Jump to content

asteroidblitz

Members
  • Posts

    467
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Everything posted by asteroidblitz

  1. You'd be better off with one of these: http://www.ebuyer.com/product/118711 Superb camera, and easy to get the hang of.
  2. "Apart from little moans and grunts, his only commentary throughout the grubby proceedings is that he can hear a milkman passing outside." "The soccer boss, more used to bawling instructions at his under-achieving players from the sideline at Pride Park, pants to his lover: "Do you like that?" Her non-committal reply is: "Oh ****ing hell, Paul."
  3. A draw. That'll piss them both off.
  4. I was in a bar in Abu Dhabi for the last Tyne-Wear derby. Wearing me toon shirt. Load of Mackems in the bar. A few Geordies about the place too. When the Mackems saw me Toon shirt, I got nothing but snide, unwashed remarks. You know the sort; humour without the humour. Generations of jealousy in their eyes. Got nothing but shit from them. I kept my mouth shut though. However, when we scored....'Howay! Fuck off you dirty unwashed fuckers. Mackem cunts! TOON ARMY etc etc.' I was rather drunk.. Cue the unwashed...'No need for that, like' Cunts.
  5. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/foo...icle3556074.ece Physically, he is as imposing as ever, but a little of the spirit appears to have drained from Sam Allardyce as he sits down in a hotel near Bolton. Hardly surprising when you consider that it was not so long ago that he was dismissed by Newcastle United. The sack would dent anyone’s ego, and even a man as robust as “Big Sam” went through an emotional buffeting. “I was shocked, to be honest, then you go through a period of taking all the phone calls, everyone saying ‘why?’ and ‘I can’t believe it,’ ” he says. “Then that dies down, then you reflect, then you get a bit angry, a bit upset. And then you move on. And that is where I am now.” He claims to have stopped kicking the cat, but losing his job must be all the harder to accept when he sees the chaos that has unfolded at St James’ Park. We will never know if Allardyce could have turned Newcastle into a consistent force, but we can surely agree that he would not have led them into their present pickle perilously close to the relegation zone. He was sacked after 21 league matches with the team in eleventh place. “No one suggested we were going down,” Allardyce says. The least he deserved was the chance to see out a campaign, a proper opportunity to show whether the methods that carried Bolton Wanderers to league finishes of eighth, sixth, eighth and seventh could be transferred to a so-called big club. Instead, questions about his calibre have been left hanging, unsatisfactorily. He talks about coming back better than ever, about a career on the rise at the age of 53, but privately he must ask himself whether a job such as the one at Newcastle will come up again. While he waits for offers, he is sitting in the pundit’s chair for a variety of television networks. Given the chance to commentate on Newcastle’s forthcoming relegation battle, he insists that he will not be rancorous towards the men who sacked him, the supporters who showed such indifference or the players who questioned his methods. “I’ve no real bitterness any more because there’s only me who’ll be losing sleep over it,” he says. The terms of his lucrative payoff prevent him from saying all that he might about his former employers, but he is entitled to vent his frustrations. “If it was 18 months down the line, I would accept my responsibility,” he says. “But when I left, they’d had fewer points in five of the previous ten years. Bobby Robson finished eleventh and eleventh in his first two years before he got them in the Champions League. So I don’t know how much results were a factor.” Was it, then, the failure to produce the beautiful game? Allardyce was accused of betraying a heritage of cavalier football. He snorts, as well he might, given that we are talking about a club without a trophy since 1969 – when they won the old Fairs Cup – not Barcelona or Real Madrid. “I call that a load of waffle,” he says. “Too many people speak about how the Newcastle fans are, but they are not how they are portrayed. They want to win something, they want to win something so badly they will accept you winning something for the sake of it.” He points to the gradual improvement being engineered by Juande Ramos at Tottenham Hotspur, based, in the first instance, on diet and organisation. “Tottenham is a case in point,” Allardyce says. “It is not purists’ football that is being talked about there but getting results and winning. Playing style was never an issue. At Newcastle it was never going to be how it was suggested I played at Bolton.” His plan was 4-3-3, although it was not clear where Alan Smith was going to slot in, whether Mark Viduka would ever be fit enough to lead the line or if Michael Owen could be persuaded to adapt. Progress was fitful. “Newcastle were not good enough, in recent history, to go out and play 4-4-2 every week,” Allardyce says. “And in any case, it is an antiquated system; 4-4-2 has got cobwebs on. We were finding a way of playing, having changed everything behind the scenes. The players were still learning to blend. It was a question of patience. It is like building the Empire State Building in a month. It can’t be done.” Impatience is a criticism that can be aimed at him, too. Allardyce accepts that if he made a mistake on Tyneside, it was in not persuading the players to buy into his approach. Whether they liked him or not is immaterial, he says, which is just as well because a cabal of senior players were set against him from early on. A far more serious charge is that they rejected his methods. Allardyce believes that it was a clash between his rigorously scientific approach, which includes reams of analysis, and the laissez faire attitude that was entrenched at Newcastle. “Perhaps I couldn’t sell that to the players because they’d never been shown it before,” he says. “All that was said [before] was, ‘Go out and play.’ But today’s game is not like that. The level of preparation is so detailed that you can’t just say, ‘Off you go, off the cuff.’ I was challenging them to adapt and maybe that was a problem. I think I gave the players too much too soon. “Too direct? If those players had the ability to look at their ProZone stats instead of me shouting at them, they would have learnt more about their game than they’ve ever done. They would have learnt something about themselves. I don’t know whether any of that played a part in losing my job. If other people listen to the Chinese whispers or the tittle-tattle, no manager would ever get the chance to build or be successful. Maybe I should have gone, ‘Sod year two, sod year three, I’ll just worry about tomorrow.’ But I’m not like that. I try to build something that has sustainability, not a flash in the pan. I don’t want to sound like I’m making excuses, but how can you judge [from seven months]? It is destined to be a great club somewhere down the line, but who can make it that I don’t know. The longer it goes on without that success they think they deserve, the harder it is to achieve it, and they can’t do it by changing managers all the time.” With Kevin Keegan hopelessly out of his depth, Newcastle will probably be on to another manager by the time Allardyce returns to work, which he hopes to do in the summer. He may be forced to drop into the Coca-Cola Championship, while part of him is intrigued by working in Spain. “I’d be fascinated to see if they would appoint an English manager out there,” he says. Moving abroad would help him to dodge the BBC, with which he has refused to engage since the Panorama documentary that alleged that his son, Craig, benefited from nepotism during Allardyce’s days at Bolton. Harry Redknapp recently dropped his boycott of the BBC, but Allardyce is not keen to discuss either the corporation or the Portsmouth manager who might have succeeded him on Tyneside. “Only he [Redknapp] and Newcastle know what the contact was before they decided to get rid of me,” Allardyce says. “It appears that there was, but I don’t know. We haven’t talked about it.” Oh, to be a fly on the wall the next time Harry and Sam talk in private. At one stage, Allardyce might have regarded a successful spell at Newcastle as a stepping stone to the England job. He is convinced that the national team should be led by an Englishman and even argues that Steve McClaren was underpaid by the FA. “Why pay an Englishman only a quarter of what they are paying Fabio Capello?” he says. “It is like saying an Englishman will take less because he’ll be grateful. I don’t want to get destructive about Capello, he has got the track record. I’m just patriotic.” The invasion of foreign players is another topic that he can talk about endlessly and passionately. “The most scary comment I have heard is that Barnsley have 12 foreigners in their squad [it is actually eight],” he says. “Barnsley! If we don’t put it right very shortly, the backlash is going to be catastrophic. We care about sport, we love it, but we don’t spend time developing it. We will fail in the Olympics [authorities are trying to enter a Great Britain team for 2012] miserably.” Allardyce’s recent fate might be said to be a measure of our inadequacies. Like McClaren, he is one of the most successful English managers of recent years. That pair are about as good as we have got. Yet both are out of work and wondering how low they might have to drop to get back into the game.
  6. I had a hiatus hernia diagnosed a few years back after getting relentless heartburn. Now it's Lanzoprazole, 15 mg daily for me! Nips heartburn in the bud before it starts, and now I can eat the hottest curry without any acidic bile creeping up my throat!
  7. Is the vid available to download anywhere else? My administrator has blocked youtube
  8. The night Cantona popped in the winner totally against the run of play.
  9. I've got an Acer 5720. The recovery disk which I had to burn from within Vista corrupted, and I only discovered it when trying to reinstall. Unless you REALLY need Vista, I would just download a load of XP drivers from their site and stick XP on it. My 5720 was really sluggish with Vista, and now it works like a 'proper' computer under XP. You might have a few problems getting some of the more obscure drivers for XP, like the SD card or the webcam, but they can be found from the many confusing international versions of Acer support sites. I would never put Vista back on this lappy.
  10. Paging Isegrim and his Bundesliga knowledge...
  11. poo and goo pink and stink
  12. Which would make it all the more hilarious if the Tevez farce blew up in their face and they were sent down to the fizzy pop league.
  13. I've got a copy of the email, so hopefully it will be sorted. Just hope that they will leave my credit rating alone. Bastards.
  14. The feckers. I've been out of the UK for the last few months, and just came home to the usual pile of mail. I always keep on top of things by using internet banking, direct debits etc., and have never had any real problems. However, I was alarmed to find that 1&1 Hosting had ignored my cancellation email of their lousy hosting, and wrote to me a couple of weeks back to tell me that they have started court proceedings against me. I am faced with paying a total of 230 quid by Monday, most of it being 'legal fees', or they'll attempt a CCJ against me, so they say through their solicitors. I'd like to tell them to get fecked, but obviously I'm a tad worried that my credit rating will be knacked. I've Googled and found that lots of other folks have had the same problems, and have decided to either cough up or tell them to get lost. Any advice at this 11th hour?
  15. asteroidblitz

    Cookies

    Just been asked this question via email. No idea what the answer is. Anyone got any ideas??
  16. I thought the atmosphere in the Eintracht UEFA Cup game (was in the home end) was pretty tacky for the same reasons. Alcohol frei Licher? What's the point?
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.