What if it goes wrong? Ger Geurts had the same Parkinson’s surgery as Ernst Daniël Smid, but a different result

What if, as a Parkinson’s patient, you hear a success story about an operationthat can significantly reduce your symptoms, but that doesn’t seem to workthat way for you? It happened to Ger Geurts, who contracted the disease afteryears of working in roses.

Like more and more people, Parkinson’s patient Ger Geurts underwent the so-called Deep Brain Stimulation operation. A brain operation against thecomplaints he experienced due to Parkinson’s disease. Success stories receiveda lot of attention, including those of singer and presenter Ernst Daniël Smid.The operation turned out to work very well for him. But unfortunately itturned out differently for Ger, just like with other people. He tells hisstory.

Fail

“I can’t get any worse, I can only win,” says Parkinson’s patient Ger Geurtsin the podcast Do I get Parkinson’s? from EenVandaag reporter Laura Korsbefore undergoing surgery. He gives his life an unsatisfactory at that point.Too often he has to deal with the off-moments characteristic of PwPs. Thoseare times when his body feels restless and annoying and he can’t concentrateon normal daily activities.

Medication helps to suppress those moments, but if the disease worsens, thereis a moment when another increase in the dose is no longer possible. Thedamage to other organs would then become too great and there is a risk ofanother nasty side effect: hypermobility. In addition, the body makes grossuncontrollable movements with the arms and legs. “That looks very strange,”says Geurts. The operation can then offer solace.

info

What is Deep Brain Stimulation Surgery?

Electrodes are placed in the brain through two holes drilled in the skull.They are in contact with a box via subcutaneous cables behind the ears. Thatbox is also under the skin, just below the collarbone. From that box,electrical currents are sent to the brain, which reduces Parkinson’s symptoms.

‘Can do everything again’

Patient experiences vary widely. For singer and presenter Ernst Daniël Smid,the result of the brain operation was extremely positive. In the talk show OP1he said that he could do everything again, after he could no longer even dresshimself. Now he can sing, write and type again.

But Geurts’ experience is less positive, as the podcast shows. The more thansufficient that he hoped to be able to give his life after the operation hasnot materialized. “You have a DBS operation applied and then you think: afterthat it will go like a train again. But then it is a bit disappointing indeed.

Positive stories such as those of Smid create great expectations among otherpatients, brands and practitioners in practice. The nurse who assists Geurtsmust always temper the expectations of people who hope for an equally bigchange. And that is a tedious task.

embed

Post this item on your own site

See what doctors did during surgery at Ger

Effects are not so great for everyone

After the interview with the singer, Parkinson’s expert Bas Bloem alsoreceives many more requests from people who also want the DBS operation andexpect a lot from it. “Of course you notice that, if such a celebrity,especially Ernst Daniël Smid, is larger than life , that shouts on TV. ” Healso has to temper expectations, because the effects are not so great foreveryone.

“We are now talking about DBS, but it has also been the case with cannabis.After a positive story about it on TV, I received all sorts of questions aboutit in my treatment room,” says Bloem. “In a broader sense you can say; peopleare desperate and cling to everything. I even see people who take out amortgage on their house because a Chinese miracle doctor offers stem cells,while there is zero point zero scientific evidence for this.”

Depressed by disappointing results

Psychiatrist Odile van den Heuvel recognizes the story. “Two years ago therewas also a TV broadcast about this operation, in which only a positive storywas told. People then think it is a panacea.” But she then sees theconsequences in the treatment room.

Some people become seriously depressed because the results are disappointing.”People who respond well to DBS surgery are put back in time 10 years, and cando a lot again. For others, the gain is more subtle. The variation in effectis large with almost every treatment in medicine.” According to Van denHeuvel, neurologists should therefore paint a nuanced picture of the expectedeffects.

