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Event organisers don’t book me for shows -Rocky Dawuni laments

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Rocky Dawuni

Three-time Grammy Award nominee Rocky Dawuni has lamented that Ghanaian event organizers refuse to book him for shows despite his international fame.

Even though he has had three Grammy nominations and has resided in Ghana for the past four years, the Ghanaian international reggae musician believes he still doesn’t understand why promoters don’t book him.

Rocky Dawuni stated to Nhyira FM in Kumasi that he believes the event organizers are unwilling to pay him because they lack the funds.

“It has nothing to do with money,” Rocky Dawuni said. “Someone asked the same question, and I told them I have no control over whether or not the event organizer will book me.”

He claims that because he has no influence over the event organizers’ actions, he can do nothing to encourage them to hire him to perform.

“I don’t have any power over that. But we should ask any event planner why Rocky Dawuni isn’t booked for events even though he’s been nominated for Grammys three times. “, he asked.

Rocky Dawuni is a three-time GRAMMY nominated singer, songwriter, producer and activist whose unique “Afro Roots” sound straddles the boundaries between Africa, the Caribbean and the U.S.

Rocky is a UN Goodwill Ambassador for the Environment for Africa, a UN Foundation Ambassador for the Clean Cooking Alliance as well as a Global Ambassador the World Day of African and Afrodescendant Culture working on cultural diplomacy.

Through these and other designations he uses his music to shine a light on crucial issues facing humanity cross the globe with live concerts, speaking roles, panels, youth empowerment and much more. With 8 solo albums under his name, Rocky’s music is a refreshing and powerful message about global unity and a worldview of oneness.

Credit: pulse.com.gh

Kalybos gave me my name -Ahuofe Patri

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Kalybos and Ahuofe Patri

Ghanaian actress Priscilla Opoku Agyeman says the idea to use the screen name Ahuofe Patri came from colleague actor Richard Asante, popularly known as Kalybos. The actress, who starred in the popular “Boys Kasa” series with Kalybos recounted her experiences while speaking in an interview with Felicia Osei on Accra-based Onua FM’s ‘Adwuma Adwuma’ show.

According to her, the popular series was not planned from the beginning, but was rather a way to practice skills they learned in school which became popular after the first few episodes were posted online.

she mentioned how Kalybos gave her the name “Ahuofe Patri” due to her beautiful looks while on set making their record-setting skit.

Ahuofe Patri again took time to address the rumoured love affair with Kalybos, indicating that they have agreed to give birth if both of them remain single after two years.

“We have come to an agreement that, after two years, if I don’t have a lover and he also does not have one, we will have a child,” she said.

“So, watch out; if you don’t hear that either Kalybos or myself is married, we will have a baby coming out,” Ahoufe Patri said, adding, “We will probably start paying attention to each other. We are in each other’s plans.”

Ahoufe Patri and Kalybos segued into the limelight through the popular comedy series ‘Boys Kasa’ which aired in 2014.

In time past, netizens hoped for the actors to be in some sort of relationship because of how well they gelled when on set.

Credit: pulse.com.gh

Chad jails more than 260 people after mass trial over protests

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A general view of the High Court in N'Djamena, Chad

A court in Chad has handed out jail terms of between two and three years to more than 260 people arrested after anti-government protests in October, while defence lawyers have argued that the trial was “illegal”.

A total of 401 people were put on mass trial in Koro Toro prison, a high-security jail located in the desert 600km (375 miles) from the capital N’Djamena last week.

Speaking at a news conference on Monday, public prosecutor Moussa Wade Djibrine said that 262 people were given jail sentences, 80 were given suspended terms and 59 were acquitted, the AFP news agency reported.

The trial ended on Friday after four days, with only state TV having the right to provide coverage, and the sentences were announced on Monday after the prosecutor returned to the capital.

The defendants were charged with taking part in an unauthorised gathering, destroying belongings, arson and disturbing public order.

Approximately 50 people, including 10 members of the security forces, died when police opened fire on demonstrators in N’Djamena and several other cities on October 20, according to an official toll.

But opposition groups say the real count was much higher, and allege unarmed civilians were subject to a mass killing.

