The perfect fumble
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 3 Jun 2012
- Messages
- 24,481
Yep, the NFL ones are great.Why do people want to only see successful teams documented?
If you watch the NFL ones, the likes of the Cardinals failing at the final hurdle, and the Cowboys crashing and burning despite being America's answer to the dippers, is very entertaining.
I agree that a lot of it seems very contrived compared to the City one. I think Peg is using the show as a stepping stone to his future media career. Levy comes across as full-blown fake so that is probably an accurate portrayal of him.I was immediately put off by a clip that was posted of a blatantly scripted scene: Mourinho listening to sky talk about him, then walking over to the TV to say fuck off as he turned it off. Badly edited enough to have a remote disappear from his hand where they cut it. Bad sign for me that.
They didn't need none of the fake scripting for City because of the season City had, there was plenty enough interest and Pep is passionate enough to be interesting while being himself.
I wouldn't want too much given away about our players, manager or tactics anyway. I think the City documentary was done perfectly from the club's perspective(just enough behind the scenes exposure without compromising us) perhaps that's all our management/higher-ups would allow, which is smart. The press would use any vulnerabilities players show against them and twist anything they can to unsettle the team. Spurs don't get that treatment, so they'll be fine.
Part of me can’t help but like Mourinho.
What were the 55 sacked for?Putting staff on furlough isn’t not taking care of them!
They would still have been paid. Spurs were going to make up the extra 20%. More crucially, their jobs are secure. The only controversy surrounded whether or not Premier League football clubs should have qualified for the furlough scheme.
Not looking after staff is what Arsenal have done - sacking 55 of them.