i only learned recently that Man U fans have asterisks against all of the city titles and liverpools lol
There is nothing to suggest this thinking. I don't get how you feel Premiership are on the up and up when it took a hacker exposing this to show its a farce, lol. what? I actually believe this too.
Yup! And is anyone other than me thinking to themselves: "I sure hope Arsenal have been keeping on the legal side of financial regulations" Especially under KSE in recent years, where there's been a marked increase in transfer spending that's made me wonder slightly. I sure hope the old mantra that Wenger used to trot out is still holding, of living within your means.
oh the Prem and UEFA are corrupt to their cores. It’s probably the whole “Italians are so corrupt” stereotype or whatever that it is just assumed that Serie A is corrupt.
Just read that Marsch may be the new odds-on favorite for USMNT job. Interesting thought. Big responsibility though, leading up to a home WC in 3.5 years. Something tells me he may he'd like to take a little breather before his next assignment, but if someone comes knocking...
Juve are a more established part of the old order of Serie A. City are still interlopers. This is what I believe Jamooky is saying and why it was impressive that Serie A did what they did to Juve.
'Tell Pep I want him to know it was me' https://t.co/seKoWcuNqo pic.twitter.com/6DfQOFNSpA— Sean Swaby (@seanswaby) February 6, 2023
It goes sideways when key players are exiting their prime. Liverpool aren’t Liverpool without prime Salah and prime Van Dijk.and City aren't City with out prime De Bruyne, while having to play Walker in the center of the defense.
If you mean Big Sam to Leeds, man would that be a shock their collective system. Initial reports did not indicate they'd got that way. The leading name was Carlos Corberan, who used to be Bielsa's assistant. I'm not familiar with his way of playing but I'm guessing it's more like Bielsa than Allardyce.
Milan? PSG?? Other Continental "big league" clubs? Right now I'm having a hard time believing English clubs would voluntarily abandon the cash-cow that is the EPL, even if they have huge followings/histories like Yanited & Pool. But then I'm distinctly NOT a fan of the super league idea. I'm very happy following Arsenal in the English top flight, till the day I die.
It was a joke, it feels like half of Big Sam’s recent hires were to save teams from relegation and like Dyche he is old school.
I just read this Athletic article about the man city brouhaha: https://theathletic.com/4160366/2023/02/06/manchester-city-financial-charges-explained/ I didn’t quite finish the whole thing but it seems pretty clear that the process will be likely slow in happening. Maybe not quite the four years it took the PL to get to this point, but I have a real hard time imagining anything would be decided before the end of the season. Hope I’m wrong! One little curious tidbit, is that Murray Rosen, the barrister that will lead the independent panel, is a Gooner!
If we were in 2nd by 14 points and they got a 15 point deduction I would laugh my ass off. But I would feel we would need to go back to back, you know, for legitimacy purposes. That said, we are 5 points clear, if they get a deduction tomorrow I don't give a shit we are on top so the title is legit. Theres no guarantee they make up the difference.
The language of possible repercussions includes ‘expulsion’ but not ‘relegation’ from the premier league. Is this because the PL is a distinct organization from the championship and lower or is it just a legalese thing? If the former, could the Football League decide to re-house City if an expulsion actually occurs? (Not that said ‘expulsion’ would actually happen…just curious about the reporting.)