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🎙️ Ander Herrera: "First the Apertura, then the Club World Cup"
🎙️ Ander Herrera: "First the Apertura, then the Club World Cup"

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

🎙️ Ander Herrera: "First the Apertura, then the Club World Cup"

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here. OneFootball had the opportunity to speak with Ander Herrera, thanks to Enterprise Rent-A-Car, and took the chance to ask him about how he's preparing for the Club World the Xeneize player is injured and recovering from a grade two tear in the rectus of his right leg. However, he has the illusion of being able to face Lanús. "I'm recovering to beat Lanús on Saturday and the Club World Cup will arrive later, but there's still over a month to go. We're going to try to fight for the Apertura title. We've had a very good first half before the playoffs. We're the second team with the most points". Ander knows that a totally exciting competition like the Club World Cup is coming, but for now, he only thinks about the local terrain. "After what has to happen in the Apertura, we'll think about the Club World Cup. I know everyone has high expectations, but I take it day by day. First Lanús and then the next thing will come". Ander Herrera partnered with Enterprise Rent-A-Car, official sponsor of the UEFA Europa League and Conference League, for his latest campaign "Rent-A-Player". Whether you need a car for a weekend getaway or a replacement while yours is in the shop, Enterprise has you covered with 22 branches in Argentina. 📸 Marcelo Endelli - 2025 Getty Images

🎙️ Ander Herrera: "First the Apertura, then the Club World Cup"
🎙️ Ander Herrera: "First the Apertura, then the Club World Cup"

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

🎙️ Ander Herrera: "First the Apertura, then the Club World Cup"

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here. OneFootball had the opportunity to speak with Ander Herrera, thanks to Enterprise Rent-A-Car, and took the chance to ask him about how he's preparing for the Club World Cup. Advertisement Currently, the Xeneize player is injured and recovering from a grade two tear in the rectus of his right leg. However, he has the illusion of being able to face Lanús. "I'm recovering to beat Lanús on Saturday and the Club World Cup will arrive later, but there's still over a month to go. We're going to try to fight for the Apertura title. We've had a very good first half before the playoffs. We're the second team with the most points". Ander knows that a totally exciting competition like the Club World Cup is coming, but for now, he only thinks about the local terrain. "After what has to happen in the Apertura, we'll think about the Club World Cup. I know everyone has high expectations, but I take it day by day. First Lanús and then the next thing will come". Ander Herrera partnered with Enterprise Rent-A-Car, official sponsor of the UEFA Europa League and Conference League, for his latest campaign "Rent-A-Player". Whether you need a car for a weekend getaway or a replacement while yours is in the shop, Enterprise has you covered with 22 branches in Argentina. 📸 Marcelo Endelli - 2025 Getty Images

🎙️Ander Herrera: If any club can turn it around, it's Athletic
🎙️Ander Herrera: If any club can turn it around, it's Athletic