Source: aljazeera.com

Blasts deep inside Russia hand Putin a fresh problem, with no obvious answer

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Footage on Russian media shows the aftermath of an alleged drone strike Tuesday at an airfield in Kursk, Russia.

Moscow’s accusation that Ukrainian drones struck two airbases deep inside Russia has once again raised the febrile question of escalation nine months into the war.

The strikes are an extraordinary breach of Russia’s assumptions that it can protect its deep interior, from which safe harbors its strategic bombers have caused carnage across Ukraine with relative impunity.

These are airbases very far inside Russia, and whatever the truth of the strikes – whether they represent a new long-distance drone capability Ukraine has advertised, or there’s another explanation – this is just not something that was meant to happen when Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his “10-day invasion” in February. Week by week, there are yet more signs that Moscow’s military machine cannot perform as advertised.

On Tuesday, a Russian official said another drone strike had hit a Russian airfield in Kursk, nearer to the Ukrainian border.

Ukraine has neither confirmed nor denied responsibility for the blasts, in keeping with Kyiv’s policy of official silence around attacks inside Russia or in Russian-occupied Crimea. An aide to President Volodymyr Zelensky appeared to gloat over the strikes, tweeting cryptically that “if something is launched into other countries’ airspace, sooner or later unknown flying objects will return to departure point.”]

Russian state news agencies heaped discomfort onto humiliation by adding Monday that the initial two airfields in question had in fact been photographed by a US-based commercial satellite imaging company over the weekend.

Source: cnn.com

Dozens escape Morocco-Turkey plane after Spain emergency landing

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Barcelona police detain 14 aeroplane passengers and search for 14 others who ran across the tarmac in El Prat airport after causing an emergency landing under a false pretext.

Twenty-eight people have run away across the tarmac in Barcelona’s El Prat airport after prompting an emergency landing of a Morocco-Turkey flight under a false pretext, according to the Spanish government.

Police detained 14 people, including a pregnant woman who officials claim pretended her waters had broken, prompting the emergency landing on Wednesday morning, the government said. A further 14 people have not yet been found.

Five of those detained were immediately put back on the plane operated by Turkey’s Pegasus Airlines while eight will be deported to Morocco.

The pregnant woman was checked in hospital and found not to be in labour, the government said.

The plane was carrying a total of 228 passengers from Casablanca to Istanbul.

In October last year, a group of passengers fled a plane on to the runway in Spain’s Mallorca island following an emergency landing under a false pretext and 12 of them were arrested, while another 12 escaped.

Source: aljazeera.com

Germany arrests 25 accused of plotting coup

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Among the 25 detained was a minor aristocrat called Heinrich XIII

Twenty-five people have been arrested in raids across Germany on suspicion of plotting to overthrow the government.

The group of far-right and ex-military figures are said to have prepared for a “Day X” to storm the Reichstag parliament building and seize power.

A minor aristocrat named as Prince Heinrich XIII, 71, is alleged to have been central to their plans.

According to federal prosecutors, he is one of two alleged ringleaders among those arrested across 11 German states.

The plotters are said to include members of the extremist Reichsbürger [Citizens of the Reich] movement, which has long been in the sights of German police over violent attacks and racist and antisemitic conspiracy theories. They also refuse to recognise the modern German state.

Other suspects came from the QAnon movement who believe their country is in the hands of a mythical “deep state” involving secret powers pulling the political strings.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser assured Germans that authorities would respond with the full force of the law “against the enemies of democracy”.

Plotters prepared to kill for their ends

An estimated 50 men and women are alleged to have been part of the group, said to have plotted to overthrow the republic and replace it with a new state modelled on the Germany of 1871 – an empire called the Second Reich.

“We don’t yet have a name for this group,” said a spokeswoman for the federal prosecutor’s office. The interior minister said it was apparently made up of an organisation “council” and a military arm.

Wednesday’s dawn raids are being described as one of the biggest anti-extremism operations in modern German history. Three thousand officers took part in 150 operations in 11 of Germany’s 16 states, with two people arrested in Austria and Italy.

