|
Maldini, Paolo Maldini |
|
|
|
Aug 17 2006, 12:52 AM
|
Prima Squadra
Group: Moderators
Posts: 39,645
Joined: 6-January 06
From: Malta
Member No.: 1,109
|
Sadly I just don't see him getting back to a 100%, he has had almost all of last season and the summer to recover and he still isn't ready, I'm sure that he will play some games next season, but I don't see him being a regular.
|
|
|
|
|
Aug 17 2006, 01:11 AM
|
Insert cool title here<--
Group: Moderators
Posts: 4,121
Joined: 7-May 06
From: Berlin, Germany
Member No.: 1,792
|
I do so hope he'll come back. He's a legend. What I've seen from him at the beginning of the last season was really great for a 37 - year old. He's fighter, that's true. But I'm afraid he won't recover 100%. But I do so hope there will be one or 2 titles I can add to my sig (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
|
|
|
|
|
Aug 17 2006, 01:58 AM
|
Prima Squadra
Group: Moderators
Posts: 39,645
Joined: 6-January 06
From: Malta
Member No.: 1,109
|
QUOTE (LaPalma @ Aug 17 2006, 12:11 AM) I do so hope he'll come back. He's a legend. What I've seen from him at the beginning of the last season was really great for a 37 - year old. He's fighter, that's true. But I'm afraid he won't recover 100%. But I do so hope there will be one or 2 titles I can add to my sig (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) I'll be praying for your wish to come true (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/wink.gif) (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) I just hope that he will get to come back at least for a few games, I'm sure if he won't get to 100% by the end of this season he will surely retire, he has always said that he didn't just want to fade away and if he wasn't up to it anymore and couldn't play regularly he will retire (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/cry.gif) (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/sad.gif) I just hope that he will get to go out with a bang by winning the CL or atleast the scudetto I was just thinking about this but, if those 2 scudettos where rightfully awarded to us since we deserved them and we would win this year's scudetto then Maldini could say that he would have been their for the making of our second star, but sadly we where cheated out of those 2 titles
This post has been edited by han2503: Aug 17 2006, 02:04 AM
|
|
|
|
|
Aug 17 2006, 09:38 PM
|
Prima Squadra
Group: Moderators
Posts: 39,645
Joined: 6-January 06
From: Malta
Member No.: 1,109
|
QUOTE (pKillerMax @ Aug 17 2006, 04:43 PM) But who says he will be good enough? I really hope he will be just as good as his dady! I hope they haven't spoiled him by reserving him the number 3 jersey and telling him he will have a place in the Milan squad just like that... I'm sure it runs in the Maldini blood to be great footballers.
|
|
|
|
|
Aug 18 2006, 03:44 PM
|
Esordienti B 96
Group: Full Members
Posts: 201
Joined: 13-April 06
From: Bury St. Edmunds/ Sheffield(term-time)
Member No.: 1,611
|
Unfortunately I think old Paolo's body has given up on him, it is, frankly, exaughsted. He seems to have a persitant knee injury, which hasnt been cured by operations, rest, or whatever. I am very sorry to say that I think his playing days are, bar a couple of cameo appearances, over. Even if he wanted to go on another season, he simply couldn't.
I too hope his last season is crowned with the greatest glories, and that his son is as good as his father and grandfather.
|
|
|
|
|
Nov 3 2006, 12:13 AM
|
Insert cool title here<--
Group: Moderators
Posts: 4,121
Joined: 7-May 06
From: Berlin, Germany
Member No.: 1,792
|
QUOTE (pKillerMax @ Nov 2 2006, 11:40 PM) I will sign that petition as well! Paolo...please DON'T LEAVE US!!!!!!!
|
|
|
|
|
Nov 3 2006, 12:16 AM
|
Primavera
Group: Moderators
Posts: 23,206
Joined: 20-November 05
From: Athens, Hellas
Member No.: 911
|
if this is meant as a joke it is really a bad one !!
