Modern Day Footballers 17:07 - Aug 11 with 4575 views | ichbinnaughty | Danny Rose, mouthing off about not being paid enough/getting the recognition he deserves (er, he is first choice Left Back for the runners up....when he's FIT..and he's a bit of a sicknote). Philipe Coutinho throwing a strop and trying to force a move from a club where HE chose to sign a (no doubt extremely lucrative) contract until 2022. He's effectively their star player. The team is built around him. Two examples of why the game I have loved all my life continues to pi55 me off more and more. And why I really enjoy watching (top level) Rugby these days. Big competitive barsterds, COMPETING, not cheating, not throwing their toys out of the pram, not sulking. | | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 18:30 - Aug 11 with 4516 views | TW_R | So if you were playing for the current Liverpool team and Barcelona came knocking you wouldn't be interested in a move? Would be bonkers not to think about it as a step up. I guess you don't watch too much top class rugby if you believe there's no cheating. What do you think they are doing when they deliberately knock on, stand in offside positions, obstructions etc. Not to mention "bloodgate". | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 18:35 - Aug 11 with 4506 views | Watford_Ranger | Rose is the England left-back and could double his wages and more if he moved. Spurs' policy is a noble one but it can't work long term. | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 18:49 - Aug 11 with 4491 views | RANGERS4EVER | Treat it like any normal job and I don't see they are doing a lot wrong. You are one of the best performers in your *insert office job* and another position comes up with a better opportunity and more money. You have no real loyalty to your job after working there a few years, and this would be a great step up. Then your manager tells you you can't go and you have to stay at your job and carry on like nothings happened. Going to be a bit miffed. Expenditure in football is crazy but its not the players fault, and they are tehnically just treating it like any other job, which then gets bad mouthed by the media. | |
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Modern Day Footballers on 19:06 - Aug 11 with 4456 views | DejR_vu | Danny Rose is a gobsh1te. These players want it both ways. They want the security of a long-term contract, but don't want to be bound by the terms of the contract i.e. When another club comes calling they forget they willingly contracted themselves to their existing club. If Danny Rose felt he was being under-valued he shouldn't have signed the contract and sacked his agent. He should have negotiated a shorter contract so that he could re-negotiate more regularly. But of course he wouldn't have got the security should he get injured or see his form dip. Better to sign the contract and then whine about how hard done-by he is. Tool. | |
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Modern Day Footballers on 20:31 - Aug 11 with 4371 views | WrightUp5hit___ | England full back? Sign him up for £54,000,000 and give him £150,000 a week. Oh that's the other one, the one that isn't a whinging sicknote. | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 21:22 - Aug 11 with 4303 views | eghamranger | All official sick notes at the moment according to sky sports.. Rose... injured this weekend Sanchez... see above Berkeley...see above Coutunho.... see above Van disk... see above Blatant lies by the club | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 23:14 - Aug 11 with 4168 views | ichbinnaughty |
Modern Day Footballers on 18:30 - Aug 11 by TW_R | So if you were playing for the current Liverpool team and Barcelona came knocking you wouldn't be interested in a move? Would be bonkers not to think about it as a step up. I guess you don't watch too much top class rugby if you believe there's no cheating. What do you think they are doing when they deliberately knock on, stand in offside positions, obstructions etc. Not to mention "bloodgate". |
When I said cheating I meant what football calls 'simulation'. You know, faking it, rolling around dramatically, falling over in a way that dishonestly suggests momentum-ending impact ("oh he's 'entitled' to go down there, fckoff whatever happened to the art of riding a challenge?); feigning something to get someone else in trouble...ANYTHING to try to gain ANY sort of advantage. You know, fckn cheating. I know when players do it. Players know when to do it. I know when our players do it. It doesn't make it right. | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 23:19 - Aug 11 with 4146 views | ichbinnaughty | And I know 'it's a job' (er it's a game, ultimately, so it's different to a job), and I know that people will follow the money (important to guard against scraping by on £130 grand a WEEK); but I also welcome some other comments on here. There are ever more numbers of dick'eads playing football, and Danny Rose is a nob, and many footballers are shameful creatures. I hope that some are held to the contracts THEY sign more often. They're not hard done by. They will NEVER know hardship. They'll still moan though, and get national/international press as a soapbox too. Modern day cnts. BUUUUUUUUURRRRRP | | | | Login to get fewer ads
Modern Day Footballers on 23:21 - Aug 11 with 4138 views | ichbinnaughty | BUUUUUUUUUUUUURRRRRRRRREPPPPPPPPPPPPP | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 23:24 - Aug 11 with 4134 views | kensalriser | PIPOTE award goes to Ichbin. | |
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Modern Day Footballers on 23:41 - Aug 11 with 4109 views | ichbinnaughty |
Modern Day Footballers on 23:24 - Aug 11 by kensalriser | PIPOTE award goes to Ichbin. |