Source: bbc.com

St. Nicholas marks 10th Anniversary of holistic education for disadvantaged children

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A cross section of invited guests at the 10th anniversary celebrations of St. Nicholas Preparatory School

St. Nicholas Preparatory School marked its 10th anniversary celebrations of the provision of holistic education that improves the lives of disadvantaged children in Tema New Town from pre-school up to Junior High School.

The anniversary coincides with the graduation of the first batch of students, who had successfully completed the Basic Education Certificate Examination since the establishment of the school in 2012.

Madam Deborah Eleazar, a director of Tsakos Shipping London and a Founding Trustee, said the progress of the school and the success chalked could not have been possible without support from donors and trustees.

She made special mention of the Maria Tsakos Foundation for providing the seed money for the start of the project and for their continued support.

She also thanked the Minister of Foreign Affairs in Greece, Mr. Nicos Dendias who on an official visit to Ghana found time to visit the school and has since supported in many laudable ways.

She acknowledged the immense support the school receives from Mytilineous Metka who contributed among many others, the canteen building, some classrooms and recently a school bus and continue to support the school. She also lauded the contribution of Tsakos shipping companies, Captain Barry Hedges and the 500 Reasons Group and many other individuals who are supporting the school through provision of funds and sponsorship of specific children.

Ms Maria Asmarianaki , a Greek national working  in Ghana, donated on behalf of Kate construction of Greece , 181 new shoes for the children and three months of food in support of the schools programme of providing two square meals free of charge to the children every school day.

Ivan Quashigah, CEO of Farmhouse Productions and a trustee of the School, described the anniversary as a very special day for all who saw the humble beginning of the school as no one believed it could attain such remarkable heights within 10 years.

“We saw the beginning of what we didn’t know would turn out to be what we are seeing today. It was just a leap of faith and I have to say anytime I come here to see the children delivering so much of what they have been taught, I marveled,” he said.

Mr Quashigah praised the role played by Captain Alkiviades Kappas, and Madam Deborah Eleazar who championed the project when it started with a handful of children under a shed on the premises of the church.

“The labour of love is now mature and today we are celebrating 10 years of a school that has become an oasis of hope in the midst of deprivation and despair.

“The dream of the founding trustees which is embodied in the motto of the school “every child deserves an education” is centered on the premise that the vicious cycle of poverty which is common in this area and which keeps replicating itself through generations where a child is born into poverty; is brought up in deprivation, grows up with lack of the requisite skills and is disadvantaged and end up bringing up his or her own children in poverty can only be broken through the provision of quality education” he opined.

Professor Francis Dodoo, who was the Guest Speaker, encouraged the students to make the necessary efforts to leverage the opportunities that come available to them.

He urged the parents and teachers to take up the responsibility and commit themselves to supporting the school to give the children a better shot at life.

“I’m hoping that at some point, these children can take advantage of the opportunity of being in a sanctuary like this. It’s a lighthouse. It’s a brilliant way to light the future for the young ones,” he said.

He also advised the children. “You have to try to work hard. You have to understand that good things do not come easy. You have to work hard. You have to listen to your teachers. You have to try and push even when things are not easy, when they are painful,” he added.

Professor Dodoo urged the graduates not to dwell on their current achievements but to persevere and achieve while scaling the barriers on their way and called on the sponsors to continue to support the school.

Mr Evans Setuagbe, Headmaster, said St. Nicholas had offered a unique education to the community and the country.

“We have come a long way since 2012 offering education with Lifeline support and care. A very unique opportunity for families who cannot afford basic educational needs for their children,” he said.

While the students wait for their results, which will be released in February 2023 to enable them go on to the secondary school, St. Nicholas is offering them a work experience programme for them to pick up a few more responsible behaviours before they move on.

Ms Lawrencia Kemavor, in a speech on behalf of the graduates, expressed gratitude to the sponsors, teachers and parents for contributing to a free and quality education.

There were exciting displays by the School Cadet, the cultural troupe, the Greek Dancers and the composers club and awards for individuals and institutions that had played a key role in the development and growth of the school.

