Sunday, June 5, 2016

3 Reasons Why Arsenal Signing Jamie Vardy Would Work

If Arsenal really are going after Jamie Vardy, then it's only right that we all hypothesise over whether it's going to work, right?


News that Arsene Wenger was going after the Leicester City forward caught everyone - yes, everyone - off guard, not least because it represents such a vast shift from his usual policy in the transfer market of signing younger players who can offer potential for improvement. Maybe a change of tack is what is needed; maybe it isn't. Vardy's mooted arrival at the Emirates is likely to be a divisive move by the Gunners - let's take a look at both sides of the argument..

Three reasons Why Jamie Vardy is the perfect signing for Arsenal...

Vardy Scores Goals, Arsenal Need Goals

The logic is simple: Arsenal have long been after a 20-goal-a-season centre-forward, and Wenger has long persisted that there isn't one out there who represents sufficient value to make him worth signing; Vardy is a 20-goal striker.

He scored 24 Premier League goals last season; fewer only than Harry Kane. His chance conversion rate of 25.8 per cent was equal to that of Sergio Aguero, and far better than Kane's.

Predictably, Arsenal missed more chances the football statisticians would call 'clear cut' than any other team in the Premier League in 2015/16, letting 69 such chances pass them by. Put a clinical Vardy at the spearhead of that attack and he solves all the problems. Simple.

He Will Offer Arsenal One Thing They Lack


Jamie Vardy proved to be more than just a goalscoring threat in the Premier League last season. At full pelt, challenge him in the penalty area at your considerable risk...

Arsenal were notably light in the penalty-winning department - the extended absences of the pacey Danny Welbeck and Theo Walcott may have played a part there - and Jamie Vardy brings you penalty shouts: lots of them.

Age Is But A Number 


Vardy was a late bloomer. He didn't burst on to the scene as a plucky teenager; hell, he didn't even play much football after he all but gave up on a professional career when he was abandoned by Sheffield Wednesday.

So the fact that he is 29 - and just one year younger than the depressingly slow Wayne Rooney - does not matter. He is in the peak years of his career and those will continue for a while yet.

A certain Ian Wright joined the club at a similar age and went on to become the club's record goalscorer. Don't expect the same heights from Vardy, but don't for a second start to think he is too old to to command a £20m outlay.
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Leicester City striker, Jamie Vardy May Be Unveiled By Arsenal Football Club Anytime Soon

Leicester City striker, Jamie Vardy may be unveiled by Arsenal football club anytime soon as the England forward is already undergoing medicals at the Emirates.



The Gunners hope to complete their shock £20million swoop for Jamie Vardy in the next 24 hours.

They have begun formal negotiations after triggering Vardy’s release clause at Leicester City, and the deal is expected to be completed before the start of Euro 2016.

The 29-year-old wants a four year deal worth around £120,000-a-week which is double his current Leicester contract.

According to the Guardian (UK), Arsenal want to sign the striker after learning that Danny Welbeck will miss nine months due to injury.

Vardy scored 24 goals in the Premier League last season to lead Leicester City to their first Premier League title.

Read Also: 3 Reasons Why Arsenal Signing Jamie Vardy Will Work

It was also disclosed that Arsene Wenger wants to get all his transfer businesses done before the start of EURO 2016 having failed to sign an outfield player last summer.

Recall that Arsenal completed their first signing of the summer with Swiss midfielder Granit Xhaka pictured with the new club jersey in a photo shoot.

The Gunners are believed to have agreed a fee of around £30million for the 23-year-old, who will add leadership, excellent technical ability and a penchant for a red cards to their midfield.

The photos of Xhaka in an Arsenal shirt emerged on twitter and they looked real with the midfielder wearing the club’s new jersey.
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[PHOTOS] Former President, Goodluck Jonathan Spotted In Heathrow For UK Speaking Tour

To put to rest reports he was on exile, former President of Nigeria, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan temporarily halted his multi-city speaking tour and took some time to return to Nigeria.

