Tag: Spain

  • Pedri tipped to shine for Spain at Euro 2024

    Pedri tipped to shine for Spain at Euro 2024

    Pedri is rediscovering his best form and will have an important role to play in Spain’s European Championship campaign, head coach Luis de la Fuente said after the Barcelona midfielder scored twice in a 5-1 win over Northern Ireland.

    The 21-year-old, who struggled with injury problems last season and didn’t play for Spain in 2023, scored his first and second international goals in Spain’s final warm-up match before the European Championship.

    “We have been very happy and because he is a very good player and he knows that I have confidence in him and he is going to give us very good things in this competition,” De la Fuente told reporters on Saturday after the win.

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    “I have always talked about it from the point of view of the confidence he has to have. I said that ‘Pedri has to meet Pedri’, in the figurative sense of gaining confidence. The best version of Pedri we don’t know where he is, because he’s so good. We expect so much from him that it’s infinite.

    “It has to be the player who takes that step forward, as he has done, to be sure and confident to do the things that only he can do.”

    Spain start their Euros campaign on June 15 against Croatia in Group B. They will also take on Italy and Albania.

  • Del Bosque to lead scandal-hit Spanish federation

    Del Bosque to lead scandal-hit Spanish federation

    Former Spain coach Vicente del Bosque will lead the committee overseeing the country’s scandal-hit football federation, the Spanish government has  said.

    The retired 73-year-old led La Roja to the 2010 World Cup and 2012 European Championship titles, as well as taking Real Madrid to two Champions League triumphs.

     “I’m proud to announce that the person presiding over the committee and representing it… is Vicente del Bosque,” said Pilar Alegria, the minister for Education and Sports. “Del Bosque will be the face and representation of Spanish football.”

    Last week Spain’s National Sports Council (CSD) created a committee to “oversee” the federation (RFEF) and try to pull it out of crisis.

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    Former president Luis Rubiales resigned in disgrace after forcibly kissing Women’s World Cup star Jenni Hermoso last year, while he and new president Pedro Rocha are under investigation in a graft probe.

     “I believe that (Del Bosque) is the clearest representation of a good person of great human quality and, above all, an example of honesty and respect,” added Alegria.

    The RFEF took decisions “beyond its remit” after Rubiales stepped down in December according to a report from the country’s leading sports court, resulting in the CSD creating the committee.

    World and European football governing bodies FIFA and UEFA subsequently issued a statement expressing “great concern” at the situation around the RFEF.

     “FIFA and UEFA will seek additional information to assess the extent to which the CSD’s appointment (of the committee) … may affect the RFEF’s obligation to manage its affairs independently and without undue government interference,” they said.

    Spain is due to host the 2030 World Cup along with Portugal and Morocco.

    The court report on the RFEF interim committee overstepping its bounds also raised the possibility the CSD may provisionally suspend Rocha, who was elected as Rubiales’ replacement on Friday, and other RFEF directors.

    A CSD meeting  over potential punishments for these alleged infringements was put on hold after the sports court asked for more documentation, CSD sources told AFP.

    The sources said the CSD plans to meet again in the coming days.

    One decision allegedly beyond the remit of the RFEF was the renewal of current Spain coach Luis de la Fuente’s contract in February.

  • Spain coaching staff resigns over Rubiales kiss row

    Spain coaching staff resigns over Rubiales kiss row

    Spain’s entire coaching staff from their World Cup win, except for manager Jorge Vilda, has resigned over the Luis Rubiales row.

    Assistant managers Montse Tome, Javier Lerga, and Eugenio Gonzalo Martin, along with physio Blanca Romero Moraleda and goalkeeper coach Carlos Sanchez, have all quit.

    Six others involved with the national side at various age levels have also resigned.

    Spanish FA president Rubiales was suspended on Saturday by Fifa after kissing forward Jenni Hermoso on the lips following the Women’s World Cup final victory over England in Sydney.

