ShortSharpShock
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By Dutton | Permalink | On 11 March 2013 - 00:18 AM
http://i.minus.com/iALsuQ48PGwRV.gif

Cream.


That pass was ridiculous.
bluemoon.
17 years ago
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By Dutton | Permalink | On 11 March 2013 - 00:18 AM
http://i.minus.com/iALsuQ48PGwRV.gif

Cream.

That's a very tidy goal.
Slashman X
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I'm the only one who thinks he was trying to head it back to Kagawa?
K3V0
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By Slashman X | Permalink | On 11 March 2013 - 20:20 PM
I'm the only one who thinks he was trying to head it back to Kagawa?


Nope, I've thought the same, he heads it in such awkward fashion.
Poe
18 years ago
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Nah, he follows the exact flight of the ball as soon as it leaves his head - he knows what he's doing.
Sam
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By Dutton | Permalink | On 11 March 2013 - 00:18 AM
http://i.minus.com/iALsuQ48PGwRV.gif

Cream.


That pass.
Dutton
18 years ago
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Yeah he flicks his head towards goal, would've been a different movement to the head if it was for Kagawa.

This is the guy who did this remember;
https://sortitoutsi.net/uploads/mirrored_images/c1t50WzaHxblvwpa8vcTvQtjdAjGidNWQg5EnSbX.gif
Slashman X
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Rio receiving no punishment after FA reviewed the incident with Torres
The Platypus
14 years ago
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Rio's a cunt, but it wasn't really a red card offense anyway.
ShortSharpShock
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144
By Slashman X | Permalink | On 12 March 2013 - 16:21 PM
Rio receiving no punishment after FA reviewed the incident with Torres


Yet earlier today, The FA charged Southampton with a failure to control their players after the Norwich match.

That makes sense.
Jamieandhisego
18 years ago
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By ShortSharpShock | Permalink | On 12 March 2013 - 19:33 PM
Yet earlier today, The FA charged Southampton with a failure to control their players after the Norwich match.

That makes sense.


It does in accordance with the rule set out. Rio's a prick and it was a dumb move, but it wouldn't have been a red card at the time, and it isn't one now. Whereas that incident is definitely in violation of the laws of conduct all clubs have to abide by.
Ninja
15 years ago
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It's definitely a red card.

Terry was sent off for less against Barca last season; Ferdinand is a lucky boy.
VP.
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By Jaygull | Permalink | On 12 March 2013 - 20:09 PM
It does in accordance with the rule set out. Rio's a prick and it was a dumb move, but it wouldn't have been a red card at the time, and it isn't one now. Whereas that incident is definitely in violation of the laws of conduct all clubs have to abide by.


If the ref see's it, its a sending off no question. How he's got away without any punishment is beyond me.
ShortSharpShock
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144
By Jaygull | Permalink | On 12 March 2013 - 20:09 PM
It does in accordance with the rule set out. Rio's a prick and it was a dumb move, but it wouldn't have been a red card at the time, and it isn't one now. Whereas that incident is definitely in violation of the laws of conduct all clubs have to abide by.


I was being sarcastic, I know what the rules are.

So because it wasn't a red card offence, it's totally acceptable to do what he did??
bluemoon.
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I know the FA are crap at this sort of disciplinary stuff, but I can't believe he's got away with that.
Ninja
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By bluemoon. | Permalink | On 12 March 2013 - 21:00 PM
I know the FA are crap at this sort of disciplinary stuff, but I can't believe he's got away with that.

There wasn't a public outcry, therefore they didn't act. That's all their review process comes down to.
bluemoon.
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Yeah I can believe that.
Jamieandhisego
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By ShortSharpShock | Permalink | On 12 March 2013 - 20:41 PM
I was being sarcastic, I know what the rules are.

So because it wasn't a red card offence, it's totally acceptable to do what he did??


Where the fuck did you pull that from?
ShortSharpShock
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144
By Jaygull | Permalink | On 12 March 2013 - 22:25 PM
Where the fuck did you pull that from?


I'm just asking the question.

How can The FA charge Southampton, yet not take any action against Rio Ferdinand? I can't get my head around how they think it's acceptable not to take any further action.
Sam
18 years ago
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Man United are doing an 'ask Valencia' thing on Facebook, bad timing for that.

My favourite so far:

If one man can stand up to numerous tanks in Tiananmen Square, why can't you beat a man any more?

Number 1
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By Ninja | Permalink | On 10 March 2013 - 23:58 PM
Because he's a much better player, basically.

EDITorry, that was a little more blunt than intended.

Basically, Hernandez is a great goal scorer but that's about it. On the ball outside the box he's a bit shit (but getting better), Welbeck is having problems inside the box at the minute but is one of our better players outside it, he's technically superb.

Also he's more versatile, so will get games on the wings whereas Hernandez won't.

Ah ok. It's an odd one because the stats show Hernandez scores more than both Rooney and Welbeck, but ofc RVP is the main MUFC goalscorer which means he's likelier to get a game and have one of the other two as a deeper partner.

Hernandez sounds a bit like Papiss Cisse - great finisher (most of the time) but meh general footballer. However as a striker Welbeck doesn't seem to do much.
By Sam | Permalink | On 13 March 2013 - 11:40 AM
Man United are doing an 'ask Valencia' thing on Facebook, bad timing for that.

My favourite so far:

If one man can stand up to numerous tanks in Tiananmen Square, why can't you beat a man any more?


