Witness: No warning about Delta P possibility

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Christopher Boodram testifies that he felt there was no attempt him and his colleagues who were sucked into the 30-inch subsea pipeline. – SUREASH CHOLAI

THE five men tragically sucked into an undersea pipeline while repairing a vertical berth at sea-level were not warned of the risk of a phenomenon known as Delta P – arising due to a “differential pressure” – in nearby seas, testified Christopher Boodram on Tuesday.

He was the sole survivor of the February 25 tragedy that killed four men – Fyzal Kurban, Kazim Ali Jr, Rishi Nagassar, Yusuf Henry – at an 30-inch pipeline at Berth 6, belonging to Paria Fuel Trading Co Ltd at Pointe-a-Pierre.

Boodram gave evidence for 90 minutes and then underwent cross-examination on the second day of the evidential hearing of the Commission of Enquiry (CoE) into the accident, chaired by Jerome Lynch, KC. Ramesh Maharaj, SC, was CoE counsel and Gilbert Peterson, SC, Paria counsel.

Boodram said five men were working in an enclosed and pressurised space atop berth 6 which suddenly filled with water, with the men being sucked into the undersea part of the pipeline in a vortex of water.

On Monday in his opening statement, Maharaj had said there was no dispute that the tragedy had involved the Delta P phenomenon, and then a water vortex.

On Tuesday, Maharaj asked if anyone had ever told the divers of any risk of being sucked into the pipeline. Boodram replied, “No.”

Later, Peterson asked about an earlier meeting that fateful day and a corresponding toolbox form.

Peterson asked if there had been any discussion about Delta P.

Boodram replied, “No sir.”

Gilbertson said Delta P could occur if two plugs – a mechanical and an inflatable plug respectively, which form a seal in the berth – were ever removed at the wrong time.

Boodram replied, “We put plugs against liquids so there’s a force and Delta P couldn’t arise.”

He added that he was not there when the plugs had previously been installed.

Replying to Peterson, Boodram said the removal of plugs had been discussed before at a toolbox meeting, and Kazim Ali Jnr, ultimately a drowning victim, had okayed the plugs’ removal.

Boodram said twice in the past two years he had done similar jobs, both at LMCS, Paria’s subcontractor which had employed the deceased men.

Peterson asked if Delta P had ever been discussed in either of those two meetings.

Boodram said, “No Sir. Not to my recollection”

Peterson said Delta P was a serious risk.

Boodram replied that Delta P would only be a risk if one didn’t follow the proper steps for a job.

He explained, “If the line was empty there’s a risk for Delta P. If the line is full, you don’t have a differential of pressure.”

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Longdenville mother of 5 gets offers of help

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

PLEASE HELP US: Samantha Persad with four of her five children at her Railway Road, Longdenville, Chaguanas home. – Photo by Roger Jacob

Mother of five Samantha Persad is on her way to receiving help.

After her story was published in Tuesday’s Newsday, she received calls from state agencies and the public with offers of assistance.

Persad rents a small plyboard house near Ravine Sable Road, Longdenville, for $500 a month. It has electricity, and running water in the kitchen, but no indoor toilet or shower.

The galvanise roof leaks, and Persad and her children sleep on two beds, which sometimesget wet when the rain comes from a particular direction.

Persad said her day was filled with phone calls on Tuesday.

She did not keep count, but the most important ones, she said, were from the Ministry of Legal Affairs, the Housing Development Corporation (HDC) and the Children’s Authority.

She also received calls “from a few people who were calling to look for a wife.”

The Ministry of Legal Affairs told her it would “help with the birth certificate, the financial part with the affidavit and stuff. They trying to put everything in place that I would only have to go in and collect it.”

Persad has never had a birth certificate or any other form of official ID. As a result, her children’s births were never registered, and she cannot access social welfare nor seek maintenance from her children’s fathers.

To register her birth, the Legal Affairs Ministry initially said she must search its records. If none is found, she can apply for late registration. Someone older than Persad must swear an affidavit saying they know her family and that she was born in TT. She must then be interviewed.