Source: GNA

How Sky Fruit helps in controlling Diabetes

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Sky Fruit
Sky Fruit Tree

Did you know eating some particular fruits and vegetables can help reduce your blood sugar levels? Have you heard about sky fruit? Are you aware that it can help you control your blood sugar levels?

This blog will explore how sky fruit helps maintain the blood sugar levels of people with diabetes.

A few days back, I went to my hometown and found that my uncle was struggling to maintain his blood sugar levels in a safe range. Diabetes had begun to take its toll on him.

His body weakened, vision blurred, stomach and intestinal problems grew, he lost weight, and injuries were not recovering. The situation was grave and depressing.

Seeing him in such a condition, I consulted a leading healthcare professional and sought his help. I booked an appointment and met him. He examined my uncle and prescribed some medicines.

He asked my uncle to add sky fruit to his diet along with medicines. “Ah, sky fruit?” I surprisingly asked. The doctor looked at me and said, “Yes, you heard it right, sky fruit.”

A lot of questions popped up in my mind the second I heard the name ‘sky fruit’. What is sky fruit? How come I haven’t heard of it before? Will it help control such severe cases of diabetes? Is it safe? My mind was not letting me focus anywhere else.

When the doctor was busy explaining which medicine needed to be taken at what time, I interrupted him, “Can you tell me more about sky fruit? Is it available in the Indian market?”. He smiled and said, “Yes, it is available in the Indian market.”

What Is Sky Fruit?

The seed of mahogany fruit is commonly called sky fruit. It is abundantly found in South Asian countries and is also named Buah Tunjuk Langit in Malay. It gets its unique name from the way it hangs on a tree. Usually, most fruits hang downward, but the sky fruit hangs upwards, and its stalk points upwards to the sky.

“People belonging to most South Asian countries have been using it for a long time as it is a miraculous remedy to control blood sugar levels,” explained the doctor.

“Though in modern medical science, the reputation of sky fruits is not very old, this fruit has been widely used as a home remedy in several Asian countries.

Although not much clinical research has been performed to support its effectiveness in humans, I have recommended it to many, and trust me, it has shown miraculous benefits”, he added.

After hearing this, several other questions came to my mind. That day, I had a long conversation with the doctor and learned a lot about sky fruit. Here is the gist of our forty minutes long conversation.

What Is The Use Of Sky Fruit?

In Southeast Asian countries, seeds of sky fruits are traditionally used for treating various health problems such as high blood pressure and diabetes.

What Are Other Names Of Sky Fruit?

Its botanical name is Swietenia Macrophylla. Besides being known as miracle fruit, king fruit, and sky fruit in English, it is known as Thenkani Vidai or Thean Kani in Tamil.

How To Use Sky Fruit?

If you find sky fruit as a whole, break it and take out its seed. You can chew or swallow the inner seed with warm water. Taste-wise, it is extremely bitter. If your sugar level is above 200, take full seed and if your sugar level is below 200, eat half of the seed. Many sellers are selling sky fruit and their seeds on e-commerce sites like Flipkart and Amazon. It is available in tablet and powder form.

“My recommendation is to take it in the morning, right after brushing your teeth. For maximum benefits, avoid drinking tea, coffee, milk, and any other food item for at least one hour after taking Sky Fruit,” the doctor said.

Source: https://emoha.com

Feature: Sports, an Untapped Natural Resource and Asset

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Feature

Ghana is sitting on a rich resource that she is yet to exploit, because she does not even know the great financial opportunity in this.

This wealthy resource is even a renewable resource which will never run out. This resource is sports.

Ghana had a fair share of quota in the world of sports, showing great prowess in the track and field, boxing and soccer. About over forty years ago, sports powerhouses like Nigeria always played second fiddle to Ghana in track and field and soccer.

The Golden 70s came with world beaters in the track and field, like Mike Ahey, Alice Annum, Grace Bakari, Hannah Afriyie, George Daniels, Ohene Karikari, Joshua Owusu and Ernest Obeng among others in athletes.

In fact, Ernest Obeng would have won gold in 100 m at the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games, if Ghana had not boycotted. He always beat the British Alan Wells, back-to-back. Great Britain did not boycott the Olympics and Alan Wells won gold.

