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"The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup - Sports (13112) - Nairaland

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Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 5:51pm On May 03, 2022
do4luv14:



you are not getting it do you, remember Rome wasn't built in a day, those london clubs started as an hubbies, then an opportunity presented itself, then the workers decides to assist the kids by not just buying them boots and kits

also forming a club for them to play the game, they contribute and promote the club, even soliciting for assistance from individuals and the likes, it was not a one man factor, it was an individual one,

So no need to start lamenting about buses, players salaries, and the likes, first thing first, and others will follow gradually,

And that's how those london and European clubs became big and a brand

No one is saying do not start. I am saying at the moment, it is impossible to give the kids today the kind of education their European counterparts get at a very early stage.

No one is complaining or giving up. We will do the little we can. However, that does not make it mean the kids here have equal opportunity like the kids in Europe.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by drDoom3(m): 5:52pm On May 03, 2022
komekn:


Once again your complete lack of knowledge and understanding makrs you be say a lot of nonsense to be honest.

Do you know how many thousands of boys go on football trials at Chelsea but fail to get selected. Some become mentally depressed.

For your information Mbappe was on trial at Chelsea but failed to get selected.

If you by a miracle get past the trials ,you ate now in continuous competition year in year out. Every year a 20% of boys are dropped from the squad, could be more. Some are so depressed at being dropped and released they commit suicide.

When you get to 12/13 Chelsea will buy teenage football players showing potential. These new players from Brazil, France, Portugal, etc May cancel out existing players in the team and they will be released.

So you have survived until 15/16 you now have to prove you are first team quality. You will be competing against experienced quality proven players bought for sometimes £50 million plus+.

Add to all that the hard work , training since the age of 7

If you then somehow overcome 4/5 times a week gruelling training , After all these hurdles you then discover the manager doesn't like you or your agent and you are released i.e. Pogba released from United.

I could go on and on , do you know how many players get injured and can no longer continue end of the road ❓ What about racism Do you know how many players are denied opportunity because they are black.


So by sheer tenacity, outstanding ability and the Grace of God, you make it to the first team. Will anybody unless they are highly ignorant say to you, you had too much opportunity.

That's a nonsensical proposition without any substance.

Local boys suffer all this and more.

1 Like

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Odunayaw(m): 5:58pm On May 03, 2022
do4luv14:



you are not getting it do you, remember Rome wasn't built in a day, those london clubs started as an hubbies, then an opportunity presented itself, then the workers decides to assist the kids by not just buying them boots and kits

also forming a club for them to play the game, they contribute and promote the club, even soliciting for assistance from individuals and the likes, it was not a one man factor, it was an individual one,

So no need to start lamenting about buses, players salaries, and the likes, first thing first, and others will follow gradually,

And that's how those london and European clubs became big and a brand
I believe Nigerians are good dreamers

We think systems appear out of thin air or maybe they're downloaded out of Goggle Cloud

Systems, especially working ones take sweat, tears and blood...Not to mention years

We do alot of wishes here only. Look at our ex footballers for example. Punditry is easier for them than doing the work of developing grassroot football

Before anyone asks me if that is their job. It is not their job, but perhaps what if they took it as an investment.

If money were the motivational factor alone, we'd have achieved acres of success
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Meliforme: 6:37pm On May 03, 2022
TheGoodJoe:


What is infantile? Opportunity is part of football. If you get a chance and you have it, you can do well. If you do not get the chance, you will take time to blow.

Being English and from Chelsea academy is one of the reasons Tammy broke into Chelsea earlier. That gave him the chance to show his talent. Lampard also gave him that opportunity to show his work.

So, when they are talking of HISTORY, that Tammy has scored 100 goals and Osimhen has not, it is actually infantile to forget about that Opportunity played a part in Tammy having an early start. It is also neglect the fact of Osimhen also battling injuries, coming from a tough background to have the kind of start Tammy had.

