Engleski Premiership 2008/09

Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 11.08.2008.
Poruka: 10.838
22. svibnja 2009. u 00:29
Imaš na Wikipediji sve ..... bilo koji klub upiši i pisati će sa strane uz stadion,predsjednika, trenera još i nickname ..... 
Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 16.06.2003.
Poruka: 18.025
22. svibnja 2009. u 00:38
OK, thanks svima!
Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 20.03.2006.
Poruka: 22.201
22. svibnja 2009. u 01:15
NYC je napisao/la:
OK, thanks svima!
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Big smile
Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 20.03.2006.
Poruka: 22.201
22. svibnja 2009. u 01:17
dr.Damir je napisao/la:

Nije istina ovo za automatsko učlanjivanje u klub i tako su stotine navijača Rangersa kupili stvari, a nisu dobili kartu.LOL
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koji bolesnik LOL

Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 20.03.2006.
Poruka: 22.201
22. svibnja 2009. u 01:59
provokator je napisao/la:
Aston Villu zovu još i gorclosersi
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ako se netko kuzi u villu to je provo

profa, inace nickname newcastlea je "shit out of luck"

tko god zeli igrati za njih, jedino mora donijeti potvrdu da boluje od lobotomije
Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 20.03.2006.
Poruka: 22.201
22. svibnja 2009. u 08:09
sa jednog foruma west hama. nije cudo da vec idu na forume tottenhama hehehe

east ham

"went to east ham today, lady been in the same house for 48 years , nice fam etc tried to park was confronted by a east euro told me to fick off or i smesh yer face , tried to explain its a funeral fick off he says or i smesh you car ok ivan i ring the
local plod , it arrives 5 ft 3 special lectures me on tolarence , and how we must understand etc etc etc , there is no hope ."


Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 20.03.2006.
Poruka: 22.201
22. svibnja 2009. u 10:06

A Michael Owen is not just for Christmas

Can no decent home be found for little Michael Owen?

Michael Owen

Call me foolish if you like but I have to confess the current media campaign featuring heart-tugging photos of those moist, dark eyes set in that beseeching little face is upsetting my emotional equilibrium. Indeed hardly a day has gone by over the past month when I have not cast the newspaper aside of a morning, dabbed the salt tears from my cheeks and cried out, "For pity's sake, can no decent home be found for poor little Michael Owen?"

The way things are going the one-time Ballon d'Or winner is going to end up being left tied to the railings at Heworth Interchange until a passerby, alerted by his stoic and sensible droning, reports an abandoned former international striker to the local animal sanctuary and they come round and collect him. This will be the first time such an indignity has been visited on a BBC Sports Personality of the Year (I'm ignoring the business with Princess Anne obviously, that being more of a hen night scenario).

Then of course it will all start up again, the adverts and the appeals. Because the upkeep of a top-quality forward with a proven goalscoring record at every level of the game is very expensive, and animal welfare charities just don't have that sort of money. If they don't manage to rehouse Owen in a couple of months – and nothing suggests such an outcome is likely – it will be a choice between having him humanely destroyed or starting a cull of the other livestock. Put yourself in that position: give a lethal injection to an it's-amazing-to-think-he's-still-only-29-years-old, or shoot a donkey. It's not a decision I'd like to have to make, that's for certain.

Those of us who were in France in 1998 to witness the teenage Owen suddenly burst into the consciousness of the football world like, Ooh I don't know something big and bursty, an illegal Chinese firework in all likelihood, can only wonder at how this has come to pass. How has the incandescent adolescent ended up such a damp and unwanted grown-up squib?

Injury has certainly played its part, and moving to Real Madrid was clearly a mistake, but it is more than that. Looking back, you get a weird sense that right from the start nobody has quite believed in Michael Owen. In France Glenn Hoddle infamously announced that the Liverpool forward was "not a natural goalscorer"; in Euro 2000 Kevin Keegan unceremoniously relegated him to the bench. At Madrid, where he had scored 18 times despite starting only 15 matches, the management preferred to put their faith in Julio Baptista (the football equivalent of donning an Easter bonnet to stave off a nuclear attack).

When he left the Bernabéu only Freddy Shepherd – a man so profligate he gave large wads of cash to Patrick Kluivert – was impressed enough to meet his wage demands. More recently Fabio Capello appears more likely to select a striker at random from outside a minicab office at 2am than pick him while Alan Shearer apparently prefers Obafemi Martins on one leg.

No matter what Owen has done the football world has appeared to reserve judgment, doubt his substance, as if they suspected that when they got up close he would turn out to be a hologram.

It's hard to fathom why exactly that is. Admittedly the Newcastle United striker is not the most charismatic of footballers – but then neither was Gary Lineker or Ian Rush and managers trusted them. And it is certainly true that in recent years he has never been quite able to keep a note of polite peevishness out of his voice. So that most of the time he sounds like a junior executive complaining to the receptionist at his conference hotel that the provision of UHT milk cartons with the in-room tea and coffee making facilities is wholly inadequate.

On the other hand he scored 40 goals in 89 games for England and was the 2001 European footballer of the year, he is polite and gives no trouble just so long as you take him for the occasional walk to the betting shop. Yet still there has hardly been a rush of people stepping forward with an offer for him.

Owen at least is out of contract. Newcastle can let him go without any legal obligation to rehouse him. The increasing cost of other unwanted strikers must, however, be a serious concern. History shows that when people don't want to keep something, but can find no way to get rid of it, they resort to illegal methods. In coming years I fear we may see an increasing number of forwards bought on a whim and then found to be more trouble than they are worth being fly-tipped, dumped by the side of motorways, or abandoned in the woods in the hope that a farmer, seeing them near his sheep, will reach for his shotgun and put a decisive end to the problem.

Others may, like the alligators of New York City, simply be flushed away down the toilet, only to prosper and thrive in the sewerage network. People may say this is actually an urban myth but I for one would never be able to sit comfortably in the bathroom if I thought there was even the slightest chance of Dimitar Berbatov suddenly popping up round the U-bend.

guardian.co.uk

Hugo Chavez
Hugo Chavez
Dokazano ovisan
Pristupio: 01.08.2006.
Poruka: 11.344
22. svibnja 2009. u 10:09
owena u hajduk!
X
Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 20.03.2006.
Poruka: 22.201
22. svibnja 2009. u 10:18
Hugo Chavez je napisao/la:
owena u hajduk!
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da. a mamic nek ga plati.
dr.Damir
dr.Damir
Većinski vlasnik Foruma
Pristupio: 12.06.2006.
Poruka: 20.132
22. svibnja 2009. u 10:57
Nek propadne, ne žalim ga nimalo. Kad je bio na vrhunci karijere, trčao je za lovom, kasnije mu se vratilo ozljedama.
sve prolazi sve se mijenja, idu dani idu godine, samo Zrinjski ostaje ponos moje Hercegovine
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