‘The hope is still there’

Geurts remains hopeful that his situation will improve after all. “They giveit 3 to 12 months for all the settings to be optimal and every person isdifferent.” Geurts would love to play golf again, but whether that will workis the question. The operation has not brought him what he hoped so far. “Notyet, but it can still come. The hope is still there,” he says.

He would like his life to be a seven. “But I now keep it at a small 6.5. Afterthe operation you think: they turn on that box, and together with themedication, you go like a train again. But that is not the case.”

Mundial Qatar 2022: El VAR, Inglaterra y la ‘Schadenfreude’ | Mundial Qatar 2022

El VAR functionala. Lo que no funciona es el factor humano. Los penaltis pormanos absurdas no son culpa del VAR: son culpa de una normativa decidida porlos humanos. Los fueras de juego por milímetros no son culpa del VAR, sino dequien cree que uno o dos o cinco milímetros son suficientes para dar ventajaal delantero o quien opina que el hombro, cuyo principio y final puededepender del diseño de una camiseta, puede ser un factor decisorio en un juegoque consiste esencialmente en dominar un objeto esférico con los pies. Elproblema no es qué dicen las imágenes sobre un posible penalti sino ladisparidad de criterio entre los árbitros sobre la interpretación de una mismajugada. El VAR ha llegado para quedarse pero el factor humano ha de mejorar.Si funciona en el cricket y en el rugby, ¿por qué no puede funcionar en elfútbol? ¿Por qué no podemos oír las conversaciones entre los árbitros de lasala VAR y el del campo? ¿Por qué no se explica a los hinchas en directo lasrazones de una u otra decisión, como sí se hace en esos deportes?

Even Kim Kardashian dances to it: Ch!pz is back thanks to TikTok | Music

Ch!pz was an indispensable part of the Top 40 for years, but it has now beenfifteen years since the group scored a number 1 hit. Yet Kim Kardashian andher daughter North are also suddenly dancing 1001 Arabian Nights. Why is thesong from 2004 suddenly a hype and does this also mean the return of the band?

“We were slightly hysterical,” the members of Ch!pz tell ANP when they saw KimKardashian doing some dance steps to their song. “Having fun with my Northie,”the reality star wrote with a video of them performing a choreography to thesong that originated on TikTok.

But where do we know Ch!pz from? Cowboy Carnival and CH!PZ In Black : theyare three of the biggest hits of the 2000s. The group was founded in 2003through auditions and already consisted of Rachel van den Hoogen, KevinHellenbrand, Cilla Niekoop and Peter Rost. Their first single hit the markimmediately. CH!PZ In Black (Who You Gonna Call) takes second place in theTop 40 and first place in the Single Top 100.

This is followed by four number 1 hits in both lists: Cowboy , 1001 ArabianNights , One, Two, Three! and Carnival. Due to the great success in theNetherlands, the team behind Ch!pz is aiming for international success and notwithout results. Cowboy also comes first in Germany and even hits the chartsin the musically competitive United Kingdom. Hit success has also beenachieved in Austria, Switzerland and parts of Scandinavia.

As quickly as Ch!pz emerged, they disappeared from the scene a few yearslater. Until 2007, a few top 10 hits in the Netherlands follow, a year laterthere is another television program, but after that it becomes quieter. In2010, the management decides that the group is no longer successful enough andso Ch!pz is dissolved.

Unfortunately, this content cannot be displayedWe do not have permission forthe necessary cookies. Accept the cookies to view this content.

Wijzig cookie-instellingen

The resurrection of Ch!pz

In 2018, Ch!pz announces a tentative comeback, initially as a joke. There willbe no new music yet, but performances are planned. They can be found atfestivals and at Qmusic’s Foute Party.

The group is now suddenly in the spotlight again because new dances are beinginvented on TikTok on the song 1001 Arabian Nights. Many who grew up withCh!pz will still remember the choreography from the video clip. But on TikTokit looks completely different.

Ch!pz cleverly responds to this by recording a video together with influencerThomas Brok. The group does the original choreography, Brok the TikTok dance.This video has been viewed over sixteen million times at the time of writing.Kardashian’s video count has reached 8.5 million. The song has already beenused in more than three million creations on the app.

