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    Floyd Mayweather owns a £50m private jet, where he plays poker and gambles some of his £506million fortune

    AIR MAYWEATHER, Floyd’s private jet, has become a casino for high stakes games of poker.The boxing legend, 45, is known to own a stunning array of luxury toys and is reported to have a net worth of £560million.
    Mayweather posted a photo of a somewhat ridiculous poker game from his jetCredit: Instagram @floydmayweather
    Back in April 2020, he posted an Instagram snap of him playing a friend on his private jet with stacks of cash around them.
    He captioned the shot: “On my private jet playing a private game of poker against @tmtbside7 he thought he had me with his full house, but I smoked him with a 4 of a kind.”
    Mayweather claims he beat his opponent with a stunning four-of-a-kind hand of aces, beating an also staggering full house of kings and aces.
    Such an unlikely scenario led to sneaky suggestions from Mayweather’s 28.4million followers that the game wasn’t all it seemed.
    But the American’s wealth is pretty undeniable in the face of his lavish lifestyle.
    Not only does he own the £50m Gulfstream G650 jet, dubbed Air Mayweather, which he bought as a birthday present to himself in 2018 – he reportedly has a second jet worth £25m for his entourage to follow in.
    The plane is emblazoned with his TMT ‘The Money Team’ logo and his undefeated 50-0 professional boxing record.
    Carpets featuring the same number are rolled out for fliers as they embark and it is even stitched in the sleeves of the staff who serve him as he jets around the world.
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    Mayweather is set to take on YouTuber Deji Olatunji next month in his fourth exhibition bout.
    ‘Money’, whose last professional fight was against Conor McGregor in 2017, could also be set for a rematch with Manny Pacquiao.
    The Filipino icon was beaten by 50-0 Mayweather in 2015, which ended five long years of waiting.
    Pacquiao told the Daily Mail: “The Floyd fight, I am not sure a real fight is going to happen anymore. He doesn’t want to.
    “He would maybe do an exhibition. There is a chance for an exhibition fight to take place. That is possible. But, a real fight, I don’t think will happen.”
    Mayweather gifted himself the £50m jet back in 2018Credit: @floydmayweather Instagram
    The former world champ’s 50-0 record is proudly on displayCredit: Instagram @floydmayweather More

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    Man City’s worst transfers, from flop Jerome Boateng to Jack Rodwell and £42m mistake Eliaquim Mangala

    MANCHESTER CITY have invested over £1BILLION in the transfer market over the past decade so, naturally, there are going to be some flops.For every David Silva, Yaya Toure, or Erling Haaland there’s an Eliaquim Mangala or Jack Rodwell.
    Three great signings out of four ain’t badCredit: EPA
    Fortunately for current boss Pep Guardiola, most of the club’s most useless transfers came before the Spaniard brought them continued success.
    Here, SunSport details the five WORST signings City have made in the Premier League era….
    Eliaquim Mangala – £42m (2014)
    Mangala was strongly criticised by the media during his time at CityCredit: AFP or licensors
    Joleon Lescott left the Etihad Stadium after Manuel Pellegrini’s side won the title and Mangala was heralded as a ready-made replacement.
    The defender’s first two seasons saw the club drift away from the top of the table and he was often hammered for poor positioning and slow reactions.
    A solid loan spell at Valencia earned Mangala momentary reprieve under Guardiola but, after 15 appearances, the new boss binned him off before serious injury struck in a 2018 spell with Everton.Jack Rodwell – £12m (2012)
    Injuries curtailed Rodwell’s progressCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    Rodwell was an up-and-coming star at Everton but became a symbol of City’s trigger-happy stockpiling when jumping ship at the age of 21.
    There was a problem, however: City already had an excellent set of central midfielders.
    Battling past Yaya Toure, James Milner, David Silva, Samir Nasri, Javi Garcia, Gareth Barry and Fernandinho was too much for Rodwell and he left after two years and just 25 appearances.
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    Jerome Boateng – £10m (2010)
    It is painful enough seeing a former player go on to great things but City didn’t even get close to utilising Boateng’s full potential.
    Perhaps player and club were doomed from day one, the German tearing a tendon in his knee the week before the season began and aggravating it when a drinks trolley bashed it on a flight.
    A year later, Boateng asked to head back home and was allowed to leave for Bayern Munich – going on to win a World Cup, a Champions League and seven Bundesliga titles.
    Jo – £19m (2008)
    Jo arrived with a great record for CSKA MoscowCredit: Reuters
    A top striker in Russia when snapped up by Mark Hughes, Jo struggled to say the least – scoring once in nine league outings before being moved on six months into his stay.
    A brief upturn in form at Goodison Park gave the Citizens some hope of turning a profit… but a dismal 2009-2010 season on Merseyside dropped him back at City.
    Failing to take another chance the following season, Jo finally left to return to Brazil, having cost much more than Vincent Kompany and Pablo Zabaleta combined.Wilfried Bony – £25m (2015)
    Bony was sent back to Swansea in 2016 but couldn’t find form there, eitherCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    Ten goals in 46 games, only six of which came in the league, is a poor record for any striker, but for an expensive forward at a club aiming to win the title? Terrible.
    The Prem top scorer for the calendar year of 2014, Bony initially couldn’t play for City due to African Cup of Nations duty and a summer bout of malaria came after a quiet start.
    That stunted his hopes for the following year and the club learned their lesson, from then on turning their attention away from signing top players from smaller sides. More