In boxing, the likes of Azumah Nelson, Adamah Mensah, Kid Sumaila, Anthony Amartey, V. Attivor, E. O. Lawson, Sulley Shittu and E. F. Ankudey, lit up the touch of amateur boxing, with Azumah moving on to become the best pound for pound boxer in professional boxing in the 80s and early 90s.

D.K. Poison set the pace when in 1975 he became the first Ghanaian to win a world title in boxing. Azumah Nelson took Ghana’s professional boxing to a higher level when he ruled the world in two weight divisions in the 80s and 90s. Other boxers that brought glory to Ghana included Nana Yaw Konadu, Ike Quartey, Alfred Kotey, Joseph Agbeko, Joshua Clottey and currently Isaac Dogboe.

Soccer had a galaxy of stars that listing some and forgetting others will not be fair.

But I think I will be forgiven if I produce this short list which will include, Osei Kofi, Mohammed Ahmed Polo and Abdul Razak, who helped in clinching AFCON trophies. Stars as they were they did not tap into professional soccer in Europe. Then came, Tony Yeboah, Abedi Ayew and Prince Polley who took advantage of opportunities offered them to become professionals in great soccer nations, and they kept the flame burning even though they were not rewarded with international trophies. Michael Essien, Stephen Appiah, Sulley Muntari, Osei Kuffuor and Asamoah Gyan were among those who took Ghana to the 2006 FIFA World Cup finals, for the first time.

Ghana is a breeding ground for world stars in sports. The question is how are we grooming these talented males and females and set them on the path to become world beaters within that short span of sporting life? Apart from a few like golf, participants in the other rigorous energy exerting sports get into pension by the time they attain 35 years. Some may keep standing on their feet till age 40 years.

While it seems, some countries focus on sports from infancy to professional, making everything available in the community for children and the youth to play and build themselves into the sports, it is obvious Ghana is not looking that direction.

During the early years of this country after independence, there were parks and playing fields littered about, today they are almost extinct. Those were the days when boys and girls could go out and play, come home very tired in the evening, find something to eat and have the much-deserved sleep. These days, games the children and youth play are indoor video games.

Today, football fields like de Gaulle park in La, where George Alhassan, Dan Kayode and Abu Moro and others started soccer, has now gone back to the owner, the Presbyterian Church and a magnificent church now sits on the field.

The nation’s attention has been shifted to consider soccer, and only senior male soccer, as the only sport. Inadequate provision has been given to the other levels in soccer and other sports and there is stunted growth there. In the seventies, sports like track and field, soccer and boxing were on everybody’s lips with others like basketball, volleyball, tennis and field hockey making waves internationally. Today, this is not the case.

During that era, one could go and watch his team play in the local league and even if it got beaten, that supporter would still be very content because he had watched a good soccer game. These days, when one wants to have an afternoon rest and kids around keep disturbing, all he has to do is to trek to the stadium, buy a ticket and take a seat to watch a local league match. In the stands, he can have a good siesta and be woken up, fully refreshed after the match ends.

Ghana Football Association (GFA) is now more focused on the Black Stars and not making any effort to build a strong local league where football stars are born.

The FA goes chasing Ghanaians playing abroad but not preparing them, when they play the local league, here. The local teams will quickly sell off good talented footballers before they become ripe enough to stand shoulder to shoulder with professionals abroad. These days they can go for £25,000.00 in player transfer when with a few years in Ghana, they could go for at least £1.5 million.

If Ghana could go back to the 60s and 70s and build parks and recreational centers where children and youth will spend afternoon playing and competing against each other, in the various sports, we shall revive sports in general in this country.

Colt football should come back; academical games and annual national sports festivals should resume. Inter-zonal, inter-districts, regionals, inter-regions and national sports must be on our annual calendar.

When Ghana starts producing world beaters, money can flow in. This is so because, now sports pay a lot.

In athletes, the average annual salary of professionals is about $56,000.00 or GH¢788,000.00. That will be $4,666.00 or GH¢65,666.00 a month. There are about twenty-seven events in track and field.