This is a fact, and this is football. If you want balanced analysis, you take as much factors as you can. Not jus saying that someone has scored this amount of goals over the years.

Don't mind those guys. Osimhen could have ended up worse given his upbringing and childhood exposures, but dude has shown to be more than those who are better privileged. They simply do not want to acknowledge that Osimhen is a superstar.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 6:40pm On May 03, 2022
Odunayaw:
I believe Nigerians are good dreamers

We think systems appear out of thin air or maybe they're downloaded out of Goggle Cloud

Systems, especially working ones take sweat, tears and blood...Not to mention years

We do alot of wishes here only. Look at our ex footballers for example. Punditry is easier for them than doing the work of developing grassroot football

Before anyone asks me if that is their job. It is not their job, but perhaps what if they took it as an investment.

If money were the motivational factor alone, we'd have achieved acres of success


Keep in mind that we have many people that have put in blood, sweat and tears for the good of the country.

Kashimawo Laloko for instance was behind the rise of lots of quality talents, both home based and overseas. He was the brain box behind the Pepsi football academy that led to the discovery of the likes of Mikel Obi and Osaze Odemwingie.

I told you about Coach Monday Sinclair who put in so much work in the grassroot. Imagine picking and training a young boy with the goal of replacing Stephen Keshi. The boy later became a kingpin in our defence and voted best defender in the Serie A. That is Taribo West.

Churchill Olise put in so much work in the grassroot and discovered talents like Obafemi Martins. I think he had a hand in Victor Agali too.

We had a woman who worked hard in the grassroot of Port Harcourt. She founded the Bright Stars FC that led to the rise of Kelechi Osunwa and Akpan Bassey.

We still have many guys putting in so much work to grow football in Nigeria. We have people that have opened clubs and supported young players. We have agents like Babawo Mohammed who has done loads to help young players.

So when you use the term dreamers, I find it insulting and condescending to the efforts of many.

There was a guy in D-LIne, Palanto, who set up Palanto FC. He had his boys playing some breathtaking football. They were so good that Super Sports did a documentary on his work.

We battle a lot of vices but still many put in hard work.

What I listed up are few I have been exposed to. There are many across the nation like the man who discovered and raise Emmanuel and Celestine Babayaro.

We will keep marching but does not change that the Europeans are ahead of us.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Meliforme: 6:46pm On May 03, 2022
TheGoodJoe:


What is infantile? Opportunity is part of football. If you get a chance and you have it, you can do well. If you do not get the chance, you will take time to blow.

Being English and from Chelsea academy is one of the reasons Tammy broke into Chelsea earlier. That gave him the chance to show his talent. Lampard also gave him that opportunity to show his work.

So, when they are talking of HISTORY, that Tammy has scored 100 goals and Osimhen has not, it is actually infantile to forget about that Opportunity played a part in Tammy having an early start. It is also neglect the fact of Osimhen also battling injuries, coming from a tough background to have the kind of start Tammy had.

This is a fact, and this is football. If you want balanced analysis, you take as much factors as you can. Not jus saying that someone has scored this amount of goals over the years.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by JohnBullMySon: 7:10pm On May 03, 2022
drDoom3:


The reason it looks competitive is that many parents want to cash out and throw untalented kids in. Some kids mistake passion for talent, making their parents put them in those academies. However, if you are as talented as you should be, you will make it pro.

In Nigeria, even the talented ones don't have the opportunity. Most of these boys you see making waves in Europe (Awoniyi, Osimhen and co.) if you hear their stories you'd notice that it was mostly luck (one day they were playing and a scout just saw them or something) combined with sheer tenacity (trekking for hours to train, begging for transport money etc). They all had lucky breaks. It is very difficult to see English born players that faced similar problems in terms of how bleak it was (e.g. maybe Aribo).

That's not how it works. You can't just get into an academy because you want to. An academy will have to sign you after you prove yourself in trials. That's why they pay you stipends.

