Demichelis
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Neuroimaging and Reading Comprehension
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Thomas Kraft
German footballer
Thomas Kraft (born 22 July 1988) is a German former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper.
Club career
Bayern Munich
Born in Kirchen, West Germany, Kraft began playing in a goalkeeper position when he was eight years old.[1] Kraft then started out at Sportfreunde Daaden, VfB Wissen and SG Betzdorf before joining Bayern Munich in 2004.[1][2][3][4][5] He then signed his first professional contract with the club at age seventeen, keeping him until 2008.[6][7]
Kraft was promoted to the Bayern's reserve team in 2006.[8][9][10] However, he spent two years, playing for the club's U19 team as their first choice goalkeeper.[11][12][13] In January 2008, Kraft was promoted to the Bayern Munich's first team.[14] He then was included six times as unused substitute into the club's first team throughout 2007–08 season.[15][16][17]
After two years b
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Mind games
Paul Joyce reflects on the tragic death of German goalkeeper Robert Enke and examines football's poor record when it comes to helping players with mental illness
Unlike many of today's players, people felt like they genuinely knew Robert Enke. An ambassador for children's heart charities and anti-fur campaigns, the German national goalkeeper embodied a new generation who rejected the combative machismo of Oliver Kahn and Jens Lehmann in favour of an unspectacular integrity. Yet it turned out that no one knew Robert Enke at all, not even his Hannover 96 team-mates. "You learn over time how to trick the media," he once said, tellingly. "You talk a lot, but say nothing."
On November 10, Enke drove to a level crossing near his home in Neustadt and stepped in front of a regional express train travelling from Bremen to Hannover. The 32-year-old was killed instantly. In a moving press conference held the following day, Enke's widow Teresa revealed that her husband first sought therapy for depression in 2003.
His psychologist, Dr Valent
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