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    Before Arsenal play Bodo Glimt on a plastic pitch, teams likes QPR and Luton used artificial turf to their advantage

    THERE’S nothing like a plastic pitch as a leveller.Tonight, Mikel Arteta takes his in-form Arsenal team, who sit top of the Premier League, to play against Bodo Glimt – who play at the 8,270 seater Aspmyra Stadion.
    Bodo Glimt play on an artifical pitch as the club battles the elements of the Norwegian weather
    Mikel Arteta said Arsenal are ready for the artificial surface
    But what will make their task much harder – and what undid Roma last season who were humbled their 6-1 – is the turf they play on.
    Arsenal’s superstars, used to playing on the pristine carpets of our top division, will have to deal with an artificial pitch as they continue their Europa League campaign.
    Speaking in his press conference on Wednesday, Arteta revealed his players will have to adapt to their relatively unknown surroundings.
    He said: “Obviously, everybody is aware that there are a lot of things that are different. The speed is different, the way you can use the grass is different and we will have to adapt to it. We know that, we are here to win the game and tomorrow night for sure we are going to play on an artificial pitch.”
    Of course, this isn’t the first time a professional side has used an artificial pitch for a professional match.
    Here’s some SunSport have seen over the years  that would’ve had our knees jerking at the thought of having a run-out on them.
    IT STARTED WITH QPR
    In 1981, Queens Park Rangers became the first club in the country to replace grass for something called Omni-Turf.
    The West London pioneers were always looking for a solution to improving the Loftus Road surface, which suffered after treacherous winters and arid summers of the 1970s.
    QPR were the first side to embrace synthetic turf in 1981Credit: Hulton Archive – Getty
    Under Terry Venables Loftus Road became a fortress and QPR reached the FA Cup final in 1982Credit: PA:Press Association
    With Omni-Turf they got a green carpet, rolled on to a thick layer of concrete with sand acting as a cushion.
    Their first game on it was ironically against Luton Town, who joined the artificial pitch brigade soon after, and they lost 2-1.
    However, Terry Venables’ team managed to master their new pitch, and in 1982 Second Division QPR managed to reach an FA Cup Final after playing every round at home before a Highbury showdown in a semi-final with West Brom.
    Because of that run, many felt that Omni-Turf gave QPR an unfair advantage. Rangers became the first team to remove it in 1988.
    KENILWORTH ROAD
    Luton Town clearly took notes from QPR’s experiment.
    In the summer of the 1984-85 season they installed a multi-layered £350,000 surface called Sporturf International that had base levels of broken stones and bitumen macadam (a mixture of aggregate, filler and bitumen), underneath an artificial surface finished with sand.
    Although it was said to be kinder on the joints, the carpet burn for many was unpleasant and the bounce of the ball made fans critical of the football they watched, even though it forced sides to keep it on the deck.
    The first game played at Kenilworth Road on the new surface ended in a 1-1 draw between the hosts and Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest.
    It was an extremely difficult place for any of the high-flyers to get a result at, with many top sides dreading their visits to Luton. And that wasn’t helped by the thought of coming up against the might of Mick Harford too.
    Inspired by QPR, Luton Town soon installed a plastic pitch in time for the 1984-85 seasonCredit: PA:Empics Sport
    OLDHAM AND PRESTON
    Boundary Park became a fortress for Joe Royle’s Oldham Athletic AFTER a plastic pitch was installed in 1986.
    They embarked on a 32-game unbeaten run at home, and in 1989 enjoyed arguably their best ever campaign reaching the League Cup final and the semi-final of the FA Cup, beating Arsenal, Southampton, Everton and Aston Villa along the way.
    That same year, cash-strapped Preston North End, who were nearly on the verge of extinction from the Football League after a disastrous campaign in Division Four, decided to install a plastic pitch, too.
    The idea was to help swell the club’s coffers by renting it out to local teams to play on, to reduce the number of postponed matches, and to use the Deepdale pitch as a training ground.
    A season later, Preston were promoted to Division Three.
    Incidentally, they were the last Football League club to play on a plastic pitch until it was ripped up in 1994.
    Joe Royle’s Oldham went from second division to First, reaching an FA Cup semi-final and League Cup Final thanks to a synthetic pitchCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    Oldham’s Gunnar Halle shows off his moulded boots on the plastic pitchCredit: PA:Empics Sport
    Preston North End installed a plastic pitch at Deepdale as a money-spinner so they could rent it out to local teamsCredit: PA:Empics Sport
    THREE LIONS ON THE TURF
    In 2007, Wayne Rooney, Michael Owen, Steven Gerrard and Co walked out onto synthetic turf in a Euro 2008 qualifier against Russia at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow.
    It was one of the first full international games to be played on such a surface that was approved by Fifa and Uefa, and the visitors slumped to a surprise 2-1 defeat.
    Despite allowing England to toil on turf, Uefa insisted that the 2008 Champions League final in the same arena takes place on grass.
    The Three Lions would again play on artificial turf at the LFF Stadium against Lithuania in 2016.
    That game was notable for the Lithuanian fire brigade being called before kick off to water the pitch.
    In 2007 England played a Euro 2008 qualifier against Russia at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow on this plastic pitchCredit: AP:Associated Press
    Steven Gerrard and Co struggled on synthetic turf for EnglandCredit: Action Images
    The Three Lions slumped to a 2-1 defeat against Russia on a plastic pitchCredit: Getty
    CRUYFF’S TURN
    Today, National League sides Sutton United and Maidstone United play on plastic pitches, but one of the last big teams in world football to embrace artificial turf was Mexican giants Chivas.
    In 2010 they opened their stunning Estadio Omnilife stadium in Guadalajara, which embraced the idea that plastic is fantastic.
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    Chivas owner Jorge Vergara said he wanted the stadium to be “environment friendly and as such, having grass would result [in] using too much water.”
    But when Johan Cruyff became an adviser at the club, he recommended they ditch the artificial pitch.
    In 2012, Chivas listened to the Dutch legend and the turf was replaced by grass.
    Arsenal, you have been warned.
    In 2017 Arsenal played Sutton United on their synthetic turf in the FA CupCredit: AFP and licensors
    Mexican club Chivas played on a plastic pitch until Johan Cruyff came on board as an adviser and told them to ditch it for grassCredit: AFP More