Then imagine that after you make it in trials, only a tiny miniscule fraction still get to play professionally. The percentage that will even play in the premier league can be safely approximated to zero.

Maybe you people think professional football is easy because you watch it on tv. Most top tier players can consistently target a small area of the goal in training, dash through the field in 11 seconds, make extremely sharp turns without getting injured. You think those things are easy?

I can agree that aspiring players may not get access to world class training and coaching facilities to hone their skills, but you see all these stories about having one badass player in Mbaise who is better than Ronaldo but no one can help him with an opportunity. That's dumb AF.

1 Like

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheLoneCitizen(m): 7:13pm On May 03, 2022
Forrest vs Bournemouth bigger than Liverpool v Villareal.

Forrest will sign a Nigerian if they qualify for PL next year.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Kog45(m): 7:15pm On May 03, 2022
Odunayaw:
I believe Nigerians are good dreamers

We think systems appear out of thin air or maybe they're downloaded out of Goggle Cloud

Systems, especially working ones take sweat, tears and blood...Not to mention years

We do alot of wishes here only. Look at our ex footballers for example. Punditry is easier for them than doing the work of developing grassroot football

Before anyone asks me if that is their job. It is not their job, but perhaps what if they took it as an investment.

If money were the motivational factor alone, we'd have achieved acres of success

Yes Odun,the system is the key.We are getting it in the 80s to 90s but suddenly things turned upside down and till today we are in limbo,doing the same thing all the time with no success.

Those who managed our sports in the 80s have a very strong blue prints for grassroots development.....my secondary school handball team represented Nigeria in Finland,also selected outstanding talents in Kwara state secondary schools which i was part played football youth tournament known as Dana cup in Denmark.In the 80s secondary schools produced a lot of stars for national teams....

Olympian like former NTA sport presenter Hameed Adio,Olapade Adenakan,Ezenwas brothers,Chidi Imoh,Innocent Egbunike,Yusuf Ali,Falilat Ogunkoya,Mary Onyali are real grassroots discovery and most of them went from secondary schools to various universities in United States with NSC assistance.....Hakeem the Dream went straight from Ansaru Deen secondary school to United Stated as a basketballer.I can say much about Olapade Adenakan who was my area bro and how he started,the same thing late Sunday Bada,my mate Olympian Bisi Afolabi,these peoples started from secondary schools.

In the 80s st finbarrs produced real footballers for Nigeria national team,Stephen Keshi,Henry Nwosu,Samson Siasia but it is a pity seeing schools without sports field.

What really make it worst now,if you don't have the money you can't enroll your talented kids in football academies in Nigeria,am privy to this cos my senior bro is the Principal of Kwara football academy,meaning the real kids out there don't even have the chance to show case their skills.

I just don't know how things went berserk regarding sports development in Nigeria even in the 80s it wasn't like this...imagine secondary schools travelling out to represent Nigeria then...Oh my God,I remember when my school lost out to another school when America football was introduced newly,the school went to Canada on exhibition tour game.

2 Likes

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by andrewbaba44: 7:19pm On May 03, 2022
A win for Bournemouth today and they are back in the epl

I pray they scale through

1 Like

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 7:21pm On May 03, 2022
JohnBullMySon:
That's not how it works. You can't just get into an academy because you want to. An academy will have to sign you after you prove yourself in trials. That's why they pay you stipends.

Then imagine that after you make it in trials, only a tiny miniscule fraction still get to play professionally. The percentage that will even play in the premier league can be safely approximated to zero.

Maybe you people think professional football is easy because you watch it on tv. Most top tier players can consistently target a small area of the goal in training, dash through the field in 11 seconds, make extremely sharp turns without getting injured. You think those things are easy?

I can agree that aspiring players may not get access to world class training and coaching facilities to hone their skills, but you see all these stories about having one badass player in Mbaise who is better than Ronaldo but no one can help him with an opportunity. That's dumb AF.

That is a fact. We have loads than will never in their life time have a chance for trials despite being talented.

