La Masia| Results without quality is boring| Rossonero| Geopolitics & History| Antioquia 🇨🇴| Santo Antão 🇨🇻| Rotterdam 🇳🇱| Every stock in Toni Fernandez
With 0 G/A this was Ebrima’s best game of the tournament for me, when he actually locks in, keep it simple and doesn’t want to play heroball like against Belgium he’s just super efficient in his play.
@XaviTempo__ Every other attacker signed by a top club was given a 10M wage back in 2021, not crazy we did the same for a Bdor talent that was killing it on the pitch
❗️Once Ansu Fati’s transfer is finalised, Barça will free up almost €9M in salary mass per season over the next two years, totalling €17.2M gross.
For the 2026–27 season, this amount will be added to the salary space already freed by Lewandowski’s departure, as well as the €11M transfer fee received from Ansu’s sale.
Via (🟢): @RamonFuentes74 [md]
Yea it was so obvious from his debut that Roony was just a load of mid, but people love to hype and he does One Piece celebrations. Sell for a profit and forget.
🚨 Roony Bardghji has informed his agent of his wish to leave FC Barcelona in search of more minutes. Bardghji would prefer a loan move. [@ferrancorreas]
Europe has spent years worrying about Hungary. Perhaps it should start paying more attention to Spain.
For years, the EU struggled with illiberal governments that were openly sympathetic to Russia. But quietly, Spain is emerging as a major problem of its own.
- Spain has decided to legalise the status of hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants.
- Spain's support for Ukraine consists largely of encouraging words rather than meaningful military contributions.
- Spain has announced it will not meet the target for defense spending agreed by everybody else in Europe.
- Spain's hostility towards almost everything connected to Israel has become so one-sided that it raises uncomfortable questions.
- And now Spain appears unwilling to acknowledge that China is both a strategic challenge and a systemic rival to Europe.
Is this merely Spanish domestic politics? Not really. In every case, Spain is pursuing policies that make Europe less secure. The common denominator is a failure to think strategically about the world as it actually is.
Europe spent decades underestimating Russia.
It would be unfortunate if one of its largest member states now repeated the same mistake with Russia's senior partner: China.
The problem is not that Spain is left-wing. The problem is that Spain increasingly treats very hard, strategic realities as interesting perspectives on an academic debate.
That should concern all Europeans.