Nearly every Twitter/FB "ask ..." is a bad idea. Saying that, that riposte is impressive
Shola
16 years ago
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Manchester United’s Yank-Hating Fans
By Jonathan Mahler Mar 13, 2013 10:30 PM GMT

Things are going pretty well for Manchester United right now. Sure, the team was knocked out of the UEFA Champions League last week, but it has a comfortable lead in England’s Premier League heading into this season’s final weeks. The club is also still in the running for the third leg of English soccer’s triple crown, the FA Cup.
In the hypercompetitive world of European soccer, winning one title is huge. Winning two is almost unheard of.
Not that any of this is going to placate United’s English fans. They insist that Man U’s majority owners, the Glazer family of Palm Beach, Florida, are greedy Yankees -- unfit custodians for their storied club, which was founded by a British railway company in 1878.
Here’s a thought: Instead of complaining about their team’s ownership, maybe United’s English fans should start enjoying their team’s success.
Simply by buying a majority stake in Man U in 2005, the Glazers took a big step toward securing the club’s uncertain future. At the time, United’s Irish owners were on the brink of firing its longtime manager, Sir Alex Ferguson, over a dispute about the ownership of a prizewinning horse.
What sort of thanks did the Glazers get for keeping Ferguson, not to mention loading the club with high-priced talent from around the world? They have been called financial parasites, vandals and strip-miners. More specifically, United’s supporters accuse the Glazers of taking on too much debt and pocketing too much of the team’s profits.
Not Bankrupt
That Man U’s supporters are focused on their club’s balance sheet might sound strange to U.S. sports fans. But it’s surprisingly easy to leverage yourself into bankruptcy in the Premier League, which doesn’t cap salaries. Your most talented players are always in danger of being lured to Spain, Germany, Italy or other countries with deep-pocketed soccer clubs.
Is Manchester United courting bankruptcy? No. It isn’t Leeds United, a three-time English champion that went bust and was relegated to the third tier of English soccer. At a market capitalization of about $2.7 billion, Man U is the world’s most valuable sports franchise by a comfortable margin, and it’s only just beginning to see the effects of its push into international markets, including Asia. Its lucrative sponsorship deals -- it will get $559 million over seven years to put “Chevrolet” on its jerseys starting in 2014 -- and global TV revenues make the Dallas Cowboys look like a cute regional business.
It’s true that the Glazers, who also own the National Football League’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers, borrowed some $800 million from hedge funds to buy the club. And the club is still carrying a staggering amount of debt. But in the context of its even more staggering growth, there’s no reason to engage in what Paul Krugman might call “fiscal fear-mongering.”
United’s finances are actually improving, which is reflected in its stock performance: The Glazers sold 10 percent of the company to the public in August at $14 per share, and its current share price is $16 and change -- a pretty good return over seven months.
Then there’s the team’s on-the-field performance. Since the Glazers bought Man U, it has earned four Premier League titles and reached the finals of the Champions League three times, winning it once. These are remarkable results, especially in a sport in which the better team often loses.
There are also intriguing rumors circulating about United’s future. After losing to Real Madrid, the world’s second-biggest sports franchise, following a controversial red card in last week’s Champions League match, Madrid’s manager, Jose Mourinho, told reporters Man U was the better team -- fueling speculation that he might be in line to succeed the 71-year-old Ferguson as early as next year. Reading even further between the lines, Cristiano Ronaldo, who used to play for Man U, conspicuously opted not to celebrate after scoring for Real Madrid during the game. A sign that he may follow Mourinho to United?
Not Poor
As for the Glazers, they’re doing pretty well, too, helping themselves to half of the $233 million that Man U raised in last summer’s IPO. (The rest was used to reduce the club’s debt.) Does this make them rapacious Yankees? Maybe. But wouldn’t a better question be: As long as the team keeps winning, why should fans care what its owners do with the club’s money?
If Man U’s supporters are really so unhappy, they can do what any dissatisfied customer does: Stop buying the product. For United’s hometown supporters, that’s an admittedly complicated proposition. They could stop showing up at Old Trafford, but even considering their antipathy toward the Glazers, that seems masochistic. They could boycott Red Devil merchandise, but with every jersey the club sells in China, it grows further insulated from the wrath of its English fans.
Of course, those jerseys only sell if the club is successful. And isn’t that what every fan wants?


This.
ianbaker
13 years ago
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By Shola | Permalink | On 14 March 2013 - 16:41 PM
This.

Ohh.. Its a deep burn.... It burns so deeply....
Slashman X
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Winning a double almost unheard of
bluemoon.
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A truly terrible article.
Ninja
15 years ago
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They bought a club with money they didn't have, they then saddled the debt onto the club, have accelerated the trend of commercialisation and treating the fans like customers and are using it as their own bank.

Fantastic business men they might be, but they're parasitical cunts who are lucky they had Ferguson there.
tmatthew
18 years ago
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Who even wrote that?
Pippadoc
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By Ninja | Permalink | On 14 March 2013 - 17:03 PM
They bought a club with money they didn't have, they then saddled the debt onto the club, have accelerated the trend of commercialisation and treating the fans like customers and are using it as their own bank.

Fantastic business men they might be, but they're parasitical cunts who are lucky they had Ferguson there.

The fans are the customers - football's a business first and foremost.

I'm sure United fans are happy you've managed to make the three CL finals and be so consistently successful in the EPL as well. The only reason you've managed to keep up with the competition is through accelerated commercilisation bringing extra revenue into the club.

Telegram Sam
16 years ago
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This was my favourite part;

Cristiano Ronaldo, who used to play for Man U, conspicuously opted not to celebrate after scoring for Real Madrid during the game. A sign that he may follow Mourinho to United?

The majority of players don't celebrate after scoring against their former clubs - it means nothing.
bluemoon.
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By tmatthew | Permalink | On 14 March 2013 - 17:09 PM
Who even wrote that?

A guy called Jonathan Mahler. He wrote it for Bloomberg.com iirc.

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