De la Fuente Releases Autobiography in Madrid
In Madrid, Luis de la Fuente unveiled his book "La vida se entrena cada día" at a launch that drew Rafael Louzán, president of the federation, the national team staff, Penguin Random House, and You First. Eduardo Verdú, who documented conversations with de la Fuente, was also present. game-sweetbonanza.com
Ilia Topuria responds to Justin Gaethje’s coach suggesting offensive wrestling as backup plan
Justin Gaethje rarely relies on his wrestling once the cage door closes.
Ilia Topuria’s camp feel that they can take advantage of this, seeing opportunities to expose gaps when Gaethje is focused on pressing forward and throwing power shots.
Still, Gaethje has built a reputation for breaking opponents with his relentless style. Few have managed to withstand the pressure and still come out on top. His power, volume, and toughness make him a nightmare for anyone standing across from him.
But as Topuria’s team have pointed out during training, the interim champion will have to be wary of the champion’s hands. If he gets too comfortable standing in front of him, it could force him to switch things up mid-fight.
Justin Gaethje’s camp keeping offensive wrestling in his ‘back pocket’
Gaethje picked up nearly six minutes of control time against Pimblett, but it wasn’t the sort of fight you’d expect.
We often see Gaethje using his wrestling skills to keep the fight on the feet rather than taking it to the mat. He uses his background more as a defensive tool, shutting down takedowns and forcing exchanges where he feels most comfortable.
In a recent training video, Topuria reacted with a surprised, “Wrestling?!” after seeing Gaethje working on that part of his game. It’s not what fans are used to from him, but it’s clear he is adding new layers.
“Like I’ve said in past camps, Justin doesn’t utilize his wrestling in an offensive manner usually but we want to make sure that it’s in his back pocket if he needs it and I think we saw that in the Paddy fight,” Cherrington said. “He did utilize it in spots and that’s really the end goal in terms of the technical stuff.”
If Gaethje chooses to take things to the mat, Topuria won’t be caught off guard. The champion built much of his early reputation as a grappling specialist before becoming known for his striking power.
The 27-year-old even has eight submission wins on his record due to being known as a grappling specialist when he first arrived in the UFC.
Read more:
Best Performing African Football Teams in World Cup History
Earning Respect Through Results: How African Nations Challenged the World Cup Status Quo
Beyond the Underdog Label and on To Wreak Havoc
African football teams in the World Cup have had to drag respect out of the tournament the hard way. Not through nice possession numbers. Not through “plucky outsider” praise from broadcasters who barely watched the qualifiers. Through results.
Morocco reached the semifinal. Cameroon made Argentina sweat on opening night in 1990 and nearly dumped England out. Senegal arrived at its first World Cup and beat France before the French had even settled into the tournament. Ghana had a semifinal sitting 12 yards away in 2010.
So the order has to be about more than nostalgia. That is where the best African teams in World Cup history separate themselves.
Morocco Set the Bar in 2022
Morocco is first because fourth place is fourth place. No African side had gone that far before Qatar 2022, and Morocco did not get there by catching one soft opponent on a lucky night.
The group was ugly on paper. Croatia had just played the 2018 final. Belgium still had enough names to scare people. Canada was quick, young, and awkward. Morocco finished above all three.
Spain came next. Not a fun game, unless you enjoy watching one team pass itself into frustration. Morocco let Spain have the ball, kept the middle packed, and waited. Then penalties came. Achraf Hakimi, born in Madrid, dinked the winning kick like he was messing about in training.
Cameroon Made the First Real Crack
Cameroon’s 1990 team still feels louder than some teams that went farther in other tournaments. They are a standout African team that qualified for the World Cup by beating Argentina 1-0 in Milan. Argentina were the defending champions. Diego Maradona was there. Cameroon finished with nine men and still did not collapse.
Roger Milla became the image everyone remembers, and fair enough. He scored, danced near the corner flag, and gave the run its face. But Cameroon was not a one-man novelty act. They beat Romania, got through the group, and knocked out Colombia in extra time.
