There is no doubt that Junior de Barranquilla generates happiness among his followers and damages those who are not. The moves and matches of the Tiburón team do not go unnoticed and, as Juniorism gets excited, those who do not belong to the rojiblanco environment have to apply Caladryl when the team announces contracts or wins games or titles.
It is possible that, at the level of the fans who follow their teams, this could be considered normal. What’s not normal is for the owner of a big team to complain about Junior’s investments when he can, but he doesn’t do so by relying on “an economic plan” that he can’t figure out.
In other words, it does and doesn’t allow it. The worst part is not, the worst part is that he wants to manage his economy and Junior’s as well.
It happens to some technicians. When Junior beats them, or they can’t beat him when Junior visits them, the press conferences are predictable. His team deserved the win, Junior got more than him, the Barranquilla team this and that.
What they don’t see, in their way of rejecting Junior, is that if their team earned more and didn’t achieve it, they should work more to overcome the inefficiency they self-described. If they believe they deserved more, that they pretended, that they arrived, that they dominated and didn’t get the win, it’s because their team is the killer of inefficiency.
Now they have expanded their repertoire of complaints about what Juan Cruz Real does or does not say. The youth trainer has aggravated their sensitivity. They think he is always referring to them. Poor beasts, Cruz Real chases them every time he goes to a press conference.
Amid what Cruz Real may or may not be saying and some of his colleagues feeling offended, while they have always practiced the abusive technique, I firmly believe these are more direct messages to Junior than to the Argentine coach himself.
Only Junior makes them itch. First, because it came and went quickly. And another, because he never came.
Grow up in one go. Work and make it work. How ugly is it to snoop through the window, the neighbor’s house, and then practice the cantinflesco art of bla, bla, bla…
Source: El heraldo

Jason Jack is an experienced technology journalist and author at The Nation View. With a background in computer science and engineering, he has a deep understanding of the latest technology trends and developments. He writes about a wide range of technology topics, including artificial intelligence, machine learning, software development, and cybersecurity.