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Football Thread 13/14 |OT16| ''I tried to push him away with my head.''

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sohois

Member
You would think so. Either that or a move to MLS for a year.

Looks like the financial reports are suggesting those cancers did more damage to Liverpool than we thought.

Nah, the losses from the H&G era are pretty much gone in this set of accounts.

I believe the losses in these accounts stem from player amortization and disposal, so bad transfers under Kenny and Comolli. From what I have heard EBITDA is actually positive.
 

Walshy

Member
Looks like the financial reports are suggesting those cancers did more damage to Liverpool than we thought.
Yep, FSG have done brilliant.

  • Ayre is the lowest paid chief executive out of the top six clubs.
  • We saved over £10m on players wages in the past year dating to May 31st 2013. I can only guess it's significantly higher after last summer.
  • We are paying £4.4 million in bank interest. We was paying £40 million under the cancers.
  • The book valuation of our players based on wages/costs is £122 million. Ridiculously low, suggest we will make a good amount of profit if we was to ever sell anyone.
  • We lost £1m on players sold in the summer of 2013. I suspect the losses on Carroll and Downing were written off as impairments in these 2012/13 accounts so that makes 2013/14 look better for Financial Fair play.
  • Our liabilities exceed our assets. Our club is technically solvent.
  • The figures don't include the new TV deal, which adds 25m to our balance.
  • So far FSG have put £68m into the club.
All I've got so far.
 

Ushojax

Should probably not trust the 7-11 security cameras quite so much
Denmark will risk the wrath of Tim Sherwood and Tottenham Hotspur and play Christian Eriksen against England despite his club manager ruling him out of Wednesday's friendly.

The 22-year-old was named in Morten Olsen's Denmark squad for the Wembley clash but his participation was ruled out by the Spurs boss, who told talkSPORT his player was struggling with a back injury.

But Denmark boss Olsen has ignored the wishes of his Tottenham counterpart, telling the Danish press that the former Ajax midfielder is likely to have a role to play against Roy Hodgson's side despite a crucial Premier League clash with Chelsea waiting on Saturday evening.

"He is a player who plays in the Premier League and doing well in the league," Olsen told Danish outlet BT Sport. "The English come with players who played all through the winter with lots of matches, so the more players we have in the same situation, the better it will be for us."

scarface39k9b_zps3a7ac869.gif
 

dc89

Member
Their names are Jawhar Nasser Jawhar, 19, and Adam Abd al-Raouf Halabiya, 17. They were once soccer players in the West Bank. Now they are never going to play sports again. Jawhar and Adam were on their way home from a training session in the Faisal al-Husseini Stadium on January 31 when Israeli forces fired upon them as they approached a checkpoint. After being shot repeatedly, they were mauled by checkpoint dogs and then beaten. Ten bullets were put into Jawhar’s feet. Adam took one bullet in each foot. After being transferred from a hospital in Ramallah to King Hussein Medical Center in Amman, they received the news that soccer would no longer be a part of their futures. (Israel’s border patrol maintains that the two young men were about to throw a bomb.)

This is only the latest instance of the targeting of Palestinian soccer players by the Israeli army and security forces. Death, injury or imprisonment has been a reality for several members of the Palestinian national team over the last five years. Just imagine if members of Spain’s top-flight World Cup team had been jailed, shot or killed by another country and imagine the international media outrage that would ensue. Imagine if prospective youth players for Brazil were shot in the feet by the military of another nation. But, tragically, these events along the checkpoints have received little attention on the sports page or beyond.

Much has been written about the psychological effect this kind of targeting has on the occupied territories. Sports represent escape, joy and community, and the Palestinian national soccer team, for a people without a recognized nation, is a source of tremendous pride. To attack the players is to attack the hope that the national team will ever truly have a home.

The Palestinian national football team, which formed in 1998, is currently ranked 144th in the world by the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA). They have never been higher than 115th. As Chairman of the Palestinian Football Association Jibril al-Rajoub commented bluntly, the problems are rooted in “the occupation’s insistence on destroying Palestinian sport.”

