In 2024, Caleb Yirenkyi was still a student-athlete at Right to Dream 🇬🇭
Tonight, he’s about to make his World Cup debut for @GhanaBlackstars 🌍
The journey continues 🌟
Easter is one of the principal holidays, or feasts, of Christianity. It marks the Resurrection of Jesus three days after his death by crucifixion. For many Christian churches, Easter is the joyful end to the Lenten season of fasting and penitence.
Last night was unforgettable.
Stepping back onto the pitch after two years away meant more to me than I can express. To the fans, thank you for the love, the energy, and the belief.
To everyone who stood behind me, supported me, and pushed me through every moment of this journey, I’m deeply grateful. This debut wasn’t just mine…
it belonged to all of you who never stopped supporting me.
I used to be such an international football hater. The Champions League is the pinnacle of the sport, the level is higher in the club game, international breaks suck, blah blah blah — all the classics.
But the more money gets pumped into club football, and the more unfair and lopsided it becomes, the more I’ve grown to love and appreciate the international game. It feels like the last “pure” version of football.
No bullshit billionaire owners, no state owned clubs, no hoarding the best teenagers on the planet, just the players from your country and that’s it.
Maybe it’s just as because I’m older and getting more pessimistic lol, but I really enjoy and admire international football more than I ever have.
For a small Belgian guy from Braine-le-Comte playing for fun, being inducted into the Premier League Hall of Fame with these greats of the game at 34 years old is crazy. Thank you to all of you; I will see you soon, my friends! 💙
I was born a Catholic and have walked this Earth for 54 years.
Before dedicating a quarter of a century to Counterterrorism, my first degree was in Philosophy and Theology.
But I will say for the record, I have never seen a human being encapsulate in 90 seconds the meaning of Jesus Christ like @SecRubio.
Thank you Sir.
Modern Day Steven.
Charlie Kirk.
You’ve made dying for Jesus popular again, thank you Charlie, you’ve inspired a generation.
How you leave is truly more important than how you came.
Your death justified your life.