@MTNNG Please give us browsing network in Orozo Abuja. The name of the streets are angwa dogo, angwa Fulani, angwa fadama. But very terrible in angwa dogo
@Big_marvis@Okcenuno Nigeria’s debt-to-revenue ratio has often been above 70%, meaning a large part of government revenue goes to repaying loans. So even with a lower debt-to-GDP ratio, repayment pressure is still very high. You are a liar.
@Big_marvis Nigeria’s debt-to-GDP ratio is lower than several African countries, but debt sustainability also depends on revenue, inflation, and repayment capacity — not GDP alone.
You are a liar.
These APC imbeciles think everyone is like them that will just OK what ever they post.
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Just hours ago, negotiations between Xabi Alonso and Chelsea have officially broken down. Sources close to both sides confirm the Spaniard walked away after a key meeting at Cobham where he repeatedly asked one simple question that BlueCo couldn’t answer:
“What is the actual project here?”
Alonso, 44, arrived with clear expectations. Fresh from his experiences at Leverkusen and a short, intense spell at Madrid, he wanted specifics:
• Who really decides signings?
• How much control does the head coach get?
• What does success look like in Year 1, Year 3, Year 5?
• Is this a football project… or a business spreadsheet with a manager attached?
The room went silent.
BlueCo execs leaned on familiar corporate lines: “data-driven recruitment… multi-club synergies… sustainable winning culture… structural reviews…”
Alonso listened patiently, then pushed again. No concrete answers. No clear vision. Just buzzwords and deflections. He wanted to build something lasting. They wanted a big name to stabilise the chaos.
He wasn’t buying it.
In that moment, the clash became obvious.
Alonso has always demanded clarity and autonomy to impose his footballing identity. Chelsea’s current model — centralised ownership control, heavy data influence, constant manager turnover — couldn’t give him the guarantees he needed.
No vague promises. No “trust the process.” He stood up, shook hands politely, and left.
For Chelsea fans, this is yet another painful chapter. Another so called elite manager who looked at the project and said: “Not like this.”
BlueCo are now scrambling for alternatives (Iraola, Silva and others are back in the mix), while publicly putting on a brave face. Meanwhile, the same questions that sank the Alonso deal remain unanswered upstairs.
Football is full of egos and money, but sometimes it comes down to the basics. Alonso wanted to know what they were actually building at Chelsea.
When nobody could tell him… the deal died.
The carousel continues.
What do you make of this, Blues fans? Is the problem the managers… or the lack of a real vision?