Out of Play
Layla Anna-Lee: FIFA Best Awards 2018 presenter on ‘charmer’ Cristiano Ronaldo and once getting mistaken for Neymar’s girlfriend
TV presenter and host Layla Anna-Lee will be hosting the red carpet for the Best FIFA Awards.
She’s used to rubbing shoulders with some of the biggest names in football at the annual celebration of the best players in the world.
Last year she co-presented with Bond-tipped actor Idris Elba and this year she taking on red carpet duties.
But who is the half-Brazilian, half-English fitness and fashion obsessed vegan watched by 900million people?
The Daily Mirror caught up with the married mum-of-one, who has 75,000 followers on Instagram, ahead of the awards do to find out more.
She revealed the bigger the star, the nicer they are – and that she is keen to avoid any wardrobe malfunctions at the awards.
It must be pretty daunting meeting all these high-profile players?
It is and it isn’t, it’s really strange. It depends on the player.
It’s just like if you meet normal people, if they’re lovely and warm – and I especially find this with the Brazilians – they make it easier within seconds and it’s fine.
Generally, the entire trip there I am completely nervous. I am half Brazilian.
I was born here to a British father but my mum is Brazilian so my love of football has always come from her watching football and screaming and crying at the television.
Do you still feel it’s quite rare to see women commentating and presenting football?
Yes, absolutely. It’s still quite rare.
But more and more it’s changing and look at the women’s World Cup, it’s the first time anyone has ever given that any attention.
Even looking at the guestlist for the FIFA Best Awards, there are also as many women as men on the guest list which is good.
More and more I am seeing more women involved in football, and it’s refreshing.
Of course, not as many as there should be, and there is a lot of responsibility on women now as they are being really competitive with other women which is so unnecessary.
We can all present stuff and there are more than enough jobs out there.
Do you actually ever really work with any women?
It’s very rare. Flying around with 20 male crew is quite normal.
You kind of have to have balls of steel, you build it up and it’s quite tough.
I don’t know if I am personally strong, or if I have made myself strong.
How did you get into football?
My dad actually wasn’t into football in the slightest, which is strange as it’s normally someone’s dad who takes kids to games in the UK.
In fact, I didn’t even have a team in England, I always used to support teams in Brazil because of my mum.
My mum is a very stereotypical Brazilian – she’s very over the top and dramatic. I remember asking her once: “Why do you keep watching football if it makes you so upset?”
But I quickly became hooked. I have a huge family in Brazil, very stereotypically Catholic.
My mum is one of 12 and I have more than 20 cousins and all the boys play football in some capacity.
I can see from your social media how excited by fashion you are, what’s the plan for Monday?
I got to work with a stylist who I adore, his name is Graham Cruz and he’s got such an edge, he’s really attitudey.
I am wearing a black Amanda Wakeley dress, with a split up the leg but it’s not too sexy as I had a bit of a problem last year!
I thought the dress was quite safe as it didn’t show any boobs or anything – the standard thing you worry about – but when the camera spanned across my back there was a bit of side-boob action.
Hugely embarrassing! But it’s so normal, it’s not like it could have been prevented or planned!
Maybe the cameraman should have panned in on the footballer I was talking to rather than me, that would have been nice!
So this year it is more safe at the back!
You clearly like to keep yourself in shape, is that something you keep in mind before these events?
I try but I am not really into diets, I am terrible at diets, but I am vegan which automatically means I am pretty healthy.
But I do like Coco Pops and Oreos.
I became a vegan after being a sort-of vegetarian for a long time and I decided to go for veganism for ethical, health and climate change reasons.
The more I read about meat, the more I don’t want it anywhere near me.
Are you into your fitness as well?
Yeah, enough. I am not like in love with it, it’s a bit of an effort for me, but I have a personal trainer who is amazing and I started with as I started to freak out about before the awards!
I am not very disciplined, that’s the problem.
But the more time I spend with these athletes, the more motivated I am.
So I learn a lot from watching how they train and what they eat, and being around such inspiring, successful people – you just want to copy them! It’s pure dedication.
