Sunday, February 10, 2013

An Insight Into the Paris Saint Germain Football Club

An Introduction

PSG Football Club is the home team of the beautiful city Paris and has gained immense popularity worldwide. The well-known club came into existence after its formation in the year 1970 on 12 August with the merger of Stade Saint-Germain and Paris FC. From that time, it has remained in the popular premier French division as a dominant force in French football. The club has won countless number of titles such as two Trophies des Champions, three League Cups, eight French Cups, two League Titles, and more.

The Success Stories

There is nothing like the first taste of success, and same goes with the Paris Saint Germain Football club. It was during 1982 to 1986, when the club first experienced enormous success by winning two Cups in both the 1982 and 1983 seasons. The era also experienced some incredible players and the continued dominance of the club. The late nineteen nineties is considered as the best period in the history of this superb team. This was the time when the team won the French Cup (in 1993) and the League Cup.

Is Football a Dead Sport Walking?

An examination of the state of American football and a comprehensive solution to ensure its continued life

Football is dying because our brains just can't take it. More specifically, the brains of football players. One key thing you probably note in the title of this article is the absence of the word "professional", and that is because I am referring to the brains of all football players and not just professionals. Current media coverage might lead you to believe that the principle injury concern in football today - the effect of repeated concussions or more specifically, chronic traumatic encephalopathy (C.T.E.) - is one specifically concentrated in the professional ranks. This is not the case. Perhaps the most alarming aspect of this issue is that it is a long term issue and not one born in the NFL or CFL. The grave nature of this problem is receiving a cascade of study and the evidence supporting football's contribution to this illness is steadily building, but I will leave the researchers to the task of further building the scientific and medical case. Instead, I will concentrate this article on the impact of these study results on the game Americans obviously love and how that game may be changed in a way that might help it survive - along with the brains of its many participants.