Friday, October 7, 2011

The adopted Geordie is to help a new generation of Newcastle in his playing career with Hartlepool relaxing

Nolberto Solano

Under-11 comes around at night replacement as manager of Newcastle United Squad. Sometimes they choose a short walk away is in order and takes the children on a tour of the club's training facility next to the first team.

"Children need to dream and see things that give them a lot of dreams," said the former Newcastle, Aston Villa and Peru now has a cult status in the street Hartlepool United. "They look beautiful cars in the parking lot and say they want to become professionals too, but then I tell them that it's not as easy as it sounds. It helps them realize that there are a lot of work ahead and a long way to go. "

Solano has been a journey from his childhood as the youngest of seven children growing up in a shantytown in Lima implacable. His nights were devoted to the practice of playing his most precious possession, a trumpet, but the hours of the day is not consumed by the school were spent beating cans and cardboard boxes in the local streets.

"It helped me the first contact," says 36 year old, whose arrival in Hartlepool League has not only boosted sales of season tickets, but inspired by a little push to promote probable. "The street is where I have all my skills. The problem for English children that I have many things to do than can be vague about playing football. "

Solano

is not fully embrace the view that modern wealth is the enemy of young talent. "I'm sure the kids are getting smarter - I think the use of computers is to make them brighter," he says. "If you talk to my children in Newcastle on the tactics of understanding is amazing. I could have the same ideas to their age. Manage new technologies, both acute football brain. "

Fame has a habit of changing players subtly but irrevocably, despite its label as David Beckham long in Peru, Solano is pleasantly devoid of valuable race of many colleagues succumb. Aware of knee surgery means that I am unable to drive, readily accepts to meet my mother's house in Newcastle, appears at the right time and show courtesy personified. All good agreement with the vision offered by a friend who works in a branch near Asda, which reported that the ranks of Solano as a member of its customers rare football ready to pack your own bags to buy.

"I want to live a normal life," he says with a shrug. "My mother used to say:" You are good in football and it could be a success, but that does not mean that your personality is changing. "If you're an architect or an engineer or a footballer or a teacher are all the same," he said. "Maybe some players today must be more sensitive in some respects, as Sir Bobby Robson Newcastle used to say, everyone deserves the same respect. "

Hiding behind

caregivers, doors and electric windows blackened car, in any case interfere with Solano musical personality. These days, who plays the trumpet in a band called Geordie Latinos Salsa, which conducts regular live concerts throughout the region, however, even at the height of his fame in the Premier League felt the need to "socialize Salsa and play normally with my bar buddies. "

do well, flirted briefly with the idea of ??becoming a professional musician. "It is not easy, however, the practice of trumpet full time six or seven hours a day," said Solano. "I want to do some shows, but playing every night it would be very difficult. J ' loves music, and bad days, raises my soul, but I have more passion for football. "

permanent solution
This explains why a creator, once described as "my favorite player" and "Little Master" by his former Boca Juniors, his teammate and good friend of Diego Maradona is to convert free throws class Hartlepool. "Knees are increasingly felt, but football is my life, I take Mick Wadsworth League and is a great coach," said the man who conjured up infinite possibilities for Alan Cross "I should be several hundred targets "Shearer.

now in charge at Victoria Park, Wadsworth for the first time in Peru during his time as assistant Robson at Newcastle. "I was in town last season, but I was not playing, I was bored and put on weight", says Solano. "I decided I wanted to manage time and hoping to live in Newcastle Again, when I spoke to Mick said. " Join Hartlepool, I will help you with the insignia of his coach and like to play football as much as he wants for us. "At the moment things are going well, everything is looking very good. We are in a very tight division, but at the same time, get a promotion will be difficult, not impossible."

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