The psychology behind it is really interesting, which is why I have always stuck to sport entertainment. I am there to discuss a) how we feel about their performances and b) off the pitch how do they become so successful, how do they become so brilliant, what in their personal life sets them up for the pitch?
You must also have to mentally prepare yourself for these events as well as physically, because some of them must be quite diva-ish?
Yes! [Laughs.] But when it comes to footballers, my standout favourites are Neymar and Ronaldo and I know that sounds really typical for it to be such big, stand-out players but you find that the divas tend to be those people who are bit below that.
The reality TV stars are far more diva-ish than the Tom Cruises of this world.
In fact, that was one of the major reasons I changed to go to sport. I covered a red carpet at a Tom Cruise film and Tom arrived two hours earlier and spent ages talking to every member of the press.
And then a TOWIE girl arrived and threw a right strop, she wouldn’t talk to people, she wouldn’t do this, and she wouldn’t do that and I was like: “Dude, don’t worry, I’ve got Tom Cruise and he is dead chilled out.”
I know you are happily married now but I heard there were rumours of a romance with Neymar, is that true?
Well, well! [Laughs.] We are really good friends and I think what happened was there were rumours of me ruining a romance with him and Demi Lovato.
But what actually happened was they were going for dinner and got papped but there were actually about 15 of us at that dinner and then when he tweeted a photo of me and Demi everyone was like “there she is ruining their date!”
But it wasn’t a date.
He’s a really good guy. It’s nice to just make friends in the industry and refreshing because I think it’s quite hard for footballers to make friends nowadays and a lot of them are quite lonely.
You say you got your love of football from your mum, do you hope your son is passionate about football?
You know what, at the moment I have chosen him to do Brazilian jujitsu over football because I find the discipline of it amazing.
The world of football and fame and money right now can be a very difficult world.
I see the other side to it, and it’s not all that easy all the time. You see them in helicopters in Monaco, but it’s not all joy.
These guys do have to sacrifice a lot and work really, really hard.
You know, there are times when I have gone to restaurants with players and they’re like “oh I can’t go in there because it is made of glass and it will ruin lunch for everyone else” because they’ll have to move people so they can be at the back of the restaurant – and then in the papers the next day you read that they made everyone move in a restaurant, and that’s not the case at all.
And a lot of them just stay in, because it’s easier, and that’s a whole different lifestyle.
My son is only three, we will see.
What’s Ronaldo like?
I have interviewed Neymar and Messi and Ronaldo together, and Neymar is really easy, full of Brazilian warmth, and when prepping them for the interview Messi’s team literally and figuratively crowded around him, stopped me from talking to him – it wasn’t his fault, it was the team’s fault, it was really political and very, very difficult to sort out.
And Ronaldo, I had never met him before, and I approached him and started looking around like “where is his agent, who is he with, who should I talk to?”
And he noticed me doing this and he immediately came to me and said: “What is it, what do you want, I can do it?” He was such a pro, such a joy.
He was like, “don’t worry, ask me whatever you want, I don’t need to know in advance.”
- Layla Anna-Lee will be hosting the green carpet at the FIFA Best Awards on Monday
Crime & Court
Osun police arrest three night guards over alleged murder of 40-year-old man
A night guard at Ibuowo Estate, Okinni, Egbedore Local Government Area of Osun State, on Saturday, allegedly shot dead a 40-year-old man, Badmus Mohammed.
The guard, Rasaq Moshood, DAILY POST gathered, shot Mohammed, a tenant, who is popularly called Lasgidi dead with his dane gun.
His Landlord, Kazeem Jimoh told DAILY POST that he was at a bar with the deceased till midnight on Friday, before he was called on phone about his death.
According to Kazeem, his tenant was killed at the front of the house, while his door was left open.
“I and Kazeem were at a bar till past 12 when I left him.
“I didn’t sleep at home but I got a call around 1 a.m. that Lasgidi was killed by a guard. When i got home, I saw his door open, while his corpse was outside,” he said.
The Police spokesperson, SP Yemisi Opalola confirmed the incident.
She noted that three night guards have been arrested with their dane guns.
