Saturday, 16 April 2011

O'NEILL IS JUST A BIG BABY

POOR Martin O’Neill, eh? What a man of principle, walking out of Aston Villa because owner Randy Lerner wouldn’t continue to fund his WAG-style spending.

In true toys-out-of-the-pram style, O’Neill is said to have stormed into the club, read out a letter, slapped his notice on the table and left.

What a big baby. But what got him so riled? Well it wasn’t a lack of cash, that’s for sure.

O’Neill blew a whopping £117million in his four years in theVilla hotseat.

That eye-popping sum included £12m for Stewart Downing, £12m for James Milner, £10m for Ashley Young and £7.5m for Nigel ReoCoker.

Then there’s £8m for Curtis Davies, £7.8m for Carlos Cuellar and £4m for Marlon Harewood. Is it any wonder Lerner wanted to tighten the purse strings? 

In the same period Everton, who like Villa aim to break the traditional top four, spent just £64m. And they reached an FA Cup final.

Perhaps if O’Neill could spot a player in the lower leagues like David Moyes (£1.5m for Tim Cahill anyone?) or perhaps if he knew something – anything – of the continental market (Moyes bagged Steven Pienaar for £2m, Mikel Arteta for the same fee) then he would have had some cash to burn this summer.

Instead, O’Neill paid top dollar for overpriced, obvious, English talent. Downing, Milner and Young were on everyone’s radar and that’s why O’Neill had to pay big money.

And what did Villa get in return? A team that burned out before the end of the season because O’Neill refused to rotate his squad.

A style of football that resulted in them reaching a cup final and not managing a shot on target. And a manager whose answer to his own shortcomings was to call for more cash and spit the dummy when it didn’t arrive.

As for walking away five days before a season starts – Villa, their fans, and Lerner, deserved better.


Daily Sport
14 Aug 2010

LET'S SMASH STRIKERS LIKE MASCH

August 28, 2010
JAVIER MASCHERANO’S move to Barcelona is yet more evidence of football’s pampered players getting too big for their boots.

Kop boss Roy Hodgson didn’t want to sell the Argentina spoiler unless someone coughed up the market value. Fair enough. He had two years left on his Anfield deal after all.

Not for Mascherano, though. He wanted out, no matter what. So he kicked up a stink, refused to play against ManchesterCity and now look.

Like the kid who rolls around the supermarket floor kicking and screaming and ends up with an ice lolly, he got what we wanted. But what about Liverpool?

They’ve lost the world’s best holding midfielder with four days left of the transfer window. And they’ve trousered £18m up front for a player they paid £17m for three years ago.

Then Mascherano was rotting in West Ham’s reserves and there was hardly a queue of clubs vying for his services.

By refusing to play against City, the 26-yearold left Liverpool up sh*t creek without a paddle.

They had a wantaway star on their hands who was prepared to carry out a wildcat strike to get what he wanted. They had money on the table from Barca.

By holding out for more, they risked having a bad egg in the camp and come January the price would have been less.

But so what eh, Javier? At least you got what YOU wanted. And what message does it send to the rest of the Liverpool players?

Just a year ago, Barca were in the hunt for Mascherano. Then the price was £30m to £40m.

But then Liverpool were in the Champions League and had finished second in the league.

Now they’re trawling Europe’s backwaters. That wasn’t good enough for Masch – he’d had his chips at Liverpool.

One hissy fit later, his value drops by £12m and he’s off to the Spanish champions.

Fernando Torres was kept out of the clutches of Chelsea this summer by promises of new investment at Anfield. That now looks as far away as ever.

So what’s to stop the Spaniard bringing out the burning bin and donkey jacket to secure himself a move?

Clubs should start taking the hard line. Get the lawyers in, dish out some fines or come to a collective agreement that players who take the piss are blacklisted.

If they don’t, there’ll be more like Mascherano.

TIME TO TURF OUT ANDY

ANDY GRAY is only too ready to highlight managers’ failings on the gadget-heavy bullshit fest that is his show on Sky Sports.

So without the slightest pang of guilt, I call on Sky to do us all a favour and put this dinosaur out to grass.

For 20 years we have put up with Gray’s cliches, his know-it-all tactical analysis and the uncomfortable fawning from sidekick Richard Keys.

Now it’s all gone a step too far. In Sky’s coverage of the Manchester City v Liverpool game, Gray ‘man-marked’ Keys on a piece of astroturf to demonstrate the difference between that approach and zonal marking. Yes, really.