Anyone with valid ID can apply to register her children on Persad’s behalf. It requires a letter from the hospital certifying where the children were born. After Tuesday’s call, she hopes to get the birth certificates very soon.

The HDC also called Persad and took details of the place she is renting. Officials told her “that they go around building houses for people with their own land, but my situation different. I waiting on them to call back.”

The Children’s Authority also took her details and her children’s.

“Basically everybody taking the information and saying they will get back to me with whatever they get. So right now, I very grateful.”

In addition, Persad said, “A next guy called, Steve, he not calling from any work, he say he doing it on he own behalf. He said he’d support the kids with groceries for every month.

“Another guy called from Siparia, and he said within the next ten days he will come up and help me out with some groceries as well.”

Because of Persad’s location in Longdenville, there was some uncertainty about which parliamentary constituency she lives in. Initially, Newsday contacted Caroni Central MP Arnold Ram, but in fact he is not not her MP.

Calls to Caroni East MP Dr Rishad Seecheran went unanswered.

Anyone who wants to help Samantha Persad and her family can contact her at 274-2483.

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CoE hears Paria survivor’s tale: Nightmare

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Paria diving tragedy survivor Christopher Boodram is emotional during his testimony at the commission of enquiry hearing at Tower D, International Waterfront, Port of Spain on Tuesday. – SUREASH CHOLAI

CHRISTOPHER BOODRAM, the sole survivor in the Paria tragedy which claimed the lives of four divers, on Tuesday gave a harrowing account of being sucked into an undersea oil pipeline before escaping.

“I did not know if I was in heaven or hell, or in a pipe,” Boodram said at the Commission of Enquiry (CoE) at the International Waterfront Centre, Port of Spain.

He wept openly at times as he spoke. Chairman Jerome Lynch, KC, allowed him to step outside briefly to compose himself. He summed up his experience inside the pipeline as “an unbelievable nightmare.”

Divers Fyzal Kurban, Kazim Ali Jr, Rishi Nagassar, Yusuf Henry and Boodram were sucked into a 30-inch pipeline at Pointe-a-Pierre on the compound of Paria Fuel Trading Co Ltd on February 25.

Christopher Boodram testifies that he felt there was no attempt him and his colleagues who were sucked into the 30-inch subsea pipeline. – SUREASH CHOLAI

While Boodram couldn’t get rescuers to his trapped colleagues as he had promised, his fellow divers had saved his life by directing him to the open berth six, not the sealed berth five.

“If they didn’t know which direction to go in, I’d be dead today,” he attested of Ali, Kurban and Henry.

Boodram complained of no rescue efforts to save his colleagues. He said upon emerging from the pipeline, he couldn’t access a decompression unit and relied on his wife for a salve to clean oil from his sinuses.

He felt his life under threat in a covid19 isolation ward, even though he was covid-free, next to a woman who died shortly after he was placed there.

Boodram disputed Paria manager Collin Piper’s evidential claim that Boodram had said the trapped men were already dead.

“I would not say something like that. Why would I call Mr Piper to say I think them fellars dead?”

He recalled the incident of a their work chamber (“the habitat”) suddenly filling with water.

“I said, ‘Let’s get out of here.’”

Jumping into the sea, he was spun rapidly as if in a tornado, beating up his body.

“It happened so fast.”

In a foetal position, he was pulled through the pipeline at “unbelievable speeds,” debris hitting him.

Boodram had to hold his breath so long his lungs made gasping noises, which he hauntingly replicated for the CoE.

“I said, ‘God, I’m coming. Ma, look for me.

“I was in a state of panic. I was not sure if I was dead. I was not sure if I was alive.”

He heard the other divers, asking, “Kazim, you all right?”. He said Ali replied, “No. I in real pain. I mash up bad.”

Commission of enquiry chairman Jerome Lynch, KC. – SUREASH CHOLAI

Henry said, “My foot break.”

Boodram recalled, “I said ‘no, we’re not going to die. We’re coming out of here, boy. We have to get out of this. God is good.’”

