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BOOOOO

 

 

BOOOOOO

 

 

f***ing grow up, adults, some of them with children behaving like big bairns spitting their dummies out. You're a tosser if you do this. Entitled to? Yeah, of course, just as you're entitled to walk out half an hour early, that's fine, I don't mind having to get out of your way every few seconds because you're having a sulk. If you hate it that much then f*** off, stay in the pub.

 

This annoys me as you can probably tell.

 

How do you think a player feels when he is going on the pitch & fans start singing "You don't know what your doing" it must make that player feel like shite as much as being booed. How did the team feel when they herd the much vaunted away support sing "We’re shit, and we’re sick of it” got to rock there confidence.  All them morons who thought making paper planes at the match was fun rather than watching the game, must have been soul destroying for the team.  I am not down with the booing, I just dont get this booing the players is wrong but managers & chairmen/boards are fair game & singing songs against the team is fine compared to booing.

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BOOOOO

 

 

BOOOOOO

 

 

f***ing grow up, adults, some of them with children behaving like big bairns spitting their dummies out. You're a tosser if you do this. Entitled to? Yeah, of course, just as you're entitled to walk out half an hour early, that's fine, I don't mind having to get out of your way every few seconds because you're having a sulk. If you hate it that much then f*** off, stay in the pub.

 

This annoys me as you can probably tell.

 

How do you think a player feels when he is going on the pitch & fans start singing "You don't know what your doing" it must make that player feel like shite as much as being booed. How did the team feel when they herd the much vaunted away support sing "We’re shit, and we’re sick of it” got to rock there confidence.  All them morons who thought making paper planes at the match was fun rather than watching the game, must have been soul destroying for the team.  I am not down with the booing, I just dont get this booing the players is wrong but managers & chairmen/boards are fair game & singing songs against the team is fine compared to booing.

 

I don't boo or generally abuse players or managers myself, even Souness, as someone said earlier, I'd feel pretty ashamed to do so as an adult. Kids doing it, fine, you judge them by different standards. Some make the point that it's a way of perhaps letting the manager/chairman/owner know what 'the fans' think. Personally I don't want NUFC to be some sort of democracy, because there is no one view, and most of the louder-mouthed supporters spout shite and are utterly fickle depending on a lucky strike or an embarrassing fall. As if Keegan will suddenly realise 'oh yeah, Smith's a bag of balls really isn't he? I suppose we'll get rid of him'. I think knee-jerking is a major problem at this club, appease the fans with a signing/sacking/new manager, then they'll be happy for a few months.

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BOOOOO

 

 

BOOOOOO

 

 

f***ing grow up, adults, some of them with children behaving like big bairns spitting their dummies out. You're a tosser if you do this. Entitled to? Yeah, of course, just as you're entitled to walk out half an hour early, that's fine, I don't mind having to get out of your way every few seconds because you're having a sulk. If you hate it that much then f*** off, stay in the pub.

 

This annoys me as you can probably tell.

 

How do you think a player feels when he is going on the pitch & fans start singing "You don't know what your doing" it must make that player feel like s**** as much as being booed. How did the team feel when they herd the much vaunted away support sing "We’re s***, and we’re sick of it” got to rock there confidence.  All them morons who thought making paper planes at the match was fun rather than watching the game, must have been soul destroying for the team.  I am not down with the booing, I just dont get this booing the players is wrong but managers & chairmen/boards are fair game & singing songs against the team is fine compared to booing.

 

I don't boo or generally abuse players or managers myself, even Souness, as someone said earlier, I'd feel pretty ashamed to do so as an adult. Kids doing it, fine, you judge them by different standards. Some make the point that it's a way of perhaps letting the manager/chairman/owner know what 'the fans' think. Personally I don't want NUFC to be some sort of democracy, because there is no one view, and most of the louder-mouthed supporters spout s**** and are utterly fickle depending on a lucky strike or an embarrassing fall. As if Keegan will suddenly realise 'oh yeah, Smith's a bag of balls really isn't he? I suppose we'll get rid of him'. I think knee-jerking is a major problem at this club, appease the fans with a signing/sacking/new manager, then they'll be happy for a few months.

 

All fair points well made :thup:

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Love and Smith heading for Everton as manager Moyes bolsters his strikeforce

 

By Sportsmail Reporter

Last updated at 11:10 PM on 10th August 2008

 

Comments (0)  Add to My Stories

David Moyes will finally make his first foray into the transfer market this week by wrapping up deals for Vagner Love and Alan Smith.

 

 

Everton will need to smash their club record transfer fee of £11.25million to sign Brazil striker Love on a permanent basis but a 12-month loan deal is likely at first.

