trapezium
35.8K posts

trapezium
@trapstarhim
Nigerian Graphic Designer helping brands look premium online | Sharing what actually works in design & digital strategy.
Osun, Nigeria เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2025
626 กำลังติดตาม528 ผู้ติดตาม
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A game of heartbreak, heroics, and controversy, forever etched in football lore.
Uruguay 1–1 Ghana (Uruguay wins on penalties, 2010 FIFA World Cup Quarter-Final)
One of the most dramatic matches in World Cup history. Ghana looked set to make history as the first African nation to reach a World Cup semi-final.
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DONE WATCHING BREAKING BAD and this episode really stuck with me. When Jesse’s little brother scoffs at being called the “favourite” and says Jesse is all their parents ever talk about, it reveals a lot beneath the surface. A LOT about their family.
It feels like their parents placed a heavy expectation on both of them to be overachievers. Not the kind of pressure that motivates, but the kind that quietly builds stress. You can see how that kind of environment could push them, in different ways, toward experimenting with drugs. There’s that telling moment later on, the last time we see his brother, asking for his joint back…the same one that got Jesse kicked out. That detail says A LOT.
What stands out most is that Jesse was never dumb at all. You see it in the craftsmanship with the woodworking, in how quickly he learns the meth business, and in how he operates as a fixer and protector. He’s clearly capable of doing things at a very high level. It feels less like he lacked ability, and more like he fell off the path his parents had set for him. And once that happened, he became the one labeled as the problem.
That’s why the idea of a “favourite child” doesn’t fully land. It doesn’t seem like one was loved more than the other, just that both were pushed in different ways and it affected them differently.

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lol
Nobody teach me before I go port my 9mobile to MTN for 2024.
Ravy@heisnissi_
who dey use 9mobile abeg...how e be?
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International break in March usually ruins club momentum and invites unnecessary injuries to players just when the season is entering its most decisive stretch. Clubs build rhythm, chemistry, and consistency over months, only for it to be abruptly disrupted by a two-week pause that shifts focus away from club objectives.
Players return fatigued from long-distance travel, often across continents, with little recovery time before being thrown straight back into high-intensity league or European fixtures. For managers, it’s a nightmare training routines are broken, tactical cohesion drops, and key players sometimes come back injured, derailing carefully built plans.
It’s even worse for clubs fighting on multiple fronts. Title races, top-four battles, and relegation scraps don’t pause mentally just because the calendar says “international break.” Instead, teams lose sharpness, and we often see sloppy performances or shocking results immediately after the break.
While international football has its importance, the March window feels particularly mistimed less about preparation and more like an interruption. At a point where club football should be peaking, everything is forced into a temporary reset, and not every team recovers from it the same way.
They’re preparing for World Cup, just keep everything till May. Even the national team will have to come back again to build before the major tournament.
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I never thought this Diomande dude could dribble like this.
Is this why my club wants him?
The Touchline | 𝐓@TouchlineX
🚨📊 Most dribbles completed in Europe’s top 5 leagues.
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When Hazard left, no one did a video. When Aguero left, no one did a video.
When KDB left, no one did a video.
Why is it always Salah?
Jamie Carragher@Carra23
I’m not one of his biggest critics, when have I ever criticised Salah the player 👀😅 I said he’s the 2nd best foreign player ever in the PL! You & plenty of others don’t know enough about the clubs history & are being very disrespectful to other players on that list!!!!!
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