Jadwal Liga Italia AS Roma vs Juventus 12 Mei 2014 – Prediksi AS Roma vs Juventus – Bursa Taruhan Skor Bola AS Roma vs Juventus – Jadwal Liga Italia pekan ini akan mempertemukan dua tim teratas di klasemen saat ini yaitu AS Roma vs Juventus di Stadio Olimpico Roma, Minggu (11/5/2014) pukul 22.45 WIB. Juve yang telah memastikan scudetto pekan lalu berharap bisa terus melanjutkan tren apiknya meski harus menghadapi Roma.
Roma memang kehilangan peluang meraih scudetto pekan lalu setelah secara mengejutkan dikalahkan Catania 4-1. Maka, kali ini Roma tentu menyimpan ambisi besar untuk bisa menghabisi Juve untuk membuktikan bahwa mereka sebenarnya tak kalah dari sang jawara.
Ya, Roma memang punya peluang untuk bisa mengimbangi bahkan mengalahkan Juve di laga ini. Prediksi Elche vs Barcelona Apalagi top skor mereka, Mattia Destro, juga sudah kembali setelah menjalani skorsing selama empat pertandingan.
Sementara itu, Juve bisa jadi akan menurunkan beberapa pemain pelapisnya di pertandingan ini guna memberi istirahat bagi para pemain utama. Di pertandingan ini sendiri Juve sudah pasti kehilangan Arturo Vidal yang menjalani operasi cedera lutut.
Juve memang cukup berkuasa di Serie-A, namun dalam dua pertemuan terakhir di Olimpico, mereka selalu tumbang dari Roma. Lalu, apakah hasil yang sama akan terulang di pertandingan ini?
Head to head:
21-01-2014: Roma 1-0 Juventus
05-01-2014: Juventus 3-0 Roma
16-02-2013: Roma 1-0 Juventus
29-09-2012: Juventus 4-1 Roma
22-04-2012: Juventus 4-0 Roma
Perkiraan susunan pemain:
Roma (4-3-3): 26. Morgan De Sanctis; 13. Maicon, 17. Mehdi Benatia, 5. Leandro Castan, 3. Dodo; 16. Daniele De Rossi, 44. Radja Nainggolan, 15. Miralem Pjanic; 27. Gervinho, 10. Francesco Totti, 22. Mattia Destro. Pelatih: Rudi Garcia
Juventus (3-5-2): 30. Marco Storari; 15. Andrea Barzagli, 19. Leonardo Bonucci, 3. Giorgio Chiellini; 26. Stephan Lichtsteiner, 22. Kwadwo Asamoah, 21. Andrea Pirlo, 8. Claudio Marchisio, 6. Paul Pogba; 10. Carlos Tevez, 14. Fernando Llorente. Pelatih: Antonio Conte
Prediksi Skor AS Roma vs Juventus 12 Mei 2014 adalah 1 - 4
No matter how carefully you plan your goals they will never be more that pipe dreams unless you pursue them with gusto. --- W. Clement Stone
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Jadwal Liga Italia AS Roma vs Juventus 12 Mei 2014
Inter Milan vs Lazio 11 Mei 2014
Inter Milan vs Lazio 11 Mei 2014 – Prediksi Inter vs Lazio – Seri A Italia Inter Milan vs Lazio – Pertandingan laga lanjutan Liga Serie A Italia ini akan mempertemukan laga kedua tim yang akan bertanding antara Inter Milan yang akan berhadapan melawan Lazio yang akan berlangsung pada hari Minggu,11 Mei 2014 pukul 01:45 WIB yang akan berlangsung di Stadion Giuseppe Meazza.
Inter Milan vs Lazio - Inter Milan pada laga terakhirnya dalam lanjutan Liga Serie A Italia harus menderita kekalahan saat menghadapi AC Milan. Dalam laga ini Inter Milan yang bertindak sebagai tamu,gagal mencuri tiga poin saat menghadapi tuan rumah AC Milan setelah Inter Milan menderita kekalahan dengan skor tipis yakni 1-0 di San Siro. Prediksi Atalanta vs AC Milan Saat ini Inter Milan dalam klasemen Liga Serie A Italia musim ini tetap tertahan diposisi lima besar dengan perolehan 57 angka. Inter juga dipastikan tidak akan dapat mengikuti ajang Liga Champions pada musim depan dan Inter hanya dapat mengikuti ajang Liga Eropa pada musim depan jika bisa meraih kemenangan pada 2 pertandingan yang tersisa.
