N.O.R.F

Nomads
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Everything posted by N.O.R.F

  1. Breakfast at the Ambassador Breakfast :cool:
  2. ^^I know saxib but it also costs 8 Dhs!
  3. Walaahi an enjoyable trip, all will be reported on soon IA. Currently going through emails, faxes etc,,,
  4. I wasnt playing for them saxib
  5. lost all my cookies :rolleyes:
  6. bleary eyed,,,,, back to the heat and traffic,,,, someone has been using my pc and has been on youtube,,,,
  7. Udub and Riyaale have made a big mistake here. I think this has made many people's mind's up in the coming elections.
  8. Sheffield, July 14, 2007 – Mo Farah had a brawl on his first day at school and sleeps in a bedroom bedecked with Muhammad Ali posters, so it seems clear that he has the stomach for a fight. "This kid came over and whacked me," he recalled. "So I hit him back." He has been rolling with the punches ever since. The Somali-born British distance runner will invoke the spirit of the Rumble in the Jungle, his favorite Ali bout, to throw down a marker at the World Championships in Osaka, Japan, next month. The potential has been simmering for some time. Last year, he became the European cross-country champion, won a silver in the 5,000 metres at the European Championships and became the second-fastest Briton over that distance in knocking 21 seconds off his personal best. But it is one thing to beat yourself and the best of a bygone era and quite another to join an elite core of Kenyans and Kenenisa Bekele, an Ethiopian legend. Freshly returned from injury, Farah will try to do that over 3,000 meters in the Norwich Union British Grand Prix in Sheffield tomorrow and he has already had an insight into the loneliness of a long-distance running great. "I want to retire and say I did my best," he said. "It's a lot of pain and a lot of sacrifice, but that's what you have to do. I learnt that by living with some of the Kenyans for a while. It was their life. They would run, eat and sleep, run, eat and sleep. That was it. If you want to be the best, then it is hard to have a social life, but I look at my friends who are going out and would not swap it for standing on a podium." This athletes' commune was put together by Farah's agent, Ricky Simms, and gave the 24-year-old a personal insight into the lengths he would have to go to if he wanted to join them on athletics' top table. "I think they got annoyed with me a bit at first because I might get up a bit late," he said. "Not any more." It has taken Farah time to accept the more monastic regime of the top Africans. "I jumped off Kingston Bridge into the Thames once," he said. Was it a drink-fuelled escapade? "Maybe, but more just a bit of madness." Those days are long gone. Farah seeks his inspiration from disparate sources. Ali is one, Paula Radcliffe another. "Paula has been great to me all the way through," he said. "She knows what it takes and it means a lot when someone like that bothers to help. When I was starting out, she even gave me some money and before the European final I saw her and she said, 'Go out and be brave.' " He has also trained in Australia with Craig Mottram, the bronze medal-winner at the 2005 World Championships in Helsinki and another man trying to break the African monopoly on distance events. "I realized that I had to do more than these guys," Farah said. "If I'm not working, I know Craig and the others will be." In Sheffield, Farah will be in at the deep end after his injury problems, but he knows the World Championships in Osaka will be a true test of his development. "I've never been there and it's about judging races," he said. "I want to make the final and then see what happens. Anything can." It is already an intriguing tale. Born in Mogadishu and raised in Djibouti, a country largely made up of nomadic herdsmen, he came to Britain at the age of 9. Unable to speak a word of English, he misbehaved to seek attention and dreamt of becoming an Arsenal football player. It was when he went to compete in Florida as a 15-year-old and took a trip to Disney World that he realised he liked athletics. Last year, he liked it enough to run 13min 9.40sec for the 5,000 metres. It was a time that signaled his arrival, because David Moorcroft is the only Briton to have gone faster; the bad news is that the Africans have since lowered the world record to 12:37.35. This year, Farah was the best of the Europeans and eleventh overall at the World Cross Country Championships in Mombassa, Kenya. "I believe we can challenge the Africans if we train the same way," he said. Now relocated from his base in Teddington, Middlesex, to a nearby