Thursday 7 November 2013

TOP 10 YOUNG BILLIONAIRES IN THE WORLD - Mark Zuckerberg drops.

Mark Zuckerberg drops to 2nd in the world's listing of top 10 young billionaires.
Inspiring stories of the worlds top 10 young billionaires, their amazing age and figures.
No. 1: Dustin Moskovitz
Age: 28
Net Worth: $3.8 billion
Moskovitz, Mark Zuckerberg‘s former roommate, no longer works at Facebook, the social networking giant that he co-founded. A signee of Bill Gates‘ and Warren Buffett’s Giving Pledge, Moskovitz bikes to work, flies commercial, and pitches his own tent at Burning Man.

No. 2: Mark Zuckerberg
Age: 28
Net Worth: $13.3 billion
Few CEOs of any age are under more media scrutiny than Zuckerberg (who’s only 8 days older than Moskovitz). Since taking Facebook public in May 2012, and getting married days later, the hoodie-wearing founder has seen his net worth rise and fall with every fluctuation of the stock price.

No. 3: Albert von Thurn und Taxis
Age: 29
Net Worth: $1.5 billion
Albert von Thurn und Taxis first appeared in Forbes’ billionaire rankings at age 8 but officially inherited his fortune in 2001 on his 18th birthday. The eligible bachelor is also a race car driver and tours with a German auto-racing league.

No. 4: Scott Duncan
Age: 30
Net Worth: $5.1 billion
Duncan is the youngest of the four children who inherited the massive fortune of late energy pipeline entrepreneur Dan Duncan, founder of Enterprise Products Partners. Today the company owns more than 50,000 miles of natural gas, oil, and petrochemical pipelines.


No. 5: Eduardo Saverin
Age: 30
Net Worth: $2.2 billion
Facebook co-founder Saverin renounced his United States citizenship in 2011, news of which broke days before the company’s IPO and drew accusations of tax evasion. Saverin, immortalized in The Social Network as Mark Zuckerberg’s onetime best friend, settled a lengthy legal battle with Facebook, apparently receiving a 5% stake. A Brazilian citizen, he now resides in Singapore and invests in startups.
No. 6: Huiyan Yang
Age: 31
Net Worth: $5.7 billion
Yang, the daughter of the founder of real estate developer Country Garden Holdings, is once again China’s richest woman. Her father transferred his stake to the Ohio State grad before the company’s IPO in 2007.

No. 7: Fahd Hariri
Age: 32
Net Worth: $1.35 billion
Hariri is the youngest son of slain Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. He graduated from the Ecole Spéciale d’Architecture de Paris in 2004. While still a student, he ran an interior design studio on the outskirts of the city, and sold furniture to clients in Saudi Arabia.

No. 8: Marie Besnier Beauvalot
Age: 32
Net Worth: $1.5 billion

Marie, along with siblings Emmanuel, 42, and Jean-Michel, 45, inherited French dairy giant Lactalis, producers of popular Président brie among hundreds of other cheese, milk and yogurt brands.



No. 9: Sean Parker
Age: 33
Net Worth: $2 billion
Parker is revamping his much hyped start-up, Airtime, with the hopes that the video chat site will have the impact of his other Web companies. At 19, Parker skipped college to disrupt the recording industry with music swapping site Napster. He served as Facebook’s first president at age 24.
No. 10: Ayman Hariri
Age: 34
Net Worth: $1.35 billion
Hariri is the son of slain Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. He’s involved in running Saudi Oger, one of Saudi Arabia’s biggest construction companies, and the source of the Hariri family fortune.
Falcao
COLOMBIAN, FOOTBALL PLAYER IN ARGENTINA


