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Football

Mcr Warrior

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They still have an Albanian goalkeeper but I do not know when he joined them.
Think that's Elgi Fejzo. Joined them in 2022. By the way, Fort William FC likely won't be back in the Highland League anytime soon, as their application for an entry level SFA licence was recently turned down. Doesn't help that their floodlights at Claggan Park suffered storm damage last January and are now no longer operational.
 
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Xenophon PCDGS

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Think that's Elgi Fejzo. Joined them in 2022. By the way, Fort William FC likely won't be back in the Highland League anytime soon, as their application for an entry level SFA licence was recently turned down. Doesn't help that their floodlights at Claggan Park suffered storm damage last January and are now no longer operational.
At least Fort William are safe from relegation from this league as long as there are teams such as Bunillidh Thistle in that league, who this season have produced scorelines similar to those that Fort William produced the the Highland League. They are bottom of the league, played 13 and gained only 4 points from those matches, with a goal difference of minus 53.. The eye-catching defeat scoreline was 15-1, away at Invergordon.
 
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Haywain

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At least Fort William are safe from relegation from this league
They will be safe from relegation every year as there isn't a league to which they can be relegated. The North Caledonian League is at the base of the pyramid.
 

PauloDavesi

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Birmingham City return to the top of League One with a 3-0 win at Wigan. It looked, and sounded, that there were more Birmingham supporters in the full away end than in the other 3 sides of the stadium.

Oxford United continued their recovery under Gary Rowett with another draw, and Plymouth had their best away result in months with a goalless draw at Stoke.
 

Cletus

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Bit worried about Hendon v Dover Athletic today, until turning up to find a plastic pitch :lol:

Easy 3-0 win followed :lol:
 

1D54

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Birmingham City return to the top of League One with a 3-0 win at Wigan. It looked, and sounded, that there were more Birmingham supporters in the full away end than in the other 3 sides of the stadium.
Attendance was 13,485 with 4,459 Blues fans in ground
 

PauloDavesi

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There must have been a lot of fans in the stand with the tv cameras, as the stand opposite and to the right were not very full.
 

DarloRich

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New Years Day: South Shields 0 v Darlo 1 - an excellent away win. Great first half, good goal, clean sheet and Darlo completely killed the game in the second half shutting out the leagues top scorers.

4th January - Alfreton P V Darlo P - game off. Frozen pitch, Not sure both teams complained to much after a hectic xmas period.

Sitting 6th in the league, on a great run of form. Tight defence. My only concern is the lack of goals in the team and the ending of a couple of key loans this weekend.
 

Ghostbus

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Arsenal v Newcastle

Live on itv

Only footy I get to see these days.
Arsenal embarrassed in front of the whole nation (nobody's out on a January Tuesday).

Edit: FT. 0-2, with ease. Newcastle subbed off Arsenal target Isak and England winger Gordon with time to spare.
 
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Haywain

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Arsenal embarrassed in front of the whole nation
You really think the whole nation has nothing better to do than watch football? To say nothing of the fact that Sky doesn't attract a particularly large viewing audience.
 

AlterEgo

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Arsenal embarrassed in front of the whole nation (nobody's out on a January Tuesday).
Nobody's watching the EFL Cup or whatever it calls itself these days. I didn't even know the game was on. Did Arsenal play their under 7s like they often do?
 

Haywain

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Nobody's watching the EFL Cup or whatever it calls itself these days. I didn't even know the game was on. Did Arsenal play their under 7s like they often do?
It's only a semi-final first leg. As you say, hardly anybody actually cares.
 

Jimini

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Based on the above recent posts I may be in the minority (based on a small sample size), but as a neutral I rather enjoyed that!
 

150249

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Newcastle, at the moment, look somewhat unstoppable and deserved the win. Isak continued his hot streak. He really is incredible isn't he. If I were Arsenal I'd, as Paul Merson says, 'break the bank' for him.
 