house used by UK Athletics, Farah added: "Train hard, win easy – that's what they say." It has been a long and winding road, but the kid in the playground is still punching his weight. Report card Ian Stewart, the Olympic 5,000 meters bronze medal-winner in 1972, gives his verdict on Mo Farah Strengths "One of the things that Mo has done is make a major breakthrough on his cross country – he is stepping into world-class distance running. He is also a very brave runner. His attempt at the Europeans last year in the 5,000 meters was a great effort. He doesn't mind getting out there and attacking from the front, even from a long way out, which is not an easy thing. He has all the tools he needs to do well and more. He learnt a lot from the Kenyans." Areas to work on "He needs to get into the races and learn the craft of racing. When it comes to distance running, it's more about racing than it is about time. In terms of distance running, I think there is a lot of obsession with time at the moment. You also need to learn to handle yourself at major championships, which Mo has proved by his performances at recent ones." Hopes for 2007 "His problem is that he has been injured for a while this season. Expectation is going to be extremely high at the World Championships and he will be playing catchup. There will be a lot of pressure. If he makes the final of the 5,000 meters, then that is a massive step forward." — Mo Farah will run at the Norwich Union British Grand Prix in Sheffield on Sunday; tickets are available by phone on 0870 402 8000 or online at ukathletics.net/tvevents Source: Rick Broadbent, IMES ONLINE
  9. caluushan kuusana iska rid baan ku odhan lahaa oo garoonkii timacade laba jeer kusoo yara wareeg JB, stop using subag as butter/magerine saxib, hilib geelkana iska yaree
  10. NG Yala yala ya Saudi! Saudi vs Iraq in Final.
  11. We touched on this a while ago in the Islamic section. I now have an Islamic Bank Account and a complementary Credit Card :cool: Read this.
  12. JB, when today? Going to Berbera tomorrow IA Val, good luck with the new job. I need a new job myself,,,time to start looking,,,Ngonge, any jobs at your AD headquarters? Drop a good word in for me saxib,,,
  13. Originally posted by NGONGE: Edit. Actually. NO! This should not be here. Carry on... Is this guy alright? :confused:
  14. Xanthus The Imams of the UAE are very well qualified. The ministry of Awqaaf sends emails to Abu Dhabi based Imams containing sermons for Friday prayers. I dont think there is anything wrong with this. LG Thanks for clarifying. As a conclusion, yes there are some good Imams and there are some who need to improve their English/French and actually communicate better with the youths. But since when did a non-Muslim who has never attended a Khutba been someone to take seriously on this issue?
  15. ^^Yep, in action in Dubai for Benfica vs Lazio
  16. the speaches of the Imams are controlled,and is prepared by ministry of religous affairs Good point. Like the Abu Dhabi Imams who have been told to become IT literate as the Friday sermons will now be emailed to them. But I dont see anything wrong with this as all Friday sermons are of benefit. Anyone?
  17. I have been painting, demolishing walls and gardening. Pics to follow in the next few weeks IA
  18. Been working on a burst water pipe for the past 4 hours :rolleyes: One of the guys had a distinct accent. He was from Xamar and has been living here for 3 years now, runs a small business with his uncle, he met his wife here and now has 3 kids masha Allah. Ngonge, you dont know what your missing mate :cool: Fresh Caano geel waligaa ma cabtey? I have seen no snakes so far
  19. Into an area in Balli Dhiig where my grand father (Allah Yarxamu) has a barkad. Its on the border but just inside Ethiopia.
  20. Its not about where the Imams are trained. It should be about their linguistic and inter-personal skills. Alot of Imams just dont seem to relate to the youths. Has this women written any articles on the problems within the Church?
  21. Another Dubai attraction. It doesnt look that tall when you drive past though.
  22. Originally posted by rokko: ^ ka wanaagsan Burco boodhwayn, baan ana ku idhi :cool: Raali ahow saxib, JB baa waxaa igu yidhi dee
  23. Yes. I will put them onto the flash today and empty the camera for more Burco pics. I crossed into Ethiopia yesterday. They didnt tell me until after we got back into Somaliland. Waan sigtey LoL
  24. Originally posted by The Duke: Northerner you have every right as a Somalicitizen to criticise your leaders. Your reference to Yeey/Geedi AND the Ethiopians as Somali leaders has been noted