Boodram said the men formed a chain, pulling and pushing each other along the pipeline.

“Inside there was like an unbelievable nightmare. Your eyes burning. Every time you try to open your eyes it burning. Pitch black – you can’t see anything.

“Your throat burning. Your ears ringing. Your body sore.”

The men, in pain, linked up themselves.

“We drag and pull, drag and pull.”

Wiping his nostrils with a wash rag, he asked to go outside and Lynch ordered a short break.

A tearful Boodram returned and apologised. Lynch said, “No need for an apology.”

CoE counsel Ramesh Maharaj helped by relating Boodram’s evidence which he had previously given in a statement.

Lead counsel for the Paria Commission of Enquiry, Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj, hold up a hula hoop to demonstrate the approximate width of the pipeline in which five LMCS divers were trapped on February 25. – SUREASH CHOLAI

Boodram said the men were in eight-ten inches of water, but moving along it got deeper – aiding their mobility but providing less air.

He recalled telling Kurban, “Nobody can help us here but God.”

The men found a scuba tank, also sucked into the pipe, and he told them each to take “two or three pulls” to avoid becoming delirious from the pipeline air.

“Trying to stay calm and keep those fellars calm was one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do in this life.

“Yusuf was in pain but was a fighter. He had resilience to a different level.”

Boodram recalled finding a GoPro camera.

“I was think(ing) of leaving a message for my family.” However, he decided against it and made up his mind to fight his way out of the pipeline and get help for the others.

He said he went ahead of the men for 15 feet to explore, fearing he’d end up trapped in berth five.

“I have to try because failure is death.” He wiped his tears.

“Kaz said, ‘Don’t go. I said, ‘I have to.’”

He said he kicked his foot free of someone’s grasp.

“I had to yank it out, force it out.”

“I started to move through the water. My tank started to go dry. I could only hope I’m reaching a next air pocket or get a next tank. My tank hit a next tank, ‘tong!’”

Using that tank “was like eating oil.”

“My mind was just on forward, forward!

“Fyzie said, ‘Christopher, I’m right here. Wait for me.’

“I said, ‘I can’t wait for you. If we have to save anybody, we’ve got to get out of here. Fyzie, I can’t wait.”

In the habitat, he clung desperately to a chain, feeling exhausted and faint. His first rescuer appeared. The person was someone he knew but did not recognise.

“I swear to God it was the angel of death.”

He then saw one of Kurban’s sons, Nicholas, and told him to rescue his father, saying, “Now boy, now!”

Unable to get treated at a decompression unit, Boodram reflected, “I felt like nobody cared for me. Everybody was like a headless chicken.”

Saying potential rescuers could have bypassed any six-inch wide scuba tank in the pipeline, as he had done to exit, he said he begged for a rescue but said Paria officials repeatedly cited the scuba gear available, presumably as being inadequate equipment for a rescue.

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FLA seizes weapon of gun holder following New Kingston incident Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The Firearm Licensing Authority (FLA) has seized the firearm of the gun holder who was seen pulling his weapon on a homeless woman in New Kingston.

FLA officials told Loop News that the firearm was confiscated as the organization launches its own investigation into the matter.

The FLA has also confirmed that the man has a permit for the weapon.

Last week a 40-second video showed the woman, who is known to beg for a living, walking towards the man close to the intersection of Knutsford Boulevard and Trafalgar Road.

The man is seen backing away while he appears to warn the woman to stay away, but after a few steps, he pulls his firearm and points at the female.

Social media users have been divided following the incident with even several firearm holders giving their views on the situation.

One firearm holder said he felt the action was justified. The firearm holder who spoke to Loop was of the view that the man felt threatened and pulled his firearm to keep away the threat.

Another firearm holder and a retired policeman who asked that his name not be published because of security reasons said he did not feel the action of the man was justified.

“Look at the small frame of the woman and look at the firearm holder who towers over the woman. Where was the threat the woman did not have a weapon or any corrosive substance so the licensed firearm holder did not have to pull his gun.

