Tournament Pathways

🎮 Esports Tournaments  

Step 1: Data-Driven Selection
Players compete individually at first. Stats like kills, assists, win rate, and decision-making are used to recommend their best fit.

Step 2: Join Your Club
Based on performance data, players are drafted into clubs where their abilities strengthen the team.

Step 3: Compete as a Team
Clubs face off in tournaments, testing teamwork, strategy, and consistency under pressure.

Step 4: Showcase Your Growth
Player progress is tracked through performance data, giving them visibility to fans, sponsors, and future opportunities.

Tournament Pathways

⚽ Football Tournaments – For Homegrown Talent

Step 1: Talent Identification
Players are recommended by schools, clubs, or coaches—or can apply directly. Data such as performance stats, fitness, and match history are reviewed for first selection.

Step 2: Skills Challenges
Shortlisted players compete in structured skill tests—dribbling, shooting, passing, and tactical awareness. Coaches assess both ability and potential.

Step 3: Join Your Club
Selected players are placed into a local club, representing their community while training and developing as part of a squad.

Step 4: Compete & Progress
Play in tournaments, sharpen your skills, and build a profile that can lead to future opportunities in the game.

Coronavirus disease 2019

Coronavirus disease 2019

COVID-19 is a contagious disease caused by the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. In January 2020, the disease spread worldwide, resulting in the COVID-19 pandemic.

The symptoms of COVID‑19 can vary but often include fever,[7] fatigue, cough, breathing difficulties, loss of smell, and loss of taste.[8][9][10] Symptoms may begin one to fourteen days after exposure to the virus. At least a third of people who are infected do not develop noticeable symptoms.[11][12] Of those who develop symptoms noticeable enough to be classified as patients, most (81%) develop mild to moderate symptoms (up to mild pneumonia), while 14% develop severe symptoms (dyspnea, hypoxia, or more than 50% lung involvement on imaging), and 5% develop critical symptoms (respiratory failure, shock, or multiorgan dysfunction).[13] Older people have a higher risk of developing severe symptoms. Some complications result in death. Some people continue to experience a range of effects (long COVID) for months or years after infection, and damage to organs has been observed.[14] Multi-year studies on the long-term effects are ongoing.[15]

COVID‑19 transmission occurs when infectious particles are breathed in or come into contact with the eyes, nose, or mouth. The risk is highest when people are in close proximity, but small airborne particles containing the virus can remain suspended in the air and travel over longer distances, particularly indoors. Transmission can also occur when people touch their eyes, nose, or mouth after touching surfaces or objects that have been contaminated by the virus. People remain contagious for up to 20 days and can spread the virus even if they do not develop symptoms.[16]

Testing methods for COVID-19 to detect the virus’s nucleic acid include real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT‑PCR),[17][18] transcription-mediated amplification,[17][18][19] and reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT‑LAMP)[17][18] from a nasopharyngeal swab.[20]

Several COVID-19 vaccines have been approved and distributed in various countries, many of which have initiated mass vaccination campaigns. Other preventive measures include physical or social distancing, quarantining, ventilation of indoor spaces, use of face masks or coverings in public, covering coughs and sneezes, hand washing, and keeping unwashed hands away from the face. While drugs have been developed to inhibit the virus, the primary treatment is still symptomatic, managing the disease through supportive care, isolation, and experimental measures.

Comments are closed