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    In a statement, the coaching staff said: “Those named below express their firm and resounding condemnation of the conduct shown by the RFEF president.

    “He offered a story that does not reflect in any way what was felt by Jenni Hermoso, who has expressly stated that she felt she was the ‘victim of aggression’.

    “Given the unacceptable attitudes and statements made by the president, they have made the decision to relieve themselves of their duties.”

  • Minimum Wage: 200 female footballers to go on strike

    Agency Report

     

    No fewer than 200 female footballers in Spain from various first division clubs have voted to go on strike over pay and working conditions.

    The vote late Tuesday won the support of 93 per cent of 188 players from 16 clubs after more than a year of failed negotiations with the Association of Women’s Football Clubs (ACFF).

    Clubs are proposing part-time salaries worth €8,000 a year while the players are demanding a minimum of €12,000, amounting to 75 per cent of minimum full-time contracts.

    “We are footballers 24 hours a day, 100 per cent of the time,” said Ainhoa Tirapu, goalkeeper for Athletic Bilbao and the Spanish national team.

    “We hope to reach an agreement at some point but we had to take drastic action because the time for women’s football is now.”

    A date for the start of the strike has not been set but it could affect the Women’s Champions League, with Atletico Madrid playing against Manchester City next week.

    Barcelona ladies

    “We want an agreement now that is worthy and with equality” said David Aganzo, president of the Association of Women’s Players (AFE).

    “We have enjoyed talking about all the positive things in women’s football, many of them on show at the World Cup, but the players also need an improvement in their working conditions, that recognise what they do. In the 21st century, women deserve respect.”

    Last season, women’s football enjoyed a record-breaking season in Spain as 60,739 people turned out to watch Barcelona play Atletico Madrid at the Wanda Metropolitano in March.

    But when the two sides met again last month, Barca’s victory was not even shown on television.

    “It was disappointing,” Atletico’s Toni Duggan told AFP earlier this month. “Last season there were 60,000 people in the stadium and they can’t even televise the game the next year.

     

     

     

  • Spanish club awaits hammer for celebrating promotion with stripper

     

    A Spanish football team has been slammed after a video emerged of their players celebrating promotion with a leather-clad Stripper performing in her underwear in the changing rooms.

    Spanish side Club Esportiu Llanca have issued an apology after their players were filmed celebrating their promotion to the Catalan Second Division with a stripper in the changing rooms.

    In the video, the players can be seen celebrating when a stripper in a leather getup and mask performs for them.

    She climbs onto a chair and dances in a bra for the players as they cheer and chant.

    She then strips down to her underwear, before she takes off her mask to reveal her flowing blonde locks.

    The stripper forward rolls, before dancing on the floor and pouring champagne over herself in front of the cheering players.

    The video was posted online and the club have now apologised in a statement, writing: ‘CE Llanca would like to apologise if anybody felt offended by the incidents which took place in the changing rooms once the first-team match ended.’

    The statement added that the stripper had been hired as ‘a gift from one person’ adding the club ‘in no way’ was involved in hiring her.

    The club added: ‘It was never the intention to offend anyone, just to celebrate the promotion to the Catalan Second Division.’

    Local media report the stripper was hired by the club’s secretary Franscesc Romero, who said nobody on the club’s board knew about the surprise he had prepared.

    The stripper was hired by club secretary Franscesc Romero, who said ‘everything was normal’

    Romero said: ‘It was a party atmosphere, nothing got out of hand. There was cava, smiles and joy, but she did her show calmly and at the end, she got dressed and left. Everything was normal.’

    He added that no minors had been in the changing room at the time of the performance. Although the club has issued appology there are strong indications that a hammer might fall if not from the football authorities then from human right fellows who say using a stripper for such celebration without restricted viewership is unacceptable

     

     

     

  • Ronaldo pleads guilty to tax fraud to pay N7.9billion fine

     

    Cristiano Ronaldo has pleaded guilty to tax charges relating to his time at Real Madrid and accepted a suspended prison sentence  but with very heavy fine.