With these high numbers on TikTok, you would also expect significant growth onSpotify. Although the popularity of the song is picking up somewhat, thecounter is still stuck at fifteen million plays. This may be due to the factthat the artist and song title are not mentioned in most TikTok videos withthe Ch!pz song.

The members of Ch!pz are very enthusiastic about this new attention. Theythink it’s special that a song from 2005 manages to unleash all this, theytell various media. Booking requests are also pouring in again. Whether thiswill also lead to their own concerts and new music, they do not dare to saywith certainty to ANP.

“The people who knew us from the past and now run into us all the time say:It’s great that you’re back. We love your music, but come up with somethingnew. Maybe we should sit down for it, because we hear it so often now.”

Lewandowski se mide con Mbappe | Mundial Qatar 2022

Lewandowski.

No sera un duelo parejo. Mbappé, como Pelé, gano un Mundial con 18 años. Es ungigante emergent a la cabeza del actual equipo campeón. Lewandowski, a la edadde 34, ha iniciado el declive sin haber conseguido ningún éxito notable con suselección. El polaco no se clasificó para los Mundiales de 2010 y 2014, semarchó de Rusia sin meter ni un solo gol en 2018, y acaba de completar unapobre phase de grupos en Qatar, en donde solo marcó un tanto contra ArabiaSaudí, el 2 -0, cuando el partido estaba roto. Paraphrasando a Deschamps, losbalones insignificantes de Polonia son menos significativos que los balonesdel Barcelona, ​​el Bayern, o el Dortmund de Klopp.

El exiguo rendimiento de Lewandowski con su selección es objeto de debat enPolonia, en donde los aficionados intentan explicarse por qué la estrella quegolea en el Bayern o en el Barcelona pasa inadvertida cuando lo rodean suspaisanos. Ayer se lo volvieron a preguntar al seleccionador, CeszlavMichniewicz. El hombre suspiro. “Es una larga historia”, dijo; “y no puedorevelarla del todo”.

Michniewicz explicó benevolente que Lewandowski, a diferencia de delanteroscomo Mbappé, no es capaz de ser productivo para su equipo si su equipopreviamente no le suministra balones en el área, para que él los empuje.“Contra Mexico y Argentina tuvimos problemas en la transición”, dijo. “Nofuimos precisos para crear condiciones suficientes para Robert. El necesitaestar en el area. Ahí lo llevamos contra Arabia Saudí y pudo meter cuatrogoles. Contra Argentina nos interceptaron los pases en el mediocampo y nopudimos aprovechar los contragolpes. Para sacar todo el partido de nuestrosatacantes necesitamos llevarlos al lugar adecuado”. Hostigado para quecomparase a Mbappé con su némesis polaca, Deschamps perdió la sonrisa: “Sonjugadores muy diferentes. Lewandowski es muy eficaz en la zona de definition.Hay que limitar su influencia evitando que reciba balones en nuestra area. Másallá de su inteligencia, de su habilidad técnica, él emplea muy bien sucuerpo. No nos queremos enfocar en el pero no debemos perder de vista que sufunción es aparecer para concretar el peligro”.

El primer Mundial de mi hijo, el último de Messi | Mundial Qatar 2022

No sé si vas a entender las coincidencias históricas, pero quizá veas a tupadre faltar el respeto a la investidura en algunas ocasiones. Verás que nocanta el himno, que su sueño es ser puteado por la hinchada de River entera yque puede ir en bermudas y ojotas a reuniones en la Casa Rosada. A mí eso meenamoró y quizá habla de mi propio origen porque yo llegué en el año delMundial de España 1982.

Amy Robach ‘Went to Mediation’ with Andrew Shue and Was ‘Waiting’ to Announce Their Split: Source

Amy Robach was waiting to announce her split from estranged husband AndrewShue before her relationship with her GMA3 co-anchor, TJ Holmes, was madepublic.