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    Chelsea talent Charlie Webster, 18, has been called the ‘next Jadon Sancho’ and wowed Kevin De Bruyne in KDB Cup

    GENERATIONAL talents are becoming the norm at Stamford Bridge.In the past few years, thanks to Frank Lampard, Thomas Tuchel and now Graham Potter, Chelsea’s youth talents are thriving in the first team.
    Chelsea wonderkid Charlie Webster is next off the conveyor belt at Stamford BridgeCredit: Getty
    Webster might get his opportunity in the Chelsea first team under Grahan PotterCredit: Getty
    Mason Mount wowed all and is the back-to-back Chelsea player of the season, while Reece James seems to be winning the bumper race to be Gareth Southgate’s first-choice right-back.
    And now, there’s another name you can add to the list of youngsters hoping to get their chance under Potter.
    England’s Charlie Webster, 18, is a rising star and has already been tracked by Bundesliga giants Borussia Dortmund.
    He’s been called the ‘next Jadon Sancho’, and with the Bundesliga giants losing the Three Lions winger last summer they might just make a beeline for Charlie.
    READ MORE ON FOOTBALL
    MAKING AN IMPRESSION
    At just 15, Webster had Manchester City playmaker Kevin De Bruyne wowed by his ability.
    The setting was the prestigious KDB Cup – an international U15 tournament named after the Belgium ace – with the midfielder as the guest of honour.
    Players from clubs including Barcelona, Bayern Munich, and PSG were on show – all desperate to impress.
    It was Chelsea that ended up being victorious – beating Racing Genk on penalties after an exciting 2-2 draw.
    Star of the show was Webster, and his performances didn’t go unnoticed.
    Blues starlet Webster has been called the ‘next Jadon Sancho’
    Webster starred at the KDB Cup in 2019