Yahoo

time08-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

🎙️Ander Herrera: If any club can turn it around, it's Athletic

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here. OneFootball had the opportunity to speak with Ander Herrera, thanks to Rent-A-Car, to heat up the anticipation for the return of the Europa League semi-finals between Athletic Club and United. Let's remember that Ander made his great talent known internationally with the red-and-whites and was able to show what he was made of with the Red Devils."If there is a club that can pull off the comeback, it's Athletic because of what they've done in recent years, because of the human group, because I know that with very little to lose, Athletic is even more dangerous. It's true that there are absences, but if Athletic scores an early goal… We must bear in mind that United has two faces. Against Athletic they won by three goals and the other day against Brentford they fell heavily. Athletic has to cling to that, they must go out to attack because they don't know how to do anything else and if those clear chances they had at the start at San Mamés are converted at Old Trafford, I think the story can change". Let's remember that Ander, started the season as a Lion and until the round of 16, was under the command of Ernesto Valverde. "I started this competition with Athletic and I want it to be Athletic's year at the European level, but we'll see what happens. United is a tough nut to crack. With this coach they can play on the counterattack. It's going to be a beautiful match. If Athletic scores a goal in the first few minutes anything can happen. These competitions always leave us with epic moments like what happened between Inter and Barcelona". The star who migrated to Argentine football is used to watching a lot of football and he assured us that he will not miss the match tomorrow. That's why he told us where the tactical key for both teams could be. "Athletic will have chances because they always generate them. If United plays through the middle, Athletic has players who can steal a lot there. It's true that the absence of the Williams will weigh because you can play more forward and you already have a dangerous chance. But Athletic has players like Djaló, Berenguer, Unai Gómez, Guruzeta, Sanmadi who can take care of causing damage. If United decides to play through the middle they will be making a mistake, but if they wait for the counterattack, it could be more beneficial for them because Athletic has to leave spaces because they have to go out to attack and expose themselves a bit. If Garnacho, Hojlund or Diallo play, they will be dangerous for Athletic because they could exploit the counterattacks even more". Finally, Ander recalled his time at Manchester United, where he played for five years and was able to win the Europa League in the 2016/17 season with that memorable team led by José Mourinho. I enjoyed almost 200 matches at the club and half of them were at Old Trafford. The connection I had with the people was unique. I am eternally grateful. I always value how I behaved with the institution and that field. On that field an impressive atmosphere is created like the day of the Olympique Lyon that only United can do. I got to enjoy it and I feel privileged to have been able to play there. Ander Herrera teamed up with Enterprise Rent-A-Car, the official sponsor of the UEFA Europa League and the Conference League, for their latest "Rent-A-Player" campaign. Whether you need a car for a weekend getaway or a replacement while yours is in the shop, Enterprise has you covered with 22 branches in Argentina. 📸 Denis Doyle - 2024 Getty Images

Foundation's $15 million gift to train police supervisors to help reduce gun violence in Chicago
Foundation's $15 million gift to train police supervisors to help reduce gun violence in Chicago

Yahoo

time11-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Foundation's $15 million gift to train police supervisors to help reduce gun violence in Chicago

CHICAGO — Hoping to reduce gun violence in Chicago, the Sue Ling Gin Foundation announced a $15 million gift Friday to develop a leadership and management education program for police supervisors. The gift, which will be made to the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, will fund the new five-year program, working with the University of Chicago Crime Lab. Slated to launch in January 2026, all Chicago Police Department supervisors — from sergeants to the superintendent — will participate in mandatory leadership training to be better equipped to solve crimes, connect with the community and prevent gun violence, according to Roseanna Ander, founding executive director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab. 'Policing invests almost nothing in the human capital of people who go into policing,' Ander told the Tribune. 'This is a huge leap forward in changing that and puts Chicago at the forefront.' The new program builds on the 40 hours of required annual training for all officers implemented through a 2019 consent decree in the wake of the 2014 police shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. The management education will focus on effective leadership, data-driven analytics, officer wellness and building community trust. The curriculum will involve a mix of scenario-based and hands-on training, as well as classroom study, Ander said. 'As part of our ongoing efforts to strengthen safety and build trust across the city, we have to invest in the frontline supervisors who are managing day-to-day operations,' Chicago police Superintendent Larry Snelling said in a news release. 'We are deeply grateful to the Sue Ling Gin Foundation for its partnership and support in making this a reality.' Like many large cities, Chicago saw a spike in crime during the pandemic, peaking at 804 homicides in 2021, mostly from gun violence. While the total declined to 573 last year, Chicago remained the city with the most homicides in the U.S., according to research from AH Datalytics, which tracks crime statistics. Gun violence continues to be a major problem in Chicago, although statistics have been steadily improving in the post-pandemic landscape. There were 2,282 shootings in Chicago last year, down from 2,452 in 2023, according to CPD data. Gun violence is down 36% from 2021, when there were 3,554 shootings in the city. Chicago entrepreneur Sue Ling Gin, who died more than a decade ago, has been posthumously fighting gun violence through her foundation in the city where she built her career. The Aurora-born daughter of immigrants, Gin worked in her family's suburban Chinese restaurant growing up and later became a Playboy Bunny at the original Playboy Club in Chicago. In 1983, she launched Flying Food Group at Chicago's Midway Airport, building it into a network of 20 catering kitchens from Honolulu to New York, servicing more than 70 airlines. Gin also managed and developed an extensive Chicago-area real estate portfolio. When she died in 2014 at age 73 after suffering a stroke, Gin left a sizable estate, which was used to fund her foundation. In 2021, the foundation made its first major gift, a $21 million three-year donation to Chicago CRED, a nonprofit community intervention program that focuses on reducing gun violence in some of the city's most underserved neighborhoods. The foundation's latest gift to fund police supervisor training will take a page from the business world where Gin proved so successful, according to Robert Hamada, former chairman of the Flying Food Group and the estate's trustee. 'Corporations do this kind of continuing education all the time, but government agencies are often unable to prioritize this kind of investment,' Hamada said in a news release. ____

