If the Three Lions win the World Cup, a football-obsessed principal has promised to rename his school after England captain Harry Kane.
If the men’s football team takes home the world cup, Norfolk’s Howard Junior School will be renamed Harry Kane Junior. Until the conclusion of the World Cup series on November 20 in Qatar, the institution will go by a temporary name.
School principal Gregory Hill announced on Twitter, “Howard is gone, Harry Kane is in. We’re following England closely.
With all our support, England will win the World Cup.
If England win, our school will be known as “Harry Kane Junior School” from now on. “Go, Harry, go England!”
Every student will also receive a badge bearing the new name and a photo of Harry Kane designed especially for the occasion. Students can also tune in to Monday’s 1pm men’s opener against Iran.
There have been rumors that the school intends to decorate with lion-themed banners and costumes.
An educator who has been told he resembles England’s football manager Gareth Southgate has dressed up as Southgate and begun carrying around a life-size cardboard cutout of the man.
According to Gregory, “Football is all about learning about different cultures and respect, and it has a really good drive on anti-racism too.”
Many organizations are lucky to have Harry Kane as their ambassador because he is such a great role model for young people.
The principal remains upbeat despite England’s lack of World Cup success since 1966.
If we win now, no kid will ever see this again in their lifetime, so why not go for it and have a tribute to Harry Kane?
According to Gregory, his interest in soccer was sparked by the fact that he attended the same elementary school as the England captain and grew up in the same neighborhood as David Beckham.
Football fans were dealt a major setback today when they learned that beer would no longer be sold in Qatar’s stadiums.
On the eve of the World Cup, FIFA reversed course and said that beer would not be sold in stadiums, infuriating fans who had paid thousands of dollars to attend the games.
Despite repeated assurances that products would be sold at games, the governing body came under pressure from the Qatari royal family and banned all alcohol sales. To the dismay of Budweiser, one of FIFA’s major sponsors, FIFA has announced that eight of the organization’s stadiums will no longer sell the beer.