It was as embarrassing as it sounds. And Gray gets £20,000-a-week for that? Here’s a thought. Why not tell us something we don’t know, Andy?

Why not find a new catchphrase – cos ‘tikkaboo-son’ is wearing as thin as your barnet.

And guess what? We fork out big wedge to Sky to watch FOOTBALL – not to watch you play computer games and push Keys around on fake grass.

Tuesday, 12 April 2011

NOBODY BUYS THIS TWO-FACED BULLSH*T!

IS football the most two-faced sport in the world? There seems to be a lot more honesty about in other sports.

Take the egg-chasing for example. If a team plays shit in rugby, the managers say the team played shit. And the fans love it. As Roy Walker so famously said - say what you see.

Unfortunately that's not a catchphrase that's part of football.

Instead fans have to put up with constant one-eyed bullshit from managers desperate to cover their own backs. Players do it too. It's enough to make a politician proud.

Look at Alex Ferguson. Jamie Carragher launches into a high tackle that doesn't take the ball and leaves Nani needing five stitches in his leg. Ferguson labels the tackle "disgraceful".

Jonny Evans launches into a high tackle that doesn't take the ball and leaves Stuart Holden needing 26 stitches in his leg. The Bolton midfielder is ruled out for up to six months and will miss Wanderers' FA Cup semi-final at Wembley. Ferguson says that Evans is "not that type of player". Spot the difference.

Carragher stayed on the pitch after his tackle while Evans was red-carded. On that point United had a valid moan - refs giving one decision one week and another the next drives everyone mad.

But Ferguson wasn't trying to clean up the game or launching some kind of moral crusade. If he was, why so quiet when Wayne Rooney slammed his elbow into James McCarthy's face?

Club bias gone mad is infuriating. Nani said after the Carragher tackle: "I want referees to pay more attention when players make tackles like that."

Yet when a Man United player made a tackle like that, his team-mate Rio Ferdinand said on Twitter: "It was an honest solid tackle between him and Evans and Evans gets a red card. I don't agree at all."

Steve Bruce was at it on Sunday. It wasn't a penalty - we know that. Liverpool's Jay Spearing was clearly fouled outside the box.

But when the Sunderland manager tried to give it the puppy-dog eyes and played the sympathy card in front of the cameras, was anyone buying it?

After all, the Mackems were awful, and didn't manage a shot on goal until the 86th minute. But that was the ref's fault, right?

Wind the clock back a couple of weeks and Sunderland clung on to a point at Arsenal after a perfectly good Andrey Arshavin goal was ruled out for offside. The Gunners were also denied a clear penalty.

Did Bruce tear into the officials? Did he reveal he had been to see the ref to tell him he got it wrong? Of course not. Because he'd benefitted from it and that's all that matters. So he just shrugged and said Sunderland had "got away with one". Welcome to the world of football logic.

Liverpool may well point Bruce to last season's visit to the Stadium of Light when Darren Bent's beachball-assisted winner should have been ruled out.

It wasn't, Sunderland won and Bruce said: "If anybody knew that rule - that it is supposed to be a drop ball - then you are a saddo."

That's not sad. What's sad is that managers think we buy this bullshit.


Daily Sport
23 Mar 2011

WINTER FOOTBALL IS SNOW JOKE

TEMPERATURES are lower than a call-girl's knickers at a footballers' Christmas do and the snow is deeper than Roman Abramovich's pockets.

So what do we do? Play football. Genius.

No matter that some people can't get out of their front door. No matter that public transport is grinding to a halt. The show must go on – there's bills to pay and Sky Sports subscriptions to justify after all.

And if someone slips and cracks their head on an icy pavement, well, it doesnt matter – at least the pitch is alright.

For once in this country why don't we use a bit of common sense?

It might be tradition to freeze our bollocks off at the match but tradition in football bit the dust with fourth officials, technical areas and girls with pom-poms.

Why not have a bit of time off over Crimbo, forget about snood-clad millionaires and spend a bit of time with the family? It's not like match-going regulars spend time with their loved ones at the game any more is it? The prices have seen to that.

And who knows, a winter break might actually help our clubs and the international team to prosper.

Chelsea fans might have had a little chuckle at their boys drawing Copenhagen in the Champions League but perhaps the Danes were having a laugh, too.