Goodluck Jonathan Spotted In Heathrow For UK Speaking Tour


He is now back in the UK where he is scheduled to give a number of talks and interviews. Widely respected globally for his democratic credentials, the former president has become a sought after speaker.




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Saturday, June 4, 2016

Muhammad Ali, 'the legendary boxer', dies aged 74

Muhammad Ali, 'the legendary boxer', dies aged 74


The world is mourning the death of boxing legend, Muhammad Ali, who has died aged 74 after being admitted to a hospital in Pheonix on Thursday. Ali had suffered from Parkinson's syndrome since 1984. His condition was complicated by a respiratory illness.

When the news arrived that Ali had died aged 74 in Phoenix, Arizona,after a 32-year battle with Parkinson’s disease, its inevitability did not soften the blow for admirers who numbered in their billions. He lived in an era of mass communication that led John Lennon to claim the Beatles were more popular than Jesus Christ; Ali made a compelling case to push them into third place.

Muhammad Ali training ahead of his 1976 heavyweight fight against British Richard Dunn at the Olympiahalle in Munich, Germany. Photograph: Istvan Bajzat/EPA

He housed such an improbable quantity of warmth that it seemed the love he generated could sustain the planet. He was for many, as a gauche pop song of the 70s went, the Black Superman. Such adoration will appear ludicrous to a generation who knew him only as a sick old man, a long-retired famous fighter whose rare and faltering public appearances usually coincided with the death of one of his contemporaries, most notably Joe Frazier in November, 2011. Yet, for those who saw him box, listened to him talk and watched him grow into a media phenomenon of his own creation, it was easy to regard Ali as unlike the rest of us. The paradox was he was like all of us, in one way or another.


He was the funniest athlete of his era, of that there can be little argument. In the end, after a life of serial duplicity, innocent and otherwise, he found serenity. He used his illness, too, to turn pity into love. He forgave anyone who ever did him down, and there have always been plenty of those scoundrels in professional boxing. He held not a single grudge, and gave away a thousand little bits of himself, from a smile to an autograph, unloading the tat of his trade – gloves, shorts, robes, even a signed cigarette paper – to those who valued such things. Everyone wanted a piece of Ali, and, in the end, he let them take what they wanted. He found riches elsewhere.


Which brings to mind an oft-repeated Ali story. A nervous flier but a bigger egoist, Ali once refused to buckle up when a flight attendant asked him to do so moments before take-off. “Superman don’t need no seatbelt,” he protested in mock indignation. “Superman don’t need no airplane,” she is alleged to have replied. The anecdote describes both his ego and his attachment to mischief-making – and it might even be true. The Ali myth-making machine was prodigious.


Malcolm X and Muhammad Ali high five while surrounded by jubilant fans after he beat Sonny Liston. Photograph: Bob Gomel/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Image

Ali was many things to many people. To older connoisseurs of boxing, to his mother, Odessa, and, until his own end, to Joe Frazier, he was always Cassius Clay. He was the brash and beautiful young black man from Louisville who, “shook up the world”. He did that by beating the unbeatable beast that was Sonny Liston, in Miami in February, 1964, as Cassius Clay and thereafter continued to do it, time and again, asMuhammad Ali.

Religion and politics aside, Ali remained a prisoner of his original vocation: boxing. When it was said and done, what he did best was knock out great fighters. To most (but not all) of those who did not have to suffer embarrassment against him in the ring, Ali was an inspiration. So many young men of his era all over the world took up boxing because they wanted to move like him, box like him, talk like him, be like him. That was impossible, however, because Ali dealt in a singular magic, inside and outside the ring. This most beguiling of dream-sellers bewitched opponents with the power of his personality, much as Mike Tyson did with his intimidating knockout power.

Ali did not brood like Tyson, though, nor like Liston. Indeed, he carried none of their innate menace, taking an unusually theatrical route towards intimidation and self-promotion. His air was invariably lighthearted and his life-long addiction to parlour tricks ensured he retained his innocence and sense of wonder until the final bell. He also loved attention and would tell some outrageous fibs to generate headlines.

