Football Heads is a series of free soccer games. You are playing with a big-headed and one-legged football player. You can hit the ball with your foot and head. Just like in traditional football, the player's task is to win the opponent and score as many goals as possible into his goal.

FC Copenhagen head coach Jacob Neestrup, right, celebrates victory over Galatasaray after the Champions League Group A soccer match between FC Copenhagen and Galatasaray, at the Parken Stadium, in Copenhagen, Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023. (Liselotte Sabroe/Ritzau Scanpix via AP)


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The 2009 final in Rome was hyped as a gladiatorial clash between the two best players in the world, and this time Messi came out on top. Barca successfully kept United at arm's length in Rome to win 2-0 -- with Messi scoring a rare header for his team's second goal -- and secure their first-ever league, domestic cup and European Cup treble.

Stoops led the Sooners to a school-record 18 consecutive bowl berths and 10 Big 12 titles. Even though he didn't arrive in Norman until the Big 12 was three years old, the Youngstown, Ohio, native coached the program to more than three times as many championships (10) as the next closest school in the league.

Despite arriving at the University of Oklahoma with a career record that was less than .500, Howard Schnellenberger was highly touted and respected by his peers across the country. Schnellenberger had directed the Miami Hurricanes to a national championship in 1983 after only five years at the helm, and brought perennial loser Louisville to respectability, guiding the Cardinals to bowl victories over football powers Alabama and Michigan State during his 10 years as head coach.

Oklahoma's all-time winningest coach, Barry Switzer, led his Sooner teams to three national championships, 12 Big Eight Conference championships and eight bowl wins in 13 appearances. Switzer led the Sooners on a 28-game win streak from 1973 (his first season as head coach) to 1975. When the Sooners won the national championship in 1975, it marked the first time in history a team had won back-to- back titles more than once.

As Oklahoma's 16th head coach, Chuck Fairbanks won three Big Eight Conference titles (1967, 1972 and a shared title in 1968). He had 24 players earn all-league honors while nine received All-America accolades. Fairbanks also coached the 1969 Heisman Trophy winner, running back Steve Owens. In bowl games at OU, he posted a 3-1-1 record with the Sooners playing in a pair of Sugar and Astro-Bluebonnet bowls, and one Orange Bowl.

Mackenzie came to Oklahoma in December 1965, after spending nine years as assistant to Frank Broyles. Mackenzie was with Broyles for one year at Missouri as well as eight years at Arkansas. Mackenzie built great defenses for the Razorbacks, and in 1964, Broyles named Mackenzie assistant head coach. Oklahoma's 15th head coach was an All-Southeastern Conference tackle under Coach Bear Bryant at Kentucky. Kentucky compiled a 28-3 record and went to a bowl every season Mackenzie played. The Wildcats also upset Oklahoma's 1950 national champions, 13-7, in the 1951 Sugar Bowl.

Jones developed 16 All-American interior linemen while he was line coach at OU as well as two other All-Americans while he was head coach. He helped to develop nine Oklahoma bowl teams, 14 Oklahoma teams that won conference championships and three teams that won national championships.

Methembe Ndlovu enters his second season as Trinity College's head men's soccer coach in 2023. Ndlovu came to Trinity in 2022 owning a wealth of impressive coaching and playing experience at many levels. A four-time All-Ivy League player at Dartmouth College, Ndlovu coached at numerous clubs both in the U.S. and abroad and most recently served as an assistant coach at Penn State University and women's associate head coach at Claremont-Mudd-Scripps in California. Ndlovu was also the Africa CEO of Grassroot Soccer and played both professionally and for the Zimbabwe National Team. He replaces Mike Pilger who retired from coaching following the 2021 season.

Ndlovu earned his bachelor's degree in government from Dartmouth in 1997, where he starred on the pitch for the Big Green. He went on to a professional career that saw him spend six years with the Albuquerque Geckos, Highlanders FC in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, and the Boston Bulldogs. In addition, Ndlovu earned nine international caps with the full Zimbabwe Men's National Team between 1997 and 1999. Ndlovu started his coaching career as a player assistant coach with the Cape Cod Crusaders, then of the PDL, in 2002. In his first season as head coach in 2003, he led the Crusaders to the 2003 PDL National Championship. He then joined the PDL Indiana Invaders as general manager and head coach. A holder of the USSF B License, he was voted 2004 PDL National Coach of the Year. That year, Ndlovu also served as a volunteer assistant coach with the University of Notre Dame men's soccer team under one of his mentors, the legendary Bobby Clark.


