He'll never become a classy man...
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Swedes enjoy day off
BREMEN, Germany (AP) - Sweden's players were given the day off Tuesday -- the country's national day -- after high intensity training raised fears that their performance could be affected.
"We have pulse watches that show how they're doing and they reached "red" level throughout last week when we trained in Stockholm, and also here in Bremen," Swedish coach Lars Lagerback said. "Hard practice is effective long-term, but there is also a short-term risk: your performance level can decrease."
Lagerback said practice was cancelled because "of the high intensity during workouts for the past 10 days in Stockholm and here."
"We want them to be 100 per cent on June 10," said Lagerback, referring to the Group B opener against Trinidad and Tobago in Dortmund.
"The players have worked out so hard. We're so close to the (opening match). We want them to relax and we'll only have some theoretical discussions with the players."
The Swedes will resume training on Wednesday and will also work out Thursday in Bremen before leaving Friday for Dortmund, where they will work out the day before the opener against Trinidad and Tobago.
The other group teams are Paraguay and England. Sweden and England drew 1-1 in the 2004 World Cup en route to first place in the "Group of Death" that also included Argentina and Nigeria.
On Tuesday some players went golfing. Others visited a Mercedes Benz factory.
Five other players, including Juventus star striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic, enjoyed cappuccino at an outside cafe in Bremen's main square.
Ibrahimovic, who has a stormy relationship with some Swedish media people, got angry at Swedish photographer Erich Stering, who asked if he could take one picture and then leave the players alone.
"This is private," Ibrahimovic barked, according to photographer Stering, who works for the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter. "It was a rude response."
Stering said another player, backup forward Mattias Jonson, just laughed and indicated that it was OK to take pictures.
Henrik Larsson, who is leaving Barcelona and going back to the Swedish league in his home town of Helsingborg, picked up the bill at the cafe. He left two euros in tips, according to a half-American waiter.
"They had five cappuccinos and three bottles of water for 18 euro, and he (Larsson) gave me a 20 euro bill," said waiter Franklin Norlin of Glendale, Arizona.

(
What has this anything to do with journalism??):D
The players, all wearing dark sunglasses, spent about an hour at the crowded cafe. Surprisingly, not a single person approached them and asked for autographs until just before they left.
Twenty metres away, six Swedish blondes dressed in Swedish team jerseys sang ABBA tunes and the Swedish national anthem. There were Swedish flags on every flag pole at the square.
The players left after about an hour and headed to several mini-vans parked near the main square, Markt Platz, in downtown Bremen.
Five other players, including Aston Villa captain Olof Mellberg, played golf on a course outside the city.
http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Soccer/WorldCup/Groups/B/2006/06/06/1617392-ap.html