Ai Abacus... let’s look at the veracity of the Mails proposition in their article shall we children...
Now Ai Abacus may be a logic based system for assisting with player recruitment and development but their company still seems happy to quote the opinion of fuckwits on their website.
The mail have taken their headline from the opinion of that well known cockwomble John Barnes who was actually contributing opinion to a betting company - not even to Ai Abacus who merely quoted what he had said.
To save you looking this is the Barnes opinion as included in the Ai Abacus website.
“Earlier this week it was revealed that Kane had told Spurs he wanted to leave the club this summer and worse still, he wants to stay in the Premier League.With their spending power, ability to win trophies seemingly at will, and the fact they need to replace their star striker,
City are favourites to sign the England striker.
Chelsea and United are also amongst the sides expected to make a move for the 27-year-old, and
Liverpool legend John Barnes thinks Kane should pick one of those two sides.
"As far as the three clubs go, he should pick Chelsea or Manchester United rather than Manchester City," Barnes told
Bonus Code Bets.
"If he goes to Manchester City, he is not going to be the player he is at Tottenham, because at Tottenham he is the creator, goal scorer and the focal point for everything.
"Chelsea and
Manchester United need a centre forward. Manchester United have good players around them. They have got Marcus Rashford, Anthony Martial and Mason Greenwood, but they really need a number nine.’
Those who have bothered to read my post with good eye will have noted that neither Pernandes or Pogba is even mentioned in the Barnes opinion but the Mail have managed to shoehorn them into their headline.
Typical bitter, City hating. See a spurious opportunity to kick City, dress it up with some dodgy provenance, publish and wait for the clicks. The Mail are really desperate aren’t they? Their standards and what pitiful integrity they currently grasp onto slips by the day.