16, January 2024
Song says Onana’s absence from Guinea game is logical 0
After a grueling effort to reach the Africa Cup of Nations on time, Manchester United goalkeeper André Onana failed to make the Cameroon squad for the five-time champions’ opening game.
Onana was omitted from Coach Rigobert Song’s squad for the 1-1 draw against Guinea on Monday, despite the player’s rush from England to reach the Charles Konan Banny Stadium in Yamoussoukro on time.
“It’s logical. He arrived at 4 o’clock in the morning. How do you want him to play?” Song said after the game. The coach added: “He’s part of the group.”
Onana had played for United on Sunday, in a 2-2 draw with visiting Tottenham in the Premier League, then flew to Abidjan in Ivory Coast. From there the player had reported difficulties getting another flight to Yamoussoukro, forcing him to make the journey by road instead.
Such a trip would normally take 2½ hours, but heavy traffic in Abidjan and traffic restrictions imposed by police for Africa Cup security measures mean most journeys during the tournament face delays.
Onana quit the national team after he was sent home from the 2022 World Cup following a dispute with Song, but returned after apparently winning back the coach’s favor.
Source: AP
17, January 2024
Danish monarch publishes a book three days into reign 0
Three days after becoming the king of Denmark, Frederik X has published a book seemingly out of nowhere.
The book has come as a surprise to Danes, and media outlets have been hastily live-blogging lines from it.
“The King’s Word” promises Frederik’s thoughts on topics including Denmark’s place in the world and his relationship with his wife, Queen Mary.
Frederik was crowned king on Sunday after his mother, Margrethe II, abdicated on New Year’s Eve.
The book costs up to 250 Danish Krone (£29; €33.50) and is around 110 pages long.
The book was based on interviews conducted over the past year-and-a-half
It was written with Jens Andersen, who authored Frederik’s 2017 biography, and is based on interviews conducted over the last year-and-a-half.
In one section, Frederik says that, as a child, he had difficulty accepting he would become King of Denmark, saying he “just wanted to be like all other boys of my age”.
“I remember my 18th birthday as something similar to the end of the world. It was the feeling that now everything that was fun and exciting was coming to an end. Fortunately, it didn’t,” Frederik says.
Later in the book, the king also reportedly discusses his faith, saying that he and his Australian-born wife say prayers with their children every evening.
He also talks about family life, saying that his father – the late Prince Henrik of Denmark, who died in 2018 – was “very patriarchal” and “tried to pass that pattern on to his two sons”.
Frederik says: “I have learned a lot from having a wife who, from time to time, reminds me that of course I am not always right, and that my words are not automatically believed, just because I am a man in the house.”
Tens of thousands of people turned out to watch King Frederik X succeed his mother as the monarch of Denmark on Sunday.
Blinking back tears, Frederik told a cheering crowd outside Christiansborg Castle in Copenhagen that he hoped to become “a unifying king” for the future.
His mother, Margarethe II, abdicated after 52 years on the throne.
Source: BBC