France-Sweden Preview: Can Sweden find desperation?

France-Sweden Preview: Can Sweden find desperation?Christian Polanco and Alexis Guerreros of The Cooligans explain why France has ‘too much talent’ and will likely overwhelm Sweden in Round of 32 at the FIFA World Cup. Check out the full conversation on the “The Cooligans” podcast - and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen.2:03Now PlayingPaused
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France-Sweden Preview: Can Sweden find desperation?
Christian Polanco and Alexis Guerreros of The Cooligans explain why France has ‘too much talent’ and will likely overwhelm Sweden in Round of 32 at the FIFA World Cup. Check out the full conversation on the “The Cooligans” podcast - and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen.
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This is gonna be a big moment for Sweden to see if they can play at this level, but I have a feeling France is way too stacked for them.
Sweden cannot, uh- play at this level.
Okay, don't say that, 'cause you might have said that about Paraguay versus Germany.
I mean, it is, I, they, they, they are not playing the same way Paraguay's playing.
You know what I mean?
No, that's true.
They, they're not playing with the same, chemistry, cohesion.
They're not, they don't, they're not showing the same level of like, desperation, and this is why I think, CONMEBOL teams can be a little bit difficult for, for some of these, UEFA teams.
AdvertisementAdvertisementbut, but s- yeah, Sweden, I think are gonna get, I, I think are gonna get demolished.
Th- this could easily be like a 4, 4-nil, 4-1, 5-1.
I, I, I think France is gonna go nuts and they c- they cannot be any more excited that this is their opponent.
I mean, look at, look at these names.
I mean, it's- This is- it's, it's all the names we know and love.
We watch them every Saturday and Sunday, and then sometimes on m- on, on, on- Wednesdays or Thursdays Tuesdays, Tuesdays or- Yeah and Wednesdays, in Champions League.
but this, this team is just simply too, too strong, and Sweden has not shown me pretty much anything, that would lead me to believe that they even have a chance in this game.
AdvertisementAdvertisementNo, and Sweden hasn't ke- kept a clean sheet in 14, matches, and I feel like, make that 15.
Yeah.
this one's gonna be a tough one for them.
but again, I, you know, if there's one weakness, in, in France, to me it's, Theo Hernandez, their, left back.
Sweden is gonna have to, you know, use some of these, some of these attacking threats, maybe an Isak- Mm-hmm to sort of, focus on that side and have, hopefully a chance.
But, look, Anthony Elanga scored in consecutive matches.
Is he maybe a little bit of magic out of that midfield?
I just think in the end, over 90 minutes, France just has too much talent to, to, to sort of put under control in any way, shape, or form.
They, France has to have a really bad game for Sweden, and Sweden has to have an incredible game in order for there to be any chance.
France-Sweden Preview: Can Sweden find desperation?Christian Polanco and Alexis Guerreros of The Cooligans explain why France has ‘too much talent’ and will likely overwhelm Sweden in Round of 32 at the FIFA World Cup. Check out the full conversation on the “The Cooligans” podcast - and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen.2:03Now PlayingPaused
Netherlands-Sweden Preview: Will Dutch ‘urgency’ win the day?2:31Now PlayingPaused
Japan-Sweden Preview: Does Japan's team-first approach have the edge?1:34Now PlayingPaused
Can Norway pull off the upset against France?1:21Now PlayingPaused
France-Iraq Preview: Does France have a weakness?1:35Now PlayingPaused
France routs Norway 4-1, wins Group I1:38Now PlayingPaused
Why we should take the Netherlands seriously as World Cup contenders3:31Now PlayingPaused
France rolls over Senegal despite Mbappe’s 'slow start2:07Now PlayingPaused
Can France go perfect in Group I?1:46Now PlayingPaused
Will Norway’s ‘calculated risk’ against France pay off?1:46Now PlayingPaused
Why Senegal should be ‘proud’ of France result2:08Now PlayingPaused
Ford's AI experiment backfires as car giant rehires humans
Ford has admitted its push to rely heavily on AI fell short, revealing it has hired hundreds of veteran engineers after concluding the technology alone could not deliver the quality improvements it expected.
