“Look at the stars…”
It was a special day for novelty booking fans. Panama's Cecilio Waterman's crimes embracing Thierry Henry can sway from his glorious double nest early on Friday morning in Panama's Cecilio Waterman.
Waterman scored on Panama's first and only target in four minutes of downtime, knocking three reigning champion USA USA from the semi-finals of the Concacaf Nations League before creating a beeline for the ESPN expert who sat on Dais behind the goal. “My idol has always been Thierry Henry,” Waterman calmed down. “I saw him play for Arsenal. The truth is, he was an inspiration for me from a young age. I was an inspiration since I was a boy. I knew I had to score goals and say hello.” The moment the pair shared was very warm and life-affirming, so Henry described it as the most special thing in his career. “I scored goals, I got my bags, I lost things, but it's going to be there in everything,” the Frenchman said. A good story. Please enter the book.
A few hours later, leaving the big ocean, Wood slammed Fiji 7-0 in the semi-finals of the Oceania World Cup Qualifiers, so he bagged a hat trick and played in 30 minutes, then quickly returned to the stands to sign some signs instead of returning to the bench. As for the umpire, Polynesian Norbert Hautta was concerned about the seductive attitude of these fans, but the vaguely competitive match was still ongoing, making up a bookable attack that showed lack of respect for the game. “If that's the rule, that's the rule,” Wood sniffed. “I'm just doing something good.”
Now Wood is paying attention to doing horrible things. In Monday's final, we will ruin the dream of aspiring history maker New Caledonia (and literally dozens of football hacks). All white successes are all going well, but journalists who remember the days and weeks following Iceland's surprise qualifications at the 2018 World Cup must be hoping to be charming, called after the candid carnivorous, non-flying birds endemic to the rainforest.
For those who have forgotten, the Icelanders were able to move barely after they became the smallest (population-specific) nation ever to compete in a massive competition. The general consensus was that it rested on the granite spirit born from living on barren, icy outcrops of the North Atlantic. “The people of Icelandic agreed with life long ago as a struggle.” Read one article. “Iceland, a desolate island, was one of the last bits of Europe settled by humans. Its spirit of struggle, against the elements, against the geographical isolation – remains.” Now, it may be happening again, but only in countries with population: a) There is little three-quarters of the size of Iceland. b) Living on the Pacific Atoll at Beach Breath. Perhaps the answer is as simple as anything else is missing. Second on Lonely Planet's list of must-see attractions in New Caledonia is Pont de Mouri, which connects the north and south of Ubea. National Tourism Bureau His pride is “13m wide and has double lanes, two bike lanes and two sidewalks.” Certainly, more dedicated research allows for better explanations, but when we come to it, we cross that bridge.
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Today's quote
“Identity, clarity, rhythm, repeating patterns, player freedom, player expression, hunger. They were afraid of dropping out of the tournament with my observations rather than having excitement and hunger to win.” – New boss Thomas Two-Shell is not sitting on the fence based on ratings of what he missed in the under British Gareth Southgart.
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Two things. First, I would like to thank you for the link to the A-Team episode (Yesterday's Football Daily). I watched this until the end. In other words, I've seen it the most in its amazing entertainment in over 35 years. Secondly, I plugged in the Greek vs Scotland game (live live on big website) but didn't predict the score. Maybe you didn't want to alienate your Scottish readers with negative predictions? Second leg prediction: Lose 2-0″ – Andy Morrison.
I'm sure your Football Daily inbox is full of ODEs to your favorite A-Team episodes (Yesterday's Soccer Daily). It's not me. I am fascinated by your rather Baroque Baroque style of 19th century military strategy – Google says that it is due to Field Helmut von Moltke – that will not survive contact with enemies regarding Thomas Touchel's World Cup strategy. However, you could also quote Mike Tyson for a more relevant statement that “everyone has a plan until they're punched in the mouth.” Mike Wilner.
Could Anthony Barry's surveillance of 16,154 throw-ins (Just yesterday's daily football) be a little less interesting than reading all 16,154 letters from Noble Francis here? ” – Nigel Sanders.
Send a letter to the.boss@theguardian.com. The winner of today's pure letter o'The Day is… Andy Morrison. Our Competition Terms and Conditions can be seen when we have them here.