    He was awarded player of the tournament – winning a golden ball, as well as a signed De Bruyne shirt.
    One feels it could be the first of many awards headed Webster’s way in the future.
    A CULTURED MIDFIELDER
    In similar vein to Billy Gilmour, who joined Brighton in the summer, Webster is a cultured midfielder – good on the ball and smart in possession.
    However, unlike the Scot who prefers to dictate play from deep – Webster likes to get in the box and score goals.
    He started playing football at the Pezzaz Street Soccer academy, which have bases in Wiltshire and Hampshire, before joining Chelsea in 2016 at the age of 12.
    Coaches there believe he has a bright future in the game, and in the past Webster has spoken about his football dream.
    “Obviously, it’s to play for this brilliant club,” he told a reporter at the KDB Cup after starring for the Blues.
    Webster is a cultured midfielder, good on the ball and in possession
    In the past Webster has said it was his dream to play for “brilliant” ChelseaCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    LEADING BY EXAMPLE
    Webster’s qualities have seen him earmarked as a leader.
    In 2019, he captained England’s U16 team in a match against Republic of Ireland – scoring his first international goal.
    He’s also played for the Three Lions’ U17s – coming off the bench in a 4-1 rout over the USA in 2020.
    And that was the same month Webster made his U18 Premier League debut for Chelsea against Southampton, followed by his U23 debut last April.
    Then in January 2021, Charlie signed his first professional contract with the club on his 17th birthday. Given his progress, you can imagine it’ll be the first of many.
    Webster has captained England at U16 levelCredit: Getty More

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    Football’s most intelligent, as Petr Cech graduates with a Masters in Business Administration, including Mata and Lukaku

