‘When he sits in the Kop he says it’s like coming home”’ 🥰
@curtisjr_10 pays a visit to Harry, an inspirational Red born with Williams syndrome, for a special day at Anfield full of surprises ❤️
Dear Liverpool FC, presented by @NIVEAMENUK… #AD
I can now exclusively reveal that Bayern Munich have suffered yet another crushing setback in what is rapidly turning into one of the most humiliating transfer windows in recent memory, with Vincent Kompany and Max Eberl investing days of discussions, presentations and persuasion attempts in an effort to convince Spanish talent Víctor Muñoz to move to Bavaria, only to find themselves facing yet another rejection despite aggressively pushing the project, a scenario that has become increasingly familiar for a club that once expected Europe’s brightest talents to answer the phone immediately whenever Bayern Munich came calling.
The rejection becomes even more damaging when considering that Muñoz would have preferred a move to Newcastle United over Bayern Munich, a choice that would have been almost unthinkable a decade ago but now serves as another uncomfortable reminder of how dramatically the landscape has shifted, with the Bundesliga’s ability to attract elite talents continuing to weaken while the Premier League tightens its grip on world football, leaving self-proclaimed giants Bayern Munich repeatedly forced into the role of spectators as target after target chooses a different path, and with every rejection the illusion that the Bayern badge remains one of football’s irresistible destinations continues to crumble before their eyes.
Interestingly enough, the race took a dramatic twist and was effectively buried the very moment newly appointed Liverpool head coach Andoni Iraola entered discussions and informed the player that Liverpool Football Club wanted him, because Bayern Munich can offer trophies and Germany can offer domestic dominance, but Liverpool offers something entirely different, something that exists beyond contracts, salaries and sporting projects, a football cathedral standing beneath the grey skies of Merseyside where history breathes through every brick of Anfield, where generations of legends have walked the same tunnel, where the famous red shirt carries the weight of immortality, where You’ll Never Walk Alone echoes like a sacred hymn across the footballing universe, and where dreams are not merely promised but woven into the very identity of the club itself, leaving Bayern Munich once again watching from afar as another player looked towards those mythical Anfield lights, heard the call of one of football’s greatest institutions and immediately knew his future lay anywhere but Bavaria.
As Muslims in New York City and around the world mark the beginning of the Islamic New Year, Muharram calls us to reflect on the values of justice, compassion, and moral courage that guide us in our lives and our communities.
As we welcome this new year, may it renew our commitment to one another and to the work of building a city where every New Yorker can live with dignity and opportunity.