Fated to Be a footballer football

He set about his task, but as the witching hour approached, Herman became convinced that his goal was unattainable. Rather than praying to God for mercy as a good monk should, he made a plea to the fallen one himself….Satan. Of course being the agreeable fellow that he is, Satan completed the book, and Herman showed his gratitude by adding the now infamous illustration of the Devil himself. Of course, the Devil then possessed poor Herman, who was then forced to add a number of exorcism spells within the Codex in an attempt to exorcise himself.
Of course legends are funny things. It seems that the legend about Herman making a pact with the devil is more likely a mistranslation of the word inclusus, which rather than meaning “walled up alive”, more literally means choosing to live a solitary life. However, as experts have analyzed the book, it does appear to have been written entirely by the same hand, and is not beyond belief that perhaps Herman was commissioned to write the Codex as a form of punishment. But it certainly took him more than one night. Scholars estimate that the book would have taken a minimum of 25-30 years to complete, including the time taken to rule the pages, write the text, and complete the illuminations and drawings.
yeah its Chicharito running in my mind. a new manutd signing this year. The exciting young striker joined from hometown club Chivas de Guadalajara, for whom he had scored 29 goals in 79 games since making his debut as a teenager in 2006.
Unusually for a club of United’s stature, the transfer was conducted completely under the radar: only the player and his father were aware of the deal and there was no prior speculation in the media, either in the UK or Mexico.
‘Chicharito’ means ‘little pea’ and Hernandez attracted the moniker because he’s the son of Javier Hernandez, himself a top Mexican striker who played in the 1986 World Cup and was nicknamed ‘Chicharo’ (‘pea’) because of his green eyes.
An out-and-out striker, Chicharito is quick, two-footed and strong in the air, qualities that have already seen him likened to Reds legend Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.
He’s already made an impact at international level, scoring twice for Mexico in the 2010 World Cup just days before completing his switch to United.
Those goals introduced him to a wider global audience and would
undoubtedly have led to a clamour for his signature – precisely the reason why United moved fast to complete the deal before the tournament began.
“We first received some background knowledge of the boy in October [2009],” Sir Alex Ferguson said. “One of our scouts went to Mexico in December and watched a few games – the reports that came back were very good. At that time we thought we’d just wait because he was only young.
“But then he came into the national team and that created a potential problem: if he went to the World Cup and did well at the tournament then we could be in danger of
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