🚨🗣️New: Mohamed Salah on the controversial officiating decisions in Egypt and Argentina game, Messi and Argentina are being favored:
“People will say Argentina showed the mentality of champions. Fine. But tell me this: when exactly did Egypt get the same protection from the officials?
We scored a second goal. The stadium exploded. The world saw it. Then suddenly VAR became an archaeologist, digging through the ruins of football history to find a foul from another lifetime.
Funny how they could rewind the game Five minutes to cancel our goal, but when I was brought down in the box, everyone suddenly forgot where the replay button was.
That’s what hurts. Not losing. Not Argentina.
The inconsistency.
One decision gets examined under a microscope. Another gets buried under the carpet.
We were told football is decided on the pitch. Tonight it felt like it was decided in a control room.
And let’s talk about those final minutes.
Two penalty appeals. Two moments that could have changed everything. Nothing. No review. No urgency. No explanation.
Then Argentina go down the other end and score the winner.
That isn’t a plot twist. That’s the kind of script that leaves millions of people asking questions.
Egypt fought for every blade of grass. We defended. We believed. We earned our moments.
But every time we climbed the mountain, someone moved the summit.
The disallowed goal.
The ignored penalty shouts.
The cards flying around our bench because people who dedicate their lives to this game couldn’t understand what they were witnessing.
And now we’re expected to smile and say football won?
No.
Football wins when the rules are applied equally.
Football wins when VAR is a shield for fairness, not a sword that appears only when convenient.
Because from where I’m standing, Egypt didn’t just lose 3-2.
Egypt lost a goal, lost two penalty appeals, lost faith in consistency, and eventually lost a place in the quarter-finals.
Maybe Argentina deserved to advance.
Maybe they didn’t.
That’s football.
But what will make people angry isn’t the result.
It’s the feeling that one team was forced to play against eleven men, the clock, and a set of decisions that seemed to change shape whenever the game demanded it.
And that’s why this match will be remembered long after the scoreline is forgotten.”
This is Bharat Jain. A beggar by profession with a net worth of ~₹7.5 crores.
He lives with his family: his wife, 2 sons, his brother, and his father.
- Begging for 40 years
- Earns: ~₹2,500 a day
- Works: 10-12 hours a day
He is able to earn ~₹75,000 per month from begging.
He owns
- 2 flats in Mumbai worth ₹1.4 crores
- 2 shops in Thane with a monthly rental income of ₹30,000
His children run a stationery business. They advise their father to stop begging, but he says, "I enjoy begging, and I don't want to give it up. I'm not greedy. I'm generous. I donate money to temples and charities."
Vande Bharat ne toh ego par le liya😂😂
Jokes aside, there was a time when one train had to be stopped on sidetrack to give passage to Express Train. Now both trains run simultaneously. You know whom to thank.
Thank you, Lehru ji.
@RailwaySeva All the details were mentioned in first complaint. Leave it paap ho gaya complain karke. Send more and more hooligans and druggists in train for viksit bharat.
@adradivision@rpfser@RailwaySeva Its a simple complain from tata till next stop unwanted beggars & druggists boarded the train & I have done the complaint, instead of taking initiative you R insisting on cell number. Infact if a call has been made to the respective member present in the train it would have work.