Another firearm holder said the man ran the risk of getting charged with assault at common law for his action and he also ran the risk of exposing himself to other members of the public that he was the holder of a weapon.

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Contrasting evidence presented in Paria CoE

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Paria and Heritage attorneys Jason Mootoo (left ) and Senior Counsel Gilbert Peterson at the CoE into the Paria diving tragedy. – SUREASH CHOLAI

There was contrasting evidence in the Paria Commission of Enquiry as lawyers sought to determine whether procedure was followed during the changing of a faulty riser which resulted in the death of four divers on February 25.

Gilbert Peterson, SC, who represents Paria and the Heritage Petroleum Company, showed surviving diver Christopher Boodram an account by Paria’s HSE officer of the toolbox meeting which took place on the morning of the incident.

Peterson said, “In that list of 16 steps, there is no mention of any activity involving the removing of the barriers, the mechanical plug, or the inflatable plug.”

CoE Chairman Jerome Lynch, KC, took Boodram through the Land and Marine Construction Services Ltd (LMCS) method statement, which was attached to the work permit governing the job. “I can’t recall seeing this document but you have to remember I wasn’t there every day. I have no recollection of seeing this document at all.”

Lynch read through sections of the document.

“Paragraph 56 said to manually remove the migration barrier from the line – that’s the plug, the metal one with the bolts on; and paragraph 57 said manually deflate line plug and remove from the line. Paragraph 58 said manually install the blind flange on riser by positioning end flange on newly installed slip-on flange and securing with fasteners. Paragraph 59 said the chamber crew to demobilize and return to exterior, 60 said disengage air supply and allow chamber to flood, and 61 said unbolt the 50-inch flange at the top of the chamber stove-pipe.”

He asked Boodram whether this was his recollection of what was to happen on that day.

“Yes sir, this is what I was told. This is the topic we had on that day, excluding the flood, well we had to flood the chamber when we were leaving, including the flooding of the chamber, but the removal of the chamber and thing would have been done, providing the 25th went smoothly, on the 26th.”

Lynch asked, “Did anyone say to you that under no circumstances must that plug was to be removed, from LMCS or from Paria, at any stage.”

Boodram replied, “No Sir, on the contrary, that was the plan, to remove the plug.”

Lynch said Boodram had testified that it took an hour to two hours for that process to occur.

“During that two-hour period, did anyone from Paria or LMCS say, do not remove that plug?”

To which Boodram replied “No Sir.”

Lynch said the work permit document also had attached a lift document and job safety analysis (JSA) document, which were together in a series of documents supplied by Paria.

“Do you remember if this document at all was shown to you on the day you were going to carry out this work?”

Boodram said he could not remember seeing the document attached to the work permit, but it was read to him by LMCS’ safety officer.

Peterson asked Boodram if he knew , between the method statement and the PTW for the day, which one actually dictates what workers were supposed to do on the day.

Boodram replied, “the method statement is, in my view, the one you would work with and go to, because the method statement is what you would use to obtain the contract.”

When Peterson asked if Boodram accepted that the PTW took precedence over the method statement, Boodram said, “Which part in the PTW say that you could not take out the plugs? There was nowhere stating you should not have done it.

“If there was a ‘must not’ do something, it would have been bold, as it is here – bold in writing that all steps below shall be carried out to full compliance with Paria PTW system. When Paria at any time found that the job was going out of their PTW, they would have stopped the job, that’s what they had officials there for.”

In response to questioning from Seaman and Waterfront Workers’ Trade Union counsel Nyree Alfonso, Boodram said when he used a tank to get air from while escaping the pipe, it was not lodged anywhere in the pipe, as he was able to swim over it. He said he did not believe camera footage which showed the pipe was blocked.

The CoE was adjourned until Thursday at 10 am.