 

 

Newcastle's Smith, who was booed by his own fans on Saturday, will join Love at Goodison Park but the spending won't stop there, and Everton are hopeful they will add Real Zaragoza striker Diego Milito, Rennes midfielder Stephane M'Bia and Joao Moutinho of Sporting Lisbon to their squad before the window closes.

 

 

Moyes needs reinforcements, as the 1-1 draw in the final preseason game against PSV Eindhoven on Saturday showed.

 

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Just recap fans cant boo players, managers back them 99.9% of the time in public. Nee wonder England produces a lot of s**** players the most of the fuckers don't know they are s****.

 

Previous managers & boards have had a lot more grief at matches than a few kids in purple tops booing them in a pre-season game.

 

Using your way of thinking we just need to boo like hell and the league is ours.

 

I don't think I said that all, as your old enough to know booing our managers,singing sack the board while booing the likes of Stimo, Whitehurst, Rob McDonald didnt has won us f*** & in fact it didnt even get us promotionhas won us f***, made the players f*** off sharpish though.

 

My main point is it seems okay to boo or sing songs against Newcastle managers or slam a chairman/board but boo a player & it is not okay for some reason.

wasn't the point about booing a player as he is coming on ? does it help ? not in my opinion.

 

Anything that can be classed as negative does not help in the short term esp to the mentally weak. But I think it made a player like Nicky Butt want to show people they were wrong which he did as he went from being booed pre-season to many peoples player of the year. Lets hope Alan comes pounding back & scores his first goal next week against the Mancs.

 

strange considering the boos and cat calls butt received for weeks before his loan move to brum only seemed to make him worse.

 

The weeks before? We loaned him out 03/08/2005 so which games did he get the cat calls & booed at? Also which games did it effect his performances.

 

He got stick after the Man Utd semi the previous season but he hardly played after that.

 

he got booed v villareal when coming on and scored 2 awesome headers, thats the way to hit back at fan's showing your ability

 

After his loan

he was getting cat called and jeered after about two months (the bramble treatment)
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Love and Smith heading for Everton as manager Moyes bolsters his strikeforce

 

By Sportsmail Reporter

Last updated at 6:58 AM on 11th August 2008

 

 

David Moyes will finally make his first foray into the transfer market this week by wrapping up deals for Vagner Love and Alan Smith.

 

Everton will need to smash their club record transfer fee of £11.25million to sign Brazil striker Love on a permanent basis but a 12-month loan deal is likely at first.

 

Newcastle's Smith, who was booed by his own fans on Saturday, will join Love at Goodison Park but the spending won't stop there, and Everton are hopeful they will add Real Zaragoza striker Diego Milito, Rennes midfielder Stephane M'Bia and Joao Moutinho of Sporting Lisbon to their squad before the window closes.

 

Moyes needs reinforcements, as the 1-1 draw in the final preseason game against PSV Eindhoven on Saturday showed.

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Love and Smith heading for Everton as manager Moyes bolsters his strikeforce

 

By Sportsmail Reporter

Last updated at 6:58 AM on 11th August 2008

 

 

David Moyes will finally make his first foray into the transfer market this week by wrapping up deals for Vagner Love and Alan Smith.

 

Everton will need to smash their club record transfer fee of £11.25million to sign Brazil striker Love on a permanent basis but a 12-month loan deal is likely at first.

 

Newcastle's Smith, who was booed by his own fans on Saturday, will join Love at Goodison Park but the spending won't stop there, and Everton are hopeful they will add Real Zaragoza striker Diego Milito, Rennes midfielder Stephane M'Bia and Joao Moutinho of Sporting Lisbon to their squad before the window closes.

 

Moyes needs reinforcements, as the 1-1 draw in the final preseason game against PSV Eindhoven on Saturday showed.

 

2X

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I'm sure everybody would be in uproar if he turned it around and called the support shit, the fans have hardly been their best in recent years. It worth both ways and i'm pretty sure "fans" wouldn't like that either and take a paddy.

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I'm sure everybody would be in uproar if he turned it around and called the support shit, the fans have hardly been their best in recent years. It worth both ways and i'm pretty sure "fans" wouldn't like that either and take a paddy.

 

He doesn't pay the fans' wages though. Fans pay his.

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I'm sure everybody would be in uproar if he turned it around and called the support shit, the fans have hardly been their best in recent years. It worth both ways and i'm pretty sure "fans" wouldn't like that either and take a paddy.

 

He doesn't pay the fans' wages though. Fans pay his.