By the way: what a player Cantona was ...
|
|
|
|
|
Dec 17 2006, 02:56 PM
|
Prima Squadra
Group: Moderators
Posts: 39,645
Joined: 6-January 06
From: Malta
Member No.: 1,109
|
NIGHT THE BOY BECAME A MILAN
Gord: I knew teen Maldini was world class when he took me to cleaners By Neil Cameron
GORDON STRACHAN eyed up the fresh-faced AC Milan defender and decided he would have a bit of fun teaching this young buck a thing or two about football.
But just 90 minutes later it was the experienced professional who was given a lesson and there and then he predicted the boy he had just come up against was going to be a superstar.
What the former Manchester United player couldn't have predicted was that two decades later he would be the Celtic manager and would once again have to face the kid who ran him ragged in a friendly match.
The rookie left-back in question was a certain Paolo Maldini who is still going strong for the Milan giants after a career which, let's face it, has been fairly decent.
Strachan smiled as he recalled an end-of-season game at Old Trafford when the winger truly believed an easy evening awaited as he eyed the nobody he was to go up against.
Maldini is, of course, a legend of the game and it is incredible to think that this wonderful footballer is still playing for one of the biggest clubs in the world at 38. He has said this will be his last season but we have heard it all before.
And you have to wonder if the AC Milan captain remembers the night when he gave a wee ginger Scotsman a torrid time of it.
Strachan said: "I played against Maldini years ago when he was a youngster. AC Milan had just won the league when they came to Old Trafford at the end of the season for a game.
"He was left-back, only 18, so I thought to myself that it would be an easy night for me. I spent 90 minutes in reverse. I saw that night that he was special.
"That was a team with Ruud Gullit and Marco Van Basten. They were fantastic and we managed to scrape a draw.I have no idea how.
"Maldini has had a great career and still to be going is fantastic."
The AC Milan Strachan and his players will face are not of that vintage but they are still mighty opponents. Maldini is still there as is the incredible Alessandro Costacurta.
Then you add the names of Rino Gattuso, Andrea Pirlo and Cafu. All World Cup winners. Brazilian Kaka, on his day, is as good as anyone, yet the consensus rightly or wrongly is Celtic have got themselves a decent draw.
That may well be true but Strachan pointed out that for his side to beat the Italians they must be at full strength and every last man will have to be at his very best.
He said: "I would like to have a full squad for the games. I couldn't say anything about the AC Milan players. They have done enough in the game and I can't be commenting on them. It's going to be a massive test."
Not only a test, but a fantastic learning experience for this relatively young Celtic side. Strachan yesterday joked about the not-so-exotic places he visited with Aberdeen on their foreign travels when trips to Bulgaria and Albania were far from easy.
But the team he learned most from was Liverpool who, as European Cup holders, faced the Dons in 1980 and gave them a footballing lesson. Strachan took a lot from that doing, a 5-0 defeat over two legs was the end result, and his hope is that players such as Stephen McManus and Mark Wilson will learn from playing the superstars of Milan.
He said: "It will be great if all the younger boys can get involved in this. They will find out what they need to do to compete at this level.
"They can't just say that they played well against Dunfermline last week. If you want to be a top, top player then you must be recognised in these games.
"We got battered by Liverpool when Aberdeen played them. We were a right young side and it was only then that we realised we would have to be some team to play at that level.
"It also helped me personally. I moved on after playing at the highest level and that helped me in England."
AC Milan will have to be forgotten about for a couple of months as there is plenty of football for Celtic to be concerned with in the meantime - tomorrow's Old Firm game for a start.
But these two games in the distance do keep every player on their toes. Standards won't be allowed to slip because a few bad games and you'll be watching Kaka and Co from the bench.
Strachan said: "There can be long winters here. The training is hard but this tie keeps us ticking over. Guys with injuries will keep themselves going in the gym because they know at the end of it there is the chance to play AC Milan. It gives them that wee added incentive."
The matches against the Italians offer Shunsuke Nakamura a return to the country where he made his name and he is determined to emulate the strike that stunned Manchester United in qualifying Group F.
Nakamura said: "I'm delighted to be going back to Italy and especially somewhere as special as the San Siro. It's a fantastic draw for Celtic and for myself as I get the chance to return to Italy and show the people there what I can do.