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‘Zolang nog een of twee personen achter ons staan gaan wij door met protest’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

Tekst en beeld Valerie Fris PARAMARIBO — “Het begint met een kleine groep en zal aanzwellen tot tachtigduizend man”, zei

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KC eliminated from Manning Cup, STATHS join JC in final Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
Loop Sports

1 hrs ago

Jamaica College’s Kevaughn Wilson (left), son of former national player Kevin Wilson, celebrates with a teammate after scoring his team’s second goal during the first semifinal match of the ISSA/Digicel Manning Cup competition against Mona High at the National Stadium on Tuesday, November 22, 2022. (PHOTO: Marlon Reid).

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

A new champion will be crowned in the urban area ISSA/Digicel Manning Cup football competition after St Andrew Technical High School (STATHS) defeated Kingston College (KC) 3-2 in their semi-final game at the National Stadium on Tuesday night.

STATHS will now face Jamaica College (JC) in the final after the Old Hope Road-based school – the winningest team in the competition with 30 titles – defeated Mona High 2-1 in the first semi-final.

It will be the third time in five years that STATHS and JC will contest the final, having previously met in 2017 and 2019. JC won those two finals.

It was two exciting games and in the curtain raiser, Mona High playing in their first-ever semi-final struck early through Donhue Mitchell in the sixth minute.

But JC roared back as Tarick Ximines turned Mona’s Dante Peralto inside out and rammed home in the 30th minute before Kevaughn Wilson calmly converted a 58th-minute penalty to give JC the victory.

In the feature encounter, Sakeone Satchell gave STATHS a ninth-minute lead with a beautiful long-range effort that beat goalkeeper Tajarie Lee.

Another wonderful strike in the 25th by right back Rashaun Frankson whistled past the KC custodian although he could have done better.

Nashordo Gibbs reduced the deficit for KC in the 31st minute tapping home following good work from Dujuan Richards. But STATHS were relentless and they notched their third goal in the 65th minute from Dwayne Atkinson III — who is the younger brother of former KC player Dwayne Atkinson II — now at Cavalier FC.

The prolific Richards gave KC a little glimmer of hope for a famous comeback weaving his way past several players and slotted home in the 90th minute. It was his 26th goal in a remarkable season.

With six minutes of time added on, STATHS held on for yet another famous win and ended KC’s hopes of retaining their title.

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Paternity leave comes into effect January 1, 2023 Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The proposed introduction of paternity leave for fathers of newborns and family leave for adoptive parents bringing a new child into the home, is slated to come into effect on January 1, 2023.

This was stated by Minister of State in the Ministry of Finance and the Public Service, Marsha Smith, who also advised that the proposed increase of paid maternity leave from 40 days to three months will commence on January 1.

She was speaking at the Civil Service Week Public Forum at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel on November 22. The forum was held under the theme ‘The Public Sector: Forging Ahead with Determination’.

The changes are coming out of the current public-sector compensation review and will be facilitated by updating the Public Sector Staff Orders of 2004.

The compensation review is intended to overhaul the structure of salaries and other emoluments in the public service.

“This is an opportunity for other Jamaicans who have the capacity and the ability to take on fostering to foster a child. If you are a public servant, you are going to be given that opportunity to get those weeks to settle that child in before you go back to work fully. This is why we are trying to modernise the public sector in real ways to meet the ways of public servants, not just in terms of compensation but also in overall quality of life,” she said.

Smith said the aim is to ensure that public servants are compensated in ways that are competitive with the local private as well as the international markets.

“These changes will ensure that we are able to retain the talent locally, which will ensure an efficient, simplified public sector,” she said.

Meanwhile, she indicated that the Ministry of Finance and the Public Service has reached an agreement with several trade unions representing public-sector workers on the restructured public-sector compensation system.

“I was very happy last week when the Ministry of Finance, together with its union partners… were able to sign several memoranda of understanding, and these… cover approximately 60,000 employees, and we are well under way to seeing the entire public sector being transformed,” Smith noted.

“The minister of finance… is committed to ensuring that we implement a public-sector compensation that is fair, transparent and sustainable. He is determined to ensure that each and every public sector worker is better off financially. To all public-sector workers, I say be patient; there is always some shifting around when there is transformation, but in the end, everything eventually settles down,” she said.

