pb21
Well-known member
- Apr 23, 2010
- 6,684
I picked up a pristine 1st edition of this from a branch of Oxfam in Norwich for 50p, absolute bargain!Alan Partridge wrote the book about it.
I picked up a pristine 1st edition of this from a branch of Oxfam in Norwich for 50p, absolute bargain!Alan Partridge wrote the book about it.
How many 'youngsters' played on Saturday who need a senior pro to help them through the game? Baleba. Ferguson is young but no longer 'green'. IMO I'd have welcomed another couple of 'youngsters' starting on Saturday as they might have injected some energy. As an example for me the main ingredient Hinchelwood brings apart from being a good player is massive energy, we are missing it.You never know. Perhaps he was one of the ones on the end of a fierce rollocking from RDZ?
In a team of youngsters that lack experience you need your senior pros to step up and carry them to an extent and, for the first time this season, I don't think they did. Webster was poor, Steele's confidence looks to be on the rocks, Lallana didn't have much influence at all, GroB was well below his usual standard when he came on, and Estupinan looked a shadow of his usual self. Only Veltman and Dunk came out of it with any credit and even they were both 6/10s tops.
You make a fair point, but Ferguson and Baleba are precisely the youngsters of whom I was thinking. Ferguson may well not be "green", but he is still inexperienced and very young for a PL footballer. Pairing a raw teenager like Baleba with a young centre back like JP meant that you needed Dunk and Lallana to really coach them through the game.How many 'youngsters' played on Saturday who need a senior pro to help them through the game? Baleba. Ferguson is young but no longer 'green'. IMO I'd have welcomed another couple of 'youngsters' starting on Saturday as they might have injected some energy. As an example for me the main ingredient Hinchelwood brings apart from being a good player is massive energy, we are missing it.
Perhaps he had realised post match that he himself was awful on the pitch and time to hang the boots up.I'm not going to try and draw any conclusions from it, but it was far from a typical Adam Lallana interview. He's usually very measured and articulate.
He looked completely shell-shocked, almost on the verge of tears. Most unusual.
The last couple of weeks have hardly been the best preparation for Roma.He’s clearly hurting, as I suspect were the whole dressing room he’d left behind for the interview. He talks about no blame as there have been a catalogue of horrible mistakes that have cost us games. He talks about unity as that is what he knows it takes to come through these spells.
I’m mystified why anyone is struggling with his interview or finds any of it weird.