You won’t be able to control the narrative at the end. They’ll meet your opps to tell your story and it’ll be too tainted for you to come back. Think about it from the start.
We know, That's why the North has become a terrorist zone because there are lots of untapped mineral resources in the North and both the government and foreigners are using bandits and terrorists to chase the indigenes away so that they can do illegal mining.
The Chinese are in the lead of illegal mining in Nigeria.
@devkonn I think it’s not about them ‘acting like they’re too good for him’. Rather, it’s about all the additional drama and baggage that comes with him.
Is it really worth it? Plus what does that do to their roster and team chemistry adding him to the mix?
But I get your point though
The World Cup knockout system is unfair.
A team can dominate its group, collect more points, and still get punished with a much harder path. Meanwhile, another team can barely qualify with fewer points and face an easier opponent simply because of a fixed bracket.
Example: Morocco finished strong with 7 points, yet faces the Netherlands. Senegal barely survived with fewer points but may get a softer route.
The solution is simple: reseeding.
After the group stage, rank all 32 qualified teams based on performance:
points, goal difference, goals scored, and group position.
Then:
#1 plays #32
#2 plays #31
#3 plays #30
And so on.
This is how many American sports leagues protect competitive fairness. The NFL, for example, reseeds playoff teams so the highest remaining seed faces the lowest remaining seed.
The World Cup should reward performance, not punish it. @FIFAcom@FIFAWorldCup
Iran have my ultimate respect. They went undefeated against Egypt, Belgium and New Zealand, playing in a country whose government completely despised them and refused to protect their safety.
No team played under more adversity, and they still nearly made it to the Round of 32.
@maps_black Estos son los porcentajes de la cantidad de clasificadoa por confederación:
África: 90,0%
Sudamérica: 83,3%
Europa: 81,3%
Norteamérica: 50,0%
Asia: 22,2%
Oceanía: 0,0%
CUSTOMERS ARE NOT TO PAY ELECTRICITY BILLS THAT ARE ABOVE 1 YEAR.
The Lagos State Electricity Regulatory Commission has said electricity supply licensees cannot recover charges that are more than 12 months old.
Consumers should not be made to pay charges older than 12 months except in cases involving meter tampering, illegal use of electricity, or obstruction of meter reading.
“Electricity supply licensees cannot recover charges older than 12 months, except in cases of meter tampering, illegal use, and obstruction of meter reading,” LASERC said.
Consumers are to be aware of their rights and protections under the electricity regulatory framework. “Stay informed, stay protected,” the commission stated.
LASERC took over electricity regulation in the state from the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission in accordance with the provisions of the Electricity Act 2023.
The commission has said it would not allow electricity subsidies in the state, insisting that operators must recover their costs.