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JustinR

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Everything posted by JustinR

  1. Hiring **Lord Pannick KC** is the ultimate "nuclear option" in the English legal system. If Southampton are trying to overturn an unprecedented EFL decision to expel them from the playoff final, there is quite literally no bigger name they could have turned to. He is widely regarded as one of the most brilliant, formidable, and expensive appellate barristers of his generation. When a multi-million-pound entity faces a catastrophic ruling, he is the man they call. ## Why He Is the "Go-To" for High-Stakes Appeals Lord Pannick (David Pannick) doesn’t usually spend his time arguing over standard football regulations; he is a Crossbench Peer in the House of Lords who routinely handles landmark constitutional law cases in the UK Supreme Court. His reputation is built on a few core strengths that align perfectly with Southampton's current predicament: * **The Master of "Proportionality":** Pannick is a genius at convincing panels that a punishment is fundamentally unfair relative to the crime. Since the Saints' core defense is that expulsion *plus* a four-point deduction is "wholly disproportionate" (especially given the spying didn't actually help them win those matches), this is his bread and butter. * **Exploiting Procedural Flaws:** He doesn't just argue the facts; he tears apart *how* the governing body reached its decision. If the EFL rushed the Independent Disciplinary Commission or breached its own procedural guidelines to force a verdict before Saturday, Pannick will expose it. * **Calm, Laser-Focused Advocacy:** Judges and panels respect him immensely. He doesn't shout or resort to histrionics; he delivers devastatingly logical, unshakeable legal arguments that make regulatory frameworks look flimsy. ## His High-Profile Track Record You might recognize his name because he is frequently brought into the sporting and political spotlight when the stakes are at their absolute highest: ### 1. Manchester City vs. UEFA & The Premier League When UEFA hit Manchester City with a two-year Champions League ban in 2020, City hired Pannick. He successfully got the ban overturned at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). City then retained his services to front their massive legal defense against the Premier League's 115 financial charges. ### 2. Gina Miller v. The Prime Minister (2019) In one of the most famous constitutional law cases in British history, Pannick represented Gina Miller and successfully argued in the Supreme Court that Prime Minister Boris Johnson's prorogation (suspension) of Parliament was unlawful. ### 3. Boris Johnson & Partygate When Boris Johnson was being investigated by the Parliamentary Privileges Committee over the "Partygate" scandal, he hired Pannick to review the committee's approach, with Pannick arguing the process was unfair. ## What Will His Strategy Be for Saints? Given that Southampton have already admitted to multiple breaches of training-ground observation (Middlesbrough, Oxford, and Ipswich), Pannick won't try to prove the club is innocent of the acts. Instead, his appeal strategy tonight will likely hammer three points: 1. **The Precedent Disconnect:** He will argue that jumping from the **£200,000 fine** Leeds received for "Spygate" in 2019 to **complete expulsion** in 2026 is an irrational and arbitrary escalation of punishment. 2. **Double Jeopardy:** He will argue that hitting the club with a 4-point deduction *and* removing them from a £200m match is punishing them twice for the same offense, effectively destroying the club’s financial future. 3. **The Compressed Timeline:** He may argue that forcing an appeal within a microscopic 24-to-48-hour window has prejudiced the club’s ability to properly defend itself, violating the principles of natural justice. ## Is He a Guaranteed Savior? **No.** Even the greatest barrister in the country cannot change airtight rules if the panel is determined to make an example of the club. Pannick has lost major cases before—such as representing Shamima Begum in her attempt to return to the UK, and various high-profile government welfare challenges. If the newly drafted EFL Regulation 127 is written so strictly that expulsion is a explicitly mandated outcome for multiple offenses, Pannick’s room to maneuver is limited. > **The Bottom Line:** Hiring him means Southampton’s ownership group is sparing no expense. They are paying top-of-the-market rates (rumored to be thousands of pounds per hour) to give themselves the absolute best chance of salvaging their Wembley dream. If anyone can find a loophole or a procedural error to get the Saints back into Saturd ay's final, it's him. >
  2. That loophole has been closed now. The two leagues have a reciprocal arrangement- points deductions from one carry over to the next
  3. Social media experts (lol) have deduced from lip reading that he said "sp-sp-sp, spit it out mate". If the FA find cleaner evidence of that, Sky player cams etc, then that's discriminatory language and the starting point is a 6 match ban. But he'll have weeks to respond so likely applied next season. Players often instinctively cover their mouths when talking on the pitch these days, but not sure he did that
  4. Oddschecker have us as second favourites to finish top 2- behind Ipswich still. Millwall behind us then boro
  5. You forgot the OOOOOH 😉
  6. Strikers watch the ball not the goal. Google it
  7. He was looking at the goal rather than the ball when he struck it
  8. Agree with that. Stewart played a part in each goal I think. He pulled defenders away from Manning, so he had an easy finish. When Arma wasn't scoring he offered little
  9. fellows fit !! Thank f
  10. Booked. Whoop
  11. All the other sky games are fine except ours
  12. Me too
  13. Just appeared. Sky Sports +
  14. was just wondering the same. Can't see it on sky sports website
  15. Not sure it's being fickle. I think the evidence has changed. Before, it was a manager with zero experience- i.e. a huge gamble when all the others haven't paid off. Now, the risks feel much lower. It wasn't unreasonable for us to say he was the wrong man at the wrong time before. Now looks like he very much is the right man.
  16. Right place, right time springs to mind. As Brentford have shown, promoting from within is the right call when the model is established. You don't want an outsider to come in and upset the model/ culture that is working so well. That is absolutely not where Saints are right now. As the debacle with Still showed, you need a big personality, gravitas and credibilty to make big changes. Or the players will simply ignore you- as we now hear happened with Still. This feels very similar to what we needed when Koeman came in. Les Reed (for all his faults) said that they decided they needed a big name first and foremost and then used the data to pick the best manager available. There were other, more successful (in terms of data) managers available but he was what we needed AT THAT POINT. So the black box identified who was best within the parameters set. Not just.. whos won the most games/ got the best xG in Europe. Now is the time for the same approach IMO. We have the resources and talent. We don't need a high risk choice to get some marginal extra gains. Basic competance with instant respect right now is the way to go. Viera or Rogers are the only ones in that category.
  17. average score of 7.55 so far. Think that's not far off
  18. Heady times- "Southampton will never sign Gaston Ramirez" (Mark Lawrenson)
  19. That is the complaint from EFL teams. I think the football regulator will attempt to level the playing field when they get appointed. Until then, we could persue a BOING Saints strategy.
  20. JustinR