AND ANOTHER THING
Buuuuurp | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 00:35 - Aug 12 with 4072 views | FDC | I just Googled PIPOTE. Top two results were: ____ Gizzard Chicken as food The gizzard, also referred to as the ventriculus, gastric mill, and gigerium, is an organ found in the digestive tract of some animals, including archosaurs, earthworms, some gastropods, some fish, and some crustaceans. Wikipedia Nutrition Facts Gizzard Amount Per 100 grams Calories 94 Urban Dictionary Pipote 12 Mar 2005 ... Pee-poh-tay. Means clitoris in Spanish. The word comes from pipa (sunflower seed or other seed). | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 01:12 - Aug 12 with 4041 views | PunteR | I cant believe anyone would defend modern day footballers and their obscene greed and compare them to everyday joes on the street trying to scratch a living. We are poles apart. | |
| Occasional providers of half decent House music. |
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Modern Day Footballers on 01:34 - Aug 12 with 4033 views | bob566 | I'm with you for the most part. But if Barcelona or Madrid come knocking then that's another thing. | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 05:59 - Aug 12 with 3972 views | Fearless | I love it when these players say "we should sign 2 or 3 world class players..." Subtext... but not in my position, it's the others that aren't good enough Charming | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 07:57 - Aug 12 with 3903 views | eghamranger | Rose "got a heroes welcome" when he returned to the dressing room. I know it's in the Sun... However as Levy hasn't bought anyone and everyone knows they got 54 million for Walker... Are they about to blow up. I can't see them being anywhere near the top 4 this season with them playing at Wembley and rumbling going on in the background | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 09:04 - Aug 12 with 3850 views | LythamR |
Modern Day Footballers on 18:49 - Aug 11 by RANGERS4EVER | Treat it like any normal job and I don't see they are doing a lot wrong. You are one of the best performers in your *insert office job* and another position comes up with a better opportunity and more money. You have no real loyalty to your job after working there a few years, and this would be a great step up. Then your manager tells you you can't go and you have to stay at your job and carry on like nothings happened. Going to be a bit miffed. Expenditure in football is crazy but its not the players fault, and they are tehnically just treating it like any other job, which then gets bad mouthed by the media. |
These players are not working in salaried positions like standard office workers though are they. They have signed fixed term contracts on big money, these particular players have signed new contracts when they have already been on big money for years so presumably they have agents that are also earning big money specifically to look after their interests. if you havent incorporated a release clause in your contract that gets you out when a better offer comes along then you have to look to yourself and your agent for the reason why and just suck it up like people in the real world. Call me mental but i would also expect a modicum of loyalty from a member of staff that was one of my top earners and i had employed for a number of years after giving them an opportunity in the first place | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 09:05 - Aug 12 with 3850 views | Mick_S |
Modern Day Footballers on 07:57 - Aug 12 by eghamranger | Rose "got a heroes welcome" when he returned to the dressing room. I know it's in the Sun... However as Levy hasn't bought anyone and everyone knows they got 54 million for Walker... Are they about to blow up. I can't see them being anywhere near the top 4 this season with them playing at Wembley and rumbling going on in the background |
I read that as the scummy Sun patting itself on the back after publishing the interview the day before. I doubt he's the most popular man at Spurs at the moment - I actually hope he isn't. Rose is quoted as knowing what he is worth. He doesn't, because if he isn't content with around £65,000 a week, he knows nothing. He should be on his knees in gratitude on a daily basis, not scratching around in a jealous strop. Utter c untery. | |
| Did I ever mention that I was in Minder? |
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Modern Day Footballers on 12:24 - Aug 12 with 3713 views | PlanetHonneywood |
Modern Day Footballers on 09:05 - Aug 12 by Mick_S | I read that as the scummy Sun patting itself on the back after publishing the interview the day before. I doubt he's the most popular man at Spurs at the moment - I actually hope he isn't. Rose is quoted as knowing what he is worth. He doesn't, because if he isn't content with around £65,000 a week, he knows nothing. He should be on his knees in gratitude on a daily basis, not scratching around in a jealous strop. Utter c untery. |
Shows how far football has moved on from the miserly days of previous England left-backs plying their trade in North London, and being expected to mend and make do with meagre £5,000 per week wage rises. A mate of mine runs a charity in Islington, providing basics like food, shelter and mental health counselling for young me who, through circumstances beyond their control, fall on hand times. She said, after the last human rights abuse of north London left-backs; when they were basically told that were expected to play for free, one victim attended her centre utterly broken! Couldn't feed himself and his wife, the latter having known extreme poverty due to being hatched in the north-east of England. She was reduced to turning tricks out at Heathrow to try and get money to fuel her beau's Lambourgini. Poor sweet couple, reduced to that! Imagine if it were your brother or sister, how would you feel? Have some compassion and basic human decency some of you! The problem is that while these jackasses are technically right and not breaking the law, when millions of people are struggling just in the UK, you do not moan that you're only on £65k per week!! | |