How that is dumb to you is baffling.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheLoneCitizen(m): 7:22pm On May 03, 2022
The lad who started crowd funding for Dessers has been threatened with death.

Man didn't read the rules.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by JohnBullMySon: 7:24pm On May 03, 2022
chrisooblog:
Those thousands of boys can still join other clubs in the EPL, championship and League 1 whose quality is still way ahead of anything you will get in Nigeria.

Those lower league English clubs will still give any truly talented player a platform to succeed. Plus the superior football education in countries like England will have equipped some of them to do well if they are truly talented.

Nigerian born talents more often than not can only rely on sheer talent because they football basics are either poor or non existent. I read a story of how when Kanu first joined Ajax from Nigeria he had poor fundamentals to the extent even for throw-ins he displayed some ignorance on the proper way to execute it and this is some one with outrageous talent o!.

Being born in a European country is not an automatic recipe for success but boy does it boost your chances. Some one like Nwakali who you rightly criticizes who knows if he was born in a place like Spain or France quality coaching from when he was 10 upwards would have ironed out the kinks in his game. I have read of clubs in Germany that use special training simulations that improves youngsters techniques because he does it so often it becomes muscle memory. Pray tell how do you want a Nigerian youngster who only plays 'set' to compete?

When you hear that only 0.5% make it from academies, it includes even league two and the National league.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by andrewbaba44: 7:29pm On May 03, 2022
TheLoneCitizen:
The lad who started crowd funding for Dessers has been threatened with death.

Man didn't read the rules.

The crowd fund can’t take place self according to fifa rules
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Odunayaw(m): 7:42pm On May 03, 2022
TheGoodJoe:


Keep in mind that we have many people that have put in blood, sweat and tears for the good of the country.

Kashimawo Laloko for instance was behind the rise of lots of quality talents, both home based and overseas. He was the brain box behind the Pepsi football academy that led to the discovery of the likes of Mikel Obi and Osaze Odemwingie.

I told you about Coach Monday Sinclair who put in so much work in the grassroot. Imagine picking and training a young boy with the goal of replacing Stephen Keshi. The boy later became a kingpin in our defence and voted best defender in the Serie A. That is Taribo West.

Churchill Olise put in so much work in the grassroot and discovered talents like Obafemi Martins. I think he had a hand in Victor Agali too.

We had a woman who worked hard in the grassroot of Port Harcourt. She founded the Bright Stars FC that led to the rise of Kelechi Osunwa and Akpan Bassey.

We still have many guys putting in so much work to grow football in Nigeria. We have people that have opened clubs and supported young players. We have agents like Babawo Mohammed who has done loads to help young players.

So when you use the term dreamers, I find it insulting and condescending to the efforts of many.

There was a guy in D-LIne, Palanto, who set up Palanto FC. He had his boys playing some breathtaking football. They were so good that Super Sports did a documentary on his work.

We battle a lot of vices but still many put in hard work.

What I listed up are few I have been exposed to. There are many across the nation like the man who discovered and raise Emmanuel and Celestine Babayaro.

We will keep marching but does not change that the Europeans are ahead of us.
You just described action takers not dreamers. I don't see what is insulting and condescending EXCEPT you are part of the dreamers.

My post was targeting the dreaming class
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 7:42pm On May 03, 2022
JohnBullMySon:
When you hear that only 0.5% make it from academies, it includes even league two and the National league.

That will be astonishing is 0.1% of aspiring Nigerian kids make it to foreign pro football. We can't even dream it.

Heck, we can't even join academies.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 7:44pm On May 03, 2022
Odunayaw:
You just described action takers not dreamers. I don't see what is insulting and condescending EXCEPT you are part of the dreamers.

My post was targeting the dreaming class

Read what you posted again. Now you know there are action takers in Nigeria but tagged them dreamers.

