Ronaldo scored against Manchester United for Juventus and literally pulled his shirt off to flex his abs in our faces.
He called his United contract "modern slavery" to force a Real Madrid move. He disrespected the badge multiple times.
And you expect me to revere him more than a man like Bruno Fernandes who gives his absolute soul for the club every single week? Hell nah. The agenda is dead
URGENTE:
Ancelotti disse a Endrick que ele será TITULAR contra o Haiti.
Com isso, o trio de ataque do Brasil deve ser formado por Vini Jr, Raphinha e Ancelotti.
A) Sandro Tonali + Lewis Hall = £130m
B) Mateus Fernandes + Summerville = £130m
For me, the choice is clear.
I’m taking the first option every single time.
Tonali and Hall simply offer better value for the money.
You are getting quality, intensity, balance, and players that already look capable of operating at the highest level consistently.
The second option feels more like a club trying to capitalize on market inflation.
West Ham balancing the books while maximizing hype around players whose current value still feels debatable at that price point.
That doesn’t mean Fernandes and Summerville are bad players.
Far from it.
But £130m for that pair feels harder to justify.
United now have a big decision to make.
Do they pay for proven impact, or gamble on potential and market trends?
@lekanfortheg0ds Literally who cares… countries aren’t the same as clubs. You can be proud of both countries you come from for but choose to play for one over the other.
Perfectly acceptable to also want that part of your heritage to be recognised too.
Yeah man basketball clout actually can’t compare to football clout.
What do you mean some 40 year old Cape Verde goalkeeper gained the same amount of followers after a 0-0 as basketball’s current biggest star.
@realrxAFC Incredible coach.
Don’t know if this is a hot take but Rice & Saliba are your only truely ELITE defensive players. Could argue Timber asw
The Bernardo Silva archetype is the definitive blueprint for Amad Diallo's long-term development.
Sticking a player with his level of spatial intelligence, needle mechanics, and elite micro-scanning into a rigid, touchline-hugging winger role is a complete waste of raw footballing intelligence.
When you look back at his Sunderland loan spell, Tony Mowbray gave him that exact structural freedom to drift inside, occupy the half-spaces, and dictate the tempo of the final third.
It’s no coincidence it was his most productive period he needs the ball at his feet in central zones to truly manipulate the opposition's defensive gravity.
Under Michael Carrick next season, a fluid, rest-defense-heavy system that allows him to roam and link play with technical monsters in the half-spaces is genuinely a terrifying prospect for the rest of the league.