    THEY’RE football’s smartest men.For years footballers have had their intelligence questioned, but that’s just not the case with this lot.
    Petr Cech graduated with a Masters in Business AdministrationCredit: Instagram
    Fikayo Tomori revealed he was studying for a business management degree on England duty in 2019Credit: Getty Images – Getty
    Sure, many players neglect their studies to concentrate on making it in the professional game, and that’s fine.
    But some like to use their brains further in getting degrees that could help them in life after football.
    Ex-Chelsea and Arsenal keeper Petr Cech is the latest brain box – graduating with a Masters in Business Administration.
    While AC Milan star Fikayo Tomori  talked about studying for a business management diploma, while on England duty back in 2019.
    “Football won’t go on for ever,” he wisely said in a press conference.
    “When I retire or, God forbid, I get an injury, then I have something I’m working towards that can stand me in good stead for the future.”
    And he’s not the only one who has thought about a life after football.
    Join SunSport in introducing the beautiful game’s most intelligent stars.
    JUAN MATA
    Juan Mata could’ve been a journalist instead of a footballerCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    Not only is he an all-round nice guy doing tons for charity, he’s also super smart.
    The former Man Utd man studied journalism at Universidad Politecnica e Madrid.
    And during his time at Old Trafford, dancing down the wing, he’s completed a sports science and finance degree too.
    Not many in the game can lay claim to two degrees.
    Former Man Utd ace Juan Mata also studied sport science and financeCredit: Reuters
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    HOW TO GET FREE BETS ON FOOTBALL
    ANDREY ARSHAVIN
    If it wasn’t football, it would’ve been fashion for Arshavin.
    The mercurial Russian playmaker graduated from the St Petersburg State University of Technology and Design.
    He studied clothing technology, and has put that talent to use by launching his own clothing range in Russia.
    Andrey Arshavin studied clothing technology and has his own fashion label in RussiaCredit: Instagram @arshavin_official
    Former Arsenal favourite Andrey Arshavin graduated from St Petersburg State University of Technology and DesignCredit: Times Newspapers Ltd
    SIMON MIGNOLET
    He’s not just a talented keeper, you know.
    The Belgium shot-stopper has a coffee shop in his native country, so he’ll always have that to fall back on when his career ends.
    But should he want to, Mignolet could lean on his degree in law and political sciences for a career change.
    Simon Mignolet has a degree in law and political sciencesCredit: AFP or licensors
    FRANK LAMPARD
    Super Frank excelled at Derby, and did a credible job as Chelsea boss before the axe.
    But that should be child’s play for the Blues’ all-time leading goalscorer.
    After all, the Everton gaffer reportedly scored over 150 in an IQ test with Mensa.
    That result meant that Lamps is among the most intelligent 0.1 percent of the world’s population.
    Frank Lampard reportedly scored over 150 in an IQ test with MensaCredit: EPA
    Chelsea legend Frank Lampard  is among the most intelligent 0.1 percent of the world’s populationCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    GIORGIO CHIELLINI
    The tough-tackling Italian centre half isn’t as much of a brute as you’d think.
    Chiellini was a whizz at high-school, passing all his exams with ease.
    He later went to the prestigious University of Turin where he graduated with a business economics degree, just like Tomori is studying for.
    Must be something about uncompromising defenders.
    Giorgio Chiellini graduated with a business economics degree from University of TurinCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    GLENN JOHNSON
    The former Stoke City right-back has commanded high-numbered transfer fees during his time, so it’s lucky he’s not numerically challenged.
    In fact, Johnson is so good with digits he enrolled at The Open University to do a degree in Maths.
    He can start negotiating his own contracts, surely?
    Glenn Johnson enrolled at The Open University to do a degree in MathsCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    CLARKE CARLISLE
    Dubbed Britain’s most intelligent footballer, Clarke has the right CV to back that up.
    He was a contestant on Countdown, and was also the first player to appear on Question Time.
    Clarke has a degree in sports writing and broadcasting from Staffordshire University.
    Clarke Carlisle once appeared on TV show CountdownCredit: PA:Press Association
    Dubbed the most intelligent footballer, Clarke Carlisle became the first player to appear on Question TimeCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    ROMELU LUKAKU
    The on-loan Inter striker isn’t just your average footballer.
    The skilled forward is also a natural linguist, speaking as many as five languages including English, Spanish, Dutch, French and Portuguese.
    Lukaku is also said to understand German and Swahili, as well as hold a degree in tourism and public relations.
    Romelu Lukaku speaks five languages, including English, Spanish, Dutch, French and PortugueseCredit: Reuters
    Belgium star Romelu Lukaku has a degree in tourism and public relationsCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    EDWIN VAN DER SAAR
    Another ex-Man United man with a great brain – no wonder they’re so successful.
    When the Red Devils Dutch keeper retired he studied for a masters degree in sports and brand management at the Johan Cruyff Institute.
    After becoming a marketing director at the Dutch giants, he’s now their CEO and has been linked with a move to Manchester United to become their director.
    Edwin Van der Saar finished a masters degree in sports and brand managementCredit: Kenny Ramsay – The Sun Glasgow
    Edwin Van der Saar is now a CEO at AjaxCredit: Bradley Ormesher – The Times
    SOCRATES
    Recognised for his headband and beard on the football pitch, the late Socrates was one of Brazil’s favourite sons.
    He held a bachelors degree in medicine from the Faculdade de Medicina de Ribeirão Preto while he was still playing.
    Socrates also wrote columns for Brazilian newspapers on everything from sport to politics to economics.
    Socrates was a star of the Brazil sides of the 1982 and 1986 World CupsCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    Not only did Socrates finish medicine, he also wrote several newspaper columns about economics and politicsCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    DUNCAN WATMORE
    The Middlesbrough footballer became only the second player in the Premier League ever to graduate with a first.
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    Midfielder Duncan studied economics and business management, which he finished at Newcastle University.
    He juggled breaking into the first team with catching up with lectures in the evening while poring over textbooks.
    Duncan Watmore graduated from Newcastle University with a first class honours degree in 2015Credit: Getty – Contributor
    Duncan Watmore is one of two Premier League players to graduate with a firstCredit: PA:Empics Sport
    Oliver Bierhoff has a degree in economicsCredit: Bongarts – Getty
    OLIVER BIERHOFF
    The former German centre forward, who famously scored the first golden goal of football at Wembley, is a smart man.
    Not only is he revered by his home nation for scoring 37 international goals, he’s championed for having a economics degree.
    Economics is a degree that runs in football, with former Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger also having a diploma in economics.
    It just goes to show, footballers are much smarter than you think.
    The greatest goals of Socrates More

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    Ex-Arsenal wonderkid Musah, 19, is the first American to play for Valencia and captained England’s youth teams