Smith applauded all the unions that have passionately represented their members through the process, “and I acknowledge the trust they have shown in the Government by signing this agreement”.

“For those who have not yet signed, I encourage you to do so. I am confident that this is a step in the right direction as we continue to change the various aspects of public-sector transformation,” she said.

The public forum formed part of events to observe Civil Service Week 2022.

JIS News

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Car dealership calls for more tax concessions on hybrid cars Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

The managing director of a local car dealership has voiced that the tax break on hybrid vehicles needs to be expanded to include larger cars.

Roger Moore of Nassco Ltd stated he would like to see more incentives for hybrid vehicles during the Smart Energy 2030 webinar, themed Electric Vehicles 101, hosted by the Ministry of Energy and Business today, November 22.

We are going in the right direction, the only problem is getting the quantities

In April this year, the Government announced that it will be lowering the excise tax on electric vehicles for two years. The tax holiday was later extended to hybrids, taking effect from August.

However, Moore argued today the break was not enough. He pointed out that the duties on large hybrid vehicles remained high.

“No concessions were given for the RAV4 apart from the import duty which is 35 per cent across the board on hybrid vehicles but because the RAV4 has 2500 cc engine, cost on that will be very high and it still puts it into a higher tax bracket. So, it makes the RAV4 hybrid a lot more expensive so much that you really can’t say you are saving anything because the cost is so high,” explained the managing director of Nassco.

“We are lobbying the Government to see if they can look at that and ensure that the electric vehicles will fall into that same category which because of the bigger engine sizes, the cost might be a little more,” he continued.

Nevertheless, Moore reported that there has been major interest in hybrids since the concession took place on August 1.

“Since then, the sale of hybrid vehicles has been going very very well. We sold about 25 hybrid vehicles between August and September, because customers were waiting to see what relief they would have gotten, I think there is a place in the market for hybrid vehicles. A lot of the queries we are getting from customers are things like in terms of the power.

Unfortunately, importers have been unable to meet the demand due to supply issues. Moore indicated that he hoped this will be fixed by 2023.

“We are going in the right direction, the only problem is getting the quantities. We are hoping that in 2023 we will see the manufacturers getting the chips and stuff that they need in order to get these vehicles because the demand is so much higher than the supply,” he added.

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Mondial: gare aux surprises! Allemagne, Espagne et Belgique sur leurs gardes

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

À Mondial atypique, résultats imprévisibles? Après la défaite surprise de l’Argentine de Lionel Messi contre l’Arabie saoudite (2-1), l’Allemagne, l’Espagne et la Belgique entrent en piste sur la pointe des pieds mercredi au Qatar, avec…

À Mondial atypique, résultats imprévisibles? Après la défaite surprise de l’Argentine de Lionel Messi contre l’Arabie saoudite (2-1), l’Allemagne, l’Espagne et la Belgique entrent en piste sur la pointe des pieds mercredi au Qatar, avec la crainte de subir la même désillusion inaugurale.

Au lendemain de l’entrée réussie de la France contre l’Australie (4-1), les affiches Croatie-Maroc (11h00 de Paris), Allemagne-Japon (14h00), Espagne-Costa Rica (17h00) et Belgique-Canada (20h00) proposent a priori des confrontations déséquilibrées entre un prétendant européen et un challenger moins coté.

Mais dans ce tournoi inhabituellement programmé en fin d’année civile, en interrompant les championnats de clubs en Europe, les grandes sélections et leurs joueurs sursollicités redoutent de connaître le sort de l’Argentine, surprise mardi après-midi par les valeureux Saoudiens, 51e nation au classement Fifa.

“Il y aura des surprises dans ce tournoi, en partie parce que la préparation est plus courte”, a reconnu mardi l’Espagnol Roberto Martinez, sélectionneur de la Belgique. “Nous l’avons vu avec l’Argentine, mais tous les joueurs sont très conscients du niveau qu’il faut pour gagner un match, donc ça ne m’inquiète pas.”