A source tells PEOPLE that the journalist, 49, and Shue, 55, were “about readyto settle their divorce” prior to breaking news about Robach and Holmes’relationship.

“They were waiting on [the settlement] to tell people,” the source says of thepair, who got married in 2010. “The whole point of why she waited to share thenews that her marriage was over: she went to [divorce] mediation.”

“The woman had cancer for a long time. She was very preoccupied with that,”the source continues. “Stuff with her and Andrew was difficult starting earlysummer this year and they had issues before.”

Shue has not spoken publicly on the matter and has not responded to PEOPLE’snumerous attempts for comment.

RELATED: TJ Holmes Grew Closer to Amy Robach When He ‘Was Very MuchThere’ for Her amid ‘Heartache’: Source

Amy Robach and Andrew Shue RelationshipTimeline

Amy Robach and Andrew Shue Relationship Timeline

The source also notes the connection between Robach and Holmes — who has beenmarried to attorney Marilee Fiebig since 2010 — grew over time, but theypreviously denied any possibility of a romance, even when others noticed it.

“Everyone knew they were close friends and had good chemistry. She was goingthrough a lot. There was a point at which, several years ago, another _GMA_cast member had sort of made a joke with TJ about how close he was with Amyand he was very embarrassed,” the source says. “They had each gone throughdifferent things and people knew it was a friendship.”

“They joked how good their chemistry was, but they shut it down and made itclear they were each going through their own stuff and there was nothingbetween them,” the source adds. “She and TJ just did things together all thetime. Her daughter babysat for his daughter. They were open about it. Theirlives were intertwined because of work and they were best friends, so whentheir marriages ended, he was there for her and it was a very naturaltransition.”

Story continues

RELATED: Andrew Shue Deletes Instagram Pics of Amy Robach After News ofHer Relationship with ‘GMA’ Co-Anchor TJ Holmes

Amy Robach and TJHolmesAmyRobach and TJHolmes

Amy Robach and TJ Holmes

Dia Dipasupil/Getty

Robach and Holmes’ relationship was made public on Wednesday after photossurfaced of them holding hands in a car, enjoying a vacation in upstate NewYork and cozying up at a bar in New York City.

Hours later, both journalists shut down their Instagram accounts. Shue alsoremoved all images of Robach on his Instagram Wednesday following the news.

A second source previously told PEOPLE similar sentiments about how Robach andHolmes’ relationship developed over time.

“Amy was going through a heartache and TJ was very much there for her andhelpful, and that is when they started something,” the source said. “They hadno shame going out together and have been publicly doing this for much longerthan a month.”

RELATED: Amy Robach and Husband Andrew Shue Sold NYC Home Weeks BeforeHer Relationship with TJ Holmes Was Revealed

However, the first source previously insisted to PEOPLE that the pair did notbegin dating until after they separated from their respective spouses.

“This was two consenting adults who were each separated. They both broke upwith their spouses in August within weeks of each other,” the source said.”The relationship didn’t start until after that.”

The source said Robach has “got nothing to hide,” adding, “They were bothseparated so they felt very comfortable dating in the open after that. Theirspouses had moved out, even! So they were not hiding anything.”

Amy Robach and Andrew Shue RelationshipTimelineAmyRobach and Andrew Shue RelationshipTimeline

Amy Robach and Andrew Shue Relationship Timeline

On Thursday, PEOPLE confirmed that Robach and Shue quietly listed theirapartment in the West Village neighborhood of New York City in September 2022and the property entered into contract on Nov. 18, two weeks before Robach’srelationship with Holmes was revealed.

Never miss a story — sign up for ** PEOPLE ‘s free daily newsletter** to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicycelebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Robach and Holmes have not publicly commented on their relationship, thoughthey alluded to the news during Friday’s broadcast of GMA3: What You Need ToKnow.

