Pogue Mahone
Swiftie Fan Club President
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2006
- Messages
- 135,011
- Caf Award
- Caf Lifetime Achievement Award 2021
WTF ?
I'll be adding that to my vocabulary.![]()
It's an Englishism. I use it a lot. Legacy of 11 years spent in Blighty.
WTF ?
I'll be adding that to my vocabulary.![]()
You could call it an argy bargy.
It's an Englishism. I use it a lot. Legacy of 11 years spent in Blighty.
is shaw gonna be fit?We could have Rojo, Shaw, Blind, Herrera, Di Maria and Falcao playing against QPR. Ha. That's incredible. I'd like to say how unlucky it is for QPR, but knowing us we'll scrape a 1-1 draw.
is shaw gonna be fit?
I read an article the other day (can't remember which paper but it wasn't something crap like The Star) which said that he was likely to be available for QPR. It looks like all our players (apart from Carrick and Rafael?) will be available for the next game. Good to see Rojo getting a run out yesterday considering he's not been involved for Utd over the last couple of weeks.I heard he was out for four weeks originally or am I wrong? That will have passed by the time the QPR game is to be played. I'm just assuming. Stand to be corrected.
I believe he's back in training already.is shaw gonna be fit?
yeah i heard four weeks too, i think that takes us up to the QPR game so would train after that game.... but....I heard he was out for four weeks originally or am I wrong? That will have passed by the time the QPR game is to be played. I'm just assuming. Stand to be corrected.
would be great if thats true where did you hear it?I believe he's back in training already.
yeah i heard four weeks too, i think that takes us up to the QPR game so would train after that game.... but....
would be great if thats true where did you hear it?
yeah i heard four weeks too, i think that takes us up to the QPR game so would train after that game.... but....
would be great if thats true where did you hear it?
He was training with us all the while till about the last early last week. He can play now.
Epic... fail...We were talking about shaw![]()
Why?Epic... fail...
That's for me...Why?
Right ..... Good chat .... Have a biscuit!That's for me...
I... did.Right ..... Good chat .... Have a biscuit!
Was it........ Good?I... did.
Weren't we involved with something like this before?, i seem to have a memory from years ago where we signed some player and he couldn't play for ages because of something stupid that we didn't pick up on.
Manucho? Dong Fangzhuo?Yeah, Bebe. We failed to pick up he was shit.
Yep, I love him already and he hasn't even played a single minute for us. A bit crazy, transfer muppet, says great things about United, already bought his wife and daughter a United kit oh and not bad at football, what's there not to like!Rojo: "I am desperate to get onto the field and play because I have not been able to step onto Old Trafford [yet]. I am very happy to be at Manchester United, a top team in the world, sharing a dressing room with players like Wayne Rooney, Robin Van Persie, Angel Di Maria and now Radamel Falcao. This is a very important step in my career as a player and as a person. Everything that has happened to me since the World Cup has been a dream."
Great stuff from the lad. Great attitude.
Rojo reaping rewards of keeping the faith
Etched on the Argentina flag printed on the left shinpad of Marcos Rojo at the 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil™ were the words “El que abandona no tiene premio” (There are no prizes awarded for giving up). It is a motto that neatly sums up a hard-working and humble defender who, having cut his teeth on a little pitch in a disadvantaged area of La Plata, continued to go to training on his bicycle even after turning professional for local side Estudiantes de La Plata.
It was just five years ago that Rojo was still living with his family in a modest wooden abode, yet the versatile 24-year-old never thought about giving up on his dream – a level of persistence that has since led to an influential role in La Albiceleste’s run to the Final of Brazil 2014 and a subsequent big-money move to Manchester United. Such a development must taste even sweeter given the criticism directed towards the alleged defensive frailties of Alejandro Sabella’s Argentina in the build-up to the World Cup, with Rojo one of those most under fire.
The experienced coach’s support never wavered, however, perhaps unsurprisingly when you consider that, though Marquitos made his first-team debut for Estudiantes aged 18 under Roberto Sensini, it was under Sabella the following year that Rojo began earning regular playing time. Struggling to fill the left wing-back role in his 5-3-2 formation, the supremo wisely chose to turn toLos Pincharratas’ youth system for a solution.
And despite Rojo being primarily used as a central defender during his rise up Estudiantes’ junior ranks, Sabella felt he had the right ingredients to also make the left flank his own. “When I was very little I would play on the left side of midfield too,” explained Rojo. “I used to enjoy getting forward and finishing off moves.”
Putting family first
Having played his part in helping El Pincha triumph in the Copa Libertadores in 2009, Rojo used his prize money to buy his family their first solidly constructed house, a lifelong dream come true. “Why don’t you have a car yet?” experienced Estudiantes midfielder Rodrigo Brana had asked a cycling Rojo, when the pair crossed paths on the way to training a few months before that Copa win. “Because I’ve not got a house yet either,” was Rojo’s memorable riposte.
The first son of Marcos Alberto, nowadays still working as a lorry driver, and Carina, a former household help and dressmaker – the latter skill acquired in order to make clothes for her five children, had only one goal in mind: to save enough money to buy a proper home for his family. The dream achieved, his impressive rise continued: Rojo playing the full extra-time period of Estudiantes’ narrow FIFA Club World Cup final defeat versus Barcelona in December 2009, during which he impressively shackled Swedish superstar Zlatan Ibrahimovic.