Sementara dalam laga Liga Serie A Italia matchday ke 36 kubu tamu Lazio harus puas berbagi satu poin dengan tamunya Verona setelah dalam laga ini ditahan imbang Verona di Olimpico. Dalam laga ini terjadi hujan enam gol di Olimpico dimana Lazio tampil dengan penuh percaya diri sempat unggul satu gol dimenit ke 30 lewat gol dari Balde Diao Keitan. Namun kemenangan ini tidak dapat dipertahankan Lazio,dimana sang tamu Verona mampu membalas keunggulan Lazio yang akhirnya dari laga ini Verona mampu menahan imbang Lazio dengan skor 3-3. Selanjutnya dalam pekan ini akan berlanjut dengan laga lanjutan Liga Serie A Italia antara tuan rumah Inter Milan akan menjamu tamunya Lazio.
Head-To-Head Inter Milan vs Lazio :
-07 Jan 2014-Lazio 1 – 0 Inter
-09 Mei 2013-Inter 1 – 3 Lazio
-16 Des 2012-Lazio 1 – 0 Inter
-14 Mei 2012-Lazio 3 – 1 Inter
-23 Jan 2012-Inter 2 – 1 Lazio
Lima Pertandingan Terakhir Inter Milan :
-05 Mei 2014-AC Milan 1 – 0 Inter
-27 Apr 2014-Inter- 0 – 0 Napoli
-19 Apr 2014-Parma- 0 – 2 Inter
-13 Apr 2014-Sampdoria 0 – 4 Inter
-06 Apr 2014-Inter- 2 – 2 Bologna
Lima Pertandingan Terakhir Lazio :
-06 Mei 2014-Lazio 3 – 3 Verona
-27 Apr 2014-Livorno 0 – 2 Lazio
-19 Apr 2014-Lazio 3 – 3 Torino
-13 Apr 2014-Napoli 4 – 2 Lazio
-06 Apr 2014-Lazio 2 – 0 Sampdoria
Prediksi Susunan Pemain Inter Milan vs Lazio :
Inter Milan : Handanovic,Ranocchia,Samuel,Rolando,Jonathan,Hernanes,Cambiasso,Kovacic,Nagatomo,Palacio,Milito.
Lazio : Berisha,Konko,Biava,Cana,Radu,Biglia,Ledesma,Anderson,Candreva,Mauri,Keita.
Prediksi Pertandingan Inter Milan vs Lazio Adalah 2 : 0
Need A Last Minute Gift? No Problem!
|
Watch Out!
How To Send The Perfect Text
|
ScienceDaily: Top Technology News
ScienceDaily: Top Technology News |
- Toxicologists outline key health and environmental concerns associated with hydraulic fracturing
- Conducting polymer films decorated with biomolecules for cell research use
- Catalytic upgrade: Better and cheaper renewable biofuels
- Making it big: Metamaterial applications a step closer to reality
- The promise of purple for enhanced bioimaging
- The direct approach to microcavities
- Broadening the scope for synthesizing optically active compounds
- Can plants provide petroleum-derived chemicals?