At the beginning of theshowHolmesjoked, “You know it’s too bad it’s Friday, it’s been a great week. I just wantthis to keep going and going and going. Just enjoy it.”

Robach laughed as she told Holmes, “Speak for yourself. I am very excitedabout the weekend, and I’m sure everyone else is too. We all love our Fridaysaround here — some of us do, at least.”

Al estilo argentino | Mundial Qatar 2022

No sé si pudiste ver los dos partidos de Argentina de esta noche. Fue, comocasi todo lo nuestro, una rareza. Podríamos haber jugado uno solo, pero no nosalcanzaba: ya conoces nuestra desmesura. Dos, entonces, y fue curioso quefueran con Australia. Hacia 1900 dos grandes potencias asomaban en el sur delsur: se parecían en su inmensidad, sus inmigrantes, su pujanza, sus rebaños,sus futuros tan prósperos. Argentina tiene, ahora, un producto gross porcabeza de unos 10,000 dólares; Australia, the 60,000. Así que al fútbolteníamos que ganarles.

Candy Dulfer: I’m a macho, but with two pigtails

Looking, hearing, feeling, smelling, tasting, intuition: our senses make uswho we are. This week: saxophonist Candy Dulfer (53). She was followed forfour years for the documentary Candy , which will soon be seen in cinemas.”Even if I’m in shit, I want to make people feel good.”

Rick PullensDecember 2, 202221:28

HEARING – Making music starts with listening

“I was kind of born into a saxophone. That is of course because of Hans, myfather, also a saxophonist. The Filipino sister in the Anna Pavilion, here inAmsterdam, said to my mother after giving birth: ‘Oh, your husband is a jazzmusician? Then you must put on a record tonight when you take Candy home; niceand loud, then she gets used to the sound.’

The billiard table in our house in Broek en Waterland was always full ofsaxophones. During the day my father earned money selling cars, in the eveninghe often played somewhere. Many musicians came over – I sat on the knee ofArchie Shepp, the American jazz saxophonist. And I went to concerts. I wassurrounded by music.

Candy, the documentary

The documentary will be shown in cinemas from December 15 Candy a film bydirector Carin Goeijers about the life of the Netherlands’ most famoussaxophonist.

Still, I didn’t start playing myself until I was five. And quite frankly,those early years were mainly a way to please my father – that fun, flashyfather who was away so often. When I asked if I could try it too and playedsomething very silly, he replied: ‘That’s great, you even know how to holdyour hands’. To which I, as an only child, thought: oh, Daddy likes this.

For me, making music starts with listening. On stage I react to what I hear.That’s what I do all the time. That’s because I’m not really educated andbecause I think I’m good at it. As a child I played in the village harmony,but I never went to the conservatory, I never had any further lessons. At homeI played along with records.

Years passed before I became really obsessed with the saxophone and thought:this is my calling, my calling. I was mostly a go-getter. Thanks to Hans. Heused to get little support from his parents, they always criticized him anddidn’t really believe in him, but he always said to me: ‘You can do anything’.That’s what I like most about him. ‘Jeee-sister you were so good’, he stillsays it to me.”

Image Patrick Post

LOOKING – Being really seen doesn’t happen very often

“The documentary starts with a fragment where I am battling with a drummerduring a performance. I try to keep playing until I see he can’t anymore.Wonderful, such a competition. If I notice that a drummer like that thinks’no, not another round’, I just keep going.

Such a battle is very difficult, it does not always go well. You really haveto have the same swing. If it works, that’s so nice, then you both float. Evenwith a complete stranger you can have a symbiosis at such a moment. Playingtogether in that way really has a deeper meaning for me. It’s basically whatyou want people on Earth to do.

The funny thing is: I’ve been doing this battle for years, with the bestdrummers in the world – I copied it from older saxophonists – but the only onewho can keep it up is Sheila E. Men quickly think: it won’t happen to me. Theygive just a little too much gas and don’t realize that I’m going to continuefor another six minutes. She knows exactly how this game goes.