"I never really showed my best form when I was with Reggina but I feel at home with Celtic and in Scotland. I'm playing for a club who allow me to play the game the way I want to.
"The winning goal I scored against Manchester United was one of the special moments of my career and I would love now to do the same against AC Milan. It would mean even more to me given the time I spent in Italy as a player."
Celtic chief executive Peter Lawwell hopes the atmosphere in the east end of Glasgow will inspire Celtic to another famous victory. He said: "It's a fantastic draw, absolutely fantastic.
"It is a great tie for the club, for the supporters and, I'm sure, for Gordon Strachan and the players."
Lawwell insists Celtic must believe they can win the tournament and not think about the next round.
He added: "We always have our targets and that would be quite sweet. It will be a tough task. I'm sure Milan will have all their players back and they will be up for it. "If we didn't think we could lift the trophy there would be no point competing."
AC Milan coach Carlo Ancelotti is wary of the challenge his team face and insists Celtic will not be underestimated.
He said: "Celtic are a very good side. They beat Manchester United and they are a team to fear.
"Considering the atmosphere we will face in Glasgow it will be an advantage to play the decider at the San Siro."
This post has been edited by han2503: Dec 17 2006, 02:58 PM
|
|
|
|
|
Jan 6 2007, 01:09 PM
|
Smoking Bianco
Group: Helpers
Posts: 14,039
Joined: 15-August 05
From: KWT
Member No.: 191
|
Maldini: Juve Wanted Me
The Milan captain revealed this during an interview with 'Sky Italia'.
zoom - galleria Paolo Maldini could have been a Juventus player according to the former Italian international who was apparently approached by the Bianconeri before the 1990 World Cup.
"I was never tempted, but I always knew about their interest and how much they could appreciate me, especially President Boniperti and Agnelli, who told me so clearly when I met them once, I remember, before the World Cup of 1990.
"However, they knew very well what my story was, of my family and how tied I was to Milan."
The Rossoneri are currently in a winter training camp in Malta, as the squad is preparing for the second part of the season with the Champions League being the main priority for the club.
This afternoon, the Rossoneri will face Juventus in the classic Berlusconi Cup in program at San Siro at 5pm CET.
Goal.com
|
|
|
|
|
Jan 6 2007, 06:32 PM
|
Loves Greek Women esp Fay
Group: Moderators
Posts: 14,924
Joined: 19-May 06
From: Bangalore,India
Member No.: 1,865
|
I think Olympiakos were not interested...coz they had this prodigy called dst who could play at RB.
|
|
|
|
|
Feb 28 2007, 02:53 AM
|
Primavera
Group: Moderators
Posts: 23,206
Joined: 20-November 05
From: Athens, Hellas
Member No.: 911
|
QUOTE ( uefa.com ) Maldini enjoying the momentFriday, 23 February 2007As the wall of noise encircling Celtic Park reached a crescendo, there was no sign of tension on the face of the AC Milan captain; nor, for that matter, the 'focus' that sportsmen speak of so often these days. Instead Paolo Maldini responded with an appreciative nod as if acknowledging that here was a moment to savour. Authority undiminishedFour months shy of his 39th birthday, Maldini knows he may not have many such moments left as age slowly unravels his athletic abilities. Yet anyone observing his 100th appearance in the UEFA Champions League on Tuesday could see the on-field authority of this Italian football legend is undiminished. From the seventh minute, when he beat the towering Celtic FC striker Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink to a high ball before swiftly adjusting to intercept an attempted pass to Kenny Miller, to the 90th when he completed the Milan defence's last clearance of the night, Maldini was assuredness itself. 