Ndlovu was the head coach of the Highlanders Football Club from 2006 to July 2008, leading the club to a CAF Africa Champions League qualification in 2006 and the CAF Confederations Cup in 2008. Ndlovu was also the Zimbabwe National Under-20 Men's Head Coach from 2007 to 2010, and guided that squad to the COSAFA championship in 2007 and to the COSAFA silver medal in 2008. Ndlovu went on to found and serve as CEO and technical director of Bantu Rovers Football Club in Zimbabwe for 10 years (2008-17). Bantu fostered sporting and academic excellence, sent players to professional leagues in Africa and beyond, and sent student-athletes to prestigious prep schools in the United States. As CEO, he was responsible for all club operations and as technical director he oversaw the clubs' technical staff. He re-entered college coaching at Penn State under another of his mentors, Jeff Cook, in 2020 and helped guide the Athenas to a 9-4-3 record at Claremont-Mudd-Scripps last fall.


Ndlovu's achievements as a co-founder of Grassroot Soccer, Inc. (GRS), a youth health, non-governmental organization that uses soccer as a tool for social change, is equally if not more impressive as those as a player and coach. In 2010, Ndlovu was awarded the Dartmouth College Martin Luther King Social Justice Award for his vision, enthusiasm and persistence in youth health education. Ndlovu was part of the organization's Africa leadership team and was The Grassroot Soccer Africa CEO when he left the organization's management team in 2018 to serve on the GRS Global Board as a trustee.

Deion Sanders took over as the Jackson State head coach in 2020, quickly rising up to become one of the most notable figures in the current HBCU sports landscape. Sanders, a.k.a "Coach Prime", won a SWAC championship in his second year as a coach, being named FCS Coach of the Year in the process.

Rod Milstead has been the head coach at his alma mater, Delaware State, since 2018. Milstead played offensive line for the Hornets from 1988-1991, winning three MEAC championships. In his career, he was a three-time First-Team All-MEAC selection and a 1991 First-team AP All-American. Milstead was inducted into the MEAC Hall of Fame in 2021.

Connell Maynor played quarterback at Winston-Salem State, winning a CIAA championship in 1987. He then continued his collegiate career at North Carolina A&T, winning back-to-back MEAC Offensive Player of the Year awards in 1990 and 1991, leading his team to a conference championship in the later year. Professionally, Maynor played 12 years in the Arena Football League, winning four AFL World Championship teams and being named as one of the league's 25 greatest quarterbacks in 2012.

The HBCU head coaches with professional experience have seen on-field success in their times at the helm. This group of coaches has won six combined MEAC or SWAC championships since 2016. In 2021, the top five teams (record-wise) in the SWAC all had coaches with professional experience.

Head Soccer Champions League is a fun soccer game where you have to score more goals than your opponent, but in a very curious way: after choosing your team, you'll jump onto the field with your best striker and use all your concentration to head the ball and defend your own goal from your opponent's headers.

Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo (1st L) strokes Marco Asensio's head when celebrate their advance after a UEFA Champions League semifinal second leg soccer match between Spanish team Real Madrid and German team Bayern Munchen in Madrid, Spain, on May 1, 2018. The match ended 2-2. Real Madrid advanced to the final with 4-3 on aggregate. (Xinhua/Guo Qiuda)

MUMBAI, July 15 (Reuters) - Former England and Manchester United striker Teddy Sheringham has been named head coach of Indian Super League franchise Atletico de Kolkata. Sheringham, 51, replaced Spaniard Jose Francisco Molina, who led ATK to their second title in three years in his only season as coach. The Kolkata-based side, owned by a consortium including Spanish club Atletico Madrid and former India cricket captain Sourav Ganguly, also won the inaugural edition in 2014. Sheringham, who won three Premier League titles and the Champions League with United, most recently managed English League Two (fourth division) side Stevenage. The Jamshedpur Football Club, one of the two new entrants and owned by Tata Steel, have named another former England and Manchester United player, Steve Coppell, as their manager for the upcoming season. The 62-year-old Coppell took Kerala Blasters to the ISL final against ATK last year and has previously managed numerous English clubs including Manchester City and Crystal Palace. The fourth edition of the ISL will start on Oct. 1 with two new teams making it a 10-team league, running for five months. (Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Nick Mulvenney) ff782bc1db

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