    The Portuguese was in the Spanish capital on Tuesday to appear before a judge after being accused of defrauding authorities out of income generated through image rights.

    Back in 2017, Ronaldo stated that he had never tried to avoid paying the relevant taxes on his income.

    He was, however, accused by a state prosecutor of four counts of tax fraud from the period of 2011 to 2014. Ronaldo was said to have hidden €14.7m (£13m/$17m) in shell companies outside of Spain.

    The accusations do not involve the salary he was paid by Real Madrid after joining the club from Manchester United in 2009. He appeared in court as a ruling on his case was made.

    In Spain, a judge can hand out a two-year suspended sentence for first-time offenders.

    Ronaldo has accepted a 23-month judgment after reaching an agreement with the state prosecutor and the relevant tax authorities in 2018. He will, however, have to pay out nearly $22m (about N7.9b) in fines.

    The 33-year-old opted to appear in court in person after declining the option to address a judge by video link.

    His time in Madrid is not expected to last long having already reached a prior agreement with the authorities.

    Ronaldo’s former team-mate, Xabi Alonso, may require a little longer, though, in resolving his case.

    The ex-Liverpool midfielder also stands accused of defrauding tax authorities of approximately €2m (£1.8m) between 2010 and 2012.Once again, the charges relate to income generated from image rights.

    World Cup winner Alonso could be sentenced to five years in prison and fined €4m (£3.5m) on top of the money he already owes

    Ronaldo and Alonso are not the first footballing figures to have been subjected to such investigations by Spanish tax authorities over recent years.

    Lionel Messi, Jose Mourinho, Javier Mascherano, Marcelo, Luka Modric, Alexis Sanchez, Ricardo Carvalho, Angel Di Maria, Radamel Falcao and Fabio Coentrao have all faced similar charges.

  • Healthcare for immigrants in 30 languages

    A pioneering program featuring cultural mediators and interpreters at Madrid’s Ramón y Cajal Hospital provides assistance to over 5,700 migrants and trains another 10,000 in TB and sex education.

    In many African countries, almost nothing related to healthcare is free.

    That’s why an offer of free medical tests and treatment upon an immigrant’s arrival in Spain can be met with skepticism.

    Recipients might wonder: will my fluids end up on the black market? Why do they need so much blood?

    When a doctor and a patient speak different languages, everything from explaining the reason for a pain to discrediting blood-trafficking rumors is a challenge.

    Salud Entre Culturas is a pioneering healthcare program that was born in 2006 within the Tropical Diseases unit of the Madrid-based Ramón y Cajal Hospital.

    Its mission is to provide healthcare to people who don’t speak Spanish, and who have limited English and French skills.

    These are mainly sub-Saharan young men, but the program is open to all nationalities. The focus is on breaking the language barrier while getting past cultural differences.

    “Many do not know what hepatitis is. You talk about malaria and some think it spreads by water, or that AIDS doesn’t exist.

    Explaining dormant tuberculosis, diagnosing a chronic disease or telling them they need blood tests every six months is a hurdle,” says director Rogelio López-Vélez, MD.

    López-Vélez leads a team of five regular professionals and several assistants. Translators participate in consultations with migrants who know only certain African languages.

    In this facility, up to 30 African languages have been spoken, as well as Romanian, Russian and Arabic.

    The immigrants’ most common countries of origin include Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea Conakry, Ukraine and most recently, Syria.

    Suleiman, age 25, attended his first doctor’s appointment in Spain with two friends.

    “We were concerned about whether they would understand us and be able to come up with a diagnosis,” he says.

    “Now that we’ve been through this, we really appreciate the interpreting service. Translators are of tremendous help.

    Without them this would be extremely difficult and unreliable.” All three of them come from Guinea Conakry and say that learning Spanish is their top priority.

