Jump to content

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/01/19 in all areas

  1. If I go to cafes and they have a fry-up, it’d feel like cheating on TLW if I ordered something else.
    9 points
  2. A lot of bitters gone the game today dressed as blue seats.
    8 points
  3. The Henry Winter article they're frothing at the mouth about Every supporter should celebrate if Liverpool triumph henry winter, chief football writer Share Save Football has always been a kick in the tribals. Rival fans lash out at the lauding of Liverpool, just as many fume at headlines celebrating Manchester United’s revival under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and seethe at the deification of Mauricio “But what’s he won?” Pochettino. It’s the supporter’s staple of insularity often stained with jealousy, almost amplifying love for their own team by loathing others. It’s being a fan. Opposing supporters fulminate at the lengthy eulogies bestowed on Manchester City under the visionary Pep Guardiola, whose team was acclaimed as the greatest in Premier League history a month ago. The focus has changed, the pendulum swinging more in Liverpool’s favour now. The media, far from fickle, simply reflects form and there is plenty of uplifting work, on and off the field, to reflect and respect now with Liverpool. The possibility of Liverpool winning the title — and it needs stating again and again that a defiant, dynamic City still stand in their way — causes apoplexy among many. Talk to fans of other clubs and they frequently claim a media love-in with Liverpool. One Chelsea diehard totted up the number of former Liverpool players working as pundits and, exhausted, stopped at 44. Manchester United alumni fill studios, too. Most of the former United and Liverpool pundits are pretty objective. Press boxes are neutral, and the three or four Liverpool fans by birth among the main 50-odd football writers are, to this observer’s eye, consistently balanced. Yes, they salute Jürgen Klopp and his team, just as they have City under Guardiola, United under Sir Alex Ferguson, Chelsea under José Mourinho and Arsenal, for the most part, under Arsène Wenger. And yet there is this perception of Liverpool being the media darlings. During an instructive debate on social media over the past 36 hours, one supporter retorted, and doubtless spoke for many: “Facts don’t matter when it comes to hating Liverpool.” Why? What is