    THEY might just regret letting this one go.In 2019 Yunus Musah was allowed to leave Arsenal, after seven years training at their Hale End academy, for pastures new.
    Yunus Musah was Valencia’s youngest ever foreign debutant when he made his first-team debut in 2020Credit: Getty Images – Getty
    Musah has now played 77 times for ValenciaCredit: Getty
    Musah, 19, spent seven years with Arsenal before leaving for La LigaCredit: Getty – Contributor
    After representing England at youth level, Musah is now a senior USA internationalCredit: Getty
    There were rumblings inside the club that coaches believed it was a serious mistake to grant the talented midfielder, capped by England at youth level, a move to Valencia.
    But Arsenal’s loss is the La Liga giant’s gain – with Musah, now 19, growing in confidence in Spain.
    In 2020, the outstanding midfielder made his debut for Los Che in a 4-2 win over Levante UD.
    He has now played 77 times for the Spaniards and in November 2020 became the youngest non-Spanish player to score for the club.
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    And it’s not just Arsenal who have made a mistake by letting Musah slip through the net.
    After turning out for England at youth level, Musah has now been capped 18 times by the USA senior team.
    Here’s his story.
    BORN IN NY, RAISED IN LONDON
    Musah was born in New York, where his mum was on holiday at the time.
    The family, of Ghanaian descent, lived in Italy until he was nine where he played for local team Giorgione.
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    They then moved to London and he was immediately snapped up by Arsenal, eventually graduating from their Hale End academy.
    Musah was highly-rated in North London, having played a significant role in helping the U18 side win the Premier League in 2019 – scoring five goals in 17 appearances.
    But in 2019 he felt Valencia offered him a better pathway towards first-team football, and it appears that was the right decision for the exciting youngster.
    Musah was born in New York to Ghanaian parents and raised in Italy and England
    Musah played for England at U15, U16, U17 and U18 levelCredit: Rex Features
    A leader among boys, Musah captained the Three Lions at various levelsCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    INTERNATIONAL PEDIGREE
    Born in the USA, with Ghanaian parents and having UK and Italian citizenship means Musah could have played for all those countries.
    Musah played internationally at U15, U16, U17, and U18 level for the Three Lions.
    He was captain a number of times, and was seen as a real leader of his generation.
    Then in 2020, after a year in Spain, the USA senior team came knocking.
    And Musah could be set to face England at the World Cup later this year, if he makes it on the plane to Qatar.
    WHAT KIND OF PLAYER IS HE?
    An attacking midfielder with an eye for a pass, Musah is strong on the ball.
    His athleticism allows him to run past players with ease and create opportunities for his team-mates.
    Able to play as a No10 or out wide, he also boasts fine dribbling skills and has an eye for goal.
    But he’s a sucker for perfection and knows where he needs to improve.
    Athletic Musah in action against Levante on his Valencia debut in 2020Credit: Getty Images – Getty
    Musah can play as a No10 or out wideCredit: AFP or licensors
    He previously said in 2020: “I want to score more goals and be more consistent with my passes as well.
    “Sometimes in the game I can do so many good passes and one bad one, I want to correct that.”
    PRAISE BE
    Musah has started five games for Valencia this season, and has already registered two assists.
    He speaks excellent Spanish and was seen on his debut constantly talking to his team-mates and showing the self-confidence needed to be a success.
    With Arsenal short of back-up midfielders due to Mohamed Elneny’s long-term injury, they might’ve missed a trick by not integrating Musah into their first-team set-up sooner.
    Musah has the maturity to succeed at the highest levelCredit: Rex Features
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    Floyd Mayweather was ‘TARGETED’ in drive-by shooting that left bodyguard with horrific gunshot wound