Soon one of the first names on the Estudiantes’ team-sheet, next up for the Rojo-Sabella tandem came victory in the Argentinian Apertura 2010, the left-footer underlining his all-round ability by also weighing in with vital goals. At the age of just 20 came the opportunity of a move abroad, Rojo left his beloved El Pincha – whose every game he still watches wherever he may be – to sign on the dotted line for Spartak Moscow.
I did feel that my place was being questioned, there was an awful lot said about me, but I always believed in myself.
Marcos Rojo on criticism levelled at him by the media and fans on his place in the Argentina defence
Though handed frequent first-team opportunities, the switch eventually turned sour due to a disagreement with coach Valeri Karpin. Selected to represent Argentina at the Copa America 2011, Karpin asked him not to go, whereupon Rojo went anyway – thus meaning he would barely play for Spartak again until Sporting Lisbon handed him an escape route in 2012.
It was around the same time that Sabella took up the Argentina reins, soon installing Rojo as his favoured left-back despite the player having returned to central defence at Sporting. Even after appearing a total of ten times in qualifying, as La Albiceleste impressed on the way to clinching a place in Brazil, fans and media at large appeared unable to fathom Sabella’s depth of faith in him.
In the midst of the worst spell of criticism, Rojo had ‘Pride’ and ‘Glory’ tattooed onto his quads, and ordered the aforementioned shinpads. “I did feel that my place was being questioned, there was an awful lot said about me, but I always believed in myself,” he said. “I knew that if I kept putting in the hard work then everything would turn out all right.”
‘Rojo is greater than Pele’
In Argentina’s World Cup opener versus Bosnia and Herzegovina, it was his flick-on that led to Sead Kolasinac putting through his own net for La Albiceleste’s first goal, while he also made a spectacular clearance later in the game. His name running wild on social media sites in Argentina, partly in mocking disbelief and partly admiration, it was the start of a love affair between the player and fans.
Strong and aggressive in the tackle, a powerful aerial presence in both areas, comfortable bringing the ball out and willing to push forward into attack – Rojo’s World Cup was taking fine shape. Scorer of a goal with his knee against Nigeria in the team’s final group game, the strike capped a fine first phase for the defender – cue the media and social networks again being awash with his name.
There was even a version of the famous song Brasil, decime qué se siente (Brazil, tell me how it feels) dedicated entirely to him, the last line a remarkable turnaround from the pre-tournament vitriol: “A Marquitos vas a ver, la Copa nos va a traer, Marcos Rojo es más grande que Pelé” (Just wait and see, Marquitos will bring us back the World Cup. Marcos Rojo is greater than Pele).
Ruled out of the quarter-final tie versus Belgium due to suspension, an absence that had his legions of new fans fearing the worst, come the semi-final against the Netherlands, Rojo not only marked Arjen Robben out of the game but also found time to nutmeg the Dutch superstar, much to the delight of Albicelestes everywhere. And after the Final against Germany, Rojo ended the tournament as the only Argentinian in the top ten of the Castrol Index – as well as being selected in the team of the tournament.
Finally awarded a UK work permit, Rojo should shortly make his competitive debut for Manchester United, for whom he was signed on the direct request of the Red Devils’ new boss Louis van Gaal. After seeing him up close during the aforementioned semi at Brazil 2014, the Dutch strategist clearly liked what he saw.
“I’ve not been able to go to Old Trafford yet, but I’m desperate to get out on that pitch and play,” said Rojo. And though finding himself in this situation would have been virtually inconceivable as a young lad playing on the La Manito de Dios pitch, in La Plata’s El Triunfo neighbourhood, Marcos Rojo never gives up. The prizes, therefore, have kept on coming…
http://www.fifa.com/world-match-cen...mier-league-2000000000/news/newsid/243/647/9/
becauses hes man utd and he'll do what he wants.Why is him being "a bit mental" a good thing? Alarming number of people chiming with that addition.
Vidic was a bit mental:Why is him being "a bit mental" a good thing? Alarming number of people chiming with that addition.
I miss Vidic.Vidic was a bit mental:
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It's not a bad quality for a defender when you know they will fight for everything and leave nothing on the pitch.
I think he'll be a fan favourite soon. I love the idea of Rafael, Jones and Rojo in the back line. All three of them are uncompromising and will fight for every ball and give everything on the pitch.
I think Shaw has what it takes to show he is an improvement on Evra of last season over the next couple of years and depending on how he keeps developing, he may even be able to surpass Evra at his peak but the worrying thing is there's still a big question mark on the others.De Gea, Rafael, Jones, Rojo and Shaw have really big boots to fill. Sometimes the reality of us not having their predecessors kicks in hard.![]()
It's an Englishism. I use it a lot. Legacy of 11 years spent in Blighty.
Maybe I'm just behind on the term. 'Mental' to me suggests irrationality, there's a difference between that and determination or being committed.
Why is him being "a bit mental" a good thing? Alarming number of people chiming with that addition.
Mental: Does what he wants when he wants. Hard as feck. Never backs out of challenges and sticks his head infront of anything.Maybe I'm just behind on the term. 'Mental' to me suggests irrationality, there's a difference between that and determination or being committed.