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Modern Day Footballers on 14:14 - Aug 12 with 3617 views | kensalriser |
Modern Day Footballers on 00:35 - Aug 12 by FDC | I just Googled PIPOTE. Top two results were: ____ Gizzard Chicken as food The gizzard, also referred to as the ventriculus, gastric mill, and gigerium, is an organ found in the digestive tract of some animals, including archosaurs, earthworms, some gastropods, some fish, and some crustaceans. Wikipedia Nutrition Facts Gizzard Amount Per 100 grams Calories 94 Urban Dictionary Pipote 12 Mar 2005 ... Pee-poh-tay. Means clitoris in Spanish. The word comes from pipa (sunflower seed or other seed). |
Pissed Poster of the Evening. Although I am delighted to learn a colloquial Spanish word for clitoris. | |
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Modern Day Footballers on 15:15 - Aug 12 with 3571 views | Antti_Heinola |
Modern Day Footballers on 19:06 - Aug 11 by DejR_vu | Danny Rose is a gobsh1te. These players want it both ways. They want the security of a long-term contract, but don't want to be bound by the terms of the contract i.e. When another club comes calling they forget they willingly contracted themselves to their existing club. If Danny Rose felt he was being under-valued he shouldn't have signed the contract and sacked his agent. He should have negotiated a shorter contract so that he could re-negotiate more regularly. But of course he wouldn't have got the security should he get injured or see his form dip. Better to sign the contract and then whine about how hard done-by he is. Tool. |
And clubs and fans don't want it both ways? Player signs contract. Player not deemed good enough. Player then lambasted for 'sitting on his contract' and refusing to bow to the club and move somewhete else. Or, player does well, bid comes in, club agree to sell, player refuses, player then called greedy for waiting til contract runs out so he can demand a higher wage and bigger signing fee. Sometimes, the hypocrisy from fans and clubs is astounding. If a player is good, he has to honour the contract. If he's not, he's a waster bleeding the club dry. By asking for a transfer Coutinho is at least waiving what he's owed by Liverpool, which rhey'd have to pay if he was sold against his will, so it's the best deal for liverpool. | |
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Modern Day Footballers on 19:56 - Aug 12 with 3477 views | DejR_vu |
Modern Day Footballers on 15:15 - Aug 12 by Antti_Heinola | And clubs and fans don't want it both ways? Player signs contract. Player not deemed good enough. Player then lambasted for 'sitting on his contract' and refusing to bow to the club and move somewhete else. Or, player does well, bid comes in, club agree to sell, player refuses, player then called greedy for waiting til contract runs out so he can demand a higher wage and bigger signing fee. Sometimes, the hypocrisy from fans and clubs is astounding. If a player is good, he has to honour the contract. If he's not, he's a waster bleeding the club dry. By asking for a transfer Coutinho is at least waiving what he's owed by Liverpool, which rhey'd have to pay if he was sold against his will, so it's the best deal for liverpool. |
You're tarring everyone with the same brush. Fans are a collection of individuals not a single entity. If the club is stupid enough to give ridiculous contracts it's the club's fault, don't blame the player for collecting what he's contractually entitled to. Both parties are (or should be) bound by the contract. This is one player wanting to walk away from his contractual obligations because he has a better option and another moaning that his contract is not lucrative enough when nobody was holding a gun to his head when he signed it. The difference is that, ultimately, the player can effectively down tools and engineer a move. On the other hand the club has to honour it's commitment whether it likes it or not. World of difference. | |
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Modern Day Footballers on 10:54 - Aug 13 with 3317 views | TW_R |
Modern Day Footballers on 23:14 - Aug 11 by ichbinnaughty | When I said cheating I meant what football calls 'simulation'. You know, faking it, rolling around dramatically, falling over in a way that dishonestly suggests momentum-ending impact ("oh he's 'entitled' to go down there, fckoff whatever happened to the art of riding a challenge?); feigning something to get someone else in trouble...ANYTHING to try to gain ANY sort of advantage. You know, fckn cheating. I know when players do it. Players know when to do it. I know when our players do it. It doesn't make it right. |
Your initial post said you enjoyed watching rugby more because they don't cheat, which obviously isn't true. If you don't class a player feigning a blood injury by chewing on a blood capsule as "simulation" then I don't know what you'd call it. | | | |
Modern Day Footballers on 15:53 - Aug 13 with 3211 views | Boston |
Modern Day Footballers on 01:12 - Aug 12 by PunteR | I cant believe anyone would defend modern day footballers and their obscene greed and compare them to everyday joes on the street trying to scratch a living. We are poles apart. |
Well you chose carpentry remuneration, no one stopped you being a plumber. | |
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