'Still a key player'As goalkeeper Zeljko Kalac said in praise of Maldini and his defensive colleagues: "Our defence was exceptional tonight, the way they dealt with the high balls and the danger of Vennegoor of Hesselink and the players running off him." True, Milan's slick and plentiful possession in midfield meant Celtic's forwards asked few serious questions of a visiting back line that had attracted criticism for leaking three goals against AC Siena just three days earlier. Yet Maldini, with over two decades of experience to draw upon, still offered enough evidence to support the assertion of Mauro Tassotti, Milan's assistant coach, that he remains "a key player for the team". Tassotti praiseThe marauding left-back of his prime may be a distant memory – and some Italian observers will point to one or two fault lines in his recent performances – but Tassotti, a European champion alongside Maldini in 1989 and 1994, explained that his old colleague still had an important role in the Rossoneri squad. Speaking to uefa.com after the goalless draw in Glasgow that leaves Milan favourites to progress to the quarter-finals, Tassotti said: "Of course we can't ask him to play all the time – he can't manage a game every three days but if we give him time to prepare properly for a game he can still give a lot to the team." Respect"He is a great player as everyone can see and also a special person," added Tassotti. "To be playing at this level at his age means you have something special inside." Goalkeeper Kalac underlined Maldini's importance in the Milan dressing room. "He has been around for so long and with a player of his stature, his presence rubs off on the other players," said the Australian. "He does not talk too much but when he says something, you listen. That speaks volumes for the respect he has from the other players." Staying powerThe second-oldest outfield player left in the UEFA Champions League (behind team-mate Alessandro Costacurta), Maldini ascribes his staying power to several factors. "My incredible passion for the game, constant training, sacrifices and a bit of good luck too," he told uefa.com. A carefully controlled Mediterranean diet and a personal training programme developed with the help of the Milan Lab also help. "For the last few seasons I've followed a personal training programme in agreement with our coach Carlo Ancelotti, which I decide depending on my condition and how I feel," he explained. FutureWhat of the future then? Maldini has made more Serie A appearances this season than he did throughout the whole of 2005/06 and according to Milan vice-president Adriano Galliani, he could still be playing in his 40th year next season - Galliani having stressed that the decision whether or not he continues lies exclusively with the player. Looking further ahead, it seems unlikely right now that Maldini would follow his father Cesare into football management, although a position working with his beloved Milan could beckon. He would be in good company there, given the presence of old colleagues Franco Baresi, Stefano Eranio, Alberigo Evani, Filippo Galli, Sebastiano Rossi and Giovanni Stroppa in the club's coaching ranks. Eye on AthensFirst, though, there is the present and the goal of collecting a fifth European Champion Clubs' Cup winner's medal. "I think we have a good chance of going all the way to the final in Athens," he declared this week. Milan have scored only eight goals in seven matches in the competition but their defensive record augurs well, the Celtic tie bringing a fourth clean sheet. "Looking at our performance at Celtic, we are very confident for the return. We did not suffer, we played quite well and we will soon have players back from injury," added the veteran, whose efforts on his 100th appearance in the revamped competition have certainly helped put the last eight within the Rossoneri's reach. uefa.com
|
|
|
|
|
Mar 2 2007, 06:35 PM
|
Loves Greek Women esp Fay
Group: Moderators
Posts: 14,924
Joined: 19-May 06
From: Bangalore,India
Member No.: 1,865
|
Those pics...Paolo looks like God. Who's his fashion advisor??
|
|
|
|
|
Mar 2 2007, 08:27 PM
|
Loves Greek Women esp Fay
Group: Moderators
Posts: 14,924
Joined: 19-May 06
From: Bangalore,India
Member No.: 1,865
|
QUOTE Changing your style would not help you, Willy!! Paolo is also unbelievably handsome, in case you haven't noticed. I've heard commentators talking about him like if they were looking at Gisele!! Half of them are gays anyway. Especially the ones who talk about Ronaldinho. And I'm handsome too....I just shy away from the cameras, so Paolo can be noticed more. (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/tongue.gif) Coach Carlo likes it like that.
