranked team in the world and one of the most impressive squads in the tournament until Friday, Brazil lost its composure after falling behind and defender Felipe Melo was ejected in the 73rd minute for stomping on the leg of Arjen Robben.

The Dutch made the championship match in 1974 and ’78, lost both, and rarely have lived up to their talent in other World Cups. They did this time, helped by an own goal off the head of unfortunate Felipe Melo that brought them into a 1-1 tie in the 53rd.

“I’m devastated. It was hard to see the players crying back there,” Felipe Melo said after emerging from the locker room.

“I have to apologize to the Brazilian fans. I came here thinking about giving Brazil the title, but I’m a human being. Everybody can make mistakes.”

He was almost the hero.

Robinho gave the Brazilians the lead on Felipe Melo’s brilliant low pass up the middle of the field that the striker put home with a low shot.

But the second half presented the unusual sight of the Brazilians scrambling wildly to find an equalizer.

It never came.

Instead, it was the Oranje and their fans doing the dancing as Brazil’s players lay on the turf.

Brazil also lost in the quarterfinals four years ago, falling to France 1-0. Former team captain Dunga was hired to coach the team after that defeat, despite having no previous managerial experience.

“We didn’t expect this,” he said. “We know that any World Cup match is about 90 minutes. In the first half we were able to play better and we weren’t able to maintain that rhythm in the second half.”

Netherlands coach Bert van Marwijk agreed that everything changed at the break.

“We could have lost it in the first 15 minutes,” he said. “At halftime, I made it very clear to the players. I told them time and time again, ‘You have to play your own game. You have to have patience against Brazil.”’

Said Sneijder: “At halftime we said to each other that we had to improve things and put more pressure on the Brazilian defense.”

The Netherlands reached the semifinals for the first time since losing to Brazil on penalty kicks at the 1998 World Cup, and will next face Uruguay, which defeated Ghana on penalty kicks.

Having won all five matches so far, the Netherlands extended its team-record unbeaten streak to 24 games, stretching back to a September 2008 loss to Australia.

On a warm afternoon before a sellout crowd of 42,286 at the Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium, Brazil controlled the tempo early on. Before the Dutch comeback, goalkeeper Maarten Stekelenburg timed his leap perfectly to deflect a shot by Kaka that was headed into the right corner of the net.

The one-goal lead wasn’t enough. Brazil began to unravel when Felipe Melo jumped in front of keeper Julio Cesar and inadvertently headed the ball into his net.

“We had two players going for the same ball and what happened happened,” Julio Cesar said, his eyes filled with tears.

Sneijder’s goal followed a corner kick from Robben. Dirk Kuyt flicked the ball with his head to Sneijder in the middle of the 6-yard box and he rose high enough to deflect it into the left corner of the goal.

“It was an amazing game. I think we showed the whole world how we can play,” Sneijder said. “Finally we won, we beat Brazil.”

More news on: http://g.sports.yahoo.com/

Credtis & source taken from: http://g.sports.yahoo.com/

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Guppy Tail Rot Disease - Treatment & Cure for Fin Rot in Guppies

Why would a fantail fish have no tail like it has been eaten?

http://freshaquarium.about.com/cs/disease/p/finrot.htm

Disease Type: Bacterial (gram negative organism) Organism: Aeromonas, Psuedomonas, or Vibrio

Description: Fin rot is one of the most common, and most preventable, diseases in aquarium fish. It is caused by several types of bacteria, and often occurs concurrently with other diseases. It can usually be cured, but if left untreated, it can kill the diseased fish and infect all the others in the tank.

Symptoms: Fin edges turn white

Fins fray

Bases of fins enflamed

Entire fin may rot away

The fins begin to fray and get ragged, becoming shorter over time. Usually the edges look white, and may even develop a fuzzy growth due to secondary Cotton Wool infection. A the disease advances the area may become red an inflamed, with bloody patches appearing as more of the fin is eaten away.

Treatment : Correct root cause

Water change

Treat with antibiotics

Addition of aquarium salt

Fin rot is caused by one of several gram negative bacteria. Several anitiboitics are effective, however the root cause must be addressed as well.

Fin rot occurs when the fish is stressed for some reason. The most common cause is poor water quality. Overcrowding the tank, feeding outdated food or overfeeding, and moving or handling the fish can also cause stress leading to fin rot.

Treatment should include a water change, and careful examination of the aquarium conditions. If there is food debris, vaccumm the gravel and take care to avoid overfeeding. Start dating your fish food, as it loses the vitamin content fairly quickly after it is opened. Feeding fish fresh, high quality food, in smaller quantities is far better than frequent large feedings of stale foods.

Check the pH and water temperature of the water, and make sure it is appropriate for your fish. Incorrect pH is very stressful for fish, and can lead to disease. Low water temperatures, particularly in fish with long flowing fins, can trigger fin rot.

If the root cause is corrected, antibiotics will usually cure the disease itself. Use a drug that is effective against gram negative organisms. Chloramphenical, Oxytetracycline, and Tetracycline, are good choices. Treat according to manufacturers instructions.

The use of aquarium salt will benefit livebearing fish, but should be avoided in fish, such as scaleless catfish, that are sensitive to salt

Prevention: Maintain good water quality

Keep proper water parameters

Feed fresh food in small amounts

The best prevention is good aquarium maintenance. Change the water regularly, vaccum the gravel, and monitor the water chemistry. Do not overcrowd the tank, and watch for signs of fighting between fish.

When feeding, keep the volume low! Overfeeding is the most common mistake made by all fish owners, and contributes to poor water quality. Be sure to use fresh foods. If the can has been open for half a year, it has lost most of its nutritional value. Purchase food in small enough containers that it can be used in one to two months. Other Diseases Columnaris

Neon Tetra Disease

Velvet

Suggested Reading Nutrition 101

Using Salt

Maintenance FAQs

source taken from: http://wiki.answers.com/

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