Préparation écourtée, pas de série de matches amicaux pour roder les automatismes, les nations favorites abordent le grand rendez-vous planétaire sans filet et sans repères.

L’Allemagne méconnaissable, l’Espagne rajeunie

C’est le cas de l’Allemagne: méconnaissable, la sélection quatre fois championne du monde arrive escortée de nombreux doutes, symbolisés par ses errements défensifs, la méforme du charismatique attaquant Thomas Müller ou la blessure de Timo Werner.

“Je ne dirai pas que l’on est favori du tournoi, mais il n’y a pas une équipe complètement au-dessus du lot”, a reconnu Oliver Bierhoff, manager de la sélection allemande.

Face à la Nationalmannschaft se dresse le Japon, dont de nombreux joueurs évoluent en Bundesliga allemande et qui rêve d’atteindre à nouveau les huitièmes, comme en 2002, 2010 et 2018.

Pour passer au tour suivant, les “Samouraïs Blue” vont devoir s’extraire d’un groupe très relevé où figure aussi l’Espagne, qui lance contre le Costa Rica sa quête d’un deuxième titre mondial.

“Notre objectif est d’aller jusqu’à la finale, si possible”, a lancé mardi le sélectionneur espagnol Luis Enrique, autoproclamé “leader” d’une Roja très rajeunie.

Avec “Lucho”, l’Espagne a atteint les demi-finales de l’Euro l’an dernier et même sans grande star, les talents Pedri, Gavi ou Ansu Fati promettent de renouveler le jeu de passes “à l’espagnole” qui a fait les beaux jours de l’équipe victorieuse du triplé Euro-Mondial-Euro entre 2008 et 2012… 

“Avoir des joueurs de cette qualité peut t’aider à atteindre tes objectifs. J’espère qu’ils offriront leur meilleur rendement”, a déclaré Sergio Busquets, champion du monde 2010 et aujourd’hui capitaine expérimenté de cette nouvelle génération.

Ronaldo sur le marché

Le Costa Rica et son gardien Keylor Navas, remplaçant au Paris SG, promettent néanmoins de compliquer la vie à l’Espagne, dans l’espoir de revivre l’épopée de 2014 qui avait conduit les “Ticos” jusqu’en quarts.

Et que dire du Canada, qui se dresse sur la route d’une Belgique privée de Romelu Lukaku ?

“Il y a un coup à jouer” pour le retour des “Canucks” en Coupe du monde, 36 ans après leur première apparition, assure à l’AFP l’attaquant canadien de Lille Jonathan David.

Enfin, contre la Croatie, le Maroc espère également jouer un mauvais tour à une nation plus huppée, comme l’a fait la Tunisie face au Danemark (0-0).

Est-on au bout de nos surprises ? En marge du Mondial, l’annonce du départ de Cristiano Ronaldo de son club de Manchester United, après résiliation à l’amiable, place sur le marché des transferts le quintuple Ballon d’Or (37 ans).

Ronaldo, présent à Doha pour guider le Portugal dans le groupe H, avait fait les gros titres ces derniers jours en accusant le club anglais, où il était mis sur la touche, de l’avoir “trahi”. 

Ce dénouement laisse “CR7” sans club et interroge sur la suite de sa carrière, car ses émoluments XXL et son égo immense ne s’accommodent pas des clubs de milieu de tableau. Dans quel état d’esprit sera Ronaldo pour affronter le Ghana jeudi ? Et qui sera le prochain favori à mordre la poussière ?

jed/jde

Eden Hazard (g) et Kevin De Bruyne, éléments offensifs de la Belgique, à l’entraînement à Salwa Beach, près de Doha, le 20 novembre 2022
• JACK GUEZ

Les attaquants allemands Thomas Müller (d) et Youssoufa Moukoko à l’entraînement à Al Shamal, près de Doha, le 19 novembre 2022
• INA FASSBENDER

L’attaquant Cristiano Ronaldo (c) à bord d’un bus avec sa sélection du Portugal à l’arrivée à l’aéroport de Doha, le 18 novembre 2022
• Giuseppe CACACE

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