DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 6240

Sergio Ramos: Leading Madrid from Center-Back in the Absence of Ronaldo

0

He took two steps forward from the penalty box and kicked the ball to the far left side of the post. Athletico Bilbao’s goalkeeper, Unai Simon stretched full length toward the ball, but it was too fast for him. The net was already shaking by the touch of the ball and Sergio Ramos was celebrating with his team mates by the time the goalkeeper landed.

That was his 22nd consecutive goal from the penalty spot for the club and his tenth in the current domestic league season, a feat not common among defenders. The goal ensured Real Madrid went four points clear at the league table.

Three seasons ago, it would have been Cristiano Ronaldo taking the shots and converting the penalties. But the Portuguese joined the Old Lady in Turin, leaving a big vacuum that Karim Benzima, Real Madrid’s no 9, not Ramos, was expected to fill.

But in a twisting turn of events, Ramos has stepped up to fill the vacuum that is outside his job description as a center back.

At the resumption of the Spanish La Liga in June, Real Madrid was trailing Barcelona by two-points with 11 games left. The last time Real Madrid lifted the Spanish League trophy was in 2017, following Barcelona’s dominance that has kept them at bay. That reinforces the zeal for the Spanish giants to be crowned champions of the 2019/20 season, and fortunately, a mishap in the fortune of the Catalans turned the table, handing the lead to Madrid.

Evidently, Ramos’ role in Madrid’s move to the top has been spectacular. On June 24, his 25 yards free kick goal against Mallorca ensured a 2-0 victory that moved the Galaticos to the top of the table. While he’s scoring the winners, he’s also making sure he stops his opponents from scoring, a leadership trait that has inspired Real Madrid to win in oddest times.

In the 2014 uefa champions league final against Atletico Madrid, it was Ramos’ late header that put his team back in the game which they eventually won 4-1 in the extra time to be crowned European champions.

But it has not been all rosy for the Andalusian who started his football career at Sevilla. There have been a lot of controversies trailing Ramos, capped by his 26 career red cards. Many have described him as a bully in the field who uses oppressive tackles to achieve wining.

A remarkable event was the 2018 Champions League final against Liverpool, where Ramos dragged Liverpool’s Mohammed Salah to ground, dislocating his shoulder, which resulted in his ouster from the match. His action was labeled cynical and was believed to be the only reason Liverpool didn’t win.

While the Real Madrid captain has amassed a lot of haters following his perceived cynicism in the field of play, the 34 years old has shrugged it off to add more records to his name. Ramos has more La Liga goals (71) in his career than Zinedine Zidane (37), Xavi Hernandes (58), Andres Iniesta (35), Luis Figo (68), Ronaldinho (70) and Neymar (68). To top the 21 major honors he has won in his career including the world cup.

His 12 goals tally so far this season has made him the second top goalscorer for Real Madrid, and put him ahead of forwards like Roberto Firmino, Antoine Griezmann, Alexandre Lacazette and Diego Costa, all are below 10 goals. Though it is a feat that will make many forwards proud, Ramos seems unmoved by the numbers.

“The only thing I think about is the importance of these three points. It is in moments of maximum tension that I feel most comfortable and I think I am the perfect person to assume this responsibility… personal statistics are secondary, what I want is to help the team and win the league. This is the most important thing, if I wanted personal reward I would have devoted myself to tennis,” he said.

Anticlimactically, Real Madrid has found someone to look up to in the absence of Ronaldo, a winner, a leader, a formidable center-back leading forwards in goal affairs.

A Fellow of Chartered Accountants To Teach Auditing Strategy in Tekedia Mini-MBA

0

He is a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), the zenith of the accounting profession in Nigeria. He is an experienced director of internal audit & risk control with a demonstrated history of working in the financial services industry. He is skilled in enterprise risk management, internal audit, banking, accounting, and internal controls. He has worked with SMEs and understands all domains of audits for growing businesses.

A Certified Risk Analyst (CRA) with BSc in Accounting, MBA from University of Lagos, and MSc Economics from ESUTH Enugu. He worked in EY, and today he is the Director Of Internal Audit & Risk Control at African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank).

