Super Steve Earle
Well-known member
The Mail. Read by ****s. Believed by ****s.
The Mail. Read by ordinary people who have to endlessly put up with childish ***t posted online having a pop at them by people like you.
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The Mail. Read by ****s. Believed by ****s.
The Mail. Read by ordinary people who have to endlessly put up with childish ***t posted online having a pop at them by people like you.
Altogether now “ 1-0 to the Albion...”It's been taken down now. I guess there will be an apology in Sundays paper now.
The Daily fail is worse than the Sun . . .
Flog it to a tabloid as proof that an overpaid privileged PL footballer attempts to vandalise a street sign.
I admit to regularly visiting the Daily Fail website - but only to read Martin Samuel, who is consistently one of the best sports columnists out there IMO. Even then its an ad-infested video-festooned clickbait NIGHTMARE of a site to visit, but its worth it (just about) for his input, I've been reading him for years since he was at The Times. Shame he writes for such a shitty rag now. The rest of it is utter, utter BILGE.
They've always had some weird obsession with papping players in their cars coming and going from training. Why, I have never had the slightest idea. Never been able to work that one out. Imagine that being your actual job - hanging around outside the gates of a PL training ground all morning, just to snatch a glassy reflective shot of Granit Xhaka coming and going in his Porsche Cayenne.
Wow, just wow. What a shitty rag that "paper" is
The Fail represents the ultimate disconnect between sports pages and front end. Say what you like about it (and of course we do and will continue to), the Mail has invested decent money in good writers for sport, and Samuel, Ian Ladyman and Matt Barlow are among the best in the business. And in Ian Herbert they have a rising star, a possible successor to Paul Hayward, which is something I don't say lightly.
Herbs went over from the Independent, as did the former Indy sports editor and his deputy, along with the sports desk manager, which is weird shift even if it only meant moving to a different office in the same building (and wearing a suit to work instead of a t-shirt and tracksuit bottoms).
The Mail on Sunday (where the piece appeared) is a slightly different beast, with different editors. That could explain the Joe Bernstein article. Mail Online is even more of a rogue operation, staffed by kids who are out to make names for themselves.
Thats what grates. In terms of sports writers, the Fail has snaffled some true excellence (obviously when you ignore the tedious clickbate arriving-at-training etc bollocks). But every time I go there to read them, I feel like I need a shower afterwards. Certainly my laptop does, in a digital non-watery sense.
How is Martin anyway, decent bloke ? I'm sure your pens have crossed over the years.
Will Hughes?
I'll hazard a guess you're going to need good eyesight.
It's been taken down now. I guess there will be an apology in Sundays paper now.
It's been taken down now. I guess there will be an apology in Sundays paper now.
So, when caught lying,you should admit to the lie, take down the article and apologise. Seems an outdated way of going about things
Probably, but any apology will be in a tiny font size, buried in the bottom corner of a page somewhere........................so a bit pointless
The Fail represents the ultimate disconnect between sports pages and front end. Say what you like about it (and of course we do and will continue to), the Mail has invested decent money in good writers for sport, and Samuel, Ian Ladyman and Matt Barlow are among the best in the business. And in Ian Herbert they have a rising star, a possible successor to Paul Hayward, which is something I don't say lightly.
Herbs went over from the Independent, as did the former Indy sports editor and his deputy, along with the sports desk manager, which is weird shift even if it only meant moving to a different office in the same building (and wearing a suit to work instead of a t-shirt and tracksuit bottoms).
The Mail on Sunday (where the piece appeared) is a slightly different beast, with different editors. That could explain the Joe Bernstein article. Mail Online is even more of a rogue operation, staffed by kids who are out to make names for themselves.
Thats what grates. In terms of sports writers, the Fail has snaffled some true excellence (obviously when you ignore the tedious clickbate arriving-at-training etc bollocks). But every time I go there to read them, I feel like I need a shower afterwards. Certainly my laptop does, in a digital non-watery sense.
How is Martin anyway, decent bloke ? I'm sure your pens have crossed over the years.
The Mail on Sunday (where the piece appeared) is a slightly different beast, with different editors. That could explain the Joe Bernstein article. Mail Online is even more of a rogue operation, staffed by kids who are out to make names for themselves.