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-   -   Premier League (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=29233)

Griff 09-25-2013 06:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DanaC (Post 876958)
Tennant's performance in that film was excellent.

Word.

Big Sarge 10-08-2013 04:04 PM

Manchester United beat Sunderland and is ranked 9th. I don't see anyway we can catch Arsenal. Looks like we might end up middle of the pack. Of course, this affects our stock holdings

Sundae 10-09-2013 06:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lookout123 (Post 875197)
Better than a Millwall thug... er supporter, i suppose.

Danny Baker supports Millwall.
And my Uncles Ted and Charlie went to more than a few games at Milwall, but we're talking back in the '50s for them. And they had some right tasty mates, both being printers, so they knew they were safe if anyone tried to wade in.
You can't help what side of the river you were born on.
Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff (Post 876956)
Did you see United yet? Its on netflix streaming.

Quote:

Originally Posted by DanaC (Post 876958)
Tennant's performance in that film was excellent.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff (Post 877071)
Word.

Also written by Chris Chibnall. Not seen it but already has great credentials.
Quote:

Originally Posted by Big Sarge (Post 879388)
Manchester United beat Sunderland and is ranked 9th. I don't see anyway we can catch Arsenal. Looks like we might end up middle of the pack. Of course, this affects our stock holdings

That's the trouble with any Premier team. Up and down. Just hope David Moyes is allowed to prove his worth. Managerial longevity is a problem for pretty much every team (including England) apart from the Arse these days... I might not lke Arsenal, but Wenger was a little like Fergie, brought up his own team, had the time to make his mistakes, settled in.

Big Sarge 12-06-2013 02:00 AM

Manchester United is 9th in the league. However, their stock is up 20 cents a share. I try to understand what the crowd chants, but I think it isn't in English. Stock returns have been minimal, but I'm still considering buying more shares

Sundae 12-07-2013 12:12 PM

They do speak English in Manchester, despite what your ears are telling you.

I would suggest that it was a natural censorship your ears were imposing, but having served in the Armed Forces I should think you've both heard and used language as salty as any heard on the terraces.

United are a gift to sports journalists in all strands of the media at present. Column inches to fill? Editorial to wraite? Airtime to pad out? Discuss Manchester United. Where ate they going wrong, are they going wrong, who should be dropped, who should be on the bench, why are they doing this and not that or that and not this etc etc etc.

Although this is briefly on hold as attention switches to Brazil 2015 and the fact we are in The Group of Death.

Molasar 12-29-2013 06:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae (Post 870995)
Mixed them up with the Toon?

... or perhaps Notts County? (fnarr-fnarr)

Griff 04-09-2016 01:12 PM

What is this? I check the broadcast tv for a baseball game and find English Premier on NBC and Bundesliga on Fox. Where were you dudes in my childhood?

xoxoxoBruce 04-09-2016 03:36 PM

In your childhood American broadcasting was protecting children from bad words, tits, and soccer. :crone:

xoxoxoBruce 04-09-2016 08:08 PM

Check out the greatest story never told, AFC Wimbledon.

Quote:

So, okay: In May of 2002, the English Football Association gave the owners of a club called Wimbledon F.C. permission to move 70 miles away, to a town called Milton Keynes. Despite fervent protests from Wimbledon fans, the FA decided that it was “not in the wider interests of football” to have a club based in Wimbledon.

This happens all the time in American sports — the Brooklyn Dodgers become the LA Dodgers, the Baltimore Colts became the Indianapolis Colts — but it doesn’t happen in England, where football teams are not franchises but rather community assets. For many Wimbledon fans, to lose their club was to lose their community. As one protest banner read, “A club is for life, not just for profit.”

Despite the defiant graffiti and protests, it appeared Wimbledon would be without a football club until a group of supporters decided they would just start a team. Of course, there were some initial challenges — for instance, none of them had any experience running a football club, and they also had no uniforms, no sponsors, no coaches, and no players


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