Massaro94
Milan Legend
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2013
- Messages
- 24,570
- Reaction score
- 7,211
- Location
- Grande Britain
- Fav. Players
- Maradona-Shevchenko-Zizou
Sarri
what a fantastic game, end to end for 90 minutes
sarri vs emery
Sarri vs Pep vs Klopp is going to be even better.
EPL is blessed right now
Wow mourinho is just getting worse and worse.
Sarri vs Pep vs Klopp is going to be even better.
EPL is blessed right now
This dude called jurgen klopp for flopp in years and now he is putting him next to his faves...
Looking at who City have on the bench, probably all of their players except Bravo would walk into our first 11.
why noteven Phil Fodder?
even Phil Fodder?
Why label him as such? The lad barely played for City, and won FIFA U-17 World Cup Golden Ball just last year.
He is clearly one for the future, and would be a great addition to our squad.
Why label him as such? The lad barely played for City, and won FIFA U-17 World Cup Golden Ball just last year.
He is clearly one for the future, and would be a great addition to our squad.
I bet you just watched all or nothing and now you think this kid will be a great addition to our squad.
Typical for a pussy.this is typical in a lockeroom
Have you played any sports in your life?
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-...entary-all-or-nothing-amazon?CMP=share_btn_twSitton’s is by no means the only legacy-shredding meltdown to have been captured for posterity by a no-doubt delighted camera crew. The England boss Graham “do I not like that” Taylor famously suffered the same indignity in Channel 4’s Cutting Edge doc An Impossible Job, a film that provided confirmation that dressing rooms are extremely sweary places: Taylor’s 38 uses of the word ”fuck” in the documentary was a record number for a British TV broadcast at the time.
Taylor’s impressive effort was bested three years later by Peterborough boss Barry Fry’s 48 uses of the expletive in Anglia’s There’s Only One Barry Fry. Peterborough and Fry would return to the screen just under a decade later in Sky One’s Big Ron Manager, which saw the disgraced coach and pundit attempt to rebuild his career by mentoring Posh manager Steve Bleasdale. Things didn’t quite go to plan: annoyed by Atkinson’s incessant input, Bleasdale quit two games from the end of the season.
...
Still as different as this thoroughly modern documentary might seem to its grittier, grubbier predecessors, one thing remains pleasingly unchanged: the swearing. Before the opening credit sequence has rolled, Guardiola has managed three fucks and a middle finger. It’s not quite Fry and Taylor levels, but at least a grand old footballing tradition remains unchanged.
bpl is so backwards.
its like watching football from the 70s