DarloRich

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If I were Arsenal I'd, as Paul Merson says, 'break the bank' for him.
But Blood Money Untied don't need the cash. Why would they sell to a rival?

Also the barcode's haven't won anything in colour and finished 7th last season so lets not get carried away!
 

side effect

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Nobody's watching the EFL Cup or whatever it calls itself these days. I didn't even know the game was on. Did Arsenal play their under 7s like they often do?
I posted this just incase no one knew it was on, as I never and did want anyone to miss it as until sky came about we use to get live footy on bbc and itv we use to get to see football regularly free.

I struggled to watch it tbh my love for the game has truly gone. The atmosphere of an opera.
 

Ghostbus

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But Blood Money Untied don't need the cash. Why would they sell to a rival?
There's a small matter of the profit and sustainability regulations.

Check out the Amazon documentary All Or Nothing. The blood money has been irrelevant. The club has had to work really hard to get talent like Isak and Gordon, players big clubs didn't want, at the cheapest possible price. They cost nothing compared to spending by the likes of Manchester United, never mind Manchester City.

It was also an exceptionally brave move to go with an unfancied but clearly brilliant English manager in Eddie Howe. They now buy young players and improve them. And Howe's success is as much about improving players Newcastle already had, than who he has signed. Joelinton, for example. Their academy talent is also scary good and absolutely vital now that being the richest club in the world is irrelevant.


As his cleverly disguised, beautifully weighted, pass created Alexander Isak’s opening goal against Chelsea a star was born. Fernández certainly failed to relish the renewal of his acquaintance with a midfielder who, as Howe puts it, “doesn’t look 17, doesn’t act 17 and doesn’t play 17”.

After another stellar performance during Tuesday’s 1-1 draw at the Parc des Princes – where Miley became the third-youngest Englishman after Jude Bellingham and Phil Foden to start a Champions League match – Paris Saint-Germain’s players are unlikely to disagree.

At best, Saudi money will provide Newcastle with a modern (i.e. suitable for fleecing corporate customers and tourists) football stadium to boost their profitability so they can better compete under the new rules.

It's not remotely necessary, since the wealth of Newcastle's fomer local owners had already built them the kind of large imposing stadium that looks and sounds awesome when you're giving the likes of Barcelona a spanking in the Champion's League:


Newcastle United FC announced their arrival on European club football's biggest stage in dramatic fashion with a rousing 3-2 victory against FC Barcelona crowned by a Faustino Asprilla hat-trick.

Urged on by an animated St James's Park, alive to its first ever UEFA Champions League tie, Asprilla rattled off three goals inside the opening 47 minutes for a rampant Newcastle. It left Barcelona, boasting a star-studded lineup including Rivaldo, Luis Enrique and Luís Figo, in a state of shock but the Spanish titleholders threatened a late recovery in a grandstand finish.

Arsenal could probably get Lewis Miley for £150m. He's probably worth it already, to a club aiming for era defining dominance. And Newcastle would certainly be far more tempted by a pure profit of £150m rather than the net £90m if they sold Isak for £150m due to the current rules.

The scary reality for Arsenal is Newcastle don't currently need to sell either of them, and not because the club is awash with money. It's because the club is now awash with cost effective and well coached playing talent. As football should be. Take note Manchester. Both clubs! So a quick return to the Champion's League is on the cards. Two turns in three years is money in the bank, quite literally. And now there's so many more games to play in the new format.

All Arsenal can do now is blame the Puma ball for being too flighty for their players. The same ball Isak and Gordon managed to keep down once they'd breached the supposedly impenetrable centre back pairing of Arsenal. Although to be fair, during Newcastle's numerous attacks, they skied many a ball too.

Notably Jacob Murphy. Worthless until Eddie Howe was presented with the need to coach him up and let him loose, due to being unable to pay any price to buy a better right winger. The man he's keeping on the bench, Almiron, another player Howe inherited, had his best season under Howe too. Almiron was a transfer record signing for the club under the previous ownership.