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Odunayaw(m): 7:46pm On May 03, 2022
Kog45:

I just don't know how things went berserk regarding sports development in Nigeria even in the 80s it wasn't like this...imagine secondary schools travelling out to represent Nigeria then...Oh my God,I remember when my school lost out to another school when America football was introduced newly,the school went to Canada on exhibition tour game.
Egbon, you and TheGoodJoe have spoken well honestly

Systems keep running because of a kind of "handing the baton" to similar minds. Do we have such today?

Philanthropy can only do so much

This is why I talked about the angle of going private. At least there is succession in the private space

Considering the rich history of sports we have and how far it has fallen, I don't think we have anybody to blame but ourselves.

1 Like

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Odunayaw(m): 7:47pm On May 03, 2022
TheGoodJoe:


Read what you posted again. Now you know there are action takers in Nigeria but tagged them dreamers.
Probably the way I wrote it betrayed my intentions

The body of what I wrote shows I'm talking of complainers alone

1 Like

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 7:50pm On May 03, 2022
Odunayaw:
Egbon, you and TheGoodJoe have spoken well honestly

Systems keep running because of a kind of "handing the baton" to similar minds. Do we have such today?

Philanthropy can only do so much

This is why I talked about the angle of going private. At least there is succession in the private space

Considering the rich history of sports we have and how far it has fallen, I don't think we have anybody to blame but ourselves.

I believe an improvement in community development funding from the Federal level and also a community development sports growth map can sort this out.

But, our greedy politicians will not allow us work. I know what I have seen in this country working under politician controlled programs.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by do4luv14(m): 7:51pm On May 03, 2022
TheGoodJoe:


No one is saying do not start. I am saying at the moment, it is impossible to give the kids today the kind of education their European counterparts get at a very early stage.

No one is complaining or giving up. We will do the little we can. However, that does not make it mean the kids here have equal opportunity like the kids in Europe.


again what's your definition of At the moment
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 7:52pm On May 03, 2022
do4luv14:



again what's your definition of At the moment

Please, at the moment is now. I do not know how to say it. Please where in Nigeria can you give a child the kind of education obtained in Barcelona academy.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 7:57pm On May 03, 2022
do4luv14:



again what's your definition of At the moment

Xavi Hernandez Academy Report when he was 14 years old.

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by do4luv14(m): 8:06pm On May 03, 2022
Odunayaw:
I believe Nigerians are good dreamers

We think systems appear out of thin air or maybe they're downloaded out of Goggle Cloud

Systems, especially working ones take sweat, tears and blood...Not to mention years

We do alot of wishes here only. Look at our ex footballers for example. Punditry is easier for them than doing the work of developing grassroot football

Before anyone asks me if that is their job. It is not their job, but perhaps what if they took it as an investment.

If money were the motivational factor alone, we'd have achieved acres of success



Thank you Ayo, that's what Joe fails to realize,

the important thing is that the workers that formed one of those same London clubs does not wait for the system, thru years of hard work, perseverance and patience they create the system theirsefs,

the Results is what we are seeing now,
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by chrisooblog: 8:11pm On May 03, 2022
Still doesn't change my general point
JohnBullMySon:
When you hear that only 0.5% make it from academies, it includes even league two and the National league.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by do4luv14(m): 8:14pm On May 03, 2022
TheGoodJoe:


Please, at the moment is now. I do not know how to say it. Please where in Nigeria can you give a child the kind of education obtained in Barcelona academy.



sir Joe it's this high standards that you always use that makes you to see what lay beyond,

I asked you a question, you went and bring Xavi academy card, and Barcelona Academy, it's no longer an opportunity, or system,

it's now about barca academy right, yet you forget to realize that, that same academy was born out of an opportunity, and thru years and d
century of sweats and hard work, it is where it is today

sir stick to one facts and let's dwell on it to understand what we don't,

leave Xavi and barca academy out of it thanks
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by humility33(m): 8:16pm On May 03, 2022
do4luv14:



Thank you Ayo, that's what Joe fails to realize,

the important thing is that the workers that formed one of those same London clubs does not wait for the system, thru years of hard work, perseverance and patience they create the system theirsefs,

the Results is what we are seeing now,

You're very funny

So u mean when it comes to education too...

