Jump to content

Recommended Posts

SimonM Wrote:


> Understandable at the time. Benitez had just

> fielded a second XI away to Fulham, who duly won

> 1-0 - a result that saved them from relegation. It

> also exlains why, when asked whom he thought woudl

> succeed as manage at United, he answered deadpan

> "Rafael Benitez" >:D me that Liverpool, having disrespected the Premier

> league, should fail to win the Champions League.


Sorry, but I think that's total bo!!ocks! A manager of a team can field whoever they bloody want, and they will put their team first. Had Liverpool been playing the blades indtead of Fulham, he would have fielded the same team, and Warnock would have been happy about it!


If (and this is unlikely) a Warnock team ever get to a cup final, you can bet your bottom dollar he will have that game in mind when selecting his team for the last couple of league games... Assuming of course that those games are not important to his team, which is also unlikely, as his team will probably be in a relegation scrap! >:D<

Well said that man.

It all boils down to sour prescient grapes at the end of the next day.


If the Blades bid is successful I shall be a whiny little turd forever more, complaining about what a bunch of whiny little turds Sheffield Utd / Charlton / Wigan / Fulham were.


* points taken SimonM, edited accordingly*

Sheffield United, Charlton, Wigan & Fulham all made it clear from the start they would not let this matter rest - long before any of them were confirmed as relegated/not relegated. So it can hardly be classed as "sour grapes". I have yet to see any premier league club come out in vocal support for the scandalously lenient "punishment" the so-called "independent commission" handed out to West Ham.


And yes, of course a manager can put out any side he wants, and any other manager whose team is adversely affected by (real or imagined) sharp practice is free to comment on it.

Free to comment yes. I in turn am free to think it was a nasty bitter comment, and hold it against him.


As for the whole situation with West Ham, you are right, it's not only Shef U who have complained about it. What I want to know is exactly what the rules say about punishments for this sort of thing... If they state that this breach of the rules is punishable by a 3 point deduction, then it's black and white, and West Ham should be docked the 3 points... Basically, the real issue here is that the league need to make their rules very clear, and those rules need to be punished in a uniform manner. At least then no one is left in any doubt.

Everyone expected a points deduction (including West Ham): precedent strongly indicated a points deduction would be imposed (see Middlesbrough a few years back). The fact that a points deduction was the normal sanction was emphasised inadvertently by the Commission itself when it saw fit to add an excruciatingly long and unconvincing list of reasons to its "judgement" as ro why a points deduction had not been imposed. I think really the rules and regulations were quite clear until the Commission totally bollixed things up
It's a very fair point regarding consistency and Boro. However, there is still no guideline regarding punishments... In a court of law, a particular crime will carry a minimum and maximum punishment. The Judge then decides what s/he feels is appropriate in that case. The lack of these guidelines effectively means that the league can do what they want, and however unfair it may be, no one can really argue against them, because they can just say so what.

ha ha ha ha

"Against this backdrop, the Premier League confirmed yesterday that it is now looking at whether [sheffield] United themselves transgressed the U18 rule - a regulation that covers a broad range of offences, and which West Ham broke over Tevez - over the sale of the striker Steve Kabba to Watford in January this year.


United insisted that Watford, who paid ?500,000 for the player, could not field him against them at Bramall Lane in April, in a match that Watford subsequently lost.


Such clauses are not permitted in transfers between Premier League clubs, and while a similar situation occurred with Everton's goalkeeper Tim Howard against his old club Manchester United, those clubs escaped disciplinary action as there was no formal agreement between them.


If the League finds evidence of a rule breach in the Kabba case, theoretical punishments include fines or a points deduction. The precedent of the West Ham case could be used, another irony as United are calling for a points penalty."

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

    • Moving into a new place and need both a wardrobe and a chest of drawers, ideally collection Friday. Thanks!
    • Lordship Lane has two dry cleaners, three pizza places and an Italian selling pizza, two burger places, three bakeries, two hardware (ish, I'm thinking AJ Farmer here), God knows how many coffee and charity shops, two Italians, three nail salons, five wine shops... Where was the abject outrage when Dynamic Vines opened up literally next door to Cave de Bruno? But I don't see his customers decamped next door - no, those stalwarts are still out in force every night.  In Roman times all businesses were clustered by product. It's what kept prices down. Same in any market you go to abroad, they're all selling the same things next to each other.  Why is everyone being so hard on this new place? It's called healthy competition - you can't curtail the expansion of your business on the basis you that might hurt someone else's. 
    • I have a new fixation so any available, please let me know.  Thanks.
    • In restaurant terms I would say a chain manifests when the motivation is no longer “we are a couple/small group who have an idea and love food” who open a restaurant, them another and then a few more BUT THEN PIVOT to “we need capital to rollout out new restaurants so we have leveraged the help of the following investors”  that is the moment it stops being about the chef/food on the plate and becomes about the spreadsheet  so it is POSSIBLE  for a restaurant to have 50 branches and not be a chain - but I can’t think of any  I don’t know chango - by based on the number of outlets they appear to have just crossed/or are about to cross that line 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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