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Sean

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Everything posted by Sean

  1. What's the situation with Loftus Cheek? He's on a season long loan right? Can these now not be recalled? Or is this possible? I've got no idea tbh.
  2. Bakambu linked in the Chronicle again. Saw him score at the Nou Camp back in May, looked a decent option tbh. 9 goals in 14 games this season too apparently. Guessing this one depends on the takeover
  3. Why does it have to be the Daily Star ffs Having said that I do think if it's going to happen there will be hints before it's fully announced.
  4. Yeap, the main hurdle which will make it completely unfeasible is that cost of it will likely to be £50m+ which for another 8k-9k seats makes no commercial sense unless we jack ticket prices up and demand outstrips supply. The latest Etihad expansion had a cost of about £50m for about 7k new seats, the club mentioned that it would take almost ten years to recover the money but after that it was all profit. It did of course mean that there was extra space for corporate hospitality though.. There's no guarantee we would be able to sell another 8 to 9 thousand extra seats. It's all hypothetical, but I want an owner who wants to keep open the possibility, not kill it dead like Ashley has done.
  5. The electric Sports Direct hoardings were black & white against Bournemouth, had never noticed that before. Even that would have been something if he'd done it from day one. The red & blue just looks tacky as fuck. I noticed that as well and thought it was a bit strange. Can't wait for the day it's all gone, especially the big fucking ones he's got next to the clubs name.
  6. Just noticed this in the latest issue of True Faith: "We already know the lease on the land at Strawberry Place, previously bought with the club by Ashley has now been snaffled by him for his own benefits. If the new owners are what we hope them to be and which they are rumoured then SJP will have to be extended and the Gallowgate is the only option. Tread carefully with this one Amanda. We know the Staveley side has looked deeply into this." Still trying not to get my hopes up about this all, but just imagining an extended St James' without the Sports Direct branding is a nice change from normality.
  7. Thing is with our local press they have admitted on Twitter (well Douglas has) about holding things back because they have been asked too. They are desperate to have a link to the club like they had during the Shepherd and Hall era. They could know and have been asked not to say anything. He has honestly heard this at the training ground. Last thing he told me was that Staveley was at the ground and that was the night before it all came out that she had visited St James park for talks (it was a Tuesday and some London paper ran the Story the next day) so I am holding out hope. If she has been at the ground etc, and it is a big if as it is third hand info, then she has taken more interest in the club the last 3 weeks than Ashley has in 10 years and that can only be a huge positive. Can you post up screenshots of your tweets? Not doubting you but as far as I can remember the first mention of Staveley was on the sunday we played Liverpool? Where has this Tuesday thing come from? Also where has Douglas mentioned holding things back? A t the end of the day I can see them doing so if they've been asked to but haven't seen Douglas mention this anywhere.
  8. Is that really most fans' issue with Mike Ashley? I know it's not mine anyway it's more to do with the fact that he's a cunt towards the club
  9. Seems so, a few people have mentioned this. Made worse by us having a perfectly good goal chalked off.
  10. Been having a running argument with a West Ham fan at work as to who's owner(s) is/are worse out of the 2. I didn't think there could possibly even be a bit of a contest but fuck me they run Ashley close Just seen Everton linked with Allardyce also
  11. Yep, convinced we take the lead in the first half yesterday we go on to win.
  12. Who here thinks they were booing the team? I was sure it was at the goddamn awful officiating. Cook has admitted it was a foul and thought he may have got a red. Was total disbelief around the stadium that the referee and linesmen totally missed such a clear and obvious foul and gave nothing. Add that to the pivotal offside decision and previously mentioned strange imbalances regarding penalties and sending offs and you really do start to wonder when the often assumed "balances itself out" theory will kick in. Think it might have been Carragher yesterday (after the Man City offside goal) made the point that they don't even themselves out over a season. Mind blowing stuff but it really irks me how the cliche is always rolled out. In reality most of the top teams benefit massively from refereeing decisions over the course of a season and teams like us often suffer. Conversely last year in the Championship the officials seemed determined to 'even the playing field' by giving us practically nothing.
  13. He's been very poor so far but you can clearly see his confidence is shot to pieces. Rafa himself has made the point a fair few times that the crowd needs to try to get behind our players and help build their confidence rather than shatter it. That might be a pretty big ask when he's showing precious little to get behind so far though.
  14. If he was biased he would say it was offside? Oh yeah, sorry I'm only half paying attention!! makes even less sense now
  15. Dunno but isn't one of them Alan Smith? Might explain him being biased.
  16. Because it was Man City and not us. Ridiculous that video replays aren't used yet.
  17. This. Just off the top of my head he hit the post today and also put a cross in that Gayle should have scored from. Plus he works his bollocks off. The least of our worries for now.
  18. Pretty much this. It's easy to blame the manager, but he literally has f*** all to work with, especially up front. Agreed but why did he chose to prioritise the signing of a wide player who isn't anywhere near ready for the PL and a CB, where we were already well stocked, as our two biggest signings in the window, for me the priority of our transfer business was way off, we should have been looking at the number 10 situation and splurging on one, since he obviously doesn't like Mitro, get rid and replace him with someone a lot better than Joselu. Only then bring in players you can develop, or try to slightly upgrade another position. I think we all know Mike prioritised the business that he felt had most resale value etc, Murphy being young and English fit the bill, someone like Reina or Caballero not so much. Don't think Rafa prioritised Murphy over other positions, he was fucked over .
  19. Its 0-0 because of the assistant referee, Begovic making some good saves, some bad luck and some awful finishing. Bournemouth are so lucky to even still be in the game. So frustrating.
  20. Diane and Perez lack of quality massively to blame for that.
  21. Daft Question Time :- If you read her wiki page, it states that she was part of the team (pcp partners) that did the Man City deal etc etc. So - is she buying for herself ? or on behalf of 'interested' parties ? And if Ashley did sell, we would then know who the 'real' owners were ? It's just never been made clear. I wondering wether the purpose of Amanda's company PCP Capital partners is for acquiring a football club. It's her financial advisory firm. Apparently was involved in the Man City takeover and also the Barclays bank bailout so not just to buy a football club.
  22. I heard that stat too...think they also concede the least amount of goals per chances given away.
  23. From Sky: http://www.skysports.com/football/news/11678/11105219/mikel-merino-shining-for-newcastle-after-stalling-at-borussia-dortmund Mikel Merino is shining for Newcastle this season, but how did one of Spain's brightest young talents end up at St James' Park for just £7m? Nick Wright tries to find out ahead of their Monday Night Football meeting with Burnley. The season was only a few weeks old when Newcastle fans began joking that Mikel Merino was too good for them. The Spaniard arrived at St James' Park having failed to make an impact at Borussia Dortmund, but there have been no such problems in the north east. With his intelligence and industry in midfield, Merino has been the outstanding player in their bright start. The accepted wisdom is that Newcastle were wise to exercise their option to buy him so swiftly. The 21-year-old has been rotated to the bench since making the loan move permanent earlier this month, but he is unlikely to stay there. His late winner against Crystal Palace last weekend underlined his importance. In an age of inflated transfer fees, he looks like a bargain. Merino has made as many appearances in three months at Newcastle as he did in the whole of his solitary season at Dortmund, but to those who followed him at Osasuna - the boyhood club in northern Spain which his father, Angél, also played for - it was only ever a matter of time until he began to show his true potential on the big stage. "I knew him from their youth teams," says Santi Zuza, a Spanish football journalist who has covered Osasuna for local newspaper Diario de Navarra since 2002. "Normally when a player jumps a few age groups to the first team, he needs some time to adapt. There aren't many who immediately improve their level in that situation, but that was the case with Mikel." Merino had just turned 18 when he made his senior debut. It was the opening day of the 2014/15 campaign and Osasuna were preparing for life in Spain's second tier after their 14th consecutive season in La Liga had ended in relegation. Merino had been used in various positions at youth level since joining the club aged 10, but he went into the senior side as a central midfielder. It was a big responsibility, and the circumstances were far from ideal. "That season was very complicated for Osasuna," says Zuza. "They had just been relegated to Segunda, the league had banned them from signing players in order to clean up their finances, and the institutional situation at the club was very delicate." The turmoil behind the scenes was reflected on the pitch. Osasuna spent the season battling against a second consecutive relegation, eventually avoiding the drop by a single point. It was a steep learning curve for Merino, but he handled it well, making 29 appearances and impressing under three different managers. There was international recognition at the end of it. That summer, Merino was a key figure for Spain's U19s as they won the European Championship in Greece. Alongside Dani Ceballos, Marco Asensio and Jesus Vallejo - all of whom have since moved to Real Madrid - Merino started every game. He returned to Osasuna on a high. With Merino at the heart of the team and club legend Enrique Martin in the dugout, Osasuna fought their way back into La Liga via the play-offs. "From making his debut in August 2014, Mikel became a genuine leader of the team in less than a year," says Zuza. "The second season was when he truly exploded. Without him, Osasuna wouldn't have achieved promotion - that's for sure." Merino scored seven goals in 38 appearances in total - six of which came in the crucial final month of the campaign. Osasuna won 20 of the 36 games he started over the course of the season compared to just one of the 10 he didn't. Merino, the rangy young midfielder from their academy, was influential at both ends of the pitch. "Mikel has always been a player with enormous ability to organise the game, to slow things down when necessary," says Zuza. "Defensively he was very important to the team in central midfield, but he also has a great sense of when to get into the box to score goals. Let's just say he is a very complete player. He is also good in the air and in a tactical sense." Merino's contribution to Osasuna's promotion was even more impressive considering his move to Dortmund - signed off at just €5m amidst Osasuna's financial problems - had been agreed months earlier. "He was a decisive player even though the move was finalised in the winter transfer window," says Zuza. "It didn't distract him; his football actually improved throughout the season." It was no great surprise that Osasuna went straight back down to the second division in the absence of their midfield talisman last season, but few expected Merino to find himself so marginalised at Dortmund. From Ousmane Dembele to Christian Pulisic, the Bundesliga side have an excellent record for developing young talent. Merino, with maturity to match his ability, seemed a logical fit. "Dortmund are known for signing young and talented players and Merino's background in Spain and with Spain's U21s was promising," says Jurgen Koers, a reporter for the Ruhr Nachrichten newspaper in Dortmund. "But it was interesting that he signed very early. I am not sure if the club's hierarchy and [head coach] Thomas Tuchel had the same opinion of him." Merino had to wait until October to make his first appearance, playing the full 90 minutes in a 1-1 draw with Hertha Berlin, but he did not feature at all for two months after that. "Tuchel was never satisfied with Merino's development and performances," says Koers. "He is a very demanding manager, and Merino wasn't too self-confident in the beginning, so they missed each other. "It was difficult for him," adds Koers. "In central defensive midfield, German international Julian Weigl didn't miss games. He was Tuchel's number one. Nuri Sahin, a Dortmund hero and Turkish international, was number two. So Tuchel insisted Merino should become a central defender." It was an awkward transition, and by the time January arrived Merino had only made three senior appearances. Osasuna were among the clubs interested in taking him on loan, but a move away was blocked. "Tuchel said he needed him, which he did not," says Koers. "So he lost another six months." Merino now reflects on his time in Germany as an important learning experience - saying his outlook on life changed after he was caught up in the bomb attack on Dortmund's team bus in April - but there is also a clear desire to put it all behind him. "At Dortmund I didn't have the confidence of the coach," he told the Guardian last week. "Here the manager trusts me." It has made all the difference. Just as he did at Osasuna and just as he has done with Spain's youth teams, Merino is having an impact all over the pitch for Newcastle. He is the creative brains of Rafael Benitez's team, using the ball intelligently and averaging more passes per game than anyone else, but he is also invaluable in a defensive sense. His 6ft 2ins frame has helped him adapt to the physicality of English football, and his box-to-box work rate has been impressive. Merino has covered more ground than any of his team-mates in four of the five Premier League games in which he has completed the 90 minutes. He has snapped into tackles at an even higher rate than N'Golo Kante. It all adds up to what Zuza describes as an "excellent investment" for Newcastle. "In very little time at Osasuna, Mikel demonstrated that he is an intelligent player who learns every day," he says. "He has a lot of room to keep progressing and he's at a fantastic age for that. He is a very normal, humble person. He has kept those values and they translate on the pitch." They are values which might help Newcastle keep hold of him, too. Fans fear it will not be long until bigger clubs come calling, but Merino has signed a long-term contract at St James' Park and he has never been one to get distracted. "I'm happy to be here for five more years," he said earlier this month. It seems Mikel Merino is exactly where he needs to be.
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