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huss9

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Everything posted by huss9

  1. nah. would sing sad geordie basatard instead.
  2. huss9

    In memoriam

    that goal at the 74 world cup!
  3. fuck me that would be wonderful.
  4. wow - must watch. he absolutely lies and contradicts what he's been saying recently about playing the same system and not changing it even with injuries. - says he doesnt have a fixed system - he wants to vary according to the opposition. - "round pegs in square holes" to fit a system?, he's asked - absolutely not he says. - favourite formation?? "two up top". - still cutting off the interviewer. - "judge me on results",
  5. he fell out with Bruce who then blackfaced himself as a disguise and jumped ASM in the changing rooms and started whipping him.
  6. "rabid" - is it ok to describe passionate supporters that dont agree with Bruce or the pro-Bruce media as such? #doublefuckingstandards from the luke cuntwalker.
  7. first time he's really taken any responsibility for results without an excuse. hmmmm.
  8. Don't really consider him one of the WUM brigade tbh, he's just a bitter ex-player who hasn't come to terms with the fact he was a s*** manager. If he had ever been considered a successful manager then his views would be of more interest, but he wasn't. He won some stuff at Liverpool on the back of the groundwork done before him, then he promptly turned that to s***. He also a trophy or two at Rangers where he spent much more than Celtic, the only other club in the league capable of winning anything. Not disputing, but he also won the League Cup at Blackburn. Yet he still went on to prove he was a useless manager with us. No idea what the circumstances were with his short term success at Blackburn, but he proved at Liverpool that winning trophies meant nothing there, they went on a downward spiral so fast the longer he stayed there. They were almost unrecognisable as a big club by the time they kicked him out. Blackburn were one day away from sacking Souness when we went in and offered compensation to take him as NUFC manager. Blackburn couldn't believe how lucky they were to get compensation when they thought they were going to have to pay up his contract when they sacked him!! "“We had to get rid of Robson because he would have got us relegated. There was nothing more certain." - Douglas Hall With that insight in mind, just be grateful Graeme kept us up. https://www.irishexaminer.com/sport/soccer/arid-10073423.html WTF had never heard that, what a load of bollocks. “We took two points from a possible 12 and couldn’t just stand back and watch Newcastle slide out of the Premiership." 2 draws and 2 defeats in a 4 game run... including being robbed away at villa. they should have had a red card - keeper i think.
  9. Of course. and with a couple of new central midfielders we'd def have been pushing top 6. especially with that wall of a back 3.
  10. How? Think that’s a great idea tbh. Should have been the law from the start. eh? i'm sure that used to be the law just a few years back. there had to be "daylight" between the defender and the attacker for it to be offside. then they changed it.
  11. still cant believe this club TWICE paid millions for shit managers to replace heroes. souness would have been sacked within a couple of weeks and freddie could have had for free. same goes for the Coward but his sacking may have taken a couple of months rather than weeks.
  12. this cunt is sticking around for his last big pay day. have u seen the state of him? he cant work in such a pressured environment due his health alone. never mind that he's shit and he's blown any lingering credibility he ever mysteriously had. no champo/premiership clubs will be coming in for him. he slink off back to the north west and meet up occasionally with his media pals including shearer for the odd game of golf. obviously be getting the cart around the course. well yer know.
  13. no way will he stay once fans turn on him the ground.
  14. huss9

    Sunderland

    New bloke brought Mcgeady brought back in. was a bit like shelvey for us in the first few months of the champo.
  15. huss9

    Sunderland

    we can laugh but they'll be above us within 18 months unless we get sold.
  16. i think people, including myself, think he'll never be sacked. the cunt might resign hopefully.
  17. that's right. even if we get relegated. the only positive of him getting sacked now is that we know he wont be here next season no matter where we end up.
  18. kicking not quite back to his best yet.
  19. another wasted free kick almost directly leading to conceding a goal.
  20. huss9

