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Eduardo

@simple_felipe

Chicago, IL Katılım Haziran 2009
1.4K Takip Edilen193 Takipçiler
Eduardo
Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@eltri_united I don't like Jude Bellingham. Fuck him and Kane.
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Eduardo
Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@RAMONRAYA23 Ahhh por eso es que defiendes tanto a Argentina. Messi es tu ídolo absoluto del fútbol.
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Ramón Raya M.💚
Ramón Raya M.💚@RAMONRAYA23·
Mi lista de preferencias para campeón 1. Francia y Mbappe 2. Inglaterra y Belingham 3. España por el futbol que defiende 4. Argentina. Festejaré si Messi queda campeón del mundo. Pero para mi no le hace falta ganar otro para considerarlo el mejor de la historia. Eso ya lo es porque desde hace tiempo con tantos años en la cima del futbol mundial superó a mi ídolo mas grande Pelé. La historia no son solo los mundiales
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La Catrina Norteña
La Catrina Norteña@catrina_nortena·
🚨 ESTALLA ENTRENADOR DE SUIZA CONTRA LA FIFA "Dominábamos el partido, sin embargo, fuimos castigados con una tarjeta roja con una regla completamente inaceptable, en mi opinión, mis muchachos son los verdaderos héroes. El árbitro tomó esa decisión equivocada; es una situación que ocurrió muchas veces antes, se que ellos VAN A PROTEGER A SU ÁRBITRO; ser eliminados de esa manera duele mucho"...
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Romain Molina
Romain Molina@Romain_Molina·
Infantino va pousser pour passer la Coupe du Monde à 64 équipes en 2030 dans son but de réélection en utilisant notamment ses amis dirigeants africains (qui, en échange, vont demander de changer les statuts pour qu'il fasse un mandat supplémentaire derrière...) #BeautifulGame
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Eduardo
Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@martindelp Es que también la suerte que tienen para ser beneficiados por el arbitraje no la tiene cualquiera.
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Martín del Palacio
Martín del Palacio@martindelp·
Mi TL se divide en dos ahora: De un lado: “conspiración de la FIFA y grupos políticos para que Argentina gane el Mundial. Ladrones corruptos!. Del otro: “estamos aquí contra todo y contra todos. Todos son racistas. El mundo nos odia. Awante Argentina!” Te odio Elon Musk
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La Catrina Norteña
La Catrina Norteña@catrina_nortena·
🚨 EMPUJÓN DENTRO DEL ÁREA Pero como es Argentina, no la marcaron...
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Hayden
Hayden@the_transit_guy·
While the Telemundo announcers are the best in the business, it’s insanely annoying how biased to Argentina they are lmao
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Eduardo
Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@RAMONRAYA23 ¿Ramón? ¿Tú también tienes familia argentina como Martin? Su excesivo apoyo a Argentina es interesante.
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Sammerz
Sammerz@FootySammers·
@UtdMaI Just discounting Messi like that? Lmao
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Mal
Mal@UtdMaI·
Unpopular opinion: Kylian Mbappé is already one of the three greatest players in FIFA World Cup history. Pelé Ronaldo Kylian Mbappé At just 27, he’s already built a World Cup legacy that most all-time greats never reached.
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Eduardo
Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@Ma_WuKong Les metieron 5, pero ellos te metieron 4.
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Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@martindelp Dos cosas pueden ser ciertas. Egipto perdió porque no supo mantener la ventaja y manejar el final del partido. También se puede decir que lo del gol anulado fue una decisión controversial e incorrecta. Se dice y no pasa nada.
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Eduardo
Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@martindelp @nux2001 Deberías escribir un nota sobre la base rumbo a 2030. Estaría interesante.
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Martín del Palacio
Martín del Palacio@martindelp·
Rafa es un tipo inteligente, un referente para el grupo y con enorme experiencia con grandes técnicos, incluído el que quizá haya sido el mejor de la historia. Sigue siendo una incógnita porque no tiene trayectoria en el alto nivel, pero soy optimista. La mejor de las suertes.