- Rotational X-ray tracking uncovers hidden motion at the nanoscale
- Sneaking drugs into cancer cells before triggering release
- How proteins acquire correct structure: Molecular high-speed origami
- Teaching robots right from wrong
- i, Solo: Musicians perform as the soloist with full philharmonic orchestra at home
- Airborne measurements confirm leaks from oil and gas operations
- Simple model underpins building safety in the wake of landslides
- App to assist the hearing impaired
Toxicologists outline key health and environmental concerns associated with hydraulic fracturing Posted: 09 May 2014 02:25 PM PDT Since the rise in the use of hydraulic fracturing of shale to produce natural gas and oil, many have debated the merits and detractions of the practice. Scientists outline how toxicological sciences can be used to determine what risks may or may not be associated with fracking. |
Conducting polymer films decorated with biomolecules for cell research use Posted: 09 May 2014 11:03 AM PDT The ability to create conducting polymer films in a variety of shapes, thicknesses and surface properties rapidly and inexpensively will make growing and testing cells easier and more flexible, according to a team of bioengineers. The researchers create their hydrogel stamps from agarose -- a sugar extracted from seaweed -- poured into molds. |
Catalytic upgrade: Better and cheaper renewable biofuels Posted: 09 May 2014 10:16 AM PDT New catalysts to remove oxygenated compounds from bio-derived oils may lead to better and cheaper renewable biofuels. Dwindling crude oil reserves, accompanied by rising prices and environmental concerns, have led to increased interest in the use of renewable fuels. Biofuels produced from waste agricultural or forestry material are particularly desirable because they avoid diverting resources from the production of food crops. |
Making it big: Metamaterial applications a step closer to reality Posted: 09 May 2014 10:16 AM PDT The use of a fabrication technique borrowed from the semiconductor industry brings metamaterial applications a step closer to reality. Artificial materials engineered to have properties not found in nature, such as a negative refractive index are engineered to interact with light and sound waves in ways that natural materials cannot. They thus have the potential to be used in exciting new applications, such as invisibility cloaks, high-resolution lenses, efficient and compact antennas, and highly sensitive sensors. |
The promise of purple for enhanced bioimaging Posted: 09 May 2014 10:16 AM PDT Newly detected 'energy-clustering' structures inside rare-earth nanoparticles generate intense violet light, which is ideal for studying photon-induced transformations. Labeling biomolecules with light-emitting nanoparticles is a powerful technique for observing cell movement and signaling under realistic, in vivo conditions. The small size of these probes, however, often limits their optical capabilities. In particular, many nanoparticles have trouble producing high-energy light with wavelengths in the violet to ultraviolet range, which can trigger critical biological reactions. |
The direct approach to microcavities Posted: 09 May 2014 10:16 AM PDT A robust micrometer-scale structure for trapping light enhances optical interactions in advanced photonic devices. Trapping light into a small volume is a useful way of amplifying optical effects. Optical cavities, for example, can enhance the interaction between light and matter. Incorporating these tiny structures into actual devices is difficult however, because they are easily broken or can become optically misaligned. |
Broadening the scope for synthesizing optically active compounds Posted: 09 May 2014 10:15 AM PDT Chiral compounds are increasingly important in chemical manufacturing. They are distinguished by a special kind of asymmetry in their molecular structure. Scientists have now developed a method for desymmetrizing compounds to produce new chiral molecules. The process allows 99% selectivity in the chemicals produced. |
Can plants provide petroleum-derived chemicals? Posted: 09 May 2014 10:00 AM PDT Plant scientists find fatty acid desaturating enzymes link up to pass intermediate products from one enzyme to another. Getting plants to accumulate high levels of more healthful polyunsaturated fatty acids, or unusual fatty acids that could be used as raw materials in place of petroleum-derived chemicals in industrial processes, are a few possible outcomes. |
Rotational X-ray tracking uncovers hidden motion at the nanoscale Posted: 09 May 2014 08:07 AM PDT Over the past two decades or so, there has been increasing interest and development in measuring slow dynamics in disordered systems at the nanoscale, brought about in part from a demand for advancements in the food and consumer products industries. |
Sneaking drugs into cancer cells before triggering release Posted: 09 May 2014 08:07 AM PDT Biomedical engineering researchers have developed an anti-cancer drug delivery method that essentially smuggles the drug into a cancer cell before triggering its release. The method can be likened to keeping a cancer-killing bomb and its detonator separate until they are inside a cancer cell, where they then combine to destroy the cell. |
