yeah, wha ability dem have weh Boo nuh hab
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what do you call a winning manager?
the fact is he won the FA cup.- Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.
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- Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.
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Originally posted by Me View PostDid you create that statistic? it is inaccurate.Last edited by Warlord; December 5, 2008, 06:10 PM.
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Originally posted by Jangle View PostBased on your assessment, all the other coaches in the BPL might as well quit now because dem nuh good. Dem a collect million dollar salaries fe nutten.
Thge permiership is a very tough league not only to win but to survive in. Managers like Tony Pulis, Paul Jewell will never get a chance to coach a big club like Arsenal, Livpool, ManU or Chelsea. They will coach a bottom tier team in the league and will struggle because that is the calibre of coach that they are.
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LOL. This must be the moving target Gamma talk about.
You make a speech inaccurately, then when you find out otherwise you try change your criteria and edit your post.
Now you change from 3 International goals to 3 qualifiers.
So now you want to tell me that Ricardo Fuller has only scored two goals outside of Qualifier's? and you going to use wikipedia as your source. LOL
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Originally posted by Me View PostLOL. This must be the moving target Gamma talk about.
You make a speech inaccurately, then when you find out otherwise you try change your criteria and edit your post.
Now you change from 3 International goals to 3 qualifiers.
So now you want to tell me that Ricardo Fuller has only scored two goals outside of Qualifier's? and you going to use wikipedia as your source. LOL
What does his record show? are you claiming wikipedia source as inaccurate? hahaha...if u need me to get another source that shows his goal tally at international level...let me know boss
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Originally posted by Warlord View PostWhat does his record show? are you claiming wikipedia source as inaccurate? hahaha...if u need me to get another source that shows his goal tally at international level...let me know boss
Did you see Ricardo Fuller play against Japan?
against the USA?
Guatemala twice?
Saudi Arabia?
Greneda?
Mexico?
You move from 3 to 5 and next thing you going to tell me is that you meant 7.
Once again you have shown your lack of football knowledge and ability to create fraudulent stats. Next time you make big statement, come prepared to defend it.
How about his first match against Manu, you get a hold of the tape yet?
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Check out who the Man of the Match was, again! Nuff said.
Potters fightback stuns Magpies
Potters snatch a point at St James' Park
Last updated: 6th December 2008
Football Betting - Everton v Aston Villa
Correct Score - Everton to win 2-0 10/1 or 2-1 8/1
To Score a Brace - Cahill 14/1 or Agbonlahor 12/1
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Faye: Late leveller
Man of Match: Ricardo Fuller. The Jamaican striker changed the game upon his arrival.
Goal of the match: Michael Owen's first was the result of a free-flowing move in which the hosts ripped into the Potters.
Pass of the match: Jonas Gutierrez's threaded through-ball to Owen on nine minutes was perfectly weighted and allowed the England man to open the scoring.
Save of the match: Steven Taylor's desperate tackle on Richard Cresswell at 2-0 should have provided the inspiration for Newcastle to take all three points.
Talking point: It is now four draws in a row for Newcastle. Can they drag themselves to safety?
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Stoke staged a remarkable comeback at St James' Park on Saturday as they ground out a 2-2 draw with Newcastle.
A brace from Michael Owen looked to have handed the Magpies three vital points, but Mamady Sidibe gave the visitors a glimmer of hope in the second half and Abdoulaye Faye struck late on to snatch a share of the spoils.
Joe Kinnear's side took the game to their opponents from the off, dominating possession and looking threatening on the flanks.
It therefore came as no surprise when they opened the scoring on nine minutes.
Jonas Gutierrez was allowed to cut inside from the right, before threading a clever pass into Owen - who made no mistake with a low drive.
The England international was looking lively and added a second on 24 minutes when he bundled home Obafemi Martins' cross from close range.
Stoke were not prepared to lie down, though, and came storming back after the break.
The introduction of Ricardo Fuller gave them an attacking thrust and the Jamaican laid on Sidbe's strike on the hour-mark.
He escaped the attentions of his marker as he burst into the box and had enough awareness to pick out his strike partner rather than go for goal himself.
Then, as the game ticked into injury-time, Faye was able to brush off Gutierrez and lash home from close range.
Resilience
The Magpies took the game by the scruff of the neck before the break.
Goalless draws at Chelsea and Middlesbrough in their previous two games had demonstrated a commendable resilience, but they knew this was a game they needed to win and set about the task with some relish.
Owen and Martins revelled in the service they were given back on home turf with the £17million man Owen in particular making the most of the opportunities which came his way.
With nine minutes gone Gutierrez cut inside from the right to roll the ball into his path and Owen slid it past Thomas Sorensen and inches inside the post.
There was less finesse about his second, lunging in at the far post intent simply on making contact with Martins' driven cross, but the outcome was the same.
Indeed, had it not been for the heroics of defender Danny Higginbotham - one of three Sunderland old boys in a Stoke side which included as many former Magpies - who twice blocked Gutierrez shots in front of goal, the game could have been over by the break.
The Potters threatened only fleetingly, with some of the sting taken out of Rory Delap's long throw by the close proximity of the advertising hoardings to the playing surface.
However, they might have got themselves back into the game six minutes before half-time had former Newcastle defender Faye managed to direct a free header at goal from substitute Glenn Whelan's free-kick.
Inventive
Danny Guthrie's failure to reappear after the break on an afternoon when Nicky Butt missed out with a hamstring injury left Kinnear short of midfield options, and his response was inventive.
Gutierrez moved into the middle as Habib Beye took over on the right, with substitute Steven Taylor replacing him at full-back.
But in what proved to be an intensely uncomfortable second half for the home side, Ibrahima Sonko headed a 47th-minute Whelan free-kick across goal, and they were opened up for the first time five minutes later.
Sidibe found acres of space down the right and had time to pick out Richard Cresswell in the middle.
He looked certain to score until Taylor arrived from nowhere to make a superb block and prevent Shay Given from having to make his first genuine save of the game.
The threat represented by Delap ended with 57 minutes gone when he was replaced by striker Fuller as the home defence was handed a different test.
It was one they failed, as within three minutes the newcomer worked his way into the box from the right and crossed for Sidibe to score from close range.
Faye might have levelled in the final minute of normal time, but he made amends in injury time when he stabbed home from Glenn Whelan's free-kick.
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