 

Thats what you think, I'm a rent boy ;)

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Love and Smith heading for Everton as manager Moyes bolsters his strikeforce

 

By Sportsmail Reporter

Last updated at 6:58 AM on 11th August 2008

 

 

David Moyes will finally make his first foray into the transfer market this week by wrapping up deals for Vagner Love and Alan Smith.

 

Everton will need to smash their club record transfer fee of £11.25million to sign Brazil striker Love on a permanent basis but a 12-month loan deal is likely at first.

 

Newcastle's Smith, who was booed by his own fans on Saturday, will join Love at Goodison Park but the spending won't stop there, and Everton are hopeful they will add Real Zaragoza striker Diego Milito, Rennes midfielder Stephane M'Bia and Joao Moutinho of Sporting Lisbon to their squad before the window closes.

 

Moyes needs reinforcements, as the 1-1 draw in the final preseason game against PSV Eindhoven on Saturday showed.

 

2X

 

Didn't notice for all those bloody smilies

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I'm sure everybody would be in uproar if he turned it around and called the support shit, the fans have hardly been their best in recent years. It worth both ways and i'm pretty sure "fans" wouldn't like that either and take a paddy.

 

He doesn't pay the fans' wages though. Fans pay his.

 

Thats what you think, I'm a rent boy ;)

 

Bollocks Jon, you've openly offered free handjobs all round and i've never heard of you charging once.

 

(Allegedly ;))

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Love and Smith heading for Everton as manager Moyes bolsters his strikeforce

 

By Sportsmail Reporter

Last updated at 6:58 AM on 11th August 2008

 

 

David Moyes will finally make his first foray into the transfer market this week by wrapping up deals for Vagner Love and Alan Smith.

 

Everton will need to smash their club record transfer fee of £11.25million to sign Brazil striker Love on a permanent basis but a 12-month loan deal is likely at first.

 

Newcastle's Smith, who was booed by his own fans on Saturday, will join Love at Goodison Park but the spending won't stop there, and Everton are hopeful they will add Real Zaragoza striker Diego Milito, Rennes midfielder Stephane M'Bia and Joao Moutinho of Sporting Lisbon to their squad before the window closes.

 

Moyes needs reinforcements, as the 1-1 draw in the final preseason game against PSV Eindhoven on Saturday showed.

 

2X

 

Didn't notice for all those bloody smilies

 

relax :thup: cheers O0

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http://www.journallive.co.uk/nufc/newcastle-united-news/2008/08/11/do-it-like-duff-to-win-over-the-fans-61634-21508391/

 

Do it like Duff to win over the fans

 

Aug 11 2008 by Stuart Rayner, The Journal

 

ALAN Smith has been told to follow Damien Duff’s lead to resurrect his Newcastle United career – although how much longer it has left to run remains in doubt.

 

While Kevin Keegan promised to help rebuild the goal-shy striker’s shattered confidence, he was in no mood to tell the Gallowgate boo-boys to lay off him.

 

The Magpies hope to play Michael Owen in a behind-closed-doors friendly, probably on Thursday, to prepare him for Sunday’s Premier League trip to Manchester United but doubts remain over whether fellow striker Smith will still be at the club by that time.

 

Smith is believed to be negotiating a £3m move to Everton to the displeasure of the 30,000-plus fans who attended Saturday’s final pre-season match, a 2-1 win over Copa del Rey winners Valencia. The ex-Leeds and Manchester United player’s 63rd-minute introduction was greeted by loud boos. But afterwards Keegan pointed to the example of Duff as to how Smith can win over the supporters of whichever club he plays for in the coming season. Out of position at centre-forward, the Irishman scored United’s equaliser, a header from Danny Guthrie’s corner and his fourth goal of what has been his first pre-season with Newcastle.

 

“He looked like he could run forever against Valencia and the goal he scored was probably not the sort of goal you associate with Damien Duff, a great towering header, really attacking the ball,” Keegan enthused. “His fitness level is fantastic, he’s really, really trained hard and I’ve just said to him, ‘You’re now getting the reward for your training out on the pitch’.

 

There’s a chance with two or three players here that if we get them back where they should be fitness-wise, we’ll have two or three new players within our squad.”

 

While Smith’s body may be in decent enough shape, a sore ankle apart, it is his mind Keegan must work on. “(Under other circumstances) you could be saying the same thing about Damien Duff at this point,” he reflected.

 

“You’re just two or three games away from turning everything around in football. Duffer’s had a good pre-season, scored three goals at Hartlepool, another against Valencia and played very well. The

 

solution is always mainly in the player’s hands and the manager helps. That’s what I’ll be doing with Alan Smith, as with any player who has had a problem with confidence or goes through a spell where they’ve not been playing much. That’s our job. We can do that.”