That morning, in October of 2005, Radamel Falcao García Zárate was really nervous. The coach of River Plate, one of the most important football1 teams in Argentina, had just called him to his room.
This afternoon, you are starting in the first team, kid. Don’t be nervous, everything will be OK. But don’t tell anyone. They will find out when the time comes.
It was lunchtime. The boy was nauseous, he couldn’t eat a thing. His team mates gobbled up the classic pre-game spaghetti; he didn’t know what to do. He couldn’t help thinking about all the years he had spent preparing himself for this moment: his entire life. Although, truth to tell, the preparation had begun before he was born, in Santa Marta, Colombia, in 1986. His father bap- tized him with his own name –Radamel – and the name of a Brazilian football star whom he admired: Falcao. His father was a professional football player, though his career had not been brilliant. He never stayed with one team for very long, and his family travelled with him to different cities in Colombia and Venezuela, following his contracts. But when his first son, Radamel, was born, he decided that he would be a great football player, and gave him the name of his idol. Little Falcao learned to kick a ball before he could talk. His first memories are connected to football. His father taught him, encouraged him, took him to his games, to his training sessions. And Falcao did as expected: nothing mattered to him more than the ball. When Falcao was ten, his father retired and the family settled in Bogota. There, Falcao joined a football club and he was soon catching the eye of the trainers.
That’s when I got convinced that I could be a real football player. So I decided to give it my all, that my future lay there.
When was that?
When I was eleven or twelve. I began to play for the city team first, then for the Colombian team. That’s when I saw that I had to dedicate all of my time to this. I understood that I really had to live for football.
In Latin America, most boys dream about being football players. And thousands of them can hold onto that dream into their adolescence: they are the best, the ones who get into the youth divisions of the profes- sional football teams. Falcao was one of many such kids until, one Saturday when he was 14, his coach told him to get ready because the next day he was travelling to Buenos Aires: a businessman had organized a tryout with River Plate. Falcao was overjoyed: Argentina was one of his goals. He had always followed Argentine football, one of the most powerful leagues in South America. Besides, his coach had been to Buenos Aires and told him a lot about it. He liked the idea of it:
An old and beautiful football-loving city. A city with different seasons, very warm people, whose way of speaking is so funny. It was always my dream to come here.
Were you scared?
No, I was not scared. My mind was made up, and I was hungry for success. It was the opportunity of a lifetime and, with God’s help, I didn’t want to let it go by.
The tryout went well. They offered him a contract and set him up in a hotel. He had to learn to live alone in a city that was not his own. At the beginning, he was not homesick. Only after a year, when an injury put him on the disabled list for months, did he grow discouraged; there were moments when all he wanted to do was go home and forget about everything. He was 16 years old. At an age when most young people are beginning to think about what to study, where to work, the course of their lives, the football rookies have their fate on the line. Many have to leave their cities, their studies, their amusements, their friends. They know that this is their only shot.
It is a very dull life: training, watching what you eat, going to bed early, seeing everyone else doing things that you can’t. Sometimes it bothered me a lot, it exasperated me. But then I told myself that I was here for a reason that I had to sacrifice everything to make it.
Nine out of ten don’t: at the age of 18 or 19, they consider themselves failures, people who have missed the boat. Falcao did not want to be one of those people, and he found the strength to endure. He trained more and more, learned to be strong and not to fall into temptation, to convince himself that his goal was the most important thing. A professional football player must be obsessed with competition and victory. At the beginning of 2005, Falcao was promoted to the first team, but he never got a chance to play. Until that October morning, when his coach told him that his day had come.
That afternoon, when I was getting dressed, my legs were shaking. But when I hit the field, I was transformed. The stadium was full, people were shouting, and I realized that I felt that hunger, that drive to beat anyone who crossed my path, that adrenalin, that confidence. It is something that you cannot explain, you have to experience it.
That October afternoon was perfect: River Plate won and Falcao scored two of the three goals. The next day, all the news- papers were talking about the great new talent, about the guy that was going to put an end to his team’s losing streak. In the next six games, Falcao scored five more goals. He was becoming a star.
It’s an incredible feeling. Suddenly, from one day to the next, your life changes. You can’t go anywhere, people recognize you on the street, your team mates look up to you.
And you can even make a lot of money...
Yes, it’s amazing how much some players earn. You make a fortune, and they are paying you to do what you like doing. You just have to play and they pay you, though you do have to make sacrifices, you miss out on a lot. But today football players are models for many people. They are in ads for all sorts of things. A lot of people dress like football players, or get haircuts like football players. It’s strange to think that maybe someday there will be kids who try to do the things that I do…
On November 22, 2005, everything seemed to go to pieces: Falcao’s knee was seriously injured, and he would not be able to play for many months.
At the beginning, I was really down in the dumps. I asked myself why this had to happen to me now, why God had done something like this to me. Then I realized that these things happen for a reason. They help you to grow up and mature. They can be for the best. I think that helped me to keep it together, to know that I should not take it so seriously: everything can vanish at any moment. I understood that I had to be strong and present, to stick with it.
Falcao knows that coming back is going to be rough. Many promising young players are injured. Some of them can overcome it; some cannot. He is now eagerly awaiting that moment, while getting on with his studies. Last year, he enrolled in a journal- ism programme at a university in Buenos Aires. Though he does not have much time to study, he says that it is better to do something unrelated to football, to get an education, to open his mind to other things.
In football, you can be lucky and become a big star, you can do OK and play as well as many, or you can be unlucky and not make the big leagues. It’s a lottery. You never know what will happen. You give it your all, but you have to be prepared to lose.
You depend on too many factors: luck, teams, injuries…
Falcao lives in an apartment in a tall modern building in one of the most expensive neighborhoods in Buenos Aires. From his living room, you can see the river, the River Plate stadium as well as the most brutal concentration camp of the Argentine dictatorship in the 1970s. His father, his mother and his sisters live with him: the boy has become the breadwinner. Throughout South America, fathers and mothers who twenty or thirty years ago would have scolded their sons if they saw them “wasting time with a ball,” now encourage them, because football can offer them a better standard of living than any other profession. The stakes are high, and Falcao cannot stop imagining his future.
I think about it a lot, I have a lot of dreams. I want to go to Europe, to play with the best in the world.
Where would you like to go?
To Real Madrid, to Milan, to the big teams.
Do you think that is possible?
Yes. River sells players to the best teams in the world. Everything depends on how I do.
For many Latin American players, Buenos Aires is a stop on the way to Europe: the springboard from which they can reach, once and for all, the wealth and fame that they have sought since they were children. Since they were very young, most young players from Latin America have one goal: performing well on their teams so that they are “bought” by a European team. Buying is a strong word.
And the idea of moving from country to country doesn’t bother you?
No. That’s the way a football player's life is, always moving, going after the best. In this profession, if you are lucky you can get everything you want, even the greatest luxuries.
What luxuries would you like?
Well, mostly a car. A BMW convertible, that kind of thing …
Falcao emigrated for the first time when he was 14, and he thinks he will keep doing it. He still has a close connection to Colombia: his countrymen can admire him on television, he has played for the Colombian youth league, and he hopes to play for the national team. But he is no longer certain that he will return to Colombia to live.

I used to think I would, but now I am not so sure. I feel more comfortable here, in Argentina. If I go to Europe, maybe I will want to stay there. Who knows if I will ever live in my country again, after all this?


FALCAO has since become greater and more famous, moving from River Plate to Fc Porto, to Athletico Madrid and from there to AS Monaco in France. He has been listed in the FIFA best 11, he has the recieved the Globe Footballer of the year Award and several others, and has also been listed 6th in the 100 best footballers in the world by the guardian.