Sheila E. once wrote on a note after a performance: ‘The world is only halfaware of how good you are’. She didn’t mean Candy is the best saxophonist inthe world. She is not saying that, there are much better saxophonists. But shesaw what I’m doing there. She does it herself. I’m not just the soloist, I’mholding that whole band together, I’m watching the audience. That she wrotethat means a lot to me. Because everyone really wants to be seen. That onlyhappens a few times in your life.”

INTUITION – I am (too) often rational

“I actually learned the trick from a bunch of machos: my dad, Prince, MaceoParker, Dave Stewart. The last two are the bosses you want: they can make youdo exactly what they want without getting angry. But I also leaned towardsPrince. Everyone bowed to him like a jackknife. That seemed wonderful to me.That just doesn’t work for me. I’m way too sweet, but when it comes to musicsometimes too strict. I pay my musicians as well as possible, but I also ask alot of them. Being a boss is something you have to learn.

I myself am also macho yes. Male. A kind of Hans Dulfer, but with two tails.The worst part is: sometimes I don’t really know who I am anymore. Serious.I’m actually a very shy girl, very feminine, but to keep myself going I’vealways imitated my father so much that I’m a bit Hans now too. Or was thatalready in me?

null Picture PatrickPost

Image Patrick Post

Male, female, I can’t remember. As a bandleader I often had to be strong onthe road, on my own, with fourteen people behind me. Then I had to makecrucial decisions: are we being nice to this cop, are we leaving now or are wegoing to get mad? But that shy girl is still there, especially at home. ThenI’m on my phone, I want nice clothes and I spend an hour on my make-up. I’vehad a boyfriend, Rafael, for six years now – hopefully forever , he is worthgold; an ultra-civilized man, with a bodybuilder’s body and tattoos.Fortunately, he can deal well with that strange duality.

Because I was always so preoccupied with thinking like a man, I lost myintuition for a long time. I did what seemed right in my head, but in myheart? I can’t hear my heart well at all. Sometimes I just think rationally. Ioften call my best friend, who is very intuitive, almost clairvoyant. Then Iask: do you know what I feel? That helps.”

FEELING – Music should give comfort

“Anyone who tries to play funk or jazz has to realize where that music comesfrom: from Africa. In the times of slavery, the rhythm was supposed to comfortpeople and give them energy to keep going. That meditative, a beat that reallybeats and continues in the same cadence, is therefore more than ‘nice’. You doit to help the other. Be aware of that if you play African American music,especially if you are white. I don’t like playing with people who don’t care.Groove and timing, that’s what it’s all about.

In Prince I met a kindred spirit. He said exactly the same to his musicians.He had one of the best drummers in the world, but then I would hear him say,’Damn John, if you drop that first bar a little, I’ll be down 1-0′. He got it.Also in terms of energy: you give until you drop. You are broken yourself, butyou give the audience even more.

In many other ways, Prince and I were polar opposites. I still think it’sincredible that I worked with him – I was eighteen, nineteen when I first gotto play. I can still chuckle to myself: I, Candy from Amsterdam, who can’tread a note; a stubborn, weird, chubby kid who was constantly checking himout.”

SMELL – My band smells and plays very fresh

“I once broke my nose trying to grab my 40-kilogram suitcase from a luggagerack on the back of the tour bus. Once again I was too macho and wanted to doit alone. That thing fell on my nose. As a result, I now have a bad nose, onenostril is too small.

Still, I think scent is important. Hygiene. Also in a band. We often have toget on the bus immediately after playing, then you can’t take a shower. LennyKravitz had a bath in his bus, we never had that. So yes, tolerance, that’swhat it all comes down to: making sure you don’t bother others. In the bus weall brush our teeth neatly, we have to. The band I have now smells and playsparticularly fresh.

My mother was my tour manager until recently, but I felt it had to stop atsome point; Inge is now 81, Hans 82. Sometimes she goes along for a while.Like recently to Switzerland. Then we lie in the bus together in the doublebed. Our bond is so close. Even when we are not together, we are alwaysworking together. We call, call, call. And we app.”