    Ivan Juric

    From the Guardian 2 years ago, talking about his Torino side. Loving the potential for sh*thousery The broad strokes of Juric’s gameplan were nothing new. Like his mentor, Gasperini, he frequently pairs players up one-on-one with opponents all over the pitch and trusts them to engage in individual duels. Where the approach sometimes differs is in the sheer levels of aggression. Juric encourages his forwards to attack the ball-carrier at almost every opportunity. That approach can make for messy matches. Torino commit more fouls than any other team in Serie A, and it’s not close: averaging 17.6 per game compared with just 14.5 for the second-most prolific offenders, Verona – the team who Juric coached for the preceding two seasons. Yet Torino sit middle of the pack when it comes to yellow cards, with 11 other teams collecting more. Their fouling is not reckless but often tactical, premised on the idea that it is better to give away an innocuous free-kick deep in opposition territory than to let a move get started. Such infringements are also far less likely to draw bookings. And the longer that a team stay trapped in their own half, the more likely that they become impatient and flustered. As the above piece from ultimouomo.com also observed, Torino give up fewer passes per loss of possession to opponents than any other team in the league.
  21. Odds shortening on Rohl on Bet Victor. Just signed up to place a bet at 2:1 and now its gone to 6:4 with a max stake of £20!
  22. Agents do this these days I guess
  23. assist- assist? Whats his xAA stats?
  24. IMO I think the prices are reasonable. To watch a high level prem match in the best seat is £70. The cheapest £35!
  25. I take it he didn't sleep much last night 😂
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