|
|
|
|
|
Mar 12 2007, 03:12 PM
|
Primavera
Group: Moderators
Posts: 23,206
Joined: 20-November 05
From: Athens, Hellas
Member No.: 911
|
QUOTE Milan suffer Maldini blowMonday 12 March, 2007Milan have suffered a severe blow, as captain Paolo Maldini will be sidelined for at least six weeks after damaginig his meniscus. The Rossonero, who celebrated his 600th Serie A appearance in Sunday’s derby defeat to Inter, might need to undergo surgery after the problem in his left knee deteriorated recently. The former Italy international, in his 23rd season at Milan, has been suffering with knee problems for some time, fuelling speculation that he might end his extraordinary career at the end of the current term. Maldini, 38, is expected to undergo additional scans on Monday, although it seems likely that the defender will need to be operated on and is set for a six-week stop. Reports suggest that the player could be treated by Doctor Marc Martens, an orthopaedics specialist who already operated on him last season. The legendary stopper, who has not yet decided what he will do after hanging up his boots, has won seven Scudetti with the Rossoneri and 126 caps for the Nazionale over 14 years, an all-time Italy record. channel4.com I guess that if will have to undergo surgery then it'll be the end. (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/sleep.gif) Thankfully Nesta is back, I hope he won't face any more problems!
This post has been edited by dst: Mar 12 2007, 03:13 PM
|
|
|
|
|
Mar 17 2007, 02:28 PM
|
Primavera
Group: Moderators
Posts: 23,206
Joined: 20-November 05
From: Athens, Hellas
Member No.: 911
|
QUOTE Maldini 'fit for Bayern clash'Saturday 17 March, 2007Specialists have told Paolo Maldini he could be ready for the first leg of the quarter-final with Bayern Munich. The Milan captain suffered a new left knee setback during the Milan derby and there were fears he could require surgery for the persistent problem. However, the club website announced he had visited specialist Professor Marc Martens in Belgium and that an operation would not be necessary. The medic recommended continuing with physiotherapy to solve the issue and, although “the situation will be monitored daily,†it’s believed Maldini can be back within six weeks. The defender can therefore be ready for the first leg of the Champions League quarter-final against Bayern Munich on April 3. Alessandro Nesta is expected to return this weekend after several months out with a shoulder injury, while Serginho is also close to a comeback following a groin strain. channel4 I don't like this "not necessary" bullsh. I just hope there won't be any further complications... (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/sad.gif)
|
|
|
|
|
Apr 16 2007, 04:16 PM
|
Smoking Bianco
Group: Helpers
Posts: 14,039
Joined: 15-August 05
From: KWT
Member No.: 191
|
QUOTE Maldini's final ambition
Friday, 13 April 2007
by John Atkin from Munich
Depending on who you believe, the secret to longevity might be a good wife, a lack of stress, red meat or even gin. Yet as AC Milan legend Paolo Maldini weighs up the prospect of a ninth UEFA Champions League semi-final, the 38-year-old is keen to put a different slant on things.
German confidence A 2-0 victory against FC Bayern München saw the Rossoneri claim a last-four date with Manchester United FC, though the prospect had appeared decidedly bleak a week earlier. A late equaliser by Daniel Van Buyten at the San Siro had earned Bayern a 2-2 draw to put the Bundesliga side in the box seat for the second leg. It inspired one German television channel to bill the decider as "Die Nacht Der Bayern" (The night of Bayern), but this confidence was to prove unfounded. After weathering an early storm, Clarence Seedorf and Filippo Inzaghi scored and a stellar defensive display orchestrated by Maldini saw them through.
'Great mentality' "I approached the match in my usual positive way," Maldini said. "We knew we needed a win, but this team is blessed by players with a great mentality; they prove that every time. Now it is Manchester United - I think they were probably hoping to meet Bayern." The ashen look on the face of the attendant Sir Alex Ferguson at the end of the match at the Fußball Arena München suggested that assumption might well have some grounding. The United manager has good reason to fear the Italian side, who ended his team's campaign in the last 16 two seasons ago thanks to 1-0 wins, home and away.
'Not scared' Sir Alex had borne a very different appearance 24 hours earlier as his charges routed Milan's Serie A rivals AS Roma 7-1. Not since Juventus lost 7-0 to Austrian champions Wiener SC in 1958 had an Italian side conceded so many goals in one match in the competition. Maldini is confident his team-mates will provide a sterner test. "Manchester United have grown in strength over the past few years, and Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo are extremely impressive," he conceded. "It will be a difficult match, played at a great tempo. But we are not scared and we will go there in high spirits. What makes us strong is our great mentality, our determination. We are always ready when it counts."