If many Nigeria students had the opportunity, better and equipped educational institutions like what obtained in europe, they wont do better than their current state presently?

If your answer is in affirmative that they would do better....then you should know that our sports sector including football just like education, health etc has placed many young nigerians at a disadvantage position compare to kids in europe
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Joebie: 8:19pm On May 03, 2022
Una dey argue who has scored the most goals so far. I think say na this season una dey talk. I see your point
But komekn’s point is still valid.
TheGoodJoe:


I repeat, the discussion is 100 goals so far. If we are talking when both players have stabilized and we want to compare them, I am all for it.

However, opportunity played a big role in the early start players like Tammy get. The point might not fly in Europe because they lack zero idea of the challenges an African football kid gets.

Look at the picture below, he could not play for Arsenal because of work permit despite his immense talent. Yaya had to go on a journey which an English kid would have walked into Arsenal.

That is a fact. Our players find it tougher in the start. So that is why Tammy leads in goals.
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by do4luv14(m): 8:21pm On May 03, 2022
humility33:


You're very funny

So u mean when it comes to education too...

If many Nigeria students had the opportunity, better and equipped educational institutions like what obtained in europe, they wont do better than their current state presently?

If your answer is in affirmative that they would do better....then you should know that our sports sector including football just like education, health etc has placed many young nigerians at a disadvantage position compare to kids in europe


Now between the 2 of us who is very very very funny,


so you are saying if a child is 5 years old, not schooling, you will not teach him, you did rather wait for a better system, before enrollment,

sorry it's humble you miss road
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by mostob(m): 8:29pm On May 03, 2022
andrewbaba44:


I am sure you wanted to say a teenage nketiah arsenal academy will bench osimhen grin
I had to jump pass his post. He did everything to downgrade Osimehn yet he didn't waste time in bringing out the Tammy agenda....

1 Like

Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by Odunayaw(m): 8:36pm On May 03, 2022
TheGoodJoe:


I believe an improvement in community development funding from the Federal level and also a community development sports growth map can sort this out.

But, our greedy politicians will not allow us work. I know what I have seen in this country working under politician controlled programs.
Who says we can't have private funding. Something like Trusts

The philanthropic route we use is what hasn't given us the breakthrough we want

Politicians will be politicians
Re: "The Super Eagles Thread: The Road To AFCON 2023, 2025 And 2026 World Cup by TheGoodJoe(m): 8:41pm On May 03, 2022
do4luv14:




sir Joe it's this high standards that you always use that makes you to see what lay beyond,

I asked you a question, you went and bring Xavi academy card, and Barcelona Academy, it's no longer an opportunity, or system,

it's now about barca academy right, yet you forget to realize that, that same academy was born out of an opportunity, and thru years and d
century of sweats and hard work, it is where it is today

sir stick to one facts and let's dwell on it to understand what we don't,

leave Xavi and barca academy out of it thanks

Why should we leave Barcelona and Xavi out of it?

You asked a question, about the meaning of at the moment abi?

I am showing you an example of at the moment.

The debate is about opportunity. These kids learn at a high level. I am showing you a credential of a 14 years old. These guys are coached by UEFA Pro licensed coaches.

This guys have high education. This is what is the kind of opportunity given to the likes of Tammy and Tomori, which the kids here do not have.

That is the crust of the debate. The gap in opportunity between the ones in Europe and here.

It is about education and chance to have a quality professional career. It leads to early break through in clubs and a good head start.

That Xavi's report card is a view into the debate. So I do not get why you are complaining.

AT THE MOMENT, WE CAN NOT GIVE OUR KIDS THE STANDARD OF EDUCATION THE EUROPEAN KIDS GET.

We do not have the facilities, kits, training staff and materials to achieve this. Our local system has been void of investment in these areas for years.

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