In boxing, the average annual salary of professionals is about $40,000.00 or GH¢563,000.00. A cool $3,333.00 or GH¢47,000.00 a month. There are about seventeen weight divisions in this sport.

In soccer, the average annual salary of a professional differs from league to league, from division to division. But it is good to know that France’s 23-year-old, KylianMbappéof African descent, is now the top earner for the 2022-2023 season, with an annual salary of $128 million. We need not work out the conversion into Ghana cedis, because this will be in excess of GH¢ 1.8 billion.

In tennis, and this becomes very interesting, the annual salary a professional will get will depend on his or her ranking and number of games played a year. Those seeded 50-100 will earn about $510,456.00 or GH¢7,183,000.00 annually. That will be $42,538.00 or GH¢598,583.00 a month.

In basketball, the annual salary of professionals, ranges between $500,000.00 and $800,000.00 and volleyball is about $60,000.00 annually on the average. Professional field hockey players earn about $ 53,000.00 annually.

What am I driving at? Assuming in the case of soccer, we prepare our footballers well before selling them off, they can possibly be earning an average of $20 million a year.

Now, if Ghana gets world beaters in these seven sports who earn very good money, there is the possibility that these sports persons will invest heavily in the country. As some top footballers like Didier Drogba has done, developing their villages by putting up good schools and hospitals there, we can have our stars developing their ancestral towns and villages and gradually the developments will be so decentralised and evenly spread with the state spending just a little.

Since most of these sports persons come from poor homes, they will lift up the income of the household and poverty will be drastically reduced, enhancing our annual GDP.

All this can be possible, if the state and government can invest in this sector, then Ghana will create sterling, euro and dollar millionaires evenly spread across the country.

And what is important here is that, the sports fall among renewable resources. Every day, stars will be born at hospitals and maternity homes.

Our local leagues will be very competitive with players standing out and giving the professionals from abroad a run for their money.

Players chosen to play in the national teams would have worked for their position and not considering it as their bone fide property.

With sports thriving, companies and institutions will invest in the various sports clubs, and players will get good pay. With good financial advisors, they can invest into other sectors so by the time they retire from the sports, they will remain well cushioned for life.

Come to think of it, how will Ghanaians feel when our sports persons start putting up magnificent hotels and 1,000 bed hospitals with specialist facilities turning Ghanaian into a medical tourism hub? What about universities, factories, transport companies and others? And what about modern stadia and sports arenas?

Ghana has a great potential in sports, we need to move into exploiting that sector.

Hon. Daniel Dugan

Messi, Ronaldo, Mbappe, Neymar and other stars set for World Cup quarter-finals

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Kyle Walker and Kylian Mbappe

Eight teams remain in the 2022 World Cup, all with same dream of lifting the trophy on 18 December. After a tournament of shocks in the group stage, we are now progressing to the real business end, and the quarter-finals are stacked with talent.

Six of the teams left in are former champions or finalists – and they have won the competition 10 times between them.

There’s a surprise package too, with Morocco now aiming to become the first semi-finalists from Africa having reached their first quarter-final.

BBC Sport looks as some of the themes brewing as players aim to underpin their greatness and go down in footballing folklore.

A heavy-hitting last eight

Shock group-stage exits for the likes of Germany and Belgium – and Spain’s elimination in the last 16 – means they have missed out on being part of a quarter-final line-up for the ages.

Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo provide the headline names, but big guns such as Neymar, Harry Kane, Kylian Mbappe and Luka Modric are still standing.

The four ties are so closely matched you just can’t call them. It is going to be epic.

An Anglo-French battle

England and France – the reigning champions – meet at a major tournament for the first time in 10 years, and for the first time ever in the knockout stages.

The teams drew 1-1 in the group stage of Euro 2012, but you have to go back to 1982 for their last meeting at a World Cup.

Bryan Robson scored twice in a 3-1 England victory over a side captained by France great Michel Platini.

The Three Lions didn’t go on to become world champions in Spain that year, but the only time they did – back in 1966 – one of the teams they beat on their way to glory was, you’ve guessed it, France. Not a bad omen.