Because their team will be putting its feet up for a well-deserved rest while the Stamford Bridge men roam the country fulfilling the ridiculous festive fixture list in England.

Off course London's big spenders should still have too much for Copenhagen, but who knows? Fresher legs is not be sniffed at as a leveller – ask England. Every time they flop in a major competition almost inevitably it's against footballers who aren't asked to play all year round.

Alex Ferguson has been pushing for a winter break for almost 30 years, and think what you like about whisky nose, he knows a thing or two about football.

We are the only country in Europe to play on through the coldest part of the year. Not only that, to keep the telly companies happy, eight or nine games are piled on to keep the mince-pie feasting audience away from James Bond films.

Players hardly train during this time, showing up between games for a little jog before they go home to their Twitter accounts. Inevitably, stars get tweaks, strains and pulls, but they'll play on to keep everyone happy and with the chase for glory in mind.

UEFA research shows that players in leagues without a winter break are FOUR times more likely to suffer a stress fracture or other injuries in April and May than those in, say, Germany and Spain.

So how can our boys be fit for anything in the summer other than sunning their skinny arses? The answer is they can't be. They're not. And that's just one of the reasons why England are shite when it matters.

Bring up a winter break and someone will inevitably wheel out the same old arguments of why to keep on plodding on through the icy wastes.

Top of the list – fixture congestion. Of course if the money-mad chairman behind the formation of the Premier League had stuck to their promise of a slimmed-down 18-club league we wouldn't have that problem.

As it is, if we're looking for pointless fixtures to get rid off, what about the Carling Cup? It's widely-regarded as a Mickey Mouse competition anyway, and plenty of clubs just use it as a glorified reserve-team fixture.

Scrub that from the calendar and there's a bit more room to manoeuvre.

Then maybe football fans and players can do what everyone else does on Boxing Day, eat a turkey sandwich and look for batteries.

It's got to better than skidding on motorways and risking frostbite any day of the week.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ARSENE WENGER's brand of football may be the beautiful game in its purest form but pretty boys are never the hardknocks are they?

Yet again, Wenger's men bottled it when it mattered, bullied into submission by a Manchester United side that's more fight and passion than finesse and skill.

Perhaps Wenger should lead from the front in toughening up his fancy dans if he really wants that Premier League title.

Can you imagine the Frenchman kicking shit out of a punchbag at the Colney training ground or launching into a flying two-footer to pole-axe Samir Nasri?

Maybe he should. Arsenal might be able to do what they want with a ball but they need to grow a pair to floor the big boys.





Friday, 8 April 2011

IS WOY THE RIGHT MAN FOR LIVERPOOL?


Is Woy the right man for Liverpool?

Daily Sport
01 Jul 2010
Yes - says John Aldridge.

ROY HODGSON goes about his business in a quiet and unassuming manner. Not like some managers. When you look down the line that’s the way Liverpool managers have always been. He’s done a marvellous job and is one of the old guard who doesn’t say a...read more...
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SQUEAKY BUM TIME


Daily Sport18 Jan 2011

WITCH HUNT OFF FOR NOW BUT THERE'S TAFFER TESTS FOR ITALIAN


Daily Sport
27 Mar 2011

BACK SACK OR CRACK?


Daily Sport
07 Jan 2011

KEN HE FIX IT?


Daily Sport
14 Jan 2011

Thursday, 7 April 2011

IT'S NOT JUST NANI'S GASH THAT'S A PROBLEM FOR UNITED


It is not just Nani’s gash that’s a problem for United

Daily Sport
09 Mar 2011


FOR once the Nani gash was nothing to do with Wayne Rooney.

And instead of being an embarrassment to Manchester United, it was a convenient smokescreen.

Phil Dowd got it wrong when he failed to dismiss Jamie Carragher for his shuddering tackle on Nani that left the cry-baby winger with, er, a cut, in United’s deserved defeat at Anfield.

He also got it wrong when Rafael was allowed to stay on for doing a passable impression of Bruce Lee.

But talk of Nani’s gash and Alex Ferguson’s toys out of the pram reaction to defeat (or lack of it) was a veil over a string of problems at United.

That may sound mad when they top the league and are still alive in the Champions League and the FA Cup. But anyone with eyes can see all is not right at Old Trafford.

United must be the least convincing table-toppers in a lifetime. The Glazers continue to ignore pleas to leave and bids to buy and they and their debts remain.

And as average players like Michael Carrick and Anderson are handed new deals, it’s hard to shake a feeling that it’s because they can’t afford to buy anyone better.

Rooney is still far from being himself and Dimitar Berbatov remains an enigma, capable of the sublime – see his jaw-dropping control of a hoofed ball on Sunday – and the ridiculous (his general levels of effort).

And leading the madhouse is Ferguson, or the silent Knight as he is now known after his laughable “media blackout” following the Anfield humiliation.

He may be 69, but he really needs to grow up.

United match-goers sing: “We’re Man United, we’ll do what we want.” And it appears the fans are not the only people associated with the club who believe that ditty.

Managers are supposed to speak to broadcasters after a TV match. Ferguson didn’t and he ordered his players to keep it shut, too.

Even Ryan Giggs had to shrug and say ‘no’ when asked to talk about passing Bobby Charlton’s appearance record. Must be a real lift for his morale that.

So Ferguson will be hit hard now, right? He’ll face a fine, a ban? Nah.

The Premier League will only act if a broadcaster complains. And guess what?  No-one at Sky, BBC or talkSport has got the balls to take him on. Not that his behaviour should come as any surprise.

He still doesn’t speak to the BBC just because of some perfectly reasonable journalism. And he regularly bans press men just because he doesn’t agree with what they write.

Ferguson even once banned the club’s own TV channel because a presenter said United should play 4-4-2.

And he’s fallen out with the FA again of course.

Could it be that the grumpy grandad’s bullying tactics are finally going to fail? As United played out the final minutes of their defeat at Anfield, the Kop taunted their rivals: “You’re Man United, you’ll do as your told.”

Maybe it’s time Fergie did just that and stopped making up his own rules.

WENGER'S GOT ARS ON THE ROAD TO NOWHERE


Daily Sport16 Mar 2011



Daily Sport, March 16, 2011
ARSENAL are like a posh car with a shit engine – it draws admiring looks everywhere it goes but breaks down before it gets home.
If your motor performed like that for six years, what would you do? Trade it in for one that could do the job? Kick f*ck out of it like Basil Fawlty did to that crappy Mini?
Or sit there, grin and say ‘Ah well, it looks good, and at least we’ve got money in the bank’?
Wenger has had the fortnight from hell – two weeks, three trophies down the swanny.
First, Arsenal were outfought by Birmingham in the Carling Cup final.
Then they failed to beat Sunderland at home in the Premier League and Barca swept them aside in the Champions League.
And on Saturday a Man United team containing SEVEN defenders beat them at Old Trafford.
Fans that were talking about the quadruple now look like bigger tits than you find on your average page in this newspaper.
Fact is, the Gunners bottled it. They might play pretty triangles that get the geeks foaming at the mouth but so what?
Barca do it better – they score and get regular results.
And forget whining about refs, Arsenal got spannered in Spain, Van Persie knew what he was doing and Wenger made a holy show of himself when he claimed his side would have won it if the Dutchman hadn’t been sent off.
Wenger could still end a trophy drought dating back to 2005 by winning the Premier League.
But what price them cocking that up, too? Whatever it is, I’ll take it.
The Gunners have great young footballers but they’re not winners. There’s more fight in the post office on pension day.
They don’t have players who by sheer determination alone can grab a game by the scruff of the neck and win it.
I’m thinking Steven Gerrard, Frank Lampard, Carlos Tevez, Rafael Van Der Vaart, Ryan Giggs.
Instead Arsenal have a bunch of players who shit their kecks when they see the finishing post. They’re football’s answer to Devon Loch. Wenger can point the finger and dream up excuses but there’s only one person to blame and he’s in the mirror when the Frenchman brushes his teeth every morning.
Wenger has had 15 years to drum his philosophy into the club and six years to build a winning side.
If he looks at the teams that brought home the bacon in the past, they’re chalk and cheese against the class of 2011.
Wenger’s winners played decent footie but they could fight, too.
Patrick Vieira, Emmanuel Petit, Martin Keown – none of them ever shirked a tackle.
Can the same be said of Arshavin, Rosicky, Chamakh and the rest?
For f*ck’s sake, Nicklas Bendtner owns pink boots and was once scared by a balloon on the pitch – what does he think when he’s facing a burly centre-half?
Wenger bought those players and what about the ones he didn’t buy?
Where’s the top-class centre half, the reliable keeper and the dominant central midfielder?
Where’s the striker who can regularly net 20-plus goals a season?
Rumour has it Wenger CAN spend. That he’s sitting on a kitty of £80m. If that’s true it should be another nail in the coffin.
The whole point of quitting Highbury for the Emirates was so Arsenal could compete financially.
Yet in the five years that spanking ground has been their home they’ve spent less than Sunderland and Villa.
It’s all well and good growing your own and buying them early but it's just not working.
Time for Plan B, Arsene. Otherwise the Arsenal board will be thinking about a new engine for its posh car – and a taxi for Wenger.

CLATT'S THE WAY TO FUEL FANS' TALK OF A CONSPIRACY


Daily Sport
02 Nov 2010

Daily Sport, November 2, 2010

IT'S ONE rule for them and another for us. It's not fair. That f*cking referee. You'll hear footie fans all over the country saying that or something similar after their team's latest defeat.
It's hardly ever the fault of the players they follow up and down the country - there's ALWAYS a conspiracy. Such is the blind faith of many a football supporter.
But you can't always blame the fans because sometimes they are right. Ask Mark Clattenburg.
Not only did he get his call for Nani's goal at Old Trafford spectacularly wrong, but he also fuelled the fire of the claim that big clubs like Manchester United get preferential treatment from officials - particularly when they're at home.
Let's deal with the incident itself first. Nani goes down and handles the ball THREE TIMES in expectation of a penalty which he doesn't get.
Tottenham goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes puts it down to take a free-kick without realising firstly that Clattenburg had not awarded one and secondly that Nani was lurking behind him. The winger taps the ball into an empty net.
The mantra chanted by Alex Ferguson, Man United players and pundits is that Gomes should shoulder the blame. He should have played to the whistle.
But why should Clattenburg get off the hook? If he's waved play on - a signal which could not have been that clear if Gomes didn't see it - and United have benefitted (which they did), he hd the power to pull the game back, book Nani for the handball and give Spurs the free-kick.
The 'advantage' of playing on is only supposed to benefit the team against which an offence has been committed (Spurs).
So if Clattenburg had followed the rules properly (and listened to the linesman) it would have been job done, not controversy.
Spurs fans could also righfully moan about how Clattenburg treated their players compared to United's. Because while the men in white were waved away as they protested, Rio Ferdinand was allowed to stand touch tight while ref and assistant discussed whether it was goal or not. What's that about?
So it looks like Ferdi got special treatment from Clattenburg.
Spurs' terrible record at Old Trafford continues - they haven't won there since Gary Lineker scored in 1989.
And the Nani goal can be added to Pedro Mendes' shot that Roy Carroll scrambled out of the goal from well behind the line five years ago as another injustice.
The ref that day? Clattenburg.
And let's not forget a dodgy penalty awarded by Howard Webb two seasons ago against Spurs. That helped turn a 2-0 deficit into a 5-2 win.
Can you remember Manchester United being on the end of string of such dodgy decisions?
Me neither.
No conspiracy though, nothing to see here, no-one's at fault. Unlike Mr Clattenburg, we'll just have to keep our hair on - it's just those pesky fans and their conspiracy theories, isn't it?

BAN THE YELLOW IDIOTS

ON the subject of fans, some need to sit in a dark room and give their head a wobble.
I witnessed a new one on me at the Reebok Stadium on Sunday - fans brandishing an imaginary yellow card. It wasn't one or two either, it was like witnessing a new dance craze.
I've necked many a pint while fans have launched into a rant about players doing that on the pitch.
Refs and law makers promised to stop the stars doing it five years ago. But how about stopping it in the stands? And while we're there, ban drums too. Why the f*ck do you need a drum at a match?
It does nothing for a hangover, I can tell you.

YOU'LL TEV-ER GUESS WHAT I'VE DONE BOSS...


You’ll Tev-er guess what I’ve done boss…
BY GARETH ROBERTS
Daily Sport
27 Jul 2009

CARLOS TEVEZ has been dubbed the “dope on a rope” after injuring himself in the shower! The £26million Argentina striker slipped and crocked his ankle while washing in his Durban hotel suite, ruling him out of the rest of Manchester City’s pre-season...read more...

YOUNG TOPS WOY'S SHOP LIST


YOUNG TOPS WOY’S SHOP LIST

Daily Sport
26 Dec 2010

ASHLEY YOUNG is top of Woy Hodgson’s shopping list as he tries to inspire a Liverpool revival by recruiting reinforcements in the January sales. The under-fire Kop boss is plotting a £ 12million transfer-window raid for the Aston Villa left-winger as...read more...

Terry now wants Chelsea to promise him he’ll ALWAYS be the club’s highest-paid player...AND that he can have the manager’s job if he wants it!


Terry now wants Chelsea to promise him he’ll ALWAYS be the club’s highest-paid player...AND that he can have the manager’s job if he wants it!
BY GARETH ROBERTS
Daily Sport
13 Jul 2009

JOHN TERRY is ready to test Chelsea’s resolve to keep him at Stamford Bridge with a string of OUTRAGEOUS demands. With Manchester City ready to double his pay to a bankbusting £250,000 a week, Terry knows he has Blues’ billionaire owner Roman...read more...

RAFA TURNS TO MAXI POWER


RAFA TURNS TO MAXI POWER
BY GARETH ROBERTS
Daily Sport
02 Jan 2010

RAFA BENITEZ has made a shock swoop for Argentine wing ace Maxi Rodriguez. The Liverpool boss has worked hard over the festive period to tie up a deal for the Atletico Madrid ace, who was also a target for Boca Juniors. And with the transfer window...read more...

TOON FLOPS GET £10M


TOON FLOPS GET £10M
BY GARETH ROBERTS
Daily Sport
20 Jun 2009

LOONY Toon Newcastle are set to shell out £10million in bonuses – as a REWARD to the flop stars who dragged them into the Championship. The jaw-dropping revelation will further anger spitting-mad Magpies fans who are fuming at the way their club is...read more...

NOW THE SUITS KNOW HOW A SNUB FEELS


Daily Sport07 Dec 2010

NOW THE SUITS KNOW HOW A SNUB FEELS
Daily Sport, December 7, 2010

SPARE a thought for those mega-salaried, suited-up “football” bods putting in all that effort to win England the World Cup only to have the sand kicked in their faces by a fat Swiss bloke.
It must have been hard for them, bless, to watch a man whose Wikipedia once said his middle name was “bellend” (it isn’t) play God and decide what goes where and when. What does Blatter know, they said, we had the best bid. Arr, how did they sleep when their electric gates clicked shut? Back to the real world, football no-marks in powerful positions pissing everyone off is nothing new to fans who have been brassed off with the modern game for years.
They’ve watched it warp into a money-obsessed parody of the sport they once loved.
They’ve been messed around by genius TV schedules which mean they drive through the night to see their team play Portsmouth at Saturday lunchtime.
They’ve watched competitions they love turn into a run out for stiffs, devalued by managers who couldn’t give a flying one about supporters.
And all the while the sport has burnt a bigger and bigger hole in their wallets.
So while England-lovers may have felt a tad put out that FIFA’s fatcats denied them a chance of watching the World Cup on home soil, there was little sympathy for the people who tried to win us the thing.
After all, who are the FA? Or the Premier League, or FIFA for that matter?
Did fans elect them? Did they bollocks, so why should they hold all the power?
Fed-up fans are getting organised and getting heard. The Fooball Supporters’ Federation is 180,000 strong and regularly meets government bigwigs.
They don’t like what they are seeing so they’re doing something about it.
Not for the first time, the FA would do well to follow the example of the fans.

LOONY TOON

JUST when you thought football had gone all sensible on us, Newcastle sack Chris Hughton.
What’s that about? A week or so ago, it seemed Avram Grant would get the chop at West Ham.
The majority of Liverpool fans would be happy if the underwhelming Roy Hodgson got the axe and some Everton supporters have amazingly called for the head of David Moyes.
But Hughton? What has he done to deserve such treatment? Apparently the Newcastle board want someone with “more managerial experience”.
Funny they didn’t mention that when they gave Hughton the job 13 months ago.
At the time the axe fell, Newcastle were above Liverpool in the Premier League with 19 points in the bag and a better away record than the Reds.
Not bad for a promoted club that didn’t shell out on big-name signings in the summer is it? Newcastle are held as an example of the wrong way to run a football club by most fans. And the fact they have had 24 full-time and five caretaker managers in their history is a bit of a giveaway, too. So who next? Serious talk says Alan Pardew but, knowing Newcastle, would you rule out Ant and Dec?