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2006 FIFA World Cup: Where Are They Now? Zinedine Zidane | France Zizou is still living down the lasting image of the infamous headbutt to Italy's Marco Materazzi, the final time the world saw him in a competitive match. He remains officially retired from soccer after a brilliant 19-year career which ranks among the best to ever play the game. But the French legend hasn't stayed away entirely. Zidane continues to make promotional and goodwill trips around the world, and those MLS rumors won't seem to go away. Could the 34-year-old resurface stateside? Marco Materazzi | Italy The man who got inside the head of Zidane -- and received the outside of it, too -- received a hero's welcome back home as Italy won its fourth World Cup. "The Matrix" is currently the monster of Inter Milan's back line as well, a key reason the Nerazzurri won an Italian record 18 straight matches earlier this season and look poised to win their first outright Serie A title in 18 years. Clint Dempsey | United States He's perhaps America's most exciting player and was responsible for the Yanks' lone goal in Germany, a crusher against Ghana in Team USA's finale. Dempsey parlayed that success into a $4 million jump abroad -- in January, he joined teammates Brian McBride and Carlos Bocanegra at Fulham, creating an unprecedented trio of Americans on an English Premier League club. David Beckham | England Unless you've been living under a rock, you know Becks is about to take America by storm as the biggest signing in Major League Soccer history. The timing couldn't have been better. Beckham had been dropped from the England squad just after the World Cup and was languishing on the bench at Real Madrid. But he had begun to bounce back until a knee injury sidelined him last month. He should be healthy by the time he reports to the Los Angeles Galaxy this summer at age 32. Ronaldo | Brazil He was Brazil's leading scorer and played well in stretches, but the man once known as "The Phenomenon" felt the heat as Brazil fizzled out in the quarterfinals in Germany, with many calling the huge collection of superstars overprivileged and undercoached. A noticeably overweight Ronaldo was saddled with much of the blame, and the criticism continued as he found his way to the bench at Real Madrid. But he has since resurfaced in a starring role at Italian super-club AC Milan, spurning a rumored move to MLS. Juan Román Riquelme | Argentina Like Beckham, Riquelme held a teary press conference after the Cup. But the man who orchestrated the attack of the most exciting team in Germany wasn't just stepping down as captain, he was quitting international play altogether at age 28. Only now does he seem to be snapping out his depression. Riquelme has returned home to Buenos Aires, where he's playing for the team where he began his career -- Argentine superclub Boca Juniors -- on loan from Spain's Villarreal. Wayne Rooney | England When Rooney was ejected during his team's quarterfinal loss to Portugal, it marked the end of the road yet again for title-starved England. The hot-headed prodigy thrust his cleat into the groin of Portuguese defender Ricardo Carvalho, earning a red card and putting England down a man for most of the second half. Now, after a dip in confidence, the 21-year-old is back in form for Manchester United as it's in the running for three trophies this season. Cristiano Ronaldo | Portugal Ronaldo was the antagonist in "Stompgate" -- the English tabloids went nuts at video stills of the 22-year-old prodigy winking, suggesting he influenced the referee's decision to eject Manchester United teammate Rooney. Ronaldo is still the bad guy in England as he is booed in every opposing stadium United visits. But he's having the last laugh. His insane speed, creativity and massive talent are the No. 1 reason Man U is clicking right now. Maxi Rodríguez | Argentina If there's one goal you remember from Germany, Rodríguez's is it. In the 98th minute of a furious 1-1 battle with Mexico, he took a cross-field pass off his chest just outside the area and thundered a left-footed volley into the net past a leaping Oswaldo Sánchez (well worth another look, click the link below). His fortune since then hasn't been as magical, however. During a friendly against Spain in October, Rodríguez tore his ACL and hasn't made an appearance for club team Atlético Madrid since. Gianluigi Buffon | Italy Think Albert Pujols could accept a demotion to Triple-A just a season after the Cardinals' World Series title? Not a chance. But that's what the best goalkeeper at the Cup did just a month after leading Italy to the title. Buffon's club team, Juventus, was banished to the second division for its part in Italy's wide-ranging match-fixing scandal. Gigi stuck by his team, though, and is his usual dependable self this season as Juve tries to fight its way back to Serie A. Miroslav Klose | Germany The Polish-born striker was Germany's star performer at its own show, leading all World Cup scorers with five goals and becoming the first German to win the Cup's Golden Boot award in 36 years. Klose is back to his high-scoring ways in the Bundesliga: He's currently in the top five in goals scored in the German league and is a big reason why Werder Bremen is in the race for its second crown in four seasons. Petr Cech | Czech Republic The man who stonewalled the U.S. in its opener was the key figure in one of the scariest moments in world soccer in October. Cech took a knee to the head in a nasty collision with Reading's Stephen Hunt, knocking the big keeper unconscious and leaving him with a fractured skull. Cech made an incredible comeback from the accident, returning to the Chelsea nets in January wearing a rugby-style protective helmet. Michael Essien | Ghana When the U.S. crafted its game plan for its final match against Ghana, it did so with the Black Stars' bruising midfielder in mind. Essien was one of the most intimidating players in Germany, and remains so for English super-club Chelsea. While the rest of the star-studded roster struggles to find consistency, "The Bison" has been the most dependable guy on the pitch, forcing opposing teams to change their entire strategy when he's in the lineup. Essien recently signed a new deal with Chelsea that will keep him terrorizing Europe through 2012. Fabio Cannavaro | Italy Steadfast Cannavaro was the first to hoist the World Cup after the inspirational defender captained the Azzurri to their fourth title, and also ended up winning the FIFA World Player of the Year award for his heroics. But unlike teammate Buffon, Cannavaro took his leave of his relegated club team, Juventus, and moved to Real Madrid a few weeks after Germany. Now he and the rest of the struggling Merengues are stuck in yet another rebuilding project. | |
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Thanks for the update. Cannavaro is devilishly handsome isnt he? Annoyingly he is just as handsome at defending. | |
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JDINTERACTIVE said: Thanks for the update. Cannavaro is devilishly handsome isnt he? Annoyingly he is just as handsome at defending.
The way I see it. Anyone from 2006 Italia is devilish. I, favor. Zinedine Zidane | France | |
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Uno, uno, dos, tres, uno, uno, dos, uno. Final, final. Static. Signal drop. | |
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