Jerry retweetledi
Jerry
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Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi

During a team meeting last summer, Wisdom Mike committed a faux pas. The young winger fell asleep in the front row of the auditorium during a morning team meeting. Within the club it was said that Mike had been out too late in Munich the previous night with another player, who has since been loaned out.
Kompany did not reprimand his player in front of the entire team. Instead, he handled it privately. The coach explained to Mike that he now had to step up his game and that something like that shouldn't happen again. Mike took Kompany's words to heart, worked tirelessly and ultimately celebrated his Bundesliga debut in the 4-0 win against Werder Bremen. Kompany sent him onto the pitch with the words: "You deserved this – but don't sleep again!"
Bayern sanctioned Mike at the time by requiring the teenager to move out of his room on the Campus for a week and stay in a hotel at his own expense. Mike's father was also summoned for a meeting. Since then, the matter was settled
[@SPORTBILD]

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Jerry retweetledi

When Jude Baker was 12, life changed overnight. The middle schooler from Summerville, Georgia, was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma, a rare and aggressive cancer that attacks bones and the tissue around them. What followed was a two-year fight that included surgery to remove a tumor, nearly a year of chemotherapy, and all the physical and emotional weight that comes with treatment at such a young age.
Jude has been open about how hard that period was. In interviews, he said the scariest part wasn’t what people might expect. For him, chemotherapy itself was the toughest challenge. It left him exhausted, in pain, and often isolated from friends and normal teenage life. But even during the hardest days, Jude was paying attention to other people who were struggling too.
After finishing treatment, Jude rang the bell at the hospital to mark the end of chemo. He is now 14 and in remission. Because he faced a life-threatening illness, he became eligible for a wish through the Make-A-Wish Foundation, which grants special experiences to kids ages 3 to 17 with critical conditions.
Most kids pick a trip to a theme park, a chance to meet a favorite athlete or musician, or a gift they’ve always wanted. Jude had a different idea. While going to appointments, he had noticed people experiencing homelessness near the medical centers. That stuck with him. He told his family and the Make-A-Wish team that if he got one wish, he wanted to use it to help those individuals.
Make-A-Wish Georgia coordinators later said community service wishes are not something they usually offer. Jude didn’t have a backup wish. This was the only thing he asked for. He told organizers, “I got out of my version of heck, and I want to help others who are in their own version.”
With help from the Foundation, local volunteers, and the Teloga Fire Department, Jude’s wish turned into a large outreach event. Teams handed out hot meals, sleeping bags, and backpacks packed with hygiene items, socks, and other essentials. By the end of the day, more than 300 people had received food and supplies.
Volunteers at the event remembered one detail about Jude’s attitude. He refused to eat until every person in line had been served first. His focus stayed on making sure no one was missed.
The story spread quickly after local news stations and People magazine covered it in March 2026. The response was immediate. Kevin Godfrey, owner of Godfrey’s Tree Service in Georgia, started a fundraiser so Jude and his family could take a trip of their own, since Jude never asked for one. Community donations passed $40,000 within days.
Jude’s message is simple. He hopes people remember that kindness does not have an age requirement. Sometimes the people who have been through the hardest things are the ones who decide to give back first.
Why This Matters
Ewing sarcoma affects only about 3 in 1 million children each year, which makes Jude’s medical journey rare on its own. His choice to redirect his wish makes the story stand out even more. Make-A-Wish staff who work with hundreds of kids each year said they had never processed a request quite like his.
For readers, it’s a reminder that compassion can show up in unexpected places. Jude spent two years fighting for his health. When he got the chance to ask for anything, he thought about neighbors he didn’t even know.

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Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi

Gabriel also slapped Cherki on the head on Sunday after the ball had gone. I believe just four yellow cards for Gabriel this season. PGMO high threshold has become lawlessness for this guy.
Danis@DanisMCFC
PGMOL can’t let Gabriel get away with these disgusting fouls every time man this is not human bro
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Jerry retweetledi

Families of Sportspersons make the biggest sacrifice.
Thierry Henry was asked why he hasn't taken up any coaching job.
He said all through his playing career, his family had to make sacrifices, they move with him from France, to Italy, to England, to Spain, to USA.
His kids had to change schools at different times also. Basically, they had to change lots of things per time, because of HIS career. He said they have made lots of sacrifices for him and they're settled now. Its time for him to make sacrifices for them, hence, he'll only take jobs that suit "them".
Steven Gerrard said on STF few weeks ago that his family did not really settle in Saudi, and that was the reason they had to move back.
From academy days, your mum and your dad are taking you to training almost every day. This is after they close from their jobs and pick you from school. Ola Aina said his dad preferred Tottenham academy than Chelsea because Tottenham was closer and he was a fan, the stress of driving him to Cobhams for training was too much for him, but he still had to do it.
These parents invest so much time and 99% of the kids end up not playing professionally. It can be painful.
Eberechi Eze for instance, kept going for trials, from South to North of England, his parents kept taking him, even after he was rejected 6 times by different clubs. Imagine these guys grow up, get married, have their own families, and their wives and kids also keep changing environments because of their career.
At some point, they have to also make sacrifices for their families, and that is what Kompany is doing. Sometimes, its not about money, family is important.
Fabrizio Romano@FabrizioRomano
🚨❌ Vincent Kompany has rejected punditry offers for the World Cup: “Absolutely no chance!”. “Why would I do that in vacation time? Then I wouldn't have any family in Munich next season. No chance”. 😊🏝️
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Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi

This woman in the Ford t-shirt stands in her garage with a worn-out orange chainsaw in her hands, not like it’s just a tool—but like it’s proof of something she built herself. She walks through it piece by piece, calm and precise, talking about carb adjustments, fuel lines, and how she brought it back from the dead like it was nothing.
Then she sets it down, grips it steady, and pulls. It roars to life on the first try.
You can see it in her face—that quiet kind of pride that doesn’t need explaining. Not showing off… just showing it works.
Would you ever take the time to learn something like this just to say you could?
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Jerry retweetledi

If that was a challenge from one of our centre halves on one of their midfielders, that would be a yellow card 1000 times out of 1000. Kavanagh and the @FA_PGMOL are bent as fuck
Jim Keoghan@jim_keoghan
It takes some referee to watch this and think, ‘I’d best book the keeper’
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Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
Jerry retweetledi
