    The program appeared at the same time as the cayuco boat crisis, when 39,180 people landed in small “patera” boats on the coast of the Canary Islands.

    Since then, healthcare professionals have treated more than 5,700 migrants and have created specialized workshops for nearly 10,000 people, raising awareness about issues such as TB, HIV-AIDS and sex education.

    In 2017, Madrid’s Health Council made the program official, recognizing the importance of cultural mediation and interpreting services.

    Alongside López-Vélez, psychologist Anne Guionet, interpreter Bárbara Navaza and Doctor Miriam Navarro bolstered the initiative. Navarro, who no longer practices day-to-day medical care, still remembers their first steps:

    “From the very beginning, we realized the unease it caused for these people to have a heap of tests done with no one able to explain them in their own language, and all the misconceptions such a situation entailed.”

    Migrants normally come for their first medical appointments thanks to the workshops they regularly attend, organized by members of Salud Entre Culturas at NGOs, shared flats or even local bars.

    The project started with sub-Saharan Africans and progressively opened up to other nationalities. “In these meetings we run quick HIV tests and organize themed talks based on the needs of our respective organizations,” Peña says.

    The team has started analyzing the impact of these workshops. Based on data collected by Navarro, at first only 47 percent of attendees acknowledged the existence of AIDS — a figure that rose to 95 percent at the end of the workshop.

    Over the years, the project has received financing from public sources such as the National AIDS Plan and European funds, as well as from private investors and donors.

    From university and jumping the fence

    In 2008, Entre Culturas trained a group of Africans to become health and cultural mediators. This year, they were able to train four more. Serigne Fall of Senegal was part of the first group; the second one included Serge Hoys, a Cameroonian who joined in June.

    Their stories have a rather different starting point but converged in this unit. While Fall came to Spain from France, where he studied French philology, Hoys literally jumped over the fence at Melilla. They both ended up working for the organization.

    “In Cameroon, there are over 187 official dialects,” Hoys says. “Imagine what it’s like to talk to people who only speak these languages. This is not just any job; the conditions in which the sub-Saharan Africans arrive here are tough.

    Some of them have never been to a medical practice, nor have they been admitted to a hospital or had a flu shot. This is what we need to be aware of,” he stresses.

    “We’re pushing for interpreters to become part of the public health system. A doctor shouldn’t have to draw a picture for a patient.”

    Now the service’s greatest challenge is to follow up on treatments. “It’s a very unstable demographic,” López-Vélez says, “because they can only stay in foster homes in Madrid for 90 days at most…and many of them leave afterwards.

    It is important to adapt protocols.” For the time being, at least, the program has managed to remove linguistic barriers, and to convince patients that their blood is in good hands.

  • Technovation: Air Peace rewards victorious Anambra students

    Air Peace has congratulated five Anambra State students and their teachers on emerging victorious in the recent Technology challenge held in the United States, honouring them with free return Owerri-Abuja tickets to facilitate their visit to the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Thursday.

    The five Anambra students from Regina Pacies Secondary School, Onitsha represented Nigeria and Africa at the World Technovation Challenge in the Silicon Valley in San Francisco, United States and defeated Spain, USA, Turkey, Uzbekistan and China to lift the gold medal in the contest.

    They were billed for a reception by the Federal Government at the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Thursday in company with Miracle Igboke, their mentor and Chief Executive Officer of Edufun Technik STEM, Uchenna Onwuamaegbu Ugwu and principal, Rev. Fr Vincent Ezeaka.

    The girls won the technology contest with the mobile application innovation, FD-Detector they developed to assist in checking fake pharmaceutical products in Nigeria.

    A statement signed by Air Peace Corporate Communications Manager, Mr. Chris Iwarah said the carrier was proud of the schoolgirls’ rare feat.

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    The development, Air Peace insisted, was proof that its effort to develop engineering capacity in Nigeria’s aviation industry was not a misplaced venture.

