@HCaballero@DiegoArmaMedina En cierta parte si, pero el tiempo le dio la razón. Realmente el fue el unico de los entrenadores de la era tato que tenía un estilo de juego. Los que el escogió dependían de individualidades
Por favor vean este clip completo 🚨‼️
Después de más de 3 años, Vucetich afirmó que Tato Noriega tuvo toda la culpa de su salida por una “enemistad” cuando lo dirigía.
Sin dudas, la salida del Rey Midas fue uno de los mayores errores que cometió.
@CiertaVerdad1@absalon78 Y no mames se siguen reforzando bien, se va alguien que no sirve y traen alguien del mismo nivel o superior. En Monterrey venden uno en 15 y te traen uno de 3 pesos.
No sacan cantera, dividen grupos. Etc...es claro que fichar no te asegura campeonatos, pero no mantienes una base
@Dan1nsider_ Esto no se trata de Messi y cristiano. O si no fue con intención, es un planchazo que pone en riesgo la integridad del futbolista. Minimo amarilla debio sacar el arbitro
Nunca será mal momento para recordar que alguien que jugó y fue CAMPEÓN con mis @Rayados Di Oro como @Miguel_layun habló de la EXIGENCIA que se vive en la interna de EL GLORIOSO Club de Futbol Monterrey
#MundoAlbiazul
@Sisoyelbarbon Posibilidad? Quien lo iba a querer de vuelta, partió el grupo con su toma de decisiones. Solamente en pendejo del diablo lo queria de regreso
"No se lo deseo a nadie":
Porque "El Gordo Que Fuma" está vivo y sufriendo por Gaspi, "era un pibe chico, es una muerte de mierda, no se lo deseo a nadie"
🚨🗣️New: Zlatan Ibrahimovic on Vinicius Junior refusing the mandatory halftime interview with FIFA at the World Cup:
“People are shocked that Vinícius walked away from a halftime interview. I am shocked that anyone thinks he should have stopped in the first place.
Halftime is not a television studio. Halftime is not a podcast. Halftime is not a red carpet. Halftime is the heartbeat of a football match.
For 45 minutes, players are warriors in a storm. They run, they fight, they suffer, they bleed. Then they get 15 precious minutes to recover, to breathe, to listen, to think. And FIFA wants to spend part of that time chasing soundbites? That is like pulling a Formula 1 driver out of his car during a pit stop and asking him how the race is going.
And FIFA’s idea is to shove a microphone in the player’s face and ask, ‘How do you feel?’
How do you think he feels? He’s exhausted.
This is modern football’s biggest disease. Everything is content. Everything is sponsorship. Everything is television. The match hasn’t even finished and they’re already trying to manufacture headlines.
They tell us they care about player welfare. Really? Then why are players playing more games than ever? Why are tournaments expanding? Why are injuries increasing? And now they want halftime interviews too? The hypocrisy is unbelievable.
Halftime is sacred. It belongs to the players and the coaches. That’s where games are won. That’s where tactics change. That’s where injuries get treated. That’s where leaders speak. It is not a media circus.
And don’t tell me this is for the fans. Fans want better football, not a tired player giving a robotic 20-second answer because somebody sold another broadcast package.
Vinícius understood that. He chose football over public relations.
The funniest part? They threaten him with a fine. A fine. As if that changes the principle. If I were there, I’d pay it too. Because some things are worth more than money.
If FIFA really had their way, they’d put microphones in the dressing room and call it innovation.
Football should come first. Not content. Not commercials. Not corporate greed.
For once, a player pushed back. And that’s exactly why so many people are angry.”