According to her, “one Babatunde Olumide, the Chairman of Ibuowo Estate Okinni reported at dada Estate Divisional Police Hqts., that their night guard, one Moshood Rasaq used his dane gun to shoot one Mohammed Badmus, aged 40 years and he died instantly.
“Suspect has been arrested, gun used has been recovered, while the corpse has been taken to UNIOSUN Teaching Hospital morgue for autopsy.”
Opalola added that the case had been transferred to the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) for further investigation.
Out of Play
Chinese astronauts return to earth after six months in space
Three Chinese astronauts returned to Earth on Saturday after 183 days in space, ending China’s longest crewed mission as it continues its quest to become a major space power.
The Shenzhou-13 spacecraft was the latest mission in Beijing’s drive to rival the United States, after landing a rover on Mars and sending probes to the Moon.
Live footage from state broadcaster CCTV showed the capsule landing in a cloud of dust, with the ground crew who had kept clear of the landing site rushing in helicopters to reach the capsule.
The two men and one woman — Zhai Zhigang, Ye Guangfu and Wang Yaping — returned to Earth shortly before 10 am Beijing time (0200 GMT), after six months aboard the Tianhe core module of China’s Tiangong space station.
Ground crew applauded as the astronauts each took turns to report that they were in good physical condition.
Zhai was the first to emerge from the capsule roughly 45 minutes after the landing, waving and grinning at cameras as he was lifted by the ground crew into a specially designed chair before being bundled into a blanket.
“I’m proud of our heroic country,” Zhai said in an interview with CCTV shortly after leaving the capsule. “I feel extremely good.”
The trio originally launched in the Shenzhou-13 from China’s northwestern Gobi Desert last October, as the second of four crewed missions during 2021-2022 sent to assemble the country’s first permanent space station — Tiangong, which means “heavenly palace.”
Wang became the first Chinese woman to spacewalk last November, as she and her colleague Zhai installed space station equipment during a six-hour stint.
Mission commander Zhai, 55, is a former fighter pilot who performed China’s first spacewalk in 2008, while Ye is a People’s Liberation Army pilot.
The trio have completed two spacewalks, carried out numerous scientific experiments, set up equipment and tested technologies for future construction during their time in orbit.
The astronauts spent the past few weeks tidying up and preparing the cabin facilities and equipment for the crew of the incoming Shenzhou-14, expected to be launched in the coming months.
China’s previous record spaceflight mission length was set by last year’s Shenzhou-12 deployment, which lasted 92 days.
Six months will become the normal astronaut residence period aboard the Chinese space station, according to state broadcaster CCTV.
Space race
The world’s second-largest economy has poured billions into its military-run space programme, with hopes of having a permanently crewed space station by 2022 and eventually sending humans to the Moon.
The country has come a long way in catching up with the United States and Russia, whose astronauts and cosmonauts have decades of experience in space exploration.
But under Chinese President Xi Jinping, the country’s plans for its heavily-promoted “space dream” have been put into overdrive.
Besides a space station, Beijing is also planning to build a base on the Moon, and the country’s National Space Administration said it aims to launch a crewed lunar mission by 2029.
China has been excluded from the International Space Station since 2011 when the US banned NASA from engaging with the country.
While China does not plan to use its space station for global cooperation on the scale of the ISS, Beijing has said it is open to foreign collaboration although the scope of that cooperation is not yet clear.
The ISS is due for retirement after 2024, although NASA has said it could remain functional until 2030.
Out of Play
Putin’s Russia finally invades Ukraine
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a military operation in Ukraine on Thursday with explosions heard soon after across the country and its foreign minister warning a “full-scale invasion” was underway.
Weeks of intense diplomacy and the imposition of Western sanctions on Russia failed to deter Putin, who had massed between 150,000 and 200,000 troops along the borders of Ukraine.
“I have made the decision of a military operation,” Putin said in a surprise television announcement that triggered immediate condemnation from US President Joe Biden and sent global financial markets into turmoil.
Shortly after the announcement, explosions were heard in Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, and several other cities, according to AFP correspondents.
Putin called on Ukrainian soldiers to lay down their arms and justified the operation by claiming the government was overseeing a “genocide” in the east of the country.
