http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/nov/17/gus-poyet-luis-suarez-racism
Deserves abuse himself for being so unbelievably thick.
"You cannot accuse people without a proper investigation, especially when it's a foreigner who is coming from a different place where we treat people of colour in a different way"
Mindbogglingly stupid.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/nov/17/gus-poyet-luis-suarez-racism
Deserves abuse himself for being so unbelievably thick.
"You cannot accuse people without a proper investigation, especially when it's a foreigner who is coming from a different place where we treat people of colour in a different way"
Mindbogglingly stupid.
Eboue's also been a victim of racial abuse.
This is true. Once you're in you're there for life it seems. I often think - why pick someone who has consistently failed? Give me a go, I can't do any worse and you never know I might flukily be good at it.One huge problem facing black managers is not racism, but the fact that the Premier League in particular is very much an ‘old boys club’ whenever a manager is sacked (barring the top 4 sides) the same faces are touted with possibly taking over. Look how many times somebody like Gary Megson and Iain Dowie’s names come up whenever a relegation threatneed Premier League side sacks their manager, despite none of these managers ever achieving anything of note. Its time for the League to breakaway from this, not just with regard to black managers but also other young English managers
This is true. Once you're in you're there for life it seems. I often think - why pick someone who has consistently failed? Give me a go, I can't do any worse and you never know I might flukily be good at it.
He won the liga with Barcelona (for the first time in ten years apparently and also got them to the Euro final - thanks wikipedia)."There was always that thing about Venables' staggeringly mediocre record at club level; though give him his due, he did OK with England."
Was thinking more lower down the league. Top is all foreign managers - and it's hard to argue against picking foreign managers cos they keep winning things. Who was the last English manager to win the premiership? Maybe I'm being slightly disingenuous cos you can't really say that Ferguson, Dalglish or Graham came from a different footballing tradition."Only three managers currently in the bottom ten have ever managed another Prem team, successfully (Jol) or otherwise (Bruce). Seven of the top ten have (exceptions being Ferguson, Wenger and AVB).
The problem comes lower down the leagues, really. Paul Jewell is still in paid employment, much to my amusement."
He won the liga with Barcelona (for the first time in ten years apparently and also got them to the Euro final - thanks wikipedia).
This is true. Once you're in you're there for life it seems
You have to wonder how much their financial planning (if they have such a thing) relied on them getting into the late stages of the CL, though...That second goal was great. Although it should be noted that both the other goals were incredibly soft. I guess that Man City are gonna be concentrating on the Premiership now which is bad news for the other English teams.
The city is Prague in the Czech Republic. The setting is the famous Wenceslas Square, one of the most beautiful in Europe.
A young African man is stopping passers-by, handing them leaflets in the hope they can be persuaded to sample the fare on offer at some of the city’s restaurants. It’s not an untypical scenario. Until you find out that the desperate youngster with the leaflets in his hand is Bassirou Dembele – a Malian U20 international and Slavia Prague’s erstwhile left-back.
This is the baffling story that Czech football followers were reading about back in April. Dembele had disappeared from Slavia’s first team squad and had, seemingly, fallen on hard times. It was quite a fall from grace for the once highly rated Paris St Germain defender, still just 21-years-old.