Leovegildo Lins da Gama Júnior

Leovegildo Lins da Gama Júnior (born 29 June 1954), known simply as Júnior or Léo Júnior, is a Brazilian former professional footballer who played as a left back or midfielder.

He was named by Pelé as one of the top 125 greatest living footballers in March 2004. Junior now works as a television pundit for Rede Globo.

Club career

Júnior played for Flamengo during the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s, winning four Brazilian Championships (1980, 1982, 1983, 1992), the 1981 Copa Libertadores and 1981 Intercontinental Cup. With 857 matches, he is the player with most appearances for Flamengo.

On 12 June 1984 he was bought by Torino, for a fee of two million dollars. Júnior asked and obtained a guarantee to play as a midfielder rather than a full-back, because he considered the former role less stressful, so to extend the life of his career. Although he was now thirty years old, after some initial difficulties, he succeeded in integrating in the formation coached by Luigi Radice, becoming the leader of the midfield. During his first year in Italy was the victim of two incidents of racism: in Milan he was repeatedly insulted and spat upon as he left the stadium with his mother and father and in Turin, on the occasion of the derby, Juventus fans exhibited offensive banners on the colour of his skin. The Torino supporters responded promptly with another banner: "Better negro than Juventino". At the end of the season, finished second behind Verona, he was awarded Serie A's player of the year.

Junior

Junior or juniors may refer to:

Aircraft

  • Ekolot JK-05L Junior, a Polish ultralight aircraft
  • PZL-112 Junior, a Polish training aircraft
  • SZD-51 Junior, a Polish-made, training and club glider
  • Sport

  • Junior athletics, an age athletics category
  • Junior F.C., a football team
  • Argentinos Juniors, an Argentine centennial sports club
  • Junior ice hockey
  • Film and music

  • Junior (Röyksopp album), released in 2009
  • Junior (Kaki King album), released in 2010
  • Junior (band)
  • Junior (1994 film)
  • Junior (2008 film), a documentary film about Quebec junior league ice hockey
  • Places

  • Junior Lake (Vancouver Island), a lake in British Columbia, Canada
  • People

  • Junior (South Korean singer), a South Korean singer
  • Junior Aliberti, Uruguayan footballer
  • Junior Bent, English former professional footballer
  • Junior Castillo, Dominican Republican boxer
  • Junior Díaz, Costa Rican footballer
  • Junior D. Edwards, soldier in the United States Army during the Korean War
  • Junior Eldstål, Malaysian-Swedish footballer
  • Junior Félix, former professional baseball player
  • Júnior (Filipino singer)

    Júnior (born Antonio Barretto Morales; 10 September 1943 15 April 2014) was a Filipino singer and actor.

    Early life

    He was born in Manila, Philippines, the eldest of five brothers, during World War II, when the Philippines was occupied by Japan. He was 15 years old when his family emigrated to Barcelona, then settled in Madrid.

    Career

    In 1958, he became part of the group Jump, a pioneering Spanish electric guitar group. In the group's popularity, he was included in the movie Me Enveneno De Azules in 1969. His unstaked first themes Todo Porque Te Quiero (It's All Because I Love You) in 1969 and Perdóname with English theme The Snake in 1973.

    He became part of the group Los Brincos with Juan Pardo. His brothers Miguel and Ricky Morales were invited to join the group. Later, he and Juan Pardo left their group as Juan y Júnior. One of their songs is a Spanish version of "Fool On The Hill" by John Lennon and Paul McCartney from LP titled Júnior in 1976.

    In 1979, he interrupted his career to manage the career of his wife, the late singer Rocío Dúrcal with whom he had 3 children, including singer Shaila Dúrcal who is dedicated not only to her mother but also to her mother's namesake Rocío Jurado and Colombian diva Soraya who have been cancer victims. His daughter is actress Carmen Morales.

    Dare

    Dare may refer to:

    Places

  • Dare, East Timor, a city
  • Darè, Italy, a commune
  • Dare County, North Carolina, United States
  • Dare, Virginia, United States, an unincorporated community
  • Name

  • Dare (name), a list of people and fictional characters with either the surname or given name
  • Arts and entertainment

    Music

  • Dare (band), a band fronted by Darren Wharton
  • Dare (album), a 1981 album by The Human League
  • "Dare" (song), a song on Gorillaz 's 2005 album Demon Days
  • "Dare", a song on the 1986 The Transformers: The Movie soundtrack
  • "Dare (La La La)", a song by Shakira from the album Shakira (2014)
  • Other

  • Dare (film), a 2009 film
  • Dare (novel), a 1965 novel by Philip José Farmer
  • Dare, a 2007 novel by BET host Abiola Abrams
  • In business

  • Dare Foods, a Canadian food company
  • LG Dare (VX9700), a smartphone
  • Acronyms

  • Dark Ages Radio Explorer, a proposed NASA mission
  • Discrete Algebraic Riccati equation, a mathematical relationship
  • Drug Abuse Resistance Education, an anti-drug program for students
  • Defence Avionics Research Establishment, an Indian national defence laboratory
  • Dare (La La La)

    "Dare (La La La)" is a song recorded by Colombian singer-songwriter Shakira from her self-titled tenth studio album Shakira (2014). The song was first released to contemporary hit radio in Italy on 28 March 2014, as the third single from the album and was later released in a remix bundle in the United States via RCA Records. The song was co-written by Shakira, Jay Singh (J2), Dr. Luke, Mathieu Jomphe-Lepine, Max Martin, Cirkut, Raelene Arreguin and John J. Conte, Jr. while the production was handled by J2, Dr. Luke, Shakira, Cirkut and Billboard. The song is an uptempo, electro house song built over drums and chants.

    A reworked version of the song entitled "La La La (Brazil 2014)" was released on 27 May as the second theme song for the 2014 World Cup. This was Shakira's second time singing the theme song for the FIFA World Cup (The first being in 2010). The song included new lyrics and features Brazilian musician Carlinhos Brown. The version was praised by music critics and fared well commercially. An accompanying video was directed by Shakira's long time collaborator Jaume de Laiguana, the music video is influenced by Afro-Brazilian heritage and tribal imagery and features cameos from a variety of football players including Lionel Messi, Neymar, Cesc Fàbregas, Sergio Agüero, Radamel Falcao, James Rodríguez and Eric Abidal, Shakira's boyfriend Gerard Piqué and their son Milan.

    Dare (band)

    Dare are a rock band from Oldham, England, fronted by Thin Lizzy keyboard player Darren Wharton. They formed in 1985, and have released eight albums to date, including the #48 UK album Blood from Stone.

    History

    Dare was formed in 1985 by Darren Wharton after Thin Lizzy had broken up. By 1987, Dare had gained a local following in Oldham and they were offered recording contracts from A&M, RCA and MCA Records. The band's debut album, Out of the Silence, was released in 1988 on A&M Records. Dare had minor success in Europe, but album sales flagged and the band was dropped from their label after their second album Blood from Stone (1991).

    The band have had four songs in the UK Singles Chart: "The Raindance" (#62, 1989), "Abandon" (#71, 1989), "We Don't Need a Reason" (#52, 1991) and "Real Love" (#67, 1991).

    The band continues to this day, but have departed from their hard rock and melodic rock roots, and now feature a heavy Celtic influence.

    The original lineup featured Brian Cox who played keyboards on the records Out of the Silence and Blood From Stone. Cox later played with D:Ream before becoming a particle physicist and science communicator.

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