barely talk
lover boy
not friendly
reserved
overthinker
avoids problem
doesn't smoke
doesn't drink
circle small
phone 24/7
believe in God
love my family
don't like crowds
hates parties
phone dry
love music
ambivert
drowning in my thoughts
According to you people, Maresca was also not the right fit because he was arrogant and went against the hierarchy. So I have to disagree, I think the fanbase is still in the first stage of grief, which is denial. Chelsea FC is not a club built to win anything (anymore), so actually Rosenior is the perfect fit. Weed away all the players who are likely to demand a high wage, keep and bring more players like Malo Gusto who have no issues with who the manager is as long as they play, expose them to PL football, develop and sell for profit. That is what the club is. You still speak like we need to win games for this to happen. A plant like Rosenior is never gonna demand more from his higher ups
@Ajecreator@FabrizioRomano Enzo cooked them, now cucurella.
Na Palmer own go wake them up. They either get it right this coming summer or lose all the players.
Gambling as a whole is so different when you have a few million
You can take bets at 1.25 odds , put $100,000 down and make $25,000 profit
Yet if you are broke , putting $50 on it and making $12.50 profit it’s like nothing
Get rich
Do Football Players wash or rewear their Jerseys?
Well, to be frank, the answer depends largely on the level of the game the player is at.
At the elite level, matchday jerseys are almost never washed for reuse. In fact, top clubs provide two or three fresh shirts per player per match. One for the first half, a potential half-time change, and a spare for blood or heavy staining.
The reason is nothing serious. It is partly practical, partly commercial.
Sponsor visibility on television requires kits that look sharp under floodlights throughout the full ninety minutes.
Club's kit deals are worth hundreds of millions. They are not optimally fit for purpose when they are creased, faded.
Sometimes, after the final whistle, those jerseys enter a whole new world of their own. Some go to opponents in the post-match swap tradition that has existed for decades. Others go to fans, to charity auctions, or into a player's personal collection.
Players themselves almost never wash a single one, and that is entirely by design. Clubs have a kitman that handles everything: collecting dirty training gear, laundering base layers, and making sure fresh kits are ready for the next session.
Some players have cultures of their own too.
John Terry took it even further with boots, reportedly wearing three separate pairs per match. One for warmup, another for the first half and a third for the second half. If you are wondering what happens in knockout games that spillover into extra time, don't worry. You are not alone. I am wondering too.
The story is however very different further down the football pyramid. Players in smaller clubs wash and reuse the same pool of jerseys across multiple games simply because the budget does not allow for anything else.
The 2020 COVID lockdown gave a rare glimpse of this gap: Manchester United players were asked to take their training kits home and wash them themselves, something many of them had genuinely never done before in their professional careers. Not because they were lazy. Just because it had never been their job.
And yeah-the unsung heroes in all of this are the kitmen. They arrive earliest, leave latest, and make sure every player walks out looking exactly right. Some of them are the ones that do the actual cleaning.
Have you learned something today?
My name is Ajoje and I am a FIFA Licensed Agent and International Sports Lawyer. I talk about the Law and Business of Football, a lot. Repost and Follow me if you want to read more posts like this.