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Nigel de Jong


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Guest Stephen927

Booing a player sometimes can have the opposite effect than what is intended. Considering his reaction after the incident, I reckon De Jong has been revelling in playing the villain, booing him would only serve to spur him on.

 

Disagree. I think he'd go missing, like he did in the few games following our game after all of the media pressure that was placed on him.

 

Fair enough, I just remember seeing him in the paper faking tackles on Toure.

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We owe this lot one, not just for the Ben Arfa leg break incident but the bullshit penalty they got ten minutes later and the blatant pen we weren't given after that.

 

And the penalty they got up here the season we went down and Habib Beye was sent off.

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Booing a player sometimes can have the opposite effect than what is intended. Considering his reaction after the incident, I reckon De Jong has been revelling in playing the villain, booing him would only serve to spur him on.

 

Sunderland couldn't handle the atmosphere and the booing didn't spur them on.

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I reckon we should pay that very fat bloke that always gets caught on the tv cameras to run (using the term loosely) onto the pitch and sit on De Jong's face, before letting loose with an almighty wet fart. Perhaps after the little c***'s done being botted so he can't run away.

 

Thoughts?

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hW-jJaj08W8

 

Even the fart sounds are so obviously fake, man. :lol:

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Guest Stephen927

Booing a player sometimes can have the opposite effect than what is intended. Considering his reaction after the incident, I reckon De Jong has been revelling in playing the villain, booing him would only serve to spur him on.

 

Sunderland couldn't handle the atmosphere and the booing didn't spur them on.

 

Sunderland looked shit scared in the tunnel before the game tbf. Some players like Diouf love to be booed as it helps their game. I think it was Cisse who came up here with Liverpool and scored a decent amount in a couple of games after some booing from home fans.

 

Some players revel in it but they are much less in number than the ones who throw in the towel because of it. Thought De Jong would love to be the pantomime villain.

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Guest Stephen927

I reckon we should pay that very fat bloke that always gets caught on the tv cameras to run (using the term loosely) onto the pitch and sit on De Jong's face, before letting loose with an almighty wet fart. Perhaps after the little c***'s done being botted so he can't run away.

 

Thoughts?

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hW-jJaj08W8

 

Even the fart sounds are so obviously fake, man. :lol:

 

They've been added into the Youtube video.

 

Reverse stinkface on Lita would be canny.

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Sunderland looked s*** scared in the tunnel before the game tbf. Some players like Diouf love to be booed as it helps their game. I think it was Cisse who came up here with Liverpool and scored a decent amount in a couple of games after some booing from home fans.

 

Some players revel in it but they are much less in number than the ones who throw in the towel because of it. Thought De Jong would love to be the pantomime villain.

 

Sunderland were shit scared in the tunnel, they were given dogs abuse as soon at the team bus arrived and they couldn't handle the hatred.  Some players are given stick because they are good and we try to put them off, de Jong will know that's not the case with him.  He'll be thinking about coming up here as soon as the Everton game is finished.

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I'm considering running on the pitch, pulling De Jongs shorts AND boxers down and just botting him clean up the arse.

 

Suggestions for,

a) Location of pitch to carry this out on to receive the best possible media visibility to show our anger at his challenge on Ben Arfa

b) How long to bot him for

c) Whether to wear a blob

 

Cheers

 

:spit: post of the year.

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I'm considering running on the pitch, pulling De Jongs shorts AND boxers down and just botting him clean up the arse.

 

Suggestions for,

a) Location of pitch to carry this out on to receive the best possible media visibility to show our anger at his challenge on Ben Arfa

b) How long to bot him for

c) Whether to wear a blob

 

Cheers

 

:spit: post of the year.

 

:lol: It's easily the post of the year, I agree.  Gonna put it in my sig actually, it's ace.

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He's still a cunt. Proof.

 

Manchester City warrior Nigel de Jong is warning the Everton bogeymen that the Blues’ midfield has turned world-class since the two teams last met.

 

The sides meet at Eastlands tonight with revenge in the air after the Toffees twice upset City’s push for the Champions League last season.

 

In the first game at Goodison Park, City were out-beefed by strapping Belgian ace Marouane Fellaini, and in the return they were undone by the artistry of Spanish wizard Mikel Arteta.

 

But Mancini’s moves to strengthen the Blues by adding  Yaya Toure and David Silva mean the visitors won’t have such an easy match this time.

 

De Jong himself is suspended, as is Arteta, but the Dutch battler believes Silva and Yaya are among the best attacking midfielders around.

 

De Jong played in the Holland midfield which forced its way into the World Cup final, and fell to the brilliance of Spain’s Barcelona aces Xavi and Andres Iniesta.

 

But he has no hesitation in putting Silva – who was reduced to a peripheral role for Spain – and Yaya right up there.

 

“They are up there with the best in the world,” he said. “Everyone talks about the midfielders from Barcelona, or United or somewhere else, but Yaya and David are top class and in the top ten in the world.

 

“The way David links up play from midfield to attack is unbelievable. He goes from right to left, left to right and his passes are always playable.

 

“Yaya has developed himself really well and is gelling in the team more and more. He is like a train, unstoppable.

 

“You have to give them credit because it’s not easy to get used to the Premier League, something I found at first when I came here from Hamburg. But it’s getting better and better, the atmosphere in the dressing room is up there and everyone is a huge believer in those guys.

 

“But you have to give credit to the team, because the rest have helped to develop them.”

 

De Jong spent last season establishing himself as first choice defensive midfielder, and winning over the fans at City, and he admits that when the Blues first swooped for Yaya at £25million, he felt his place under threat.

 

Yaya had made his name at the Nou Camp as a defensive midfielder, the foundations on which Xavi, Iniesta and Lionel Messi built their attacks.

 

But manager Roberto Mancini remembered Yaya as a driving, attacking midfielder from his days at Monaco, and had every intention of playing him in the same team as de Jong.

 

City critics are just starting to catch on to the fact that Yaya is no longer principally a defensive midfielder, even though he still drops into the role when needed.

 

De Jong says he was surprised so many people did not figure it for so long: “Everyone still has that image of Yaya from his time at Barcelona when he played most of his time as a defensive midfield player or a centre back.

 

“Here he has a different position as an attacking midfielder, and it suits him because he has me and the guys in the back four as protection which lets him play in an offensive role.

 

“You could describe him as a defensive/offensive midfield player at the moment!”

 

And he confesses to a sleepless night or two on hearing of the signing in the summer.

 

“When you hear that Yaya Toure is coming to the club you know it will be competition,” he said. “I was away at the World Cup which made me return late to training, so I didn’t see much of him when he first came here.

 

“But it was very clear at the start of the season we would be playing together and in different positions. Competition is always good anyway, as it just makes you work harder to maintain your own position in the team.”

 

De Jong’s one-match ban leaves Mancini with a dilemma – does he bring in Patrick Vieira, who played 90 minutes at Juventus, draft in Pablo Zabaleta, or even bring in James Milner and drop Yaya into the defensive slot?

 

There are other options as well, but otherwise he is expected to field the side which excelled at West Ham.

 

http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/sport/football/manchester_city/s/1400469_de_jong_city_midfield_up_there_with_the_best_in_the_world

 

Those bolded words mean 'thug' btw.

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