    “We are very proud of the feat of these young girls from Nigeria. At Air Peace, we believe that given the right environment and encouragement Nigerians will excel in all their undertakings. These girls have proved beyond a doubt that Nigerians possess everything it takes to rank among the best in the world.

    “This is the motivation for the huge investment Air Peace has continued to make in the training of young Nigerians in aviation engineering. We will continue to recognise, encourage and reward excellence,” the airline said.

     

  • France 2018: Super Falconets bow out of FIFA World Cup

    •   Spain reach semis with 2-1 victory

    Super Falconets could not make it beyond the quarter-finals of FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup (France 2018) as Spain defeated the Nigerians to reach the semi-finals for the first time.

    Though Falconets fought hard and had a goal but could not overhaul the edge of the Sapinish team as after first-half goals from Aitana Bonmati and Patri Guijarro gave La Rojita a 2-1 victory over Nigeria in the quarter-finals on Thursday.

    On an overcast afternoon at the Stade Guy-Piriou in Concarneau, it was Spain that made their early advantage count by breaking the deadlock before the quarter-hour mark through captain Bonmati. Her fine left-footed shot from the edge of the Nigeria box gave goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie little chance of preventing them falling behind.

    Bonmati nearly had a second with a free-kick that struck the underside of the Nigerian crossbar and bounced away to safety, while Eva Navarro forced a point blank save from Nnadozie moments later.

    Spain eventually doubled their lead before the break, with Guijarro scoring her fifth goal of France 2018 after getting on the end of Maite Oroz’s free-kick into the West African side’s box and scoring from close range.

    Having struggled to create much in the first half, the Super Falconets responded with a goal just before the hour mark. Peace Efih’s forward run saw her pick out Rasheedat Ajibabe on the left. Her low shot forced a diving Catalina Coll to direct the ball into the path of an unmarked Efih, who duly converted into an empty Spanish goal.

    Though they halved their deficit, Nigeria were unable to find an equaliser, as Spain saw out the remainder of the contest to reach the last four of this competition for the first time.

  • France 2018: Prayer conscious Falconets dream victory over Spain

    Gallant and spiritual on and off the pitch of play, each player of the Super Falconets of Nigeria are not in anyway less adrift from their faith to be victorious, as they get set for their Quarter-final clash against Spain on Thursday (today).

    Falconets booked a spot for the Thursday clash on Monday, with a stoppage-time own goal to earn a highly-dramatic 1-1 draw with China PR in Dinan-Lehon to qualify for the last eight of the 2018 FIFA Women’s World Cup tournament.

    The draw was so dramatic and almost unbelievable. And just after the final whistle, it was all a serious thanksgiving service on the pitch of play cum jubilation for the Falconets for emerging victorious at a time when all hopes were lost to secure the much-needed draw.

    The team’s officials and players(on their kneels) spontaneously went on a spirit-filled song anchored hallelujah session obviously to acknowledge that their quarter-final qualification against the China strong side opponent was beyond their making.

    China were the more dangerous side in the first half at the Stade du Clos Gastel encounter as they needed a victory to leapfrog the West Africans to the runners-up spot in the group.

    Mengyu Shen had the first chance of the match on 25 minutes when she hit the Nigeria crossbar. A few minutes later, captain Linlin Wang headed over the target from close range.

    China’s breakthrough came four minutes before half-time, as the diminutive Linyan Zhang turned her Nigerian marker in the box and stroked the ball past a diving Chiamaka Nnadozie to give the Asians the lead at the break

    The Super Falconets pushed hard in search of an equaliser in the second half but found the China backline and goalkeeper Huan Xu in resilient form until the end of the contest.

    Ajibade became Nigeria’s hero when she turned home Aishat Bello’s cross at the near post. The goal sparked celebrations from the West Africans at the full-time whistle.

    Spain finished tops with seven points ahead of Japan, USA, and Paraguay in Group C. The falconets vs Spain Quarter-finals, at the Stade Guy-Piriou, Concarneau will kick off by 3: pm