How proteins acquire correct structure: Molecular high-speed origami Posted: 09 May 2014 08:07 AM PDT Proteins are responsible for nearly every essential process of life. Their form and structure are of crucial importance for their functionality. Scientists have recently discovered an unknown sequence of reactions which is necessary for newly generated proteins to acquire their correct structure. |
Teaching robots right from wrong Posted: 09 May 2014 04:39 AM PDT Researchers are teaming with the U.S. Navy to explore technology that would pave the way for developing robots capable of making moral decisions. Scientists will explore the challenges of infusing autonomous robots with a sense for right, wrong, and the consequences of both. |
i, Solo: Musicians perform as the soloist with full philharmonic orchestra at home Posted: 07 May 2014 01:50 PM PDT Musicians can now perform as the soloist with a full philharmonic orchestra from the comfort of their own living rooms, thanks to a new computer system. To model the hearing of the accompanists -- and thus be able to identify, and respond to, the notes played by the soloist, and when they occur -- the system uses an algorithm known as a hidden Markov model, which is commonly employed in speech-recognition technologies. |
Airborne measurements confirm leaks from oil and gas operations Posted: 07 May 2014 11:28 AM PDT During two days of intensive airborne measurements, oil and gas operations in Colorado's Front Range leaked nearly three times as much methane, a greenhouse gas, as predicted based on inventory estimates, and seven times as much benzene, a regulated air toxic. Emissions of other chemicals that contribute to summertime ozone pollution were about twice as high as estimates, according to the new article. |
Simple model underpins building safety in the wake of landslides Posted: 07 May 2014 08:47 AM PDT A new simple model can quickly determine which masonry buildings are most at risk of collapse following a serious landslide. |
App to assist the hearing impaired Posted: 07 May 2014 07:49 AM PDT Hearing the doorbell, the fire alarm or a tap that has not been properly turned off are everyday situations that can become a problem for a person who is hard of hearing. Scientists have now developed a tool to pick up and identify ordinary sounds that are produced in the home environment in order to help the hearing impaired. It is a mobile phone app designed to assist people who have limitations of this type in their daily lives. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Top Technology News -- ScienceDaily To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
ScienceDaily: Top Science News
ScienceDaily: Top Science News |
- Paleontologists discover new fossil organism
- Longevity gene may boost brain power: Researchers discover the gene may enhance cognitive abilities
- New species of metal-eating plant discovered in the Philippines
- Link between insecticides and collapse of honey bee colonies strengthened
- Experiencing letters as colors: New insights into synesthesia
Paleontologists discover new fossil organism Posted: 09 May 2014 02:29 PM PDT Paleontologists have discovered a fossil of a newly discovered organism from the Ediacara Biota. Plexus ricei was a broadly curving tube that resided on the seafloor. Individuals range in size from 5 to 80 cm long and 5 to 20 mm wide, and comprise a rigid median tubular structure and a fragile outer tubular wall. Plexus ricei evolved around 575 million years ago, disappearing from the fossil record around 540 million years ago. |
Longevity gene may boost brain power: Researchers discover the gene may enhance cognitive abilities Posted: 09 May 2014 12:08 PM PDT Scientists showed that people who have a variant of a longevity gene, called KLOTHO, have improved brain skills such as thinking, learning and memory regardless of their age, sex, or whether they have a genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease. Increasing KLOTHO gene levels in mice made them smarter, possibly by increasing the strength of connections between nerve cells in the brain. |
New species of metal-eating plant discovered in the Philippines Posted: 09 May 2014 10:00 AM PDT Scientists have discovered a new plant species with an unusual lifestyle -- it eats nickel for a living -- accumulating up to 18,000 ppm of the metal in its leaves without itself being poisoned, says the lead author of a new report. Such an amount is a hundred to a thousand times higher than in most other plants. |
Link between insecticides and collapse of honey bee colonies strengthened Posted: 09 May 2014 08:07 AM PDT Two widely used neonicotinoids -- a class of insecticide -- appear to significantly harm honey bee colonies over the winter, particularly during colder winters, according to researchers. The study replicated a 2012 finding from the same research group that found a link between imidacloprid and Colony Collapse Disorder, in which bees abandon their hives over the winter and eventually die. The new study found low doses of a second neonicotinoid, clothianidin, had the same negative effect. |
Experiencing letters as colors: New insights into synesthesia Posted: 09 May 2014 04:41 AM PDT Scientists studying the bizarre phenomenon of synasthesia – best described as a "union of the senses" whereby two or more of the five senses that are normally experienced separately are involuntarily and automatically joined together – have made a new breakthrough in their attempts to understand the condition. |
You are subscribed to email updates from All Top News -- ScienceDaily To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |