Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Re Under 5s - I always thought the Under 5s was the best name of all the 'firms'......funny how the myths have grown it was always much more disjointed and different odd groups from different areas or individuals joining together informally under a sort of umbrella name with various different 'faces' than the Football Factory etc make out AND initially it was mainly to all look after each other when you went to say Everton on a wednesday night. Anyway, that aws all a long time ago but it wasn't like it's made out to have been

red devil Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Question for the 'appy 'ammers amongst us.

> Would you want Di Canio as your manager?...



Broadly what EP said. I would have liked PDC at one time but I think he's going a leetle beet craze - not that that would be a bad thing right now. Can't shake the feeling that present club tactics (manager, squad) are just to 'maintain' so as not to rock boat of Olympic park move. Any adventure is being suffocated so our chairmen can make a bit of dosh on the Boleyn redevelopment.

gotta love those typos Otta


RD - no small obstacle is it. Think Wenger will be keen to show young Jose the old man knows a few tricks. Suspect he will but out a B++ team rather than just B team.


I was travelling back from Borough following the game on a blog. Arrived at Goose Green just as penalties were about to start so thought I'd have a pint and listen to 5live in the EDT (no tvs were on in there)


Was a bit like being 10 years old again - I'm sure I got some funny looks as each pen was taken

StraferJack Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> gotta love those typos Otta

>

> RD - no small obstacle is it. Think Wenger will be

> keen to show young Jose the old man knows a few

> tricks. Suspect he will but out a B++ team rather

> than just B team.

>

> I was travelling back from Borough following the

> game on a blog. Arrived at Goose Green just as

> penalties were about to start so thought I'd have

> a pint and listen to 5live in the EDT (no tvs were

> on in there)

>

> Was a bit like being 10 years old again - I'm sure

> I got some funny looks as each pen was taken



Is it me or did soppy bollocks Bendtner not look too bad last night, not great, but not bad. Still want him launched out the door for being a prize bell end though.

I've been saying this for years. It's about time the British media, football authorities, FA, and League cottoned on and stopped laying the blame at the door of "Johnny Foreigner", an easy scapegoat, when the problem lays in their own backyard.



Patrick Vieira says coaching is the problem for England youngsters

Patrick Vieira says England's failures at major tournaments are down to coaching standards rather than foreign talent playing in the Premier League.


Football Association chairman Greg Dyke recently stated that the national side need more English players starting regularly in the top flight.


But former France midfielder Vieira said: "The problem is deeper than just saying there are too many foreigners.


"The methods in England haven't changed as much as the game has changed."

They're really just two sides of the same coin though aren't they.

Given the pressures and resultant short termism, noone is tempted to fix things the hard way if you can do it by getting hceaper imports who are nearly the finished product.

ANd as long as johnny foreigner is the goto fix, the coaching standards won't improve and the english kids don't get the breaks and end up hoofing it in league 1.


So they may be the symptom, but that doesn't mean its not part of the problem.

I'm in full agreement with you there PD. Glenn Hoddle has been saying the same thing about coaching in this country for about 15 years. In fact, so frustrated was he at the lack quality coaching in this country that he set up his own academy five years ago.


See here - http://www.glennhoddleacademy.com/


Trevor Brooking has also been very vocal over the past ten years saying more or less the same things as Viera and Hoddle. In places like Holland and Spain there are at least thirty times more fully qualified coaches around the country teaching at grass roots level than in England. And Veira is correct when he says "The methods in England haven't changed as much as the game has changed." But first and foremost we need more qualified coaches to teach the game to young kids with emphasis on technique. Too often you see (young English players whose first touch is bloody awful and that surely is the first thing you should be learning. It's the basics. Control, passing and awareness. Get that right at grassroots level and then you'll have more English players at our top clubs.

My old school mate might also be part of the problem.

I get to see him once a year when he comes over and hires the cream of the crop to be coaches out in the US for his 'soccer' training company that does both youth level and professional coaching.


He's (ex pro himself, cruelly cut short at incipeince by injury in our local pub game) pretty convinced USA will be better than England in international footie within 20 years.

maxxi Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> So, looking forward to Everton game with brand new

> striking saviour Mladen Petric (brought to the

> club because Carroll is not yet fit to play and C.

> Cole's return was ruled out as he was not fit to

> play) who is... not yet fit enough to play. ha

> bloody haaa.


Never fear, Carlton's here...http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2434272/West-Ham-ready-sign-Carlton-Cole-short-term-deal.html

red devil Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> maxxi Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > So, looking forward to Everton game with brand

> new

> > striking saviour Mladen Petric (brought to the

> > club because Carroll is not yet fit to play and

> C.

> > Cole's return was ruled out as he was not fit

> to

> > play) who is... not yet fit enough to play. ha

> > bloody haaa.

>

> Never fear, Carlton's

> here...http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/a

> rticle-2434272/West-Ham-ready-sign-Carlton-Cole-sh

> ort-term-deal.html



He's 4th in the queue - after Dean Ashton (he's got one good ankle), Frank McAvennie (he's finally quit the booze and his and Andy Goram's chat tour isn't selling tickets so he may be forced into a come-back), and my dog.


My dog is blind.


And I don't have a dog.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Thank you, this really made me chuckle. It's like you met my brother as he would be the one taking more than his share. Plus the 'pikey' chutney is a winner. Unusual as in can't be identified??? Sadly I'm not the host otherwise I would definitely do that I regularly shop in the Cheese Block and am a fan. But as people have pointed out, there is no cheese shop that charges less based on bulk, so Aldi unusual cheeses may be what the familam receive! Yay, so I can get discounted mouse nibbled cheese still! Oooo, now I do love a Stinking Bishop. It actually offends my stepmum by it's stinkiness but luckily she is not one of the attendees at this particular gathering.  This is blooming genius. It's actually my partner who has the biggest issue with buying in plastic so I will have to hide the wrappers from him!
    • I like the look of SD's Sweet and Sour chicken. It's a really good dish when made freshly and well. I'll need to try it. Sad that Oriental Star and Lucky House by Dulwich Library both closed at a similarish time. They were decent, reliable, "British Chinese" takeaways.
    • William S Spicer was a family-owned firm that initially made horse drawn delivery carts for breweries (especially Fullers Brewery in W London) and horse-drawn trams. With the advent of the internal combustion engine, they successfully made the transition to coachbuilding delivery vehicles London's leading department stores using German engines. WW2 interrupted their business for obvious reasons, and their postwar attempt to become the local assembler and distributor of Bulgarian "Izmama" trucks was not blessed with good fortune. In 1953, the company pivoted to being a full-service garage, leveraging their reputation for honesty and excellence.  In 1972, the Dulwich site was sold to its present owners. William S Spicer III (the grandson of the founder) retired to Lancashire, where he founded a sanctuary for the endangered ineptia beetle, which he had encountered in Bulgaria while travelling for business. In 1978, Spicer was awarded an OBE for conservation, and a newly-discovered  beetle was named after him by the Bulgarian People's National Academy of Sciences - Byturus Spicerius.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...