FEEL (2) – Never give up

I never just make a record, it always comes from a certain feeling, but my newalbum We Never Stop is really a cry from the heart. It had to come out. Whenwe were writing, corona broke out. And themes that were always on my mind weretopical: the multicultural society, the position of people who are not white,LGBTI+ issues. That’s all in this album.

Because of the pandemic, I was suddenly at home. A confusing time. I just hada new tire, but couldn’t even keep paying the guys. I tried to be strong, butI had to say ‘we never stop’ to myself every day. It was also a mantra tomyself. Because am I still a musician if I can’t play live? And can I makepeople happy if it’s not me?

null Picture PatrickPost

Image Patrick Post

Yet it was precisely then that it became more clear to me than ever that musicis necessary. Even though I’m in shit, I want to make people feel good – ‘comeon, let’s keep going’. That’s what I’m in the world for. Of course, I alsosometimes get stuck in things, but soon I think: come on, let’s move on. I gotthat optimism from Inge, my mother. Persevere and continue. Never give up.

That’s how I deal with a lot of things. For example, I can’t have children.That is intense, because I always wanted a family. I went to extremes withivf. Still I thought: okay, I’m really sad now, I feel that, but I don’t wantto have my whole life failed because of one negative thing. That wouldn’t befair to my parents either. They have done so much for me, so that I have thisgreat life.

My parents were ultimately also the reason to say yes to the documentary. Ididn’t have to put my head in a movie myself, but I was sorry that they neverwanted to either. Now something of them has been captured on film. Soon theywill be gone. I already cry when I think about it. I think it’s scary now thatthey’re getting old.

When I recently saw the result of four years of filming, I had to laugh. I hadin my head: it’s going to be a documentary, so then I’ll sit in a chair, saysome nice sentences that sum up my life and the world and then people willsay: ‘Gosh, how wise Candy is’. Not so. It’s a very different kind of film,more like a portrait. I don’t think anyone would say, “Candy is the helmsmanof this century, what a wise 53-year-old woman.” Unfortunately. People don’tsee it in me. I’ll just put up with that. I just do it my way: with music.”

Mundial de Qatar 2022, últimas noticias en directo | Deschamps : “Hoy empieza un torneo completamente diferente al de la phase de grupos” | Mundial Qatar 2022

Esto ha sido lo más relevant de la duodécima jornada: ​​​​​​​ Alemania rescata a España. España le debe una a Alemania. Y no una cualquiera.De no ser por el auxilio germano, la que se presumía expansiva selección deLuis Enrique estaría de vuelta a España en el camión escoba en que han salidodel Mundial por la gatera Qatar, Túnez, Canadá, Irán, Arabia Saudí… Y Alemania, cuya victoria a última hora sobre Costa Rica solo sirvió a España, que no ledevolvió el flotador.

Mundial de Qatar: El primer convocado de Luis Enrique fue un peluquero | Mundial Qatar 2022

And Qatar ya tiene sustitutos. Alejandro Oliva, de 28 años, ha hecho más de7,000 kilómetros para atender durante el Mundial a algunos de sus clientes:“Llevo ocho días aquí y le he cortado el pelo a Fede Valverde, a José MaríaGiménez, a João Félix ya Rubén Neves , de Portugal, y estoy hablando conMorata”. Cualquiera puede aguantar un mes sin cortarse el pelo, pero para losfutbolistas, muchas veces, es un asunto de superstición. “Casillas decía quesi le cortaba el pelo ganábamos seguro”, recuerda Ramiro. “Y luego cada unotenia sus manias. El día que había partido, Iñaki Sáez me pedía: ‘Tuarréglales la patilla, la nuca, lo que quieras, pero distráemelos’. Andcambio, Luis Aragonés me decía: “Ramiro, hoy ni verte, ¿eh? Quiero que esténconcentrados”.