In a sport of lies, he was the ultimate deceiver. An early example of his mischief was the iconic photo of a young Cassius Clay, posing as if sparring underwater in boxing shorts, a striking image which graced the cover of Life magazine in 1961. The photographer, Flip Schulke, and the publishers were unaware at the time that Ali could not swim. He performed similar legerdemain on dry land.

As a ring artist, he was, for much of his career, peerless. Nobody – certainly at heavyweight – boxed so brilliantly but with such disregard for orthodoxy, which perplexed his opponents and annoyed the experts. He often led with his right, sometimes with both feet off the ground, as if levitating. He retreated in straight lines. He kept his hands down and his chin perilously in the air. He would grab and hold, illegally, frustrating opponents and kidding referees. All these misdemeanours broke boxing’s verities of technique and etiquette. Yet, until his legs and brain began to lose syncopation, he was untouchable, literally and metaphorically.


Muhammad Ali spars with Floyd Patterson during the World Heavyweight Championship fight in 1965. Photograph: Allsport/Getty Images

Ali often humiliated opponents, with no dispensation for fellow black fighters, from Liston to Frazier. In a 1965 fight he made the inoffensive Floyd Patterson into a public punchbag for a lot longer than was warranted, because he reckoned the former champion was a spokesman for the establishment Ali had come to regard as the enemy. In February, 1967, shortly before the first phase of his career was to be cut short by the courts and boxing authorities, he forced Ernie Terrell – again in Houston – to suffer for the full 15 rounds that were standard in championship fights at the time, asking him repeatedly, “What’s my name?”, punishment for Terrell’s refusal to acknowledge his Muslim moniker.


White fighters, however, were not usually taunted so ruthlessly. Ali liked Henry Cooper. He took pity on Richard Dunn. He had a sneaking regard for those twins of obduracy, Chuck Wepner and George Chuvalo. But he did not need their approval or respect, as he demanded of Liston, Frazier, Patterson and Terrell. Through perversity or pride, Ali was often in conflict with his own people, a rebel within a rebellion. There were a significant number of African Americans who were uncomfortable with his allegiance to the Nation – and none of his perceived enemies suffered the backlash more profoundly than Joe Frazier, a decent man whom Ali denigrated for most of their parallel careers, ostensibly for show and money, but also because he could. It was a stain on his character not easily removed.


Muhammad Ali is flanked by his wife Lonnie, left, and his daughter Hana as they watch his daughter Laila Ali make her boxing debut. Photograph: Joe Traver/Reuters

Aside from aiding some of the best sports writing ever, Ali heavily influenced all facets of popular culture: from TV, to cinema to music. Some good, some bad but I’m sure we all have our personal favourites.


The president of Ireland, Michael D Higgins, wrote a tribute especially the bit about rights strikingly missing in some of the world’s most prosperous nations.

" Many will remember the wit, grace and beauty he brought to boxing and some will recall his visits to Ireland. All over the world people also flocked to hear him offer his view on the achievement of democracy and particularly equal rights when they were so strikingly missing in some of the richest countries of the world. He brought his message of freedom and respect for people of all races to all the continents of the world.

As a sportsman and humanitarian, and as someone who struggled for a very long time with one of the most debilitating illnesses, he offered courage in the face of great difficulties. He was intent on going on communicating right to the very end".


The Democrat nomination hopeful Bernie Sanders says: “Muhammad Ali was the greatest, not only an extraordinary athlete but a man of great courage and humanity.”

And the Republican Donald Trump has weighed in: “Muhammad Ali is dead at 74! A truly great champion and a wonderful guy. He will be missed by all!” It would be too easy to score cheap political points here by contrasting with various other Trump tweets, so for the best that we leave it there.