Foundation's $15 million gift to train police supervisors to help reduce gun violence
Foundation's $15 million gift to train police supervisors to help reduce gun violence

Yahoo

time11-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Foundation's $15 million gift to train police supervisors to help reduce gun violence

Hoping to reduce gun violence in Chicago, the Sue Ling Gin Foundation announced a $15 million gift Friday to develop a leadership and management education program for police supervisors. The gift, which will be made to the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, will fund the new five-year program, working with the University of Chicago Crime Lab. Slated to launch in January 2026, all Chicago Police Department supervisors — from sergeants to the superintendent — will participate in mandatory leadership training to be better equipped to solve crimes, connect with the community and prevent gun violence, according to Roseanna Ander, founding executive director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab. 'Policing invests almost nothing in the human capital of people who go into policing,' Ander told the Tribune. 'This is a huge leap forward in changing that and puts Chicago at the forefront.' The new program builds on the 40 hours of required annual training for all officers implemented through a 2019 consent decree in the wake of the 2014 police shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. The management education will focus on effective leadership, data-driven analytics, officer wellness and building community trust. The curriculum will involve a mix of scenario-based and hands-on training, as well as classroom study, Ander said. 'As part of our ongoing efforts to strengthen safety and build trust across the city, we have to invest in the frontline supervisors who are managing day-to-day operations,' Chicago police Superintendent Larry Snelling said in a news release. 'We are deeply grateful to the Sue Ling Gin Foundation for its partnership and support in making this a reality.' Like many large cities, Chicago saw a spike in crime during the pandemic, peaking at 804 homicides in 2021, mostly from gun violence. While the total declined to 573 last year, Chicago remained the city with the most homicides in the U.S., according to research from AH Datalytics, which tracks crime statistics. Gun violence continues to be a major problem in Chicago, although statistics have been steadily improving in the post-pandemic landscape. There were 2,282 shootings in Chicago last year, down from 2,452 in 2023, according to CPD data. Gun violence is down 36% from 2021, when there were 3,554 shootings in the city. Chicago entrepreneur Sue Ling Gin, who died more than a decade ago, has been posthumously fighting gun violence through her foundation in the city where she built her career. The Aurora-born daughter of immigrants, Gin worked in her family's suburban Chinese restaurant growing up and later became a Playboy Bunny at the original Playboy Club in Chicago. In 1983, she launched Flying Food Group at Chicago's Midway Airport, building it into a network of 20 catering kitchens from Honolulu to New York, servicing more than 70 airlines. Gin also managed and developed an extensive Chicago-area real estate portfolio. When she died in 2014 at age 73 after suffering a stroke, Gin left a sizable estate, which was used to fund her foundation. In 2021, the foundation made its first major gift, a $21 million three-year donation to Chicago CRED, a nonprofit community intervention program that focuses on reducing gun violence in some of the city's most underserved neighborhoods. The foundation's latest gift to fund police supervisor training will take a page from the business world where Gin proved so successful, according to Robert Hamada, former chairman of the Flying Food Group and the estate's trustee. 'Corporations do this kind of continuing education all the time, but government agencies are often unable to prioritize this kind of investment,' Hamada said in a news release. rchannick@

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