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Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@Jose_Barrundia @martindelp Jajajajaja imagínate qué digas que nadie recuerda un noveno lugar en una copa del mundo, tú todavía te acuerdas de cuando tu selección CASI califica a un mundial. Jajajajaja
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José Barrundia
José Barrundia@Jose_Barrundia·
@martindelp Ahhh y si no hemos ido a un mundial pero recuerdo una ocasión donde estuvimos cerca, pero sospechosamente Mexico perdió con Trinidad y Tobago en la última jornada cuando Jack Warner era presidente de la Concacaf.
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Martín del Palacio
Martín del Palacio@martindelp·
La derrota de Colombia provoca que México quede como la segunda selección de América en este Mundial. El Tri acabará en 9no puesto, por encima de la propia Colombia, Brasil, EUA, Canadá, Paraguay y Ecuador. No es consuelo pero queda para referencia futura.
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Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@VascoxCT Aparte de que Mexico lo desarrolló. Quiñones se hizo el delantero que es en equipos de México.
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Javier "El Dictador" Aguirre
Para mí, Quiñones es mexicanísimo. Dicho esto, no tienen sentido esas críticas a México por “depender de un colombiano”, cuando ningún centrodelantero del continente marcó más goles que Raúl Jiménez en este Mundial. Ni los que siguen con vida.
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Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@mario_campa @VIX @TUDNMEX En Peacock/Telemundo no fue mejor. Andrés Cantor hasta se quedó sin voz cuando Argentina metió el segundo gol.
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Mario Campa
Mario Campa@mario_campa·
La transmisión de @VIX y @TUDNMEX del Egipto-Argentina fue un dolor de cabeza. Juan Pablo Sorín (ARG) regañaba a Rafa Puente Jr. (MEX) hasta por decir "qué lástima" el gol anulado a Egipto, que fue una belleza. Más analistas equilibrados en las próximas transmisiones.
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Martín del Palacio
Martín del Palacio@martindelp·
Miren, con el 2-0 quería que ganara Egipto, hubiera sido una hazaña histórica para un país que no está acostumbrado a ellas. Me enojé cuando no pasó. Pero aún en la frustración hay que mantener la claridad y no inventar. Los egipcios la cagaron, defendieron pésimo, ni modo.
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Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@DavidFaitelson_ Bueno, cuando tienes el arbitraje a tu favor no es tan difícil remontar.
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David Faitelson
David Faitelson@DavidFaitelson_·
Ganarle a los argentinos, durísimo… Puede que no repitan, pero hay que ganarles y eso no es fácil…
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Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@martindelp Si, pero no mamar, cómo crees que van a anular el gol por una falta cometida mucho antes.
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Martín del Palacio
Martín del Palacio@martindelp·
Era falta clarísima la del gol anulado a Egipto. No inventen cosas.
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Eduardo
Eduardo@simple_felipe·
@Jorge7117679666 @LeonKrauze The suspension only applied to WC qualifiers. Moreover, that decision wasn't influenced by a Portuguese political figure.
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Jorge
Jorge@Jorge7117679666·
@LeonKrauze Ronaldo got a red card in a World Cup qualifier for elbowing Dara O'Shea, which normally means a three-match ban. FIFA used Article 27 to suspend two of those matches, letting him play from the start of the World Cup the same article later used to reverse Balogun's ban.
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León Krauze
León Krauze@LeonKrauze·
With all due respect. What makes this case extraordinary is not that a red card was rescinded. It is that the rescission occurred amid public pressure and lobbying from the highest levels of political power in the host country of the tournament. The comparison isn't with a missed penalty call or an unfortunate refereeing decision. It's with one of the foundational principles of international sport: that political power should not intervene in the administration of competition. The "spirit of the game" argument isn't some quaint European attachment to suffering nobly. It is the recognition that sporting institutions derive their legitimacy from the perception that they operate independently of political influence. Once a government (particularly the government of the host nation and the world's most powerful country) appears capable of influencing disciplinary outcomes, the problem is not a “red card”. The problem is the integrity of the competition itself. And yes, FIFA's history is riddled with corruption, hypocrisy and political accommodation. But that is not an argument for accepting yet another breach of sporting independence. Quite the opposite!! It is precisely why even the appearance of political intervention should alarm anyone who cares about the credibility of international competition.