Then came England. Cameroon were winning that quarterfinal. 2-1 up. Ninety minutes from the semifinal. England leveled at 2-2 before winning 3-2 during overtime. It is very painful to recall – not because Cameroon did not play well, but because they came so near. A door that was opened but never closed.
Still, the first African team to reach a World Cup quarterfinal.
Senegal Had No Business Being That Good in 2002
It was the first World Cup ever. First game: France. The defending champions. Senegal won 1-0, and Papa Bouba Diop’s shirt ended up on the pitch while his teammates danced around it. France looked lost.
Most teams would’ve taken that result and faded. Senegal just kept going. Drew with Denmark. They almost held onto their three-goal cushion against Uruguay before finishing 3-3, messy yes, but still alive. They knocked out Sweden in the last 16 through Henri Camara’s golden goal. They fell to Turkey in the quarter-finals through extra-time once more.
A quarterfinal in your debut tournament is borderline ridiculous. What made them good wasn’t one thing either — they were organized but not boring, fast but not sloppy, and physically they made every single opponent work for everything they got. This was a best performance by an African team in a World Cup
Ghana Came Close Enough to Leave a Scar
Ghana in 2010 is impossible to discuss calmly. Everyone knows the Uruguay match. Luis Suarez handled Dominic Adiyiah’s header on the line. Red card. Penalty. Last kick of extra time. Asamoah Gyan hit the bar. Uruguay won the shootout.
That is the wound. But Ghana was not just one dramatic ending. They beat Serbia. They drew with Australia. They got out of a group with Germany. Then they beat the United States 2-1 after extra time, with Gyan scoring the winner.
The setting matters too. This was the first World Cup in Africa, and Ghana was the last African team left. That can crush a side. Ghana did not play scared. They were disciplined, direct when needed, and brave enough to keep attacking even after the pressure got ridiculous.
Morocco finally crossed the semifinal line 12 years later. Ghana were one cleaner penalty from doing it first.
Nigeria Kept Coming Back to the Knockouts
Nigeria is odd to consider. First of all, they failed to get into a quarterfinal. Second, they have no clear-cut “elite” tournament like Morocco 2022, Cameroon 1990, or Senegal 2002. However, Nigeria managed to participate in the knockout stages three times – 1994, 1998, and 2014.
It’s true, there was some magic in that generation. They knocked Bulgaria out with a resounding 3-0 score, finishing ahead of Argentina as well. Facing Italy in the round of 16, they controlled the ball for almost the whole match, being in the lead until late when Baggio tied it. The game went into extra time and then to a penalty shootout.
There is something else about this era – they won nothing despite being one of the scariest opponents worldwide back in their time. More winners are coming, and all the World Cup Golden Boot betting odds can be found on the BetUS sportsbook.
El Barça empieza a preparar el Clásico con todos menos Lamine
Why is Bobby Wagner asking family to call him Doctor?
Bobby Wagner is a 10-time Pro Bowler, six-time All-Pro and Super Bowl champion. He wants to be defined by something other than football, however.
The former Seattle Seahawks star recently received an honorary doctorate from his alma mater, Utah State. While speaking at the school's commencement ceremony, Wagner made a request to his family regarding his name.
“If you didn’t know, my name is now Dr. Bobby Wagner,” Wagner said. “And to any family members here, you need to update my name in your phone. It’s ‘Dr.’ now. I will no longer respond to ‘Bobby.’ It’s Dr. only.”
Utah State also retired Wagner's No. 9 in a pair of sweet gestures toward one of the football program's legends. Wagner is Utah State's all-time leading tackler (446) and is one of only three players to have their number retired.
Wagner went on to have a marvelous NFL career, one defined by longevity at an inside linebacker position that's notoriously tough on the body. He's entering Year 15 in the league and has missed only 10 regular-season games, a truly mind-boggling feat.
Whether the unsigned Wagner returns to the Washington Commanders is unclear, but he led the team with 162 tackles a season ago while starting every game. He'd be quite the mentor for the recently drafted Sonny Styles.
This article originally appeared on For The Win: Why is NFL legend Bobby Wagner asking family to call him Doctor?
