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  On 04/06/2014 at 16:06, SanToon said:

 

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Looks like Ronny Deila is the new Celtic manager.

 

Recipe for disaster

 

It's a one team league. Any manager wanting to improve their reputation with "trophies" should go there and just chill for a year or two.

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  On 04/06/2014 at 16:24, Kaizero said:

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Looks like Ronny Deila is the new Celtic manager.

 

Recipe for disaster

 

It's a one team league. Any manager wanting to improve their reputation with "trophies" should go there and just chill for a year or two.

 

I think it was a :dog: post

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  On 04/06/2014 at 16:30, Fugazi said:

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Looks like Ronny Deila is the new Celtic manager.

 

Recipe for disaster

 

It's a one team league. Any manager wanting to improve their reputation with "trophies" should go there and just chill for a year or two.

 

I think it was a :dog: post

 

Yeah, kinda realized after having posted. Couldn't be arsed editing/removing though as the sentiment about the league is still true. :lol:

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He didn’t know it then but he still had a year left of his career. He was asked by his friend Chris Hughton' date=' who was managing Newcastle, to join him on a one-year contract. ‘I wanted him at Newcastle for his presence and the experience he could bring to the team,’ says Hughton. It seemed like the perfect move to finish his career. His soon-to-be wife Fiona was from the area, passionate about the club and they had recently bought a property 25 miles west of the city. He made his Newcastle debut in the third round of the League Cup against Chelsea, and then in the Premier League on 3 October 2010 in a 2-1 defeat to Manchester City. Throughout his time at Newcastle he struggled for fitness, and six months after arriving, his friend Hughton was fired. He was very upset by the decision: ‘He got sacked because they wanted to get someone else in. I couldn’t understand why. He was doing well for them. He had got them promoted, and was maintaining the club in the top half of the league. He took that club out of the gutter, made it something, gave it dignity, gave it confidence and worked tirelessly throughout the time he was there. He gave everybody a hundred per cent. It was one of the more senseless decisions I witnessed in my career.’ Sol left the club when the season was over. It had not been the finale he had dreamed of.[/quote']

 

From his book. Might also be from Giggs' book.

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  On 05/06/2014 at 11:47, Jack Flash said:

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He didn’t know it then but he still had a year left of his career. He was asked by his friend Chris Hughton' date=' who was managing Newcastle, to join him on a one-year contract. ‘I wanted him at Newcastle for his presence and the experience he could bring to the team,’ says Hughton. It seemed like the perfect move to finish his career. His soon-to-be wife Fiona was from the area, passionate about the club and they had recently bought a property 25 miles west of the city. He made his Newcastle debut in the third round of the League Cup against Chelsea, and then in the Premier League on 3 October 2010 in a 2-1 defeat to Manchester City. Throughout his time at Newcastle he struggled for fitness, and six months after arriving, his friend Hughton was fired. He was very upset by the decision: ‘He got sacked [b']because they wanted to get someone else in[/b]. I couldn’t understand why. He was doing well for them. He had got them promoted, and was maintaining the club in the top half of the league. He took that club out of the gutter, made it something, gave it dignity, gave it confidence and worked tirelessly throughout the time he was there. He gave everybody a hundred per cent. It was one of the more senseless decisions I witnessed in my career.’ Sol left the club when the season was over. It had not been the finale he had dreamed of.

 

From his book. Might also be from Giggs' book.

 

Interesting choice of words from the big lump.

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Hughton actually made me feel proud of supporting the club...I'm about a million miles away from that now.

 

The way he was treated was an absolute disgrace.

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He was doing well for them. He had got them promoted, and was maintaining the club in the top half of the league. He took that club out of the gutter, made it something, gave it dignity, gave it confidence and worked tirelessly throughout the time he was there. He gave everybody a hundred per cent.

 

Precisely why he was sacked.

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