⏰ 22' |
Sabiu locates Dabai with a telegram pass, he picks the ball and fires a shot but goes wide.
Niger Tornadoes 0-0 Bayelsa United
#NPFL26 || #TORBAY || #MD3
Yeah yeah there's a spelling mistake, happens to the best of us - i'd rather comment on them writing "FOR" as his position; i think "FWD" is a much better abbreviation
While I don’t advocate for players demanding moves, I do 100% understand it.
If you’re not going to put these massively successful corporations in a bad spot, they’ll take advantage of you.
When clubs do it we don’t chastise them, but when players do whats best for them we do.
After that derby earlier, you can’t praise Union St Gilloise enough really. They’re everything they should be. Unrelentingly positive, all about team work and improving players, finding some in obscure places. Doing the simple things well, nothing pretentious about them at all. Fair play.
9️⃣▪️5️⃣8️⃣ INSANE BOLT⚡⚡
📅 On this day, 16 years ago, Usain Bolt shattered the 100m World Record with an unbelievable 9.58s in Berlin—he broke his own previous record of 9.69 seconds, which he had set one year earlier at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.🐐🇯🇲
https://t.co/FTIqjqFtF2
Did you know that the MLS owns the registration and playing rights of all players in the league and not the clubs?
This unique single-entity structure, set up in 1996, means Major League Soccer, as a limited liability company, holds all player contracts. Clubs negotiate transfers, but MLS formally signs agreements, handles paperwork like International Transfer Certificates, and receives payments on behalf of teams, ensuring compliance with league rules such as salary caps.
MLS collects transfer fees, when clubs sell players internationally, then distributes funds per league policies. Clubs can still enforce agreements, pursuing unpaid fees if needed.
This centralized model, unlike the Premier League where clubs own contracts, lets MLS control transfers while clubs drive negotiations. Many believe this is done to ensure financial stability and competitive balance, what do you think?
Opus Race Promotions, founded by former footballers Marvin Sordell and Daniel Uchechi, is gearing up to submit a formal bid to bring Formula 1 to Nigeria 🇳🇬
If successful, the race would take place in Abuja, which could mark the first F1 event on African soil since 1993.
DID YOU KNOW?
According to La Liga regulations,
First-team players must wear numbers 1–25.
Goalkeepers are restricted to #1 and #13 (and sometimes #25).
Whereas the reserve players must wear between 26—50.