Meet the Danish assailant who owns the half of New York City

After the drama with their star Christian Ericksen, who nearly died in the field during the first match, Denmark is experiencing a dream that can be conveyed tomorrow with a victory over England directly in the continental final. The Scandinavian team's protagonist is also Martin Braithwaite, the 30-year-old assailant who only a year ago was [...]
After the drama with their star Christian Ericksen, who nearly died in the field during the first match, Denmark is experiencing a dream that can be conveyed tomorrow with a victory over England directly in the continental final.
The Scandinavian team's protagonist is also Martin Braithwaite, the 30-year-old assailant who only a year ago was a protagonist in fact only of mocking memes, when he passed from Levante to Barcelona in La League.
It seemed an absurd and unworthy transfer to the Balkans, but to underestimate the Danish born in Esbjerg is the biggest mistake that can be made.
As a child, between the ages of 5 and 7, he suffered from a hip disorder that could have left him with a femur deformity, which he had temporarily left in a wheelchair.
With 7 goals and 4 assistants in 42 matches, where only 15 were title, Braithwaite justified his presence near the Messiah, while with European performance he is also receiving international fame.
But it will probably not require a significant raise because there is no need for it.
Few know, but this assailant who is not a possible champion in the field is no doubt a business champion. Along with 36-year-old Uncle Philip Michel, he owns one of the most active and innovative construction companies in the United States called NYCE.
The company has a portfolio with 1500 apartments in New York, and another 500 are predicted soon, along with building a skyscraper in New Jersey.
It's about hundreds of millions of dollars of investment that two young people have conceived with the aim of including the most discriminated categories in investing in the purchase of an apartment in a city where this was previously almost impossible for them.
Our family has been operating in the building sector” for years, says Michael, who along with Braithwaite separates the origin of parents' Guinea, small- transferred to the US. He relates how a football cousin is very present in the family business but not enough to set aside his career as a profession.












