Jump to content

Recommended Posts

The nufc blog is shutting down. Dr. Ed Harrison has stage 4 cancer so unable to keep the site going.

 

Very sad to hear this. Seems like the site has been around forever and definitely a part of my in and off season info gathering over the years.

 

He must be given his dues.. it’s some effort to have kept that going (just as it is here too). Hope he gets to enjoy the club with the time he has left.

 

To those running this site too, you’re appreciated massively. You’ve basically given something that I’ve spent as much time on as Facebook during my adult life.

 

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, Dr Jinx said:

The nufc blog is shutting down. Dr. Ed Harrison has stage 4 cancer so unable to keep the site going.

 

Very sad to hear this. Seems like the site has been around forever and definitely a part of my in and off season info gathering over the years.

 

He must be given his dues.. it’s some effort to have kept that going (just as it is here too). Hope he gets to enjoy the club with the time he has left.

 

To those running this site too, you’re appreciated massively. You’ve basically given something that I’ve spent as much time on as Facebook during my adult life.

 

 

 

I'd never came across this site but very sad.

 

https://www.nufcblog.com/2023/10/02/the-newcastle-united-blog-is-closing-down/

 

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

46 minutes ago, Bimpy474 said:

Looks like Southend United will be saved, and finally rid of Ron Martin, still getting 6000 crowds in the National League is some feat.

 

Really pleased by this news today. Wish I could go down and see them more often these days

Link to post
Share on other sites

Just now, toon25 said:

 

Really pleased by this news today. Wish I could go down and see them more often these days

 

I've been a quite a lot over the last two years (all for free), but despite being born and bred here i just don't support them. Never seems right like.

Link to post
Share on other sites

In more David Borley (the best footballer I've ever seen in my life - went to school with Colback, Stuart Nicholson, Mark Rasmussen and half of the England team year above) news

https://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/news/north-east-news/killingworth-football-coach-jailed-19-27827503?int_source=amp_continue_reading&int_medium=amp&int_campaign=continue_reading_button#amp-readmore-target

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, toon25 said:

This Beckham documentary :anguish:

 

Another opportunity for him to wheel out the family and get himself a knighthood.

 

Wish he'd just fuck off 

 

Zero chance i could ever watch that mind, wondered why hes been even worse whoring himself out for PR the last few weeks

Link to post
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, joeyt said:

If UK and Ireland get Euro 2028 do all host nations automatically qualify?

 

Heard the other day it was max 2 slots. I think the idea atm is to have all 5 nations go into qualification, then somehow dish out the 2 slots depending on who hasn't qualified. 

Link to post
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, The College Dropout said:

Can you paste the article please?

 

It started getting good then it asked me to login.

 

I think I learnt this off a kind soul on here so hopefully okay to post this but copy and pasting the article address in to archive.ph is your friend.

Link to post
Share on other sites

I thought the latest episode of Welcome to Wrexham was great, the poor bloke that runs the club had his first holiday in years and everyone promised not to disturb him.........it didn't go well.

Link to post
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, The Prophet said:
1 hour ago, The College Dropout said:

Can you paste the article please?

 

It started getting good then it asked me to login.

 

I was hoping some kind soul might do it.



 

Quote

Not always the club’s fault’: The truth about Newcastle’s biggest transfer misses under Mike Ashley
 

Newcastle’s ex-chief scout Graham Carr on unearthing gems in France, Ashley missing out on Eden Hazard, Raphael Varane and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, and why Sandro Tonali will come good
The truth about Newcastle's biggest transfer misses under Mike Ashley


He is the man who helped turned the black and white of Newcastle into the red, white and blue of the French tricolor. But for Graham Carr, the former Newcastle United chief scout who recalls riding the Eurostar to buy four French players on one January afternoon ten years ago, there will be no split loyalties when Paris Saint-Germain come to town on Wednesday. “I love French football, I felt like I spent half my scouting career on a Eurostar to Lille watching one match or another, but Newcastle United is my club,” he tells i over a riotous hour recalling his rollercoaster seven years on Tyneside.


Carr is 78 years old now and has been semi-retired for five years but the phone still rings. Earlier this week it was the man from L’Equipe, a newspaper he became very friendly with when he was trying to attract the best of Ligue 1‘s talent for Newcastle’s French revolution. A judiciously placed story every now and then was one way of keeping the club on the back pages in France. The other was keeping black and white boots on the ground, and usually that meant Carr, notebook in hand, introducing himself to agents, rival scouts, taxi drivers. Anyone who spoke English and had a snippet of insider info, essentially.


“I lived between Northampton and Kettering station so within 50 minutes I could be at St Pancras station,” he explains. “Then I was an hour and a half from Lille – which was easier than getting to Manchester – and the players we were looking at were a hell of lot cheaper than the ones we’d have seen in Manchester.” And, in many cases, much better. “It was a great market and it worked for us,” he says. “Our wage structure was about £40,000-a-week. These lads were on about 20,000 Euros so a lot of them came to us for £30,000-a-week, which made a big difference to them but didn’t break the bank for Newcastle.”
 

Hatem Ben Arfa was his first big signing in 2011, persuading a sceptical owner Mike Ashley over a conference call that he was “a perfect number ten, able to come in from the left on his right foot”. Then came Yohan Cabaye, a player he’d first seen playing for France’s U18s in a tournament in Belfast. “Great attitude,” he recalls. “Not the biggest but a superb long range passer and a tough bugger.” Moussa Sissoko was signed in 2013 for £1.5m from Toulouse and Mathieu Debuchy nicked the same year, like Cabaye, from Lille. For a time it felt like he could do no wrong but he still recalls the ones that got away.


There was a private plane ride with Ashley to Saint-Etienne to watch a 16-year-old Kurt Zouma and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang. Carr told him both would be worth tens of millions but “nothing came of it”. He alerted the club to a young Hugo Lloris, passed on a tip about an academy prospect called Eden Hazard and also remembers ringing managing director Derek Llambias excitedly about Raphael Varane, then a 17-year-old defender at Lens, and telling him Newcastle had to have him. “It wasn’t always the club’s fault though you know,” he says.
 

“Newcastle is a fantastic place – and Northumberland is beautiful on its doorstep – but some of these lads, their first thought was how cold it is up there and why would you want to play there? And with some of them, you knew their agents had bigger things in mind. “It’s why I’m so happy about where the club is now. You can sell them the Champions League and wanting to win things, which we couldn’t really at the time.” Despite the tight budget he got on well with Ashley, understood what made him tick and has remained on good terms with his former employer who – he admits – “Looked after me when I left”. Club meetings could be held on Ashley’s boat in Saint-Tropez and on one occasion, when a fed-up Carr was contemplating leaving, a helicopter landed close to his house and the owner turned up to talk him round.

 

“Mike’s first thought when you put a player in was ‘Will we get our money back?'” he admits. He left when Rafael Benitez pitched up on Tyneside. “Rafa just wanted to run everything,” he says. These days his football trips are restricted to Sixfields, where he is a director at Northampton Town. But he’s a regular visitor to son Alan, who he spent the weekend with in the company of Amanda Holden. Alan is writing a second series of his successful Changing Ends sitcom, the semi-autobiographical tale of growing up gay in a football mad household in which Graham was depicted by actor Shaun Dooley. “I met him and the rest of the cast for lunch, he did a great job,” he says. “The second series is when I won the league at Northampton so I’m looking forward to that one.” 

 

But the scout in him is never far from the surface. Before he hangs up he wants to chat Sandro Tonali and his mixed start in black and white and before long he’s selling him to me. “Good player, good age, short and long range passer. He’ll come good, you know…."

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...