    FLOYD MAYWEATHER’s bodyguard was shot protecting the retired boxing star from a “targeted” drive-by shooting that left him with a horrific wound.Greg La Rosa, 39, exclusively recounted to The Sun how he took a bullet to the leg while traveling in a convoy to a hotel in Atlanta, Georgia with Mayweather on April 9, 2018.
    Greg La Rosa has worked for Floyd Mayweather for the last eight yearsCredit: Greg LaRosa
    In 2018 he was shot in the leg in a drive-by shooting he called an ‘ambush’Credit: Greg La Rosa
    The Money Team (TMT) security member said he was driving one of three vehicles in a convoy carrying the boxer and his entourage back to their hotel after an appearance at the Medusa nightclub.
    “I guess Floyd had put the event on his Instagram page,” La Rosa said. “It was a pre-planned party appearance.”
    La Rosa said there were “no issues” inside the club and described the evening as a “great night”.
    Mayweather stayed inside the club for a little over an hour before leaving to head back to the InterContinental Hotel.
    ‘ABSOLUTE AMBUSH’
    The “ambush” happened as the convoy made a left turn towards the hotel’s valet, La Rosa said.
    “All I heard was a big bang on the side of the car,” he recounted. “It almost sounded like a car accident, or as if someone had grabbed a baseball bat and hit the side of the car as hard as they could.”
    La Rosa said he didn’t realize that shots were being fired initially. After a few seconds, however, he dropped down in his seat and clamored for cover.
    “It was an absolute ambush,” he said. “You don’t know where it’s coming from. And as I was going down between the seats, I felt one go into my leg on the inside of my left leg.
    “Honestly it didn’t hurt, but in my head, I knew I was shot. I said, ‘Guys, I’m hit.'”
    In total, police say 12 shots were fired at Mayweather’s convoy. In a press release at the time, Atlanta PD said the shooting was “not random” and appeared to be targeted.
    La Rosa was the only one injured. He was rushed to the hospital by other members of the TMT security team.
    La Rosa was the only person injured in the shooting
    The suspect’s car is seen aboveCredit: Atlanta PD
    The bodyguard said he was in shock when he arrived in hospital, taking the situation “lightly” as they rushed him into a room on a gurney and placed a heart monitor on him.
    As time went on, La Rosa said the wound started to hurt.
    “I felt as if my leg was in a meat grinder,” he said.
    “The bullet was deep in my leg but had come out.  I think the way it came out is that the bullet mushroomed as it hit the metal to go through the door and it hit my leg and went into my leg with my pant leg and my sock there.
    “So as I pulled it up to look, I think I pulled it out,” he continued. “I had a big hole there.”
    ‘IT WAS TARGETED’
    La Rosa, who describes his relationship with Mayweather as “brotherly” and “close”, said the 15-time world title winner called him immediately when he heard that he’d been shot.
    “He told me, ‘Greg, they told me you got hit. Are you OK?’ He was obviously scared and nervous. I said, ‘I’m good. Just get your stuff and get out of here.'”
    La Rosa said Mayweather was insistent that he wanted to come to the hospital and see him.
    “I said, ‘Do this for me and don’t come right now,'” La Rosa said. “I didn’t want him there because that would mean that he was exposed, and I didn’t know who else was there.”
    La Rosa said he’d “put money” on the shooting being targeted.
    “We’re a peaceful bunch. With the exception of when Floyd does his fights, it’s promotional,” he said. “That’s not street stuff, that’s promotional business.
    “It’s just sad to see that people are willing to take people’s lives over stuff like that.”
    La Rosa recovered from his injuries without any lasting effects but still has a large scar.
    La Rosa said he and Floyd share a brotherly bondCredit: Greg LaRosa
    Police released a video of the shooting back in 2018, showing a red Dodge Durango pulling up alongside Mayweather’s convoy at an intersection and opening fire.
    The vehicle sped away from the scene after firing 12 rounds. No arrests were made.
    RELENTLESS WORK
    La Rosa said he’s been working as part of Mayweather’s security detail for the last eight years.
    Describing the role as a “365 day a year, seven days a week, 24 hours a day type job”, his work as part of the TMT entourage has taken him all across the US and beyond, including the Maldives and the 2016 Olympics in Brazil.
    He first encountered Floyd after being employed to work for him for a BET event in Miami in 2013.
    La Rosa said he was one of seven or eight other bodyguards drafted in for the gig. But after his work was done, La Rosa said Floyd approached him with a stack of cash and said, “I need you to stay with me.”
    “The other guys, none of them stayed. So I guess I did something impressive,” he mused.
    In the near-decade since, La Rosa said he and Floyd have forged a “super close” relationship.
    “We’re like brothers,” he said. “More like a family relationship than a boss and employee.”
    La Rosa said he’s been working as part of Mayweather’s security detail for the last eight years
    La Rosa is pictured arguing with Conor McGregor ahead of his bout with Floyd in 2017Credit: Greg LaRosa
    FLOYD IS A ‘REGULAR GUY’
    Working for Floyd varies on a day-to-day basis, La Rosa says, but he described the decorated and undefeated boxer as a kind and humble person, in contrast to the flashy and larger-than-life persona he often projects in the media.
    “Floyd likes to experience regular stuff,” he said. “He doesn’t like high-class restaurants. We go to – he calls them hole in the walls. He loves that kind of stuff.
    “We just go to normal restaurants and sit at normal tables. They’re like, ‘do you want the back room?’ He says ‘No. We’ll sit right there.'”
    La Rosa continued: “He likes to feel as normal as possible. Now that I’ve known him for so long, he’s nothing else but a regular guy. …He’s not high maintenance at all.
    “Floyd’s is very different than other celebrities. I’m not saying all other celebrities are, but there are many that are.
    He also lets us – we went to Bora Bora, Maldives, stuff like that, he doesn’t get us rooms off to the side. We have the rooms that are on the water which cost six or seven thousand dollars a night sometimes those rooms.
    “So we’re experiencing what like an NBA star or something would experience.”
    ‘I’M MORE AWARE NOW’
    La Rosa said he wishes others could experience what it’s like to be a bodyguard for a major star, but insisted it’s not all fun, games, and expensive dinners – as the shooting in April 2018 demonstrated.
    While the incident was frightening, La Rosa said it hasn’t changed much about how he operates, only making him “a little more aware now” when he’s on the job.
    “You’re aware that things can happen. Mostly I was just aware of how easy it is for somebody to just take somebody’s life like it’s nothing. Like you’re just a piece of garbage or something.
    “When you sign up for this job you know these things are possible and that they can happen.
    La Rosa said he wishes others could experience what it’s like to be a bodyguard for a major star, but insisted it’s not all fun and games
    “So when people on the internet say, ‘you’re lucky, you have the best job in the world’, I do feel lucky, but at the same time, you don’t see the crap that goes with it.
    “I have experiences that only the rich and famous have, and that’s kind of the stuff that people see. They see the lights and glamour but they don’t see what’s behind the scenes.
    “It’s a lot of work 24/7. You’re sacrificing. You give up your family life. You can’t make plans to do things. It’s not easy.”
    When he does find spare time for himself, La Rosa said he works in real estate.
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    He also spends time with his aunt Paula, whom he says he gets his “toughness from.”
    “My Aunt Paula, she’s my godmother, she’s always been a big part of my life, growing up. It’s an Italian tradition. Godmother is a very big thing. She’s always been there for me.”
    “She’s so tough. She’s a really tough, tough, tough woman. I can attribute some of my toughness to her.”
    Mayweather retired from the ring in 2017 but has topped up his bank balance with lucrative exhibition events.
    He will take on YouTuber Deji next on November 13 at the Coca-Cola Arena on a Global Titans event.
    Floyd Mayweather is considered one of the greatest boxers of all time. He retired with a perfect professional record of 50-0Credit: Getty Images – Getty
    Floyd Mayweather cried on camera after 1996 Olympic final defeat More

