Friday, April 19, 2024

Am Ready For The Pressure at Power Dynamos: Lubambo

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Power Dynamos’ new teenage signing Lubambo Musonda says he is ready to ride the pressure at Arthur Davies.

The promising 17-year-old midfielder moves to Power on a season-long deal from K-Stars after leaving demoted National Assembly where he was on loan in the 2012 season.

“I am very much ready. Some of them were saying I can’t play there but looking at my performance I feel I can play there,” Lubambo said.

Lubambo, who has two senior Zambia caps against Zimbabwe and Saudi Arabia, said moving to Power who finished second last season was a dream come true.

“Power made the first move and I was shocked yes to be coming to Power,” Lubambo said.

Lubambo was Assembly’s most outstanding player last season despite their quick return to Faz Division one after just one year in the Super Division.

He has been brought in to bolster Power who will be taking part in the CAF Confederation Cup where they will play Clube Recreativo da Caala of Angola in Kitwe on February 16 in a preliminary round first leg game.

 

 

4 COMMENTS

  1. What do teachers of English do these days? Normally, a sentence that refers to onself must begin with the pronoun “I” followed by the verb form such as “am” in the case of the heading above. The cancerous ZamEnglish we read and hear in newslines these days is pathetic, to say the least.

    • I see you wrote ‘onself’ instead of oneself…happens to the best of us right?!

      They English themselves are the worst (an informed generalised statement!) when it comes to learning other people’s languages…
      We have been brainwashed for over 600 hundreds (you can’t even count one to ten in your own language!!!) in thinking that what is ours is actually bad…that we must master their language to perfection…
      We know enough of English and that is just fine with me! Energy I think should be spent on the core of the story and not how it was wrote or presented.

  2. No 2 No one bothers about how correct the grammar is these days.There is a shift to conveying meaning rather than correctness.The English themselves are even worse in these matters.As long as you understand what the person is saying then great.The argument they advance is, what is a language for? And the answer is not in how correct one is but what they mean.

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