um pahars
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Everything posted by um pahars
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It stemmed from when he was playing for Blackburn in the late 70's (I think 1977). Bailey had wound up a young Steve Williams who was then sent off. I think Osgood then chinned Bailey as he was so annoyed and also got sent off. The two of them then trashed the dressing room!!!!! Ossie was soon transfer listed and the hatred of Bailey never went away. I think Lawrie publicly said something along the lines of "Bailey shouldn't sleep easily in his bed tonight for what he did to his fellow professionals". Heard a few years ago that Bailey had fallen on really hard times (I think he was an acoholic and in a very bad way). Therefore as much as he got stick off me in the 70's and 80's. I think I'll leave him out of my list. My top three would be: 1. Adrian Heath - He ruined a dream for me 2. Roger Milford - For playing those extra 16 minutes against Oldham 3. Andy Ricthie - For scoring in those extra 16 minutes
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Effectively 6 points from safety due to goal diffference and even then Watford have a game in hand (and have us at home). As results go that was a fcking mare of an evening!!!!!!!!!!
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Keep the faith. My Wednesdayite mate reckons they're all over Barnsley!!!!!!!!
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I noticed there was something on the BBC site that said Sturrock is at Plymouth for the long run. After this spanking I think it will be a long run out of Home Park. They might just be the team that collapse along with Norwich that allow us to scrape out of the mire (straws, clutching et al).
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And I'm sure I remember Lowe having a proper moan about it too, and fair play to him, because it really is a backward step in terms of preparing players for the Championship.
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Agree 100%. And to think that this little tt for tat started over the premise that Lowe had handled the PR correctly since his return. Now given his performance at the Headline event, i.e. the AGM, I think it is fair to suggest that nothing much has changed on the content side of his PR. He's wound down the intensity and number of columun inches, that's for sure, but think much of that has to do with the fact that it's gone shockingly bad this season and no amount of Chris Iwelumo quotes can gloss over that simple fact.
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Plymouth are in freefall, they're the only team below us in the current form table. Their only saving grace with regards us is that they have 7 points on us (and a good goal difference, although that could easily be eroded!!).
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It's not over yet. Plenty of time left for some goals to go in. Come on you Owls, Eagles, Robins & Swans. And an early shout for Tractor Boys and Seasiders tomorrow.
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Nothing to do with knocking Lowe (honest), but one thing that struck me yesterday when I was thinking about going along to Staplewood was the fact we were playing Lewes!!!!!! Aldershot are in there with us and no disrespect to those teams, but I do wonder about the merits of playing such fixtures. It's hardly good practice to prepare yourself for games in the Championship and have to say someone in the league set up has got it wrong.
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Plymouth 2 down, which is OK as they are in freefall.
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I'm more interested in how they have continued to downplay/cover up/ignore the departures of Hockaday and Webster. Nothing like treating the supporters with respect and honesty is there!!!!!! And they wonder why people are pssed off with the relationship between the Club and it's supporters.
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Yeah. 2nd in the 8 game current form table. IMHO they're out of it http://stats.football365.com/dom/ENG/D1/oform.html
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That's the twisted logic which gives me a semblence of hope, in that the other sides are arguably just as sht as us and we only have to slightly outperform them. Barnsley may have two games in hand but given their points per game ratio, they'd be lucky to get 2 points. This evening is absolutely massive for us. Fingers crossed we get some go our way. Derby at home to Blackpool tomorrow and Forest away at Ipswich. Norwich are the only team in the group above us who aren't playing midweek.
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We cant hope to have them all go our way, so I'd accept Donny winning, as long as the others dont.
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Quite. The failure to implement Plan B was something I never got my head around. I think personal feuds, egos, SISU, and a number of other motivations were in play and the wellbeing of the Club was a second consideration. It would be worthwhile putting Dave Jones under the spotlight about this one as he was a key part of that Executive team, although I also accept that Hone was as domineering as Lowe is. Whilst Lowe was scathing of this, Jones called it a blip at the AGM (I bet that was an interesting lunch afterwards). It will also be interesting to see the Interim Accounts (they are due out soon), as that will give us an idea of how much it has been possible to save, and therefore possible to gauge how much was overspent (after allowing for the blip factor Jones alluded to e.g. Claus and other commitments), so we can at least quantify how much they "cost" us.
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For their first season here, I don't think Hone/Wilde's approach was a million miles away from what Lowe was proposing. It was all about giving it one last push at getting promotion during the parachute payment, a time when we had to exploit every possible advantage over our rivals, in a hope that we would get to the only place where the numbers really work i.e. the Premiership. In fact Lowe had set his stall out by signing Rasiak (and others) and he had also been upfront in his support of Burley and the fact that he was prepared to back Burley in the transfer market. The general consensus in that first summer was that they probably spent £2m more than lowe had intended (naughty perhaps, but not something that was going to take the Club over the edge - that came the following summer!!!). That first season also saw costs reduced and net debt down to it's lowest level for years so it wasn't all a spendfest. The really stupid stuff came when they failed to implement Plan B the next summer, although Dave Jones tried to pass this off as a mere blip at the last AGM (so who was telling the truth??).