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    Chelsea star N’Golo Kante always ignores team mates when they urge him to upgrade £10k Mini Cooper

    CHELSEA star N’Golo Kante refuses to upgrade his humble Mini Cooper despite all the pressure he gets from team-mates.That is according to Kante’s former colleague Antonio Rudiger, who left Stamford Bridge for Real Madrid last summer.
    Chelsea star N’Golo Kante is considered as one of the humblest players in the worldCredit: Focus Images
    Chelsea star N’Golo Kante has been driving the same Mini Cooper since his Leicester daysCredit: iCelebTV
    Rudiger penned a goodbye letter to fans when he left for Madrid and included an anecdotal story of his time with the star midfielder.
    The France international is considered as one of the humblest players in the world, and his modesty shows by the fact he still drives a Mini Cooper when so many footballers prefer more expensive brands.
    The 31-year-old Chelsea star has been driving that Mini since signing with Leicester in 2015 and it only cost him just north of £10,000.
    The Germany international revealed that he repeatedly advised Kante to upgrade and although he always responded politely he constantly refused to abide as the vehicle has a special meaning.
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    Rudiger told The Players’ Tribune: “Everything with NG [Kante] is authentic. Even the Mini Cooper — people laugh about it, but there is a real story behind it.
    “It was a dream for NG to make it to the Premier League, coming from where he came from, and the Mini was the first car that he bought when he got to England. So for him, it is not just a car. It has a deep meaning.
    “Of course, the boys always joke with him about it, but I am telling you — this man is so polite that he just tells you what you want to hear.
    “Someone will say, ‘NG, you know what car is really cool? A Mercedes, bro. I can see you whippin’ a black Mercedes’.
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    “And NG will just look at them genuinely and say, ‘Yes, O.K. We will think about it. Thank you, that’s a good idea’.
    “But he’s just playing with you!!! At the end of the day, you know that you’re going to be seeing that Mini at the training ground for the next 10 years.” More