    Lee Charnley

    goes round in a wig and skirt in a flower-power van with some weirdos and a talking dog looking for moles.
  21. don't tell fibs. we are the only club thats been affected by injuries and covid this season.
  22. its obvious from his article that bruce feeds edwards his news. so much for finding the mole.
  23. its an absolutely horrendous article. inadvertently makes more of a case for sacking him than keeping him. "looking ahead to 4-5 years time" ffs!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  24. Newcastle United supporters are convinced they already know the answer to the question of what needs to be done to save the club from relegation. Remove Steve Bruce as head coach and whoever replaces him will do a better job, results will improve and a third humiliating drop into the Championship in the space of just 12 miserable years will be avoided. It really is that black and white. Forget the fact Newcastle are without their three most creative and prolific attacking players - top goalscorer Callum Wilson and the exhilarating Miguel Almiron and Allan Saint-Maximin - and will be until at least the start of April. Ignore the fact that Newcastle’s first choice centre midfield partnership of Jonjo Shelvey and Isaac Hayden is the same one that played in the Championship in 2016 and dismiss the inconvenient truth that the club decided, long before Bruce was appointed in July 2019, to spend £40m on a striker Joelinton, who cannot score goals and does not look like he ever will. The raw numbers show that £100m has been spent on players since Bruce took charge and the team have gone backwards. Finishing 13th last season was, they say, a fluke and none of that matters anyway because Newcastle are 16th now, just one point above the relegation zone having won only two of their last 18 games in all competitions. It is relegation form and it stretches back to the start of December. And this was all before colourful details of a training ground bust up between Bruce and winger Matt Ritchie were leaked last week, further fanning the flames of discontent with claims several players wanted the manager sacked, along with various other snipes about training schedules and the treatment of dropped goalkeeper Karl Darlow. True Faith, one of the prominent fanzines on Tyneside, has tweeted every day for the last week to ask if Bruce has resigned yet? Of course, they already know the answer to that too. But they ask anyway and are joined in the condemnation, ridicule and vilification of Bruce by almost every other podcaster, fan channel and website. The local newspaper, The Chronicle, has stopped short of calling for Bruce to be sacked, but barely hides its disdain for him and the collective despair at form, while painfully highlighting how depressing the situation is. At any other Premier League club, Bruce would almost certainly have gone, so why is he still there? What are the reasons behind owner Mike Ashley’s continued backing of a manager very few people wanted when he replaced Rafa Benitez and who so many are demanding is replaced 20 months later? Not changing manager is not the same thing as doing nothing Contrary to what many think, Newcastle are not sleepwalking into relegation. If it happens, their eyes will have been wide open throughout. They are making decisions and may well have already made the most important of the lot. To understand the continued faith in Bruce, you have to remember that Ashley has changed manager twice before in similar situations - in 2009 when Alan Shearer failed to keep them up with eight games remaining and in 2016 when Rafa Benitez failed to do so, despite having ten games in charge. On the occasions. Newcastle have avoided the drop after being sucked into a relegation battle, they survived by sticking with the man in the dugout. It happened twice under Alan Pardew, Newcastle only securing top flight survival in their penultimate game in 2013, a 2-1 win at QPR. The following year, Newcastle lost 15 out of 21 games over the course of the second half of the season, but Ashley refused to sack Pardew - despite all four sides of St James’ Park calling for him to do so during a 3-0 win over Cardiff - and Newcastle did enough to stay up. And again, in 2015, when Newcastle had to beat West Ham in their final game under John Carver, Newcastle avoided falling into the Championship by refusing to replace the manager. Their form under Carver, leading into that do or die moment against the Hammers, was four wins in 25 games. But when he sacked Steve McClaren in March 2016 to bring in Benitez to save them, they went down. So, while supporters are angry, demanding change, Ashley sees things through a completely different sort of prism. It partly makes him the man he is. As someone close to him once told Telegraph Sport, “Mike Ashley does not look at the deal that is in front of him, he looks at what that deal looks like four or five moves away…” And with supporters not in stadiums, Ashley knows that Bruce and his players are cocooned, protected from the distractions of protests and constant chants calling for the manager’s head. There is very little, if any, external pressure being exerted. Ashley and managing director Lee Charnley know they are taking a risk, but it is a gamble they have won before. Sometimes sticking is better than twisting, especially when you have lost heavily doing the latter. Loyalty to those he likes Ashley is ruthless when he needs to be, it is why he has made so much money in his retail empire. He can cut people off if he wants to and will always base his decisions on what is best for him and his business interests. Relegation would cost him millions potentially. He is still trying to sell the club - although there is no chance of that happening while relegation matters are yet to be decided - and another drop into the Championship will wipe at least £100m of Newcastle’s value and therefore the money he can ask for to part company with it. He has a lot to lose, as supporters scream at him. Whether he is listening or not is another matter. Ashley likes Bruce and can discuss football matters with him in a way he never could with Benitez. When Bruce asked to sign the 28-year-old Callum Wilson for £21m last summer, a deal that went against the club’s transfer policy of not signing players over the age of 28 for vast sums because they have little resale value, he asked Bruce why he wanted him and what the benefits would be. He listened and told Charnley to make the deal happen. Wilson has scored ten goals in a poor side and is said to be the owner’s favorite player by some distance. Everton Newcastle United, Premier League Newcastle Unitedâ s Callum Wilson celebrates Steve Bruce was backed in the transfer market last summer CREDIT: Ian Hodgson Bruce has put pressure on him behind the scenes to make more signings, but he has never slagged the owner off in public, unlike his predecessor. In turn, when he has explained the financial situation and the losses caused by the pandemic, Bruce has in turn listened and adjusted his expectations accordingly. After three years of feeling like Benitez was constantly fighting against him and openly challenging his authority and decision making, he has a manager who tries to work with him and it has been a relief when he does not want to be dragged into constant battles at a football club he wants to leave to run itself. The fact it will cost around £4m in compensation if Bruce is sacked is another consideration of course. Interestingly, when newspaper reports emerged last week detailing the Ritchie row and the civil war in the dressing room, sources told Telegraph Sport he was instinctively protective of Bruce and wanted to help him. He also saw the leaking of information as a betrayal of the manager. If anything, it made him want to stick with him even more. In the end results will decide everything Whether Ashley’s faith holds should Newcastle lose to Aston Villa and Brighton remains to be seen. That could make all of the above redundant. The point is, he wants Bruce to win at least one of these games so that he can keep him in the job. Even if they fail to win either, with Wilson, Almiron and Saint-Maximin set to return after the international break, he could still refuse to fire the manager as results should improve with their three most important players fit and available again. Ashley watched the goalless draw against WBA and saw a team that was still playing for their manager, despite claims to the contrary in the build up to it. You can never be entirely confident in predicting anything with someone like Ashley, but as of now, the position is steadfast. Newcastle will continue to back Bruce’s judgement, leadership and methods because the club think this is the best way to avoid relegation. After all, sometimes it is safer to stick and it has worked out in the end for Ashley doing exactly that.
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