With the exception of Joelinton, the top ten record Newcastle transfers have been under the Saudi ownership. But not one of them was of any interest to the top Premier League clubs. One of them was Chris Wood! A very expensive but highly necessary stop gap striker who was apparently better than maybe even Eddie Howe realised. Or maybe did realise?

Sandro Tonali is the only Saudi record signing that even comes close to looking like Newcastle using their wealth to buy a player from a genuinely top flight European club who didn't really want to sell. Now we know why they did....but funnily enough, Newcastle got no refund and were still obliged to pay his wages. So the Georide fans embraced him, and now he's on record (interview before the match) as feeling obliged to repay that loyalty by turning in displays that the likes of Arsenal just can't deal with. Literally.

I watched in absolute amazement when, at two nil down, needing a goal, all it took for six Arsenal players to sprint back toward their own goal in terror, was Tonali, Newcastle's deepest lying midfielder, finding himself with the ball as the furthest advanced Newcastle player. They were clearly terrified of the combination of his Pirlo-esque quarterbacking for a lightning quick front three of Murphy, Gordon and Isak.

Nouveaux rich Newcastle arguably would have been a complete flop had they simply went for a big name manager and the most expensive players, quickly rendering virtually their entire current team of Arsenal embarrassers entirely redundant.

Better to do sensible things, like go back to using Adidas as your kit supplier, evoking memories of those glorious nights of old and globally monetize the brand that is Newcastle (another amazing insight courtesy of the Amazon doc).

How did I get to see that Amazon doc? Took the one month free trial so that TNT Sport didn't get the financial reward of taking two Premier League match rounds. Because all that does is reward the likes of Arsenal.

Are you not entertained, Arteta? Evidently not! Although it's hard to tell with his permanent scowl.
 

THC

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Somebody's been at the deludamol today! I'm used to hyperbole from fans of "the best league in the world" but this is next level shiz Paul. :lol:

Can I just check you're talking about the same Newcastle United who haven't won a major trophy in over half a century? And the same "unfancied" Eddie Howe who was being touted in some quarters as the next England manager while still at Bournemouth? Thought so.

All very well having a pop at Arsenal and the Mancs and the way they do things but, as messrs. Keane and Terry would say, "show us your medals". Until you can, as young Haaland would no doubt add, "stay humble". ;)

THC
 

DarloRich

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Can I just check you're talking about the same Newcastle United who haven't won a major trophy in over half a century? And the same "unfancied" Eddie Howe who was being touted in some quarters as the next England manager while still at Bournemouth? Thought so.
Correct. Won nothing in colour.

Howe is vastly overrated. Vastly. Won nowt. Bombed out of Europe easily and went backwards last season.

PS - I may be biased against Newcastle. Not sure if it shows. Years of "howay Malcom man were gonna win the league man Malcolm man howay lads tooooooooon army" on the radio takes a toll......

( and they cant even get Ha'way/H'way lads right ffs.)

It's not remotely necessary, since the wealth of Newcastle's fomer local owners had already built them the kind of large imposing stadium that looks and sounds awesome when you're giving the likes of Barcelona a spanking in the Champion's League:
Were you at that game to? I got a free ticket as Sid James Park was my neighbour. It was a great game but only the third best European tie I have seen in the north east
 
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Xenophon PCDGS

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I know footballers at the top level are trained professionals, but are they really expected to perform to the best of ther ability in deep winter night time scheduled matches, even when the pitch has been deemed playable? Do they have a different bodily make-up from normal human beings?
 

1D54

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Players at low non league level are expected to go out and perform in such conditions so why would it be a problem / challenge for the best in the land?
 

Mcr Warrior

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I know footballers at the top level are trained professionals, but are they really expected to perform to the best of ther ability in deep winter night time scheduled matches, even when the pitch has been deemed playable? Do they have a different bodily make-up from normal human beings?
Maybe. Maybe not. Hence the now somewhat clichéd "Can they do it on a cold rainy night in Stoke?" :s
 

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