Haiti has officially become the first team eliminated from World Cup contention, and responsibility falls squarely on Coach Migné, whose approach failed at the moment it mattered most.
In a match where Haiti needed courage, Migné chose caution, abandoning his heavily criticized 4-4-2 system for a rigid, ultra-defensive 5-4-1 setup that looked less like a tactical plan and more like a white flag. Instead of trusting his team to compete, he set them up to survive, and that lack of conviction was reflected on the pitch.
His decisions became even more questionable with his best player, Wilson Isidor, his best winger, Louicius Don Deedson, and his most prolific club goalscorer this season, Lenny Joseph, all left on the bench at the start. By the time changes were made, the damage had already been done, and Haiti struggled to establish any attacking rhythm or relieve pressure.
Without a real attacking outlet, Haiti spent much of the opening period pinned back and overwhelmed. While some will point to earlier qualification success in defense of Migné, reaching this stage means little if the team does not show intent to compete once there. With the talent available, Haiti had options, but they were poorly utilized, and the defensive overload disrupted structure rather than strengthening it, inviting sustained pressure that the team could not absorb.
In the end, the World Cup dream did not end because Haiti lacked players, but because the coach on the touchline chose caution over belief.
Here's a way better way to buy a house than getting a bank mortgage.
Instead of putting a big down payment, take that money and invest it in great stocks for 10 years.
During that time, rent a place to stay. For anyone who thinks you're throwing money away by renting, keep in mind that almost the entire mortgage payment you pay during that time is going to the bank's interest, not the principal.
Your rent will probably be less than your mortgage payment + property tax + repairs. So use that extra money to buy more stocks.
After 10 years, take a loan out against your stock portfolio and buy your house in cash. You will now own the house outright and have the deed - unlike getting a mortgage, where the bank holds the deed.
Your loan rate will be WAY lower than a mortgage rate because it's secured by your stock portfolio. Also, you don't have to pay back the loan on a monthly schedule. You can pay it back at your own pace, or don't pay it back and let the interest accrue on the loan. You never have to worry about the bank taking your house if you miss a few mortgage payments like a bank loan.
After it's all done, you own a house outright with a loan to yourself, and you never sold your stock portfolio, which keeps appreciating.
BTW, that's exactly what I did.
@MyFundedFutures quick help request. I know that the flex option says it cannot be added retroactively. But I selected it, then went back to compare to other accounts. And it deselected my option. I purchased 4 accounts and some don't have flex. Can you help?
@Google since you're here to help, can you tell me why my business account has been suspended, all while my NUMEROUS verification processes keep failing?
Joey Badass sampled Hit Em Up, the most iconic West Coast diss, used Kendrick’s flow, said he seen Kendrick at Diddy parties, bodied all of Dot’s henchmen, at what point will Kendrick need to respond?