 

But he refused to admonish the supporters. “I’m not going to try and tell this crowd what to do,” he said. “It’s a very knowledgeable crowd. I’m not going to tell them what they should see. I know one thing – it’s my job to see the good things and there’s a lot of them.” Keegan made it abundantly clear he wants Smith to stay but also gave the impression it was out of his hands.

 

“I definitely think there’s a lot more to come from Alan,” he added. “He’s got a lot of desire. If he didn’t have any desire I’d say you’re wasting your time. I’ve known lots of players turn themselves around, I know Alan will. Alan Smith is a Newcastle player and that’s it. What happens in the future, you’ll be the first to know.”

 

Getting official announcements out of the club is difficult at present.

 

Keegan was only able to reveal that Fabricio Coloccini trained with the squad on Saturday and that he liked his permed hairstyle.

 

But the fact owner Mike Ashley wore the Argentinian’s name on the back of his shirt suggested a degree of confidence in the deal to sign him going through.

 

Keegan confirmed coach Arthur Cox has left the club, but refused to elaborate.

 

As if any journalist is stupid enough to think that is why he was booed.

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this is what i dont understand. why do the press think he is being booed for wanting to move away. as far as i'm concerned, he is being targeted because he is sh1te and i for 1 dont qwant to see him in an nufc shirt again. the way to portray this to to boo him in my opinion

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Although I agree about not booing him, it's the fact that some muppets still think he has something to offer for 60 grand a week. Get with the program he's no longer the same player.

 

 

 

Alan Smith didn't deserve the boos

 

 

RISE ... the Alan Smith DVD.

 

http://editorial.jpress.co.uk/web/Upload/SGJJ//TH1_118200858smith.jpg

 

Published Date:

11 August 2008

By Miles Starforth

Newcastle United writer

I'M writing this blog less than 48 hours after Alan Smith was booed as he came on for Newcastle United.

Like a lot of fans, I never like to hear a player wearing black and white – or silver for that matter – heckled by his own supporters.

 

And I felt for Smith – a transfer target of Everton – as he trotted on for Obafemi Martins in the second half against Valencia at St James's Park, as I don't think he deserved it.

 

In my book, he's always given his all for the club he joined a year ago.

 

Hours before the game, as I killed time before the delayed kick off, I bought a second-hand DVD for £1.99 from a shop in town.

 

It is titled simply 'Alan Smith'.

 

Documenting his first few seasons with hometown club Leeds United, the DVD charts Smith's meteoric rise at Elland Road.

 

I watched it yesterday, and the highlights include a debut goal against Liverpool in front of Anfield's Kop, a strike against Real Madrid at the Bernabeu, a belter against Newcastle at St James's Park, and a superb Cruyff-turn and strike against Southampton.

 

Smith, quite clearly, can score goals.

 

So what's gone wrong for him at United?

 

As a couple of the contributors to the DVD pointed out, part of his problem is being such a team player, Smith's often too unselfish in front of goal.

 

Also, he spent a large part of last season playing in midfield, which isn't his best position.

 

There's also the career-threatening injury he suffered two-and-a-half years ago. A horrific leg break like that takes any player a long time to recover from.

 

On the surface, Newcastle should suit Smith down to the ground. Like Leeds, it's a one-club city, and one thing fans demand is that players give 100 per cent.

 

Smith never gives anything less.

 

I saw a few Leeds games during the second-half of their relegation season as a friend was in Eddie Gray's side.

 

And while one or two of his team-mates may have thrown in the towel as the club lurched towards disaster, Smith never stopped trying.

 

In the Elland Road players' bar after a 1-1 draw against Everton, which had seen Tyneside-bound James Milner cancel out a Wayne Rooney opener, he was being consoled by Leeds-born Radio One DJ Chris Moyles.

 

He knew they needed wins, not draws, to escape the drop.

 

That summer Smith left for Manchester United, and he went on to make close to 100 appearances and score 12 goals for the club.

 

Sir Alex Ferguson has only signed a handful of bad players in his 21-and-a-half years at Old Trafford, and I honestly don't think Alan Smith is one of them.

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He's staying with us apperently, Everton about to sign Vagner Love..

 

Thought they were after love as well as Smith

 

Doubt it, they'll have 5 strikers this way, and i'm not really expecting Moyes to see Smith as a midfielder, the deal seemed to reach a dead end last sunday and their no longer intrested..just a matter of time till the press announce that he's staying..

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