The Neviller
New Member
SAFs masterplan to get rid of their only good player succeeds
This is fact on RAWK.
SAFs masterplan to get rid of their only good player succeeds
Our next step should be to tamper with his medical records to lower his value.
Our next step should be to tamper with his medical records to lower his value.
Playing Carroll is the biggest amount of damage that can be done to them.I reckon if SAF or someone else sneaks into the Liverpool dressing room, possibly by wearing one of those stocking masks that burgulars wear, and tamper with his shorts elastic, we could get him banned for indecent exposure during a game. This could lead to a custodial sentence and many months of hilarity by Kenny and the RAWKers reactions.
We could also deprive them of Andy Carroll by waving beer at him as he is running out of the tunnel, thus directly provoking him to go out that evening, get pissed and cause some kind of fracas
I do sometimes think their club is cursed.
Literally nothing decent ever seems to happen to them.
And when it does it usually results in even more damage e.g. winning CL in '05 meant they put too much faith in Rafa who destroyed their club and seems to have ensured they'll not be at football's top table for the foreseeable.
Signing Suarez last season seemed to be a rare transfer master stroke for a club who are renowned for poor transfer dealing, but he's ended up bringing deep shame on the club and destroying the reputation of Dalglish, their hero.
Everytime they get new owners they're heralded as saviours and initially impress, but soon get shown to be inadequate or at odds with management leading to internal strife and disruption.
Yeah there's something rotten at that club and has been for years.
I'd like to add to Plech's well worded comments that I think their shear hatred of anything Manchester United - not least our success, has twisted their view of reality, not least with the stance they have taken over the Suarez issue. They've acted disgracefully and when I say they I mean Suarez himself, Dalgliesh, the Liverpool based executives and a whole load of their fans. It's taken a big boot up the arse from their American owners to jolt them out of their entrenched stance. Clearly it's a forced apology and is a PR stunt to me rather than being heartfelt.Yeah there's something rotten at that club and has been for years. An actual pathology... I do think institutions can have a kind of character and a kind of health, and in their case the whole club has a psychological disease.
Probably at the root of it is the success they had - there's a massive sense of entitlement and the failure of reality to conform with it results in paranoia and cognitive dissonance. It's something we should be wary of, because our success can't last forever.
That said, MikeUpNorth made the point the other day that becoming a PLC made us up our game and join the professional world in a way Liverpool didn't. The kind of thing we've seen from their PR and legal departments is inconceivable at United.
They're exactly as provincial as Man Utd, they just haven't won the league for 20 years.
I agree with you. Hatred clouded the issue and the more time went on the more Dalgliesh became entrenched. Suarez clearly is not a character to back to the hilt however Dalgliesh took his time to switch on to that fact. This intervention by LFC's US owners forcing Dalgliesh and Suarez to apologise is just that, a forced, empty apology. Dalgliesh wasn't for apologising when he was wearing one of those shite T-shirts was he.Does anyone else think that if Suarez had have said what he did to a player not representing Manchester United that he'd have been forced to apologise straight away, and things would never have gotten to this stage? I get the feeling Liverpool got caught up in the, quite wrong, feeling that it was them v United, rather than concerning themselves with a racist remark being made by their player. I think they allowed their judgement to be clouded by the fact that this involved Evra, Manchester United and "Mr" Ferguson.
I think they've been 'smalltime' for decades. I don't mean that as an insult; rather, I mean that the philosophy & approach of the club is parochial. Communal spirit is all very well but, by definition, it means one often neglects the 'bigger picture', let alone a sense of genuine progress.
To be fair to the sane LFC supporter (if any)
This is just an escalation of problems. They thought that Suarez was right and Evra's the lying cnut( which is understandable, we would have done the same if the situation's reversed). I'm not saying we will support racism, but we will believe Evra first and foremost.
Turns out they're wrong, and instead of just admitting that they are wrong, they wriggle struggle and finding all sorts of mock up evidence to prove otherwise. Hence leads to this circus of stupidity. I thoroughly enjoyed it though, Rawk's a box office entertainment at this time.
(i'm getting my cofffee and some more toffee)
they're exactly as provincial as Man Utd, they just haven't won the league for 20 years.
In honesty I don't read LFC fans comments tagged on to newspaper articles anymore. Vitriolic pro LFC bile which is so biased as to be so narrow minded and blinkered as a one eyed man looking down a 12ft length of drainpipe.They can't and won't see yesterday's apologies as a sign of closure. Look at the comments on this blog which I have been arguing on this morning: Liverpool apologies seek to quell ugly echoes of Luis Suárez affair | Richard Williams | Football | The Guardian
Even now, they feel they need to balance things out by getting SAF to apologise and Evra castigated for his alleged 'part' in the affair which is all down to his 'previous'.
SAFs masterplan to get rid of their only good player succeeds
It's sad but I am convinced some Liverpool fans would believe that.Sure we all know Sir Alex had a word in Torres' ear about leaving Liverpool. Clearly he was threatened by Torres potentially helping them restore themselves as Kings of England that he persuaded Torres to jump ship to Chelsea.
"And chants can be heard from the Old Trafford fans in celebration of the death of 96 Liverpool fans at Hillsborough 23 years ago." From The Guardian piece today. There is only one, 96 is not enough, if my hearing is working properly, and it needs to stop imo. Sing as loud as you like about Heysel but leave Hillsborough the feck alone.
...when one of the players presents the image of being an unsportsmanlike racist, something need to be done.
In the end, it falls to Henry on both shores and a lot of passionate fans will be watching.
Liverpool's US owners and their shirt sponsor have intervened to help defuse the race row surrounding Luis Suárez's refusal to shake Patrice Evra's hand before Liverpool's defeat at Manchester United on Saturday.
Standard Chartered, which pays around £20m a season to sponsor Liverpool, went public with its criticism in a brief statement, saying: "We were very disappointed by Saturday's incident and have discussed our concerns with the club. A person familiar with the matter said: "It was a very robust conversation."
Standard Chartered was attracted to Liverpool by its strong Asian support base. The bank is based in London but makes almost all its profits in Asia. Most of its staff are in Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
The BBC reported that the Fenway Sports Group, which bought the club in 2010 and owns the Boston Red Sox baseball team, had said an apology was necessary. A spokesman for Liverpool declined to comment on the reports that pressure had been brought to bear.
The Football Association, which imposed the eight-match ban, will take no action over Suárez's refusal to shake hands because it is not a disciplinary issue.
The Liverpool striker apologised on Sunday for refusing the handshake before his team's 2-1 loss at Old Trafford and his manager Kenny Dalglish also said sorry for his post-match reaction when challenged over the snub. Suárez was returning to the Liverpool starting lineup for the first time since serving an eight-match ban for racially abusing Evra during a match in October.
"And chants can be heard from the Old Trafford fans in celebration of the death of 96 Liverpool fans at Hillsborough 23 years ago." From The Guardian piece today. There is only one, 96 is not enough, if my hearing is working properly, and it needs to stop imo. Sing as loud as you like about Heysel but leave Hillsborough the feck alone.
A person familiar with the matter said: "It was a very robust conversation."
"And chants can be heard from the Old Trafford fans in celebration of the death of 96 Liverpool fans at Hillsborough 23 years ago." From The Guardian piece today. There is only one, 96 is not enough, if my hearing is working properly, and it needs to stop imo. Sing as loud as you like about Heysel but leave Hillsborough the feck alone.