r.soleofsalford
Well-Known Member
brazil getting giddy about uniteds "great signings"
while sterling is a disrespectful ****
while sterling is a disrespectful ****
brazil getting giddy about uniteds "great signings"
while sterling is a disrespectful ****
Also, it's "disgusting" how a player of 20 can be financially set for life..."not that i'm a bitter ex-player or anything like that". No, Alan, you're a bitter fucking ex-rag mate.
brazil getting giddy about uniteds "great signings"
while sterling is a disrespectful ****
From Brazil, the guy who had to plead to the MUEN for scum fans to get behind him and even the rags thought AB was a joke figure!
i heard a rumour delph had failed his medical how true this is i dont know, but it may account for the strange turn around

The Times has an alternative, more balanced view this morning.... (lifted from the SSN facts thread)
The tendency in the past few years has been to characterise Manchester City as some sort of graveyard for English players. It is a perception that will probably be given another airing this week as Raheem Sterling prepares to complete a £49 million move to the Etihad Stadium from Liverpool that will make him the most expensive English player in history.
In truth, it is a largely unfounded view that has gathered momentum the more it is lazily cited but one that hardly stands up to even vague examination.
Joe Hart joined City as a 19-year-old from Shrewsbury Town and has thrived in the nine years since, establishing himself as first choice for club and country and one of Europe’s leading goalkeepers.
James Milner made 201 appearances over five seasons during which time the midfielder won two Barclays Premier League titles, the FA Cup and the League Cup, which is probably far more than he can expect to win at his new club, Liverpool. Another midfielder, Gareth Barry, was an unqualified success. Eyebrows were raised at the £24 million City paid Everton for Joleon Lescott in 2009 but the centre half would come to justify the fee.
Micah Richards was an integral part of the first Premier League title-winning team in 2012 before the defender’s City career was derailed by a succession of injuries. Similarly, Jack Rodwell was rarely fit, a cycle of injury problems rather than a lack of opportunities to blame for the midfielder making ten starts in two years.
Scott Sinclair, the winger, did not play because he was not good enough and should never have been signed from Swansea City. Comparisons could easily be drawn with the predicament of Victor Moses at Chelsea, only Sinclair’s status as an Englishman ensured his exile was worthy of far greater scrutiny than the Nigeria winger’s battle against obscurity at Stamford Bridge.
Wayne Bridge and Nedum Onuoha served a purpose before improvements were found as City’s ambitions grew. Richard Wright is a third-choice goalkeeper. As for Adam Johnson, Roberto Mancini, Manuel Pellegrini’s predecessor as manager, had no doubts about the England winger’s talent and was desperate for him to deliver, but the player’s failure to apply himself properly off the field proved an enduring frustration and had inevitable consequences on it.
The point is nationality has no bearing on whether a player will succeed or not at City but application and attitude does. Sure, as a high-profile Englishman in a team blessed with too few of them Sterling will be under frequent scrutiny. Yet it is the combination of an exorbitant fee and a sullied reputation that have actually served to ramp up the pressure and leave this gifted 20-year-old with a lot less room for manoeuvre than he might ordinarily have experienced. Sterling has got his move but at what cost?
The task facing Sterling at City does not exactly mirror that of Johnson. The former Middlesbrough player, albeit two years older than Sterling when he moved to the Etihad, cost only £8 million from the Teesside club and was gradually introduced into the first team. At £49 million, there will be no hiding place for Sterling. His age will buy him some time and offer hope of a long, fruitful career at the club but at that price City and their fans will expect consistency, not one good game in five.
Nonetheless, Johnson’s plight is a cautionary tale for Sterling and there have been enough indiscretions in the latter’s recent past not to dismiss the theory that he could be more trouble than he is worth. Mancini with Brian Marwood, now the managing director of the City Football Academy, and the support staff at the club spent hours trying to counsel Johnson about the importance of conducting himself in the right way as well as reaching out to those close to him, but lifestyle issues persisted. Mancini would complain publicly about Johnson’s drinking habits. When Johnson was charged in April with three offences of sexual activity with a girl under the age of 16 and one of grooming, the disappointment was felt keenly at City.
Sterling has had his brushes with the law. He was cleared at Liverpool magistrates court in September 2013 of common assault on a former girlfriend, a few months after a charge of common assault on a different woman was dropped just as the trial was due to start.
In April, he was photographed allegedly smoking a shisha pipe and inhaling nitrous oxide for recreational purposes and that is before we get to his ugly contract stand-off with Liverpool, the undignified attempts to agitate for a transfer and the dubious advice he has received from his agent, Aidy Ward, who has been rebuked by Brendan Rodgers, the Liverpool manager.
Pellegrini may not be too concerned, though. It was in March that the City manager spelt out his longing for another “crack” player — a game-changer — and in Sterling he believes he has found one. It will certainly be interesting to see where and how the Chilean deploys his impending arrival. If he opts to start Wilfried Bony up front with Sergio Agüero, Sterling may be used primarily out wide, but it would be no surprise to see the player form part of a three-man attack with Agüero and David Silva.
English football needs Sterling to succeed, but his nationality will not be a factor if he falls short.
The Times has an alternative, more balanced view this morning.... (lifted from the SSN facts thread)
The tendency in the past few years has been to characterise Manchester City as some sort of graveyard for English players. It is a perception that will probably be given another airing this week as Raheem Sterling prepares to complete a £49 million move to the Etihad Stadium from Liverpool that will make him the most expensive English player in history.