Abel Osuji, a Tekedia Institute Faculty, will lead a session on Internal Auditing Strategy for SMEs in Tekedia Mini-MBA. Through this session, he will educate our communities on how SMEs can develop effective audit regimes in their firms. Register and attend his class.

https://www.tekedia.com/mini-mba-3/

 

Nigerians Not Attending U.S. Universities That Much [Plot]

18

This is the big news for international students: “international students whose classes will take place fully online would be asked to leave the country. ” But check the data (see plot below), not many Nigerians are actually going to the U.S. to study these years. Largely, there are reasons: visas are not being granted by the U.S. embassy in Nigeria, or parents cannot afford the big dollars-school fees which keep rising, or Canada has disintermediated the U.S on preference. But no matter how you look at it, international students have real issues to deal with right now, and those issues are outside their controls. If your school decides to go fully online to keep the majority of the student population safe, you could be flying back to your country, without your diploma! Elections have consequences in this world!

Harvard and M.I.T. have filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration over an order that would remove foreign students’ visas if their coursework is entirely online this fall, according to The New York Times. Earlier this week, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency announced that international students whose classes will take place fully online would be asked to leave the country. A number of academic institutions, including Harvard, have recently moved their academic year online to reduce the spread of the coronavirus.

Comment from Francis Oguaju below

One of those unpleasant things that happen when you are outside playing and joking with friends and strangers, and then you wish you had a loving home with caring family to cheer you up, when you run back home.

This is one of the reasons why we should never allow Nigeria to collapse, or let Africa become a continent of despair; so that whenever push turns to shove, you can always have a decent home to run back to.

A slave will never be equal to a free born, irrespective of how brilliant or hardworking he’s, once the scramble for survival begins, your surname will put you where you belong.

Never see your country of origin as your second home, rather see it as your first, even when you haven’t lived there, very important. No matter how great and caring your friends are, your biological family is above them all, because you don’t really need to prove anything to the latter, but they know that you are their own.

Nobody knows if globalisation gospel will still be relevant in another decade, so if you allow your country to disintegrate, you may no longer have home address.

We hope that the international students can navigate the complicated policy successfully and finish their studies.

 

Rising Through Markets

2
FUTO is a top technical university in Nigeria

I went for a job interview in Analog Devices while a student in Johns Hopkins. When the interview finished, and my future boss was helping me to a rented car, I quickly realized that the company was inside MIT. Really? A company with $billions of revenue was inside a university complex? (ADI has a market cap of $50 billion at the moment.) But wait  – there were other companies in what you may mistake as lecture halls. That is the beauty of America and the strength when universities become beds of innovation. 

That takes me to the massive acres of land in my alma mater – Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO). Imagine if companies are occupying those empty lands. Besides the academic quality, the biggest innovation in American education is the fusion of markets and universities. 

Nigeria needs to copy that. It has to be organic: a symbiotic value creation for schools and companies, and Team Nigeria wins. Nations rise through markets; Nigerian universities must lead from within.

 

The Restless Uber

1

Uber is indeed restless: it has become a grocery delivery company. Note, I did not write “meal delivery” as in Uber Eats. Yes, Uber can help you deliver groceries now. Uber is looking for a path to profitability. The challenge Uber has is typical: aggregation on physical-element business, unlike what Twitter, Facebook, Google, Instagram and Tik Tok do, is challenging. The distribution cost does not tend towards near-zero without affecting the fixed cost, optimally (see plot below). The implication is that making money on what Uber does is harder when compared to the aggregation models of Facebook and Google. Yes, software can eat the world, but that does not mean that making money doing so is guaranteed!

Uber is moving into the grocery delivery business, offering the new service in Toronto, Montreal and more than a dozen Latin American cities ahead of a U.S. launch later this month. The Uber and Uber Eats apps will allow users there to order groceries from local stores, receiving them in “as little as one to two hours,” according to an Uber product exec. Uber sees groceries as an extension of its food delivery service, which has gained in popularity over the pandemic.

Image result for transaction, distribution cost tekedia

Uber recently announced plans to acquire Postmates as it looks for that stability that comes with profitability. Here, the motivation is economies of scale: combining Uber Eats with Postmates can provide better margins in a very competitive market.

Uber is set to buy food delivery service Postmates in a $2.65 billion deal, the companies have confirmed. The tie-up ?— earlier reported by Bloomberg ?— could help Uber’s food-delivery service, Uber Eats, to compete against rival DoorDash, following Uber’s failed bid for GrubHub. Demand for food delivery services has grown during the pandemic, although profitability has remained a challenge, prompting delivery app companies to consider tie-ups to increase scale.