Cassius Clay’s handlers hold him back after he is announced as the new heavyweight champion of the world after beating Sonny Liston for the first time

A statement from the WWE on Ali’s passing

"WWE is saddened to learn that two-time world heavyweight boxing championMuhammad Ali passed away at age 74 on June 3, 2016,” it starts, before detailing Ali’s perhaps lesser known links to wrestling.

"Ali also made history for his historic boxer vs. wrestler match against WWE Hall of Famer Antonio Inoki in Tokyo on June 26, 1976. The fight is regarded as a precursor to modern mixed martial arts. In 1985, Ali made his mark in WWE history when he was one of the special guest referees for the main event of the first WrestleMania at Madison Square Garden. The bout featured WWE Champion Hulk Hogan and pop culture icon Mr. T against "Mr. Wonderful” Paul Orndorff and “Rowdy” Roddy Piper. During the contest, Ali climbed up onto the ring apron and took a swing at Piper."

"WWE extends its condolences to Ali’s family, friends and fans."


A statement from former US President Bill Clinton

"Hillary and I are saddened by the passing of Muhammad Ali. From the day he claimed the Olympic gold medal in 1960, boxing fans across the world knew they were seeing a blend of beauty and grace, speed and strength that may never be matched again. We watched him grow from the brash self-confidence of youth and success into a manhood full of religious and political convictions that led him to make tough choices and live with the consequences. Along the way we saw him courageous in the ring, inspiring to the young, compassionate to those in need, and strong and good-humored in bearing the burden of his own health challenges.

I was honored to award him the Presidential Citizens Medal at the White House, to watch him light the Olympic flame, and to forge a friendship with a man who, through triumph and trials, became even greater than his legend. Our hearts go out to Lonnie, his children, and his entire family."

US President Bill Clinton presents Muhammed Ali and his trainer Angelo Dundee (right) with an award in October, 2000. Photograph: Reuters Photographer / Reuters/REUTERS

Muhammad Ali was never shy about lauding his own balletic talents in the boxing ring, and this photograph shows why. His ability to move away from his opponent, Joe Frazier, with such grace makes Frazier’s haymaker look utterly crude. Ali appears to be untouchable. How ironic, then, that Frazier won the contest that was dubbed Fight of The Century.

Ali the fighter will be remembered best, probably, for two controversial nights of high drama against Liston – the second containing the infamous phantom punch – another when Cooper embarrassed him with the sweetest of all his fabled left hooks at Wembley in 1963, the first and last contests of his trilogy against Frazier, the Fight of the Century at Madison Square Garden in 1971 and in Manila four years later, and his 1974 miracle after midnight in the jungle of Zaire against George Foreman. To beat the ogre Foreman against universal expectation at 32 pleased him more than nearly any other victory. It was a shame, yet inevitable, that he would carry on past the next defining contest of his later days, the dismantling of Frazier in 1975 that left both of them physically and spiritually wrecked.


SEE ALSO: Muhammad Ali - 25 Best Photographs Of The Legendary Boxer
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Friday, June 3, 2016

See Why Federal Government Scrapped Post UTME Test To Improve Quality Of Education In Nigeria

The Federal Government has scrapped post-Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations, UTME, as a pre-condition to gaining admission into universities in the country. The government and stakeholders in education sector also pegged 180 as the benchmark for 2016 admission into universities, polytechnics and colleges of education to improve the quality of education in Nigeria.

Candidates writing UTME 

These decisions were reached  at the 2016 Combined Policy Meeting on Admissions to Universities, Polytechnics and other higher institutions in Nigeria. The Minister of Education, Malam Adamu Adamu, while declaring open the meeting, said since the federal government and stakeholders had confidence in the examinations conducted by the Joint Admissions and Matriulation Board, JAMB, there was no need for other examinations to be conducted by universities after JAMB exams. He said:

As far as I am concerned, the nation has confidence in what JAMB is doing, the universities should not be holding another examinations and if the universities have any complain against JAMB, let them bring it and then we address it.