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We are not the only ones to suffer from the nightmare of falling out of the top flight and I never for one minuite suggested we were, it was just an honest reflection of the problems that befall any "established" team that suffers relegation. But it is that massive drop in revenue that is the main driver of all our financial troubles (in fact the current Football Club Chairman doesn't even think we can wash our face in this division on normal operations). And for me, Lowe played his part (I would add that IMHO, a massive part), in our fall from the top flight, particularly when you consider that many think the appointment of Wigley to be his worst decision. So for Jonah to once again cast blame on everyone apart from Lowe seems to display a serious lack of objectivity. It is this lack of objectivity and even handedness that renders many of Jonah's other points (many of which are good) somewhat impotent as you tend to read them knowing there will be some serious bias involved. As for the warchest, here is something I posted a while back: Because the Club that started out that 2006/7 season was one that Lowe left and was still haemoraghing cash. Those that took over stemmed the flow somewhat in their first year, but then failed in their second year (in fact they probably added to the position). Here was Hone said about the warchest, and how the signings of the summer after Lowe were funded (the bits between Hone's quotes are the reporters bit). "What was clear pretty quickly after coming into the company was that there was no reserves, what some might call a warchest," said Hone. "Money that had been brought in by player trading was just used to keep the company afloat." Saints' yearly accounts released last week showed a loss of £3.3m in the 13 months ending June 30, 2006 - ironically, the day former chairman Rupert Lowe quit. During that period, Saints sold Peter Crouch, Theo Walcott, Antti Niemi, Nigel Quashie and Kevin Phillips for around £14m. "If not for selling players, the losses would be absolutely horrendous," Hone added. So without any warchest', how have Saints paid for their manager's close season rebuilding. "It's in staged payments for the players, but it's been done on debt by and large," Hone revealed (P.S. Rasiak, the £2million fee and his four year contract with a commitment of something like £3m was a Lowe decision completed in early May, almost a month before Lowe left)
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Once again you seem to absolve Lowe for his part in the downfall of the Club's finances. Lowe's decisions (including the appointment of Wigley) were the ones that contributed to relegation which wiped tens of millions off the top line. It is that loss of millions that is the fundamental driver of our financial problems. Of course, poor cost control exacerbated the problem, but that does not alter the fact that losing tens of millions from the top line was what fcked this Club over. He didn't get a grip on finances in that first season down when almost £10m cash went out the door on normal operations (even after receiving the parachute payment). There were times when "we didn't know where the next penny was coming from" and negotiations with our biggest creditors started in earnest the minute we went down. The idea that this Club was financially robust when Lowe left is fantasy land stuff. Of course others came in and exacerbated, perpetuated & contributed to our fragile position, but once again your failure to acknowledge any role Lowe played in this scenario shows a serious lack of objectivity. But the poster was countering your assertion that it was the fans that brought them to power, so good to see you've corrected yourself. When Lowe gets voted out it's the fans fault, when Crouch gets voted out it's shareholder voting power. At least try and be even handed and objective! The second time in a couple of weeks that you have made the repeated the same inaccuracy. When Lowe & Wilde recquisitioned the EGM last season they did not have a majority support in asking Crouch to leave (if they did, then they wouldn't have even bothered with an EGM;)). Seems we've moved on somewhat from this morning when we were discussing Lowe's biggest failings. It looks as though we have a degree of agreement over the appalling decision to appoint Wigley, but have failed to get agreement over Poortvliet. I just fail to see how you can still support the appointment and tenure of Poortvliet and suggest that our poor performances this season have had nothing to do with his poor management.
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I can remember him as Sundance, can vaguely remember his Flashman incarnation, but don't remember his others (The Bear??? and others). I've still got him down as Corp Ho trolling, just don't ask me how I know;).
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You wish;) BTW you are coming to my boozer to stand your rounds.
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And a professional charing of a meeting is not what took place. I have spoken to a number of people, many of whom would describe themselves as indifferent to Lowe and a couple who are lowe supporters (one of whom is very, very close to the man), and to a person they were apalled at Lowe's behaviour and in particular the antagonistic and confrontational way that he started the meeting. Your defending of this behaviour is very seriously misplaced and displays the severe lack of objectivity and even handedness that you so often demand form others. Your prefix and suffix to the part above just adds to your lack of credibility on the matter. It's a shame, because responses such as this just nullify the good points that you often make when you get out of your blinkered and defensive mindset (a trait you would appear to share with Lowe himself).
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Peter Reid for Manager - campaign needed..
um pahars replied to Channon's Sideburns's topic in The Saints
What a poor choice of hotel!!! -
Peter Reid for Manager - campaign needed..
um pahars replied to Channon's Sideburns's topic in The Saints
You wouldn't be able to!!!!!! Because I would be way ahead of you with my rope, pitch fork, petrol and kindling!!!!!! -
And with this response you've just lost any credibility on this thread. I can see no way of reconciling your claims that he acted in a professional manner with your subsequent assertions above. Being a prat to read it out, doing it on purpose to rub Crouch's nose in it, it's his perogatiove to do what he likes etc is hardly the behaviour of a Chairman of a listed PLC company at it's AGM. There are many things to praise Lowe for (and I was more than happy to do so in the earlier stages of this tenure) and there are many things to criticise him for, but your continual blinkered support for him just discredits some of your other more valid points. Considering you are quick to accuse others of a lack of objectivity and even handedness, maybe you should take a look in the mirror in the first instance with regards this issue.
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And people banged on about them then as well. Football always has been about putting the world to rights and arguing the toss down the youth club, pub or social club. There's always been ups and there most definitely have been downs, BUT the downs of today appear to be much deeper, darker and dangerous. I honestly don't think we have ever been close to the position we find ourselves in now. We certainly have never been this low with regards league position in almost a lifetime. We certainly haven't had the potential worry of two relegations in such quick succession. We certainly have never been on the verge of administration with the disastrous consequences it will bring. And worst of all, during most of the times that Jonah lined up, I think there was a degree of optimism around with almost all of them, something that we could hold on to and think that despite these setbacks, we can still see a way forward. Now I know you're an optimist nickh, but I think for the vast majority of supporters, they can't see anything buit dark clouds.