However, now they have the daunting prospect of facing in-form striking sensation Mbappe, who leads the Golden Boot race with five goals and plays alongside his country’s all-time top goalscorer in Olivier Giroud.

“Saturday will be really difficult,” said England captain Kane. “France are a great team, reigning world champions, so we know it is going to be a really tough evening.

“I think if you are going to win the World Cup, you have to play the best sides in the world, and France are certainly up there.”

A Messi v Ronaldo final?

Ronaldo and Messi

Sunday, 18 December. A showdown at Doha’s Lusail Stadium. The two greatest players of their generation going head to head – their last shot at World Cup glory. It’s on!

Argentina’s Messi and Portugal’s Ronaldo have pushed each other to rewrite the record books for years. At this tournament alone, Messi scored on his 1,000th career appearance in the last-16 win over Australia, while Ronaldo became the first man to score at five World Cups.

Both have won their continental titles – Messi claimed the Copa America last year and Ronaldo the European Championship in 2016 – but the biggest prize in football remains elusive.

With 35-year-old Messi hinting this may well be his last World Cup and Ronaldo turning 41 by the time the next tournament comes around, this is surely their final hope of lifting the famous gold trophy.

However, Ronaldo had to settle for a bit-part role in Portugal’s last-16 tie – relegated to the substitutes’ bench as his 21-year-old replacement, Goncalo Ramos, smashed in a hat-trick against Switzerland.

A final involving the two superstars would leave neutrals salivating. Will the ‘GOAT’ debate finally be settled?

South American skirmish?

Brazil players

Before that, a mouth-watering semi-final could be on the cards.

Should both progress past Croatia and the Netherlands respectively, a heavyweight South American battle will ensue between Brazil and Argentina at Lusail Stadium.

Five-time champions and tournament favourites Brazil showcased their credentials by coasting past South Korea, while Argentina needed the brilliance of their skipper Messi to edge them past Australia.

The teams have met four times at the World Cup, though not since 1990, when Claudio Caniggia’s late winner took Argentina through to the quarter-finals.

Hopes of wrestling the trophy away from Europe lie heavily with these two sides, with Brazil the last non-European team to win the competition back in 2002.

Star man Neymar recovered from an injury picked up in their opening game to score in the last-16 victory over South Korea and now needs just one more goal to match the great Pele’s 77 strikes for the Selecao.

But Luka Modric’s Croatia and Virgil van Dijk’s Netherlands will have a big say on whether that huge spectacle comes to fruition or not.

Bergkamp’s brilliance to haunt Argentina

Frenkie de Jong

Talking of the Netherlands, Louis van Gaal’s side and Argentina are familiar foes in this tournament, set to meet for the sixth time for a place in the semi-finals.

It’s a repeat of the 1978 final, which the South American side won, and their most recent meeting was in the last four eight years ago, with Argentina victorious on penalties.

But one of the most famous moments – not only in this fixture but in World Cup history – came in 1998 when Dennis Bergkamp scored a sensational last-minute goal to take the Netherlands through to the semi-finals.

“Dennis Bergkamp, Dennis Bergkamp, Dennis Bergkamp,” screamed the Dutch commentator as the Arsenal man expertly controlled Frank de Boer’s raking pass, before turning inside Roberto Ayala and flicking a finish into the net.

Cody Gakpo to do something similar this time…?

Magnificent Morocco

Morocco

Achraf Hakimi’s winning penalty in the shootout victory over Spain was majestic, dinked down the middle of the goal to spark wild celebrations at Education City.

Their progression to the quarter-finals of the World Cup was given a royal seal of approval too, as boss Walid Regragui received a phonecall from Morocco’s King Mohammed VI after the game.

Well organised and difficult to beat, Morocco are bang in form – they are yet to lose at this World Cup and have conceded only one goal in their past seven games.

Morocco are just the fourth African nation to reach the last eight and are looking to become the first side from the continent to make it through to the semi-finals.

However, another stern test against European opposition awaits – and Portugal are aiming to make history of their own by reaching a first final.

Credit: bbc.com

The Ghanaian Chronicle