The ministry expects that all candidates given admission must be from JAMB. but JAMB must stop issuing admission letters, JAMB should get in touch with institutions before offering admission to students.
The closing date is November 30th and no university should exceed its admission capacity and any tertiary institution that doesn’t follow the rule, the ministry would start sanctioning them.
Institutions should stop admitting students into un-accredited courses in their institutions. The institutions should stop writing JAMB to increase their quotas because JAMB cannot do that.” 

The minister also said institutions should stop writing JAMB to increase their quotas as there were relevant agencies to do so.

Adamu also reminded the stakeholders that the criteria for admission was still in force, and asked the institutions to adhere to it.

Merit is 45%, catchment area 35% and educational development in less developed states 20%, this is for federal universities and for states universities, merit 40%, catchment 40 % and less developed local governments get 20%,’’ he said.

The Minister also asked the Joint Admissions Matriculation Board to stop extra charges on several categories of changes on admissions such as the change of course, change of school and others. The Registrar of JAMB, Professor Dibu Ojerinde, while talking to journalists after the meeting, said institutions were free to go above the 180 benchmark.

180 benchmark is even, no one will go below it this year. Universities can go above it. This year, we have more than enough candidates because over 1.2 million candidates scored above 180, so we have enough candidates this year.
There won't be any written post-U TME but they would screen the candidates. It is a necessary thing to screen the candidates. ‘’We agree and the Minister of Education also agrees but the issue of taking another examination is no longer going to happen, he said.
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(Photos) 4 Suspected Cultist Who Beheaded 2 Students Of Abia State University Has Been Arrested

The DSS Director in Abia State, Mr Korade Kamoju has paraded the 4 suspected cultists who killed and beheaded 2 students of ABSU on March 12th, 2016.



Speaking during the parading of the suspects, the Governor, Dr. Okezie Ikpeazu described the cultists as fierce and wicked, he regretted how some children who are sent to school could abandon schooling and turned to evil, stating that they represent kidnappers and everything that is bad about the society.

Further, he wondered how many lives that must have been wasted by the activities of the cultists and said that God will judge and sanction them appropriately.


Dr. Ikpeazu said that anyone who kills and goes ahead to use the heads of his victims as goal posts must have gone to the limits and assured that the full weights of law will fall on them, adding that it will serve as deterrent to other cultists and thanked the security agencies for a job well done
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Wednesday, June 1, 2016

[Happening Now] 5 Men Being Beaten Up Mercilessly For Raping A 5yr Old Girl

Sources has it that the ongoing beat-down is taking place in Owerri,  capital of Imo state, Nigeria.

The men in the below pics,  allegedly raped an 8yrs old girl... More update about the news later.


rape case

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Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Arsenal Boldly Rejects Offer From Barcelona For Key Man

Arsenal Boldly Rejects Offer From Barcelona For Key Man


FC Barcelona are once again being linked with a move for Hector Bellerin. With the Spanish giants looking to lure the 21-year-old back to his home country, according to the Daily Star.

The European giants apparently made a move to sign him on Wednesday, but were given an instant and firm rejection by Arsenal. We have no intention of selling him at any price, as the right-back is unquestionably one of the brightest young talents in football today.

While it may well be true that Barca are interested in Bellerin – with the La Masia product potentially seen as a long-term replacement for Dani Alves – an approach is completely pointless.

Not only do we have no intention of letting the full-back leave, but the player himself clearly wants to remain with Arsenal. He has recently stated his desire to stay with the club, insisting that he can’t see himself playing anywhere else (via the Daily Mail).

I say every year that England is my home now. He said

I've lived there for many years; my family and my girlfriend are there. I’m very happy so I don’t see myself anywhere other than at Arsenal.”

Bellerin may have started out with Barcelona, but it’s Arsenal where he’s really grown and it’s Arsenal that gave him the opportunity to shine on the big stage. He’s been with us for years and is clearly a real Gooner at this point, and we need more of this type of loyalty at the club.
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