🚨🇫🇷 ILS SE VOIENT IMPOSER UN PAIEMENT À L’AVANCE DANS UN BUFFET À VOLONTÉ ET DÉNONCENT UNE DISCRIMINATION : trois jeunes affirment avoir été contraints de régler leur repas avant même de s’installer dans un restaurant buffet à volonté. Pensant d’abord qu’il s’agissait d’une règle générale de l’établissement, ils se seraient ensuite aperçus que la majorité des autres clients payaient à la fin du repas. Après avoir interrogé le gérant, celui-ci leur aurait expliqué que cette pratique concernait « les jeunes ». Selon eux, plusieurs autres jeunes présents sur place, à la peau blanche, n’étaient pourtant pas soumis à cette règle. Les trois clients dénoncent un comportement discriminatoire et estiment avoir été ciblés en raison de leur apparence.
D’habitude la pudeur m’empêche de demander ça en public. Mais si vous avez l’amabilité de faire des duaas pour mon grand père Allah yahrmo en ce mois sacré. J’espère qu’Allah vous le rendra au centuple.
je met la video uniquement parce que la nouvelle technique des maghrebins c'est de dire qu'on crée du contenu ia pour fantasmer sur leurs soeurs. Alors que ces beurettes fétichistes des hommes noirs font vraiment des dingueries comme ça pour bouffer nos boules de petanques noirs
Totti gets a bad reputation for the national team largely because of timing and narrative, not because of what he actually produced.
The three arguments casuals always use are the 9 goals in 58 caps, the spit incident at EURO 2004 and the sending off against South Korea in 2002.
The most common one is the 9 goals in 58 games, which is genuinely baffling considering Totti never even played as a striker for Italy.
He was always the creator, operating deeper and facilitating attacks. What never gets mentioned is that he also registered 25 assists in those 58 appearances, an exceptional return for a player whose primary role was creating rather than finishing.
As for the tournaments themselves, he won the U21 EURO in 1996 and the Mediterranean Games in 1997 (but let's leave this one out considering the opposition's quality).
His first major tournament was EURO 2000 after not being selected for the 1998 World Cup, despite clearly being good enough.
At EURO 2000 he was by far Italy's best player, was the best player on the pitch in the final alongside Henry and could easily have won the Player of the Tournament award had Italy lifted the trophy.
Then came the 2002 World Cup where, once again, he was Italy's best player. His performances against Ecuador and Mexico stood out in particular. Italy's run ended in the infamous match against South Korea, but before his dismissal Totti had already assisted one goal and created another huge chance for Tommasi.
The controversial elimination and the red card became the story, not his performances.
EURO 2004 is probably where the biggest damage to his international reputation occurred.
For me, this was Totti at his peak all things considered. He arrived at the tournament after recording his highest Serie A goalscoring season to that point and looked ready to dominate.
He was excellent in his opening match but then stupidly got himself suspended for three games after spitting at Poulsen. UEFA rightly punished him, Italy failed to get out of the group and his tournament was effectively over after one game. It remains the biggest self-inflicted mistake of his career.
Then you have the 2006 World Cup.
We all know this story. He breaks his fibula in February but Lippi insists he wants him in the squad regardless and famously says he would take him even with one leg.
Four months later Totti arrives at the World Cup with screws still in his leg and nowhere near full fitness. He starts every game (except Australia), finishes as the tournament's top assister, scores the last-minute penalty against Australia, produces a masterclass against Ukraine with two assists and follows it up with another outstanding display against Germany.
The final was probably his weakest game of the tournament, but by then he had already played a major role in getting Italy there.
So when people talk about Totti's international career, they're talking about a player who reached a EURO final, won a World Cup, and was the primary creator and tempo-setter in every major tournament he played.
The problem is that football discourse tends to reward goals, highlights and headlines. Totti's job was to connect everything, dictate the game and create for others.
Those contributions are far easier to overlook than a striker scoring goals, which is why the narrative around his Italy career is often far worse than the reality.