Ellen Carmichael@ellencarmichael

The most interesting part of the red card saga isn't the ruling. It's how differently Americans and Europeans process the idea that they might have been wronged. Europeans are fundamentally different from Americans in one particular way: they expect life to be aggravating and at times unfair. It's just a fact of moving through the world. I joke that in Europe, the customer is always wrong. You didn't read the fine print. The only pharmacy in town is closed every other Tuesday for three hours, and even if the times weren't posted, that's still your problem. Too bad if you want the bill, because the waiter's on his union-mandated half-hour smoke break, and you're just going to have to wait. To quote the great Mark Knopfler: sometimes you're the windshield, sometimes you're the bug. There's something freeing in that. Things are less in your control, so there's less angst in managing your expectations. In America, things couldn't be more different. We simply can't accept a wrong left unrighted. The flight attendant sneezed handing you a drink on your one-hour flight? 15,000 frequent flyer miles. Didn't like your appetizer? A replacement is on the way, and the whole course comes off the bill. There's a reason our interstates are lined with trial lawyer billboards. Europeans have turned complaining into a continental pastime with no expectation that the universe owes them a remedy for their grief. You gripe about the train being late, your friends nod solemnly and everyone goes back to their apéro. In America, we launch a full-blown investigation of the train system, sue the government (and its contractors) that allowed for the tardiness and hold a Congressional hearing on the state of national infrastructure. So to an objective observer, the red card shouldn't have happened, and VAR was a travesty. To Americans, our star player shouldn't be unfairly banned from a match we couldn't afford to lose for a card he so obviously didn't deserve. Who cares that FIFA used a little-used reversal to fix it. Who cares that other people are mad about it. We. Were. Wronged. It was unjust. It must be corrected. We would accept nothing less. Europeans waxing poetic about the sanctity of the game are, of course, talking about a governing body whose last tournament host was decided via confirmed cash bribes — one that imposed dress codes on women, shrugged off widespread allegations of modern slavery and reconfigured the entire tournament calendar to suit the host country. Which is exactly the point. If you've made peace with all of that, at least enough to watch the tournament four years later, a probationary suspension isn't actually a scandal. Maybe that's the real divide. Over millennia, Europeans have made peace with being the bug. Americans have never once considered it, and apparently, we're not about to start now.

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Sophia Cai
Sophia Cai@SophiaCai99·
FULL timeline of the campaign to bring Balogun back, according to a half dozen U.S. government & soccer officials: - Wednesday after U.S.-Bosnia match: Andrew Giuliani alerted Trump to the red card (Trump & Giuliani had been talking multiple times/week since start of World Cup and regularly before that.) - Wed night: Giuliani, Lutnick and U.S. Soccer officials began activating on plans to challenge red card - That kicked off 4 days of coordinated lobbying, legal maneuvering & diplomacy that stretched from Oval Office to Zurich - On *Thursday* Trump dialed Gianni Infantino and asked abt FIFA’s rules around the red card decision and grounds for suspension. (They’ve known each other for 8 yrs.) - FIFA declined to confirm any specific discussions but reiterated to POLITICO that the decision to suspend the one-match ban was made by an independent disciplinary committee. - As U.S. Soccer’s legal team formally prepared & submitted its appeal to FIFA, Giuliani + Lutnick offered to make White House attorneys available to assist - At the same time, Giuliani and Scott Goodwin — a hedge-fund manager who had helped pay the salary of Mauricio Pochettino — zeroed in on the officiating history of referee Raphael Claus -Articles examining previous controversies involving Claus circulated among senior gov officials as they evaluated every argument that could bolster the appeal - On FIFA side, Emilio García, who oversees the legal affairs of FIFA, advised Infantino on the available procedural options - García + other FIFA officials worked to determine whether the circumstances of Balogun’s tackle met the narrow standards that would allow the disciplinary decision to be revisited - By Sunday, FIFA announced that Balogun’s one-match suspension would be suspended - FIFA insists that the decision was an independent one made by its 18-person disciplinary committee, but it would not say whether the decision was decided through a vote, and it has not published a report on the decision. politico.com/live-updates/2…
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