Over the last year, in response to this systematic targeting of Palestinian soccer, al-Rajoub has attempted to assemble forces to give Israel the ultimate sanction and, as he said, “demand the expulsion of Israel from FIFA and the International Olympic Committee.” Al-Rajoub claims the support of Jordan, Qatar, Iran, Oman, Algiers and Tunisia in favor of this move, and promises more countries, with an opportunity at a regional March 14 meeting of Arab states, to organize more support. He has also pledged to make the resolution formal when all the member nations of FIFA meet in Brazil.

Qatar’s place in this, as host of the 2022 World Cup, deserves particular scrutiny. As the first Arab state to host the tournament, they are under fire for the hundreds of construction deaths of Nepalese workers occurring on their watch. As the volume on these concerns rises, Qatar needs all the support in FIFA that they can assemble. Whether they eventually see the path to that support as one that involves confronting or accommodating Israel, will be fascinating to see.

As for Sepp Blatter, he clearly recognizes that there is a problem in the treatment of Palestinian athletes by the Israeli state. Over the last year, he has sought to mediate this issue by convening a committee of Israeli and Palestinian authorities to see if they can come to some kind of agreement about easing the checkpoints and restrictions that keep Palestinian athletes from leaving (and trainers, consultants and coaches from entering) the West Bank and Gaza. Yet al-Rajoub sees no progress. As he said, “This is the way the Israelis are behaving and I see no sign that they have recharged their mental batteries. There is no change on the ground. We are a full FIFA member and have the same rights as all other members.”

The shooting into the feet of Jawhar and Adam has taken a delicate situation and made it an impossible one. Sporting institutions like FIFA and the IOC are always wary about drawing lines in the sand when it comes to the conduct of member nations. But the deliberate targeting of players is seen, even in the corridors of power, as impossible to ignore. As long as Israel subjects Palestinian athletes to detention and violence, their seat at the table of international sports will be never be short of precarious.

http://www.thenation.com/blog/178642/after-latest-incident-israels-future-fifa-uncertain

God damn. That's appalling.
 

Yen

Member

Slizz

Member
The Dutch seem to always have the best kits of the bunch.... That home kit is so fucking slick.


EDIT: 90$ for all the new WC jerseys from Nike with no printing. 10$ more than usual, annoying.

DOUBLE EDIT: 94$ with printing and free shipping from Kitbag, amazing. Nike stores won't even offer printing.
 

jtb

Banned
ramsey, rosicky, mertesacker all signed new deals... Ramsey's doubling his wages? well deserved. he just extended last year—though, apparently not for very long.

nothing on sagna extending I have to imagine he's off in the summer for sure.

also, really odd that Wenger hasn't signed a new deal yet. hope this isn't a distraction in the run-in.
 

bjaelke

Member
kWsJJgX.jpg


sportingintelligence ‏@sportingintel 9m
Six years ago, #LFC's wage bill was 66% higher than #MCFC's. Now it's £100m per season lower. #soccernomics pic.twitter.com/HIoVLYaE6Q
 

Jarnet87

Member
Andy Cole must not watch any games. Moyes has Kagawa buried so deep down the selection chain that it's a miracle when he gets a spot on the bench.
 

dc89

Member
@henrywinter
Hodgson confirms #eng bringing in Dr Steve Peters psychologist to work with players on penalties

Fuck sake.
 

Zabojnik

Member
Happy b-day!

Things I learned on GAF today: Big Trouble In Little China, one of the greatest movies ever made, is apparently racist.
 

tri_willy

Member
@henrywinter
Hodgson confirms #eng bringing in Dr Steve Peters psychologist to work with players on penalties

Fuck sake.

did he not consider that the players should take some spot kick training since a lot of them are fucking atrocious at it??? cole, jones, sturry to name a few

fat frank and gerrard are the better takers of pelanties in the eng squad, that i can presently think of atm

edit: cheers zab!
 

Yen

Member
kWsJJgX.jpg


sportingintelligence ‏@sportingintel 9m
Six years ago, #LFC's wage bill was 66% higher than #MCFC's. Now it's £100m per season lower. #soccernomics pic.twitter.com/HIoVLYaE6Q
Insane how high City's wages are. Fortunately for them, they'll have some serious book cooking going on.
 
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