In truth, it is a largely unfounded view that has gathered momentum the more it is lazily cited but one that hardly stands up to even vague examination.
Joe Hart joined City as a 19-year-old from Shrewsbury Town and has thrived in the nine years since, establishing himself as first choice for club and country and one of Europe’s leading goalkeepers.
James Milner made 201 appearances over five seasons during which time the midfielder won two Barclays Premier League titles, the FA Cup and the League Cup, which is probably far more than he can expect to win at his new club, Liverpool. Another midfielder, Gareth Barry, was an unqualified success. Eyebrows were raised at the £24 million City paid Everton for Joleon Lescott in 2009 but the centre half would come to justify the fee.
Micah Richards was an integral part of the first Premier League title-winning team in 2012 before the defender’s City career was derailed by a succession of injuries. Similarly, Jack Rodwell was rarely fit, a cycle of injury problems rather than a lack of opportunities to blame for the midfielder making ten starts in two years.
Scott Sinclair, the winger, did not play because he was not good enough and should never have been signed from Swansea City. Comparisons could easily be drawn with the predicament of Victor Moses at Chelsea, only Sinclair’s status as an Englishman ensured his exile was worthy of far greater scrutiny than the Nigeria winger’s battle against obscurity at Stamford Bridge.
Wayne Bridge and Nedum Onuoha served a purpose before improvements were found as City’s ambitions grew. Richard Wright is a third-choice goalkeeper. As for Adam Johnson, Roberto Mancini, Manuel Pellegrini’s predecessor as manager, had no doubts about the England winger’s talent and was desperate for him to deliver, but the player’s failure to apply himself properly off the field proved an enduring frustration and had inevitable consequences on it.
The point is nationality has no bearing on whether a player will succeed or not at City but application and attitude does. Sure, as a high-profile Englishman in a team blessed with too few of them Sterling will be under frequent scrutiny. Yet it is the combination of an exorbitant fee and a sullied reputation that have actually served to ramp up the pressure and leave this gifted 20-year-old with a lot less room for manoeuvre than he might ordinarily have experienced. Sterling has got his move but at what cost?
The task facing Sterling at City does not exactly mirror that of Johnson. The former Middlesbrough player, albeit two years older than Sterling when he moved to the Etihad, cost only £8 million from the Teesside club and was gradually introduced into the first team. At £49 million, there will be no hiding place for Sterling. His age will buy him some time and offer hope of a long, fruitful career at the club but at that price City and their fans will expect consistency, not one good game in five.
Nonetheless, Johnson’s plight is a cautionary tale for Sterling and there have been enough indiscretions in the latter’s recent past not to dismiss the theory that he could be more trouble than he is worth. Mancini with Brian Marwood, now the managing director of the City Football Academy, and the support staff at the club spent hours trying to counsel Johnson about the importance of conducting himself in the right way as well as reaching out to those close to him, but lifestyle issues persisted. Mancini would complain publicly about Johnson’s drinking habits. When Johnson was charged in April with three offences of sexual activity with a girl under the age of 16 and one of grooming, the disappointment was felt keenly at City.
Sterling has had his brushes with the law. He was cleared at Liverpool magistrates court in September 2013 of common assault on a former girlfriend, a few months after a charge of common assault on a different woman was dropped just as the trial was due to start.
In April, he was photographed allegedly smoking a shisha pipe and inhaling nitrous oxide for recreational purposes and that is before we get to his ugly contract stand-off with Liverpool, the undignified attempts to agitate for a transfer and the dubious advice he has received from his agent, Aidy Ward, who has been rebuked by Brendan Rodgers, the Liverpool manager.
Pellegrini may not be too concerned, though. It was in March that the City manager spelt out his longing for another “crack” player — a game-changer — and in Sterling he believes he has found one. It will certainly be interesting to see where and how the Chilean deploys his impending arrival. If he opts to start Wilfried Bony up front with Sergio Agüero, Sterling may be used primarily out wide, but it would be no surprise to see the player form part of a three-man attack with Agüero and David Silva.
English football needs Sterling to succeed, but his nationality will not be a factor if he falls short.
This has been said before but if City were no a threat to the clubs who have been successful in the past, there would be no such hostility. Apart from Chelsea, who did the same thing a few years ago, the so-called elite are running scared. I would be more concerned if there had been no panic after the Sterling saga, as it would suggest we have bought a pup. It may turn out that way if he cannot stay focused on his game and it will be up to Pelle to keep the lad's feet on the ground and work on his game. But Liverpool fans and their media pundits will continue to cry foul, despite being greedy and pocketing £35m and getting Milner on a free. They don't like it up em, and are panicking.
Our clubs PR dept are more interested in coffee and donuts than looking after the shit thrown at our club, might as well not have one, uselessIts actually disgusting the coverage we and the player are getting for the transfer. Media spouting shit from ex jealous players, giving them a platform, to Sky running polls and having digs at us constantly re English players when the truth is only Rodwell and Sinclair have been failures, Milner and Richards were both offered contracts and now even the BBC main sport headline is "Will £49m Raheem Sterling fit in at Manchester City or be another English player who fails to prosper at the club? " even though the fee is not 49m and its a pathetic question due to the talent Sterling has.
Its about time our clubs PR got off their arses and did something about the constant digs and negative reporting and started issuing a few ban orders as playing nice is getting us nowhere.
Our clubs PR dept are more interested in coffee and donuts than looking after the shit thrown at our club, might as well not have one, useless
aye, the price we have to pay for an online subscription is too high for the occasional pat on the head (between the kickings)great article but how many search out the truth like this