The Kremlin had earlier said rebel leaders in eastern Ukraine had asked Moscow for military help against Kyiv.
The extent of Thursday’s attacks was not immediately clear, but Ukraine Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said the worst-case scenario was playing out.
“Putin has just launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Peaceful Ukrainian cities are under strikes,” Kuleba tweeted.
“This is a war of aggression. Ukraine will defend itself and will win. The world can and must stop Putin. The time to act is now.”
Biden immediately warned of “consequences” for Russia and that there would be a “catastrophic loss of life and human suffering”.
NATO’s chief condemned Russia’s “reckless and unprovoked attack” on Ukraine.
Putin’s move came after Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky made an emotional appeal late on Wednesday night to Russians not to support a “major war in Europe”.
Speaking Russian, Zelensky said that the people of Russia were being lied to about Ukraine.
Zelensky said he had tried to call Putin but there was “no answer, only silence”, adding that Moscow now had around 200,000 soldiers near Ukraine’s borders.
Earlier on Wednesday the separatist leaders of Donetsk and Lugansk sent separate letters to Putin, asking him to “help them repel Ukraine’s aggression”, Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
The two letters were published by Russian state media and were both dated February 22.
Their appeals came after Putin recognised their independence and signed friendship treaties with them that include defence deals.
– ‘Moment of peril’ –
Putin had for weeks defied a barrage of international criticism over the crisis, with some Western leaders saying he was no longer rational.
His announcement of the military operation came ahead of a last-ditch summit involving European Union leaders in Brussels planned for Thursday.
The 27-nation bloc had also imposed sanctions on Russia’s defence minister Sergei Shoigu and high-ranking figures including the commanders of Russia’s army, navy and air force, another part of the wave of Western punishment after Putin sought to rewrite Ukraine’s borders.
The United Nations Security Council met late Wednesday for its second emergency session in three days over the crisis, with a personal plea there by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to Putin going unheeded.
“President Putin, stop your troops from attacking Ukraine, give peace a chance, too many people have already died,” Guterres said.
The US ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, warned that an all-out Russian invasion could displace five million people, triggering a new European refugee crisis.
Before Putin’s announcement, Ukraine had urged its approximately three million citizens living in Russia to leave.
“We are united in believing that the future of European security is being decided right now, here in our home, in Ukraine,” President Zelensky said during a joint media appearance with the visiting leaders of Poland and Lithuania.
Western capitals said Russia had amassed 150,000 troops in combat formations on Ukraine’s borders with Russia, Belarus and Russian-occupied Crimea and on warships in the Black Sea.
Ukraine has around 200,000 military personnel, and could call up to 250,000 reservists.
Moscow’s total forces are much larger — around a million active-duty personnel — and have been modernised and re-armed in recent years.
– High cost of war –
But Ukraine has received advanced anti-tank weapons and some drones from NATO members. More have been promised as the allies try to deter a Russian attack or at least make it costly.
Shelling had intensified in recent days between Ukrainian forces and Russia-backed separatists — a Ukrainian soldier was killed on Wednesday, the sixth in four days — and civilians living near the front were fearful.
Dmitry Maksimenko, a 27-year-old coal miner from government-held Krasnogorivka, told AFP that he was shocked when his wife came to tell him that Putin had recognised the two Russian-backed separatist enclaves.
“She said: ‘Have you heard the news?’. How could I have known? There’s no electricity, never mind internet. I don’t know what is going to happen next, but to be honest, I’m afraid,” he said.
In a Russian village around 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the border, AFP reporters saw military equipment including rocket launchers, howitzers and fuel tanks mounted on trains stretching for hundreds of metres.
Russia has long demanded that Ukraine be forbidden from ever joining the NATO alliance and that US troops pull out from Eastern Europe.
Speaking to journalists, Putin on Tuesday set out a number of stringent conditions if the West wanted to de-escalate the crisis, saying Ukraine should drop its NATO ambition and become neutral.
Washington Wednesday announced sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, which Germany had earlier effectively suspended by halting certification.
Australia, Britain, Japan and the European Union have all also announced sanctions.
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