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Everything posted by for_heaven's_Saint
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Definitely agree Hammond should be dropped and Barnard in for Connolly. Not sure what to do about puncheon, perhaps AOC on the right and Dickson on the left.
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Hedge End!
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I have to go a different route to work cos of the pope, whoever he is.
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More than happy to get paid to watch that!
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I have a shift working as a waiter/host for a lingerie fashion show for the opening of London Fashion week tonight. http://www.thebuttonclub.com/events/Lingerie_Collective_London_Fashion_Week/ Good times.
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Can't we start some sort of petition to have these losers shut down? Or at least stop being quoted as the voice of the fans.
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Mills played under Adkins when he was on loan to Scunny from us.
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Adkins loves Mills fromhis S****horpe days
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81333, start your text with solent
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2 words- 'Pork Pork'
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Scunny won 4-0 in the end.
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My housemate is at the game (his mate is a Palace fan) he says the best fans in the world are silent??? Surely not!
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Lol, he's not going to pick Crosby!
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But surely they're just going to put themselves back in more financial trouble?
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Personally I feel that the fact we're playing MK Dons means it's a bit of a waste of the 'new manager syndrome', as we always beat them anyway!
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Perhaps, being an ex-goalkeeper himself, Adkins will coach the 'keepers?!
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Not exactly about having a 'plan b' but found this article, written when S****horpe were last in the Championship, which gives a fairly detailed profile of Adkins' early management career. http://soccerlens.com/nigel-adkins-profile/6223/ Unfortunately the punctuation doesn't show up properly, but here are some of the more interesting bits related to his style of play and management: Style of Play Adkins has a rigorous approach to football management, and frequently varies his tactics based on opposition strengths and weaknesses. Although he has only been managing at league level for two seasons, and has managed in two vastly different divisions during that short time, certain patterns have emerged with regard to Adkins’ preferred style. At Bangor, Adkins created a team which played from the back, with a more patient style. He used strong midfielders and created chances from both clever passing moves and through placing a strong emphasis on wing play and crossing. During his first season as S****horpe boss, Adkins had two main focuses: set pieces, and defensive discipline. He knew from his previous time with the Iron that they were a real handful going forward, and continued to favour young, enthusiastic, and pacy forwards (Keogh and Sharp, Beckford and now Paterson). However, it became necessary to shore up a leaky backline, which he promptly did by conducting extra training sessions with the brief of stopping opposition goals from set pieces, and retaining defensive discipline until the last (United had been conceding late goals on a regular basis). Defensive soundness was the key to Adkins’ early success, and it is telling that in a season in which the club won the league with a massive 91 points, the player of the season was Steve Foster, and the club only let in 35 goals all season, the best record in the division by some length. Adkins also worked assiduously and ardently on attacking set plays, and whilst The Iron have not been known for their attacking flair, either in the title-winning canter or in the relegation scrap – one of the few charges we can level at the man – his side outperformed all others in League One in terms goals scored from set pieces. A great percentage of United’s goals this season have come from dead ball situations, and the club can expect to continue in this vein now that Grant McCann is fit to deliver. Management style Adkins is a very passionate and popular manager who treats his players with respect and sensitivity and generally eschews the spotlight. Hardly the hairdryer type, he is evidently very approachable, as shown from his time as a physio, when his players would use him as a “shoulder to cry on†and pick his thoughts when they had problems. He is also very much a thinker, and can be clearly seen to be attempting to mould together his own particular philosophy, lacing together disparate strands of knowledge – his full UEFA A badge, his physiotherapy qualifications, his sports psychology diploma, his business and finance degree, and his experience from the Warwick Business School “applied management in professional football†course, which can count the likes of Mark Hughes, Aidy Boothroyd and Paul Ince amongst its graduates – to offer his players and his club a holistic service. As Adkins told the Daily Mail: ” All of it is put to use […] Knowledge is valuable. Everything is relevant to somebody. It’s all about finding a trigger to get the best out of that individualâ€. A “modern†manager, he is not afraid to try new things to motivate his players, as we can demonstrate with an anecdote. At the beginning of the season, one of his players suggested, with some temerity, that they mightn’t be able to cut it at Championship level. Adkin’s response? He cut a film, intersticing shots of the players’ title-winning season with scenes from the movie Gladiator, to demonstrate the power of resistance and positive thinking.
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Will Adkins Bring in New Faces and if so Who?
for_heaven's_Saint replied to David Strover's topic in The Saints
I wonder if he'll favour Mills at lb/lm having worked with him at Scunny. -
Monday night is keep fit night...
for_heaven's_Saint replied to Saint-scooby's topic in The Muppet Show
lol at the caption -
I wonder if still playing at 39 will be quite common by then...
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And a stupid c*nt of a fan.
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If we had no money, we would have got a manager who was out of a job and not paid compensation.
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A cream cheese bagel from Bagel King- top notch.