Maldini name Milan have been crowned European champions six times, and only once has there not been a Maldini in their ranks. Paolo's father Cesare was part of the victorious 1963 European Champion Clubs' Cup team while the current incarnation has collected four winners' medals - in 1989, 1990, 1994 and 2003 – during an unparalleled 23-year spell at the San Siro. Such is his legend that when he does hang up his boots the No3 shirt will be retired unless one of his sons plays for the club. Ominously for rivals hoping to see the back of the Maldini clan, Paolo's eldest child Christian, 13, is already on the Rossoneri's books. It is surely no accident that the Maldini name is an anagram of "di Milan" (of Milan).
'I love the atmosphere' Maldini is not looking to bow out just yet, however, and has postponed much-needed surgery on a troublesome knee injury until the summer as he goes in pursuit of more silverware. But having won so much, what drives his ambitions for more? "I keep playing because I love the atmosphere," said the former Italy captain. "To play just one more semi-final on an English ground, with the atmosphere we will face there and the possibility of reaching another final gives me the strength to keep going."
'Very proud' Any "possibility" of a final has become a virtual probability for Maldini over the years, and until last season's defeat by FC Barcelona, he had never lost a last-four fixture. "This is yet another [European Cup] semi-final for me, my ninth. It went well seven times and I hope I will be able to make it to eight. This time we have qualified as the only non-English team, and in the last 20 years we have always been there; it makes me feel very proud. We have been somewhere near the top of the pile for years, ever since 1988."
'In our grasp' Maldini had made his Milan debut three years previously, against Udinese Calcio in January 1985, with the dawn of his career on the horizon. Two decades on he is eager for one last showpiece final – something that looked highly unlikely when the Rossoneri began their campaign seven months ago in the aftermath of the match-fixing scandal. "Last summer this target looked almost impossible, and now it is in our grasp," said Maldini. If the past 20 years have taught us anything it is that when Milan get a tentative hold on something, they tend to make it count. UEFA Magazine
|
|
|
|
|
Apr 24 2007, 12:40 PM
|
Token Girl
Group: Moderators
Posts: 12,435
Joined: 13-November 06
From: Washington, DC
Member No.: 2,800
|
Just found the following on a BBC message board:
Tonight 38 years old Paolo Maldini will play his 983rd official football game in all competitions, his 1st one was in serie A on the 20th January 1985: 16 days before the birth of C.Ronaldo and 9 months before the birth of W.Rooney !!! I think this little fact is amazing: doesn't matter who you will support tonight and doesn't matter how do you think he will cope with players so much younger than him.... I believe is a legend and just want to pay my tribute to one of the greatest defenders ever, always respected from every supporter, even from an Inter one like myself.
Maldini being praised by a Merda fan.
|
|
|
|
|
Apr 24 2007, 01:44 PM
|
Prima Squadra
Group: Moderators
Posts: 39,645
Joined: 6-January 06
From: Malta
Member No.: 1,109
|
QUOTE (Tennie @ Apr 24 2007, 11:40 AM) Just found the following on a BBC message board: Tonight 38 years old Paolo Maldini will play his 983rd official football game in all competitions, his 1st one was in serie A on the 20th January 1985: 16 days before the birth of C.Ronaldo and 9 months before the birth of W.Rooney !!! I think this little fact is amazing: doesn't matter who you will support tonight and doesn't matter how do you think he will cope with players so much younger than him.... I believe is a legend and just want to pay my tribute to one of the greatest defenders ever, always respected from every supporter, even from an Inter one like myself. Maldini being praised by a Merda fan. (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/ohmy.gif) (IMG: http://cyrus.medialayer.net/~m1ke/milanfan.com/forums/style_emoticons/default/ohmy.gif) You're an Inter fan????
|
|
|
|
|
Apr 24 2007, 02:10 PM
|
Prima Squadra
Group: Moderators
Posts: 39,645
Joined: 6-January 06
From: Malta
Member No.: 1,109
|
QUOTE (Tennie @ Apr 24 2007, 12:56 PM) oh! phew! Well at least there are some classy merda fans out there. That was a shocker.
|
|
|
|
7 User(s) are reading this topic (7 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:
|
|