The US automaker has hired more than 350 veteran engineers over the past three years to help address quality problems that have cost the company billions of dollars.
Ford, however, insisted it is not abandoning AI and said the improvements have come from combining the technology with decades of engineering expertise.
'This reorg allowed us to look at the entire lifecycle of a vehicle – from software development to suppliers on our plant floor - as one continuous and collaborative flow,' a Ford spokesperson told the Daily Mail.
'At the same time, we have rallied the whole company around a clear vision: Quality Comes First. We've built a culture of relentless problem-solving and recognizing our teams when they prevent issues from reaching customers.
'Using AI is just a small part of this. One tool in a toolbox and culture that relies on experience and expertise as it does modern manufacturing tools.'
The so-called 'gray beard' engineers - many of them former Ford employees or recruits from suppliers - were brought in to reprogram the company's AI tools and tackle quality problems that have cost Ford billions of dollars.
'Artificial intelligence is a fantastic tool, but it's only as good as the information you use to train it,' Charles Poon, Ford's vice president of vehicle hardware engineering, told Bloomberg and other reporters on a call Wednesday.
Ford has admitted its push to rely heavily on AI fell short, revealing it has hired hundreds of veteran engineers after concluding the technology alone could not deliver the quality improvements it expected
Chief operating officer Kumar Galhotra told the outlet the company implemented mandatory meetings to troubleshoot quality issues and reprogrammed AI tools to identify glitches before they occur
The US automaker has hired more than 350 veteran engineers over the past three years to help address quality problems that have cost the company billions of dollars
'Over prior years, we didn't pay as much attention as we should have to the experience of our most knowledgeable engineers that have been with us through many product cycles.'
Chief operating officer Kumar Galhotra told the outlet the company implemented mandatory meetings to troubleshoot quality issues and reprogrammed AI tools to identify glitches before they occur.
Galhotra acknowledged Ford's reliance on automated quality systems alone did not produce the 'desired results,' prompting the automaker to bring back technical specialists to 'hunt for failure points before a part ever reaches the plant floor.'
Ford says pairing experienced engineers with its AI tools has helped improve vehicle quality.
'We're seeing our warranty coverages come down. We're seeing our recall costs come down,' Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley said Thursday on Bloomberg TV.
'These are all contributing to literally hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars of a tailwind for Ford on cost.'
The company also remains on track to achieve its goal of cutting $1 billion in costs this year.
Ford learned that AI could not replace the expertise accumulated by longtime engineers.
Ford says pairing experienced engineers with its AI tools has helped improve vehicle quality
Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley said the company is seeing warranty and recall costs decline, helping drive hundreds of millions of dollars in savings
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'Mistakenly, we thought that by just introducing artificial intelligence and ingesting the design requirements that we had, that that would produce a high-quality product,' Poon said.
He added that the only way to get the most out of the company's automation, machine learning and AI tools is to ensure 'they were trained by the most experienced individuals.'
The strategy appears to have paid off. Ford climbed to the top of J.D. Power's closely watched Initial Quality Study among mainstream brands, finishing ahead of rivals Toyota and Honda and behind only luxury brands Porsche and Genesis overall.
The result marked a significant turnaround after Ford ranked 10th among mainstream brands and below the industry average in last year's survey.
Three Ford models - the F-150 pickup, Super Duty truck and Mustang sports car - ranked highest in their respective categories.
Ford nevertheless remains the most recalled automaker in the US despite the improved quality rankings. The company said it expects about $1 billion in warranty and material costs this year.
Galhotra said recalls are a 'lagging indicator' of vehicle quality and predicted they would decline as newer models reach customers.
By focusing on preventing issues 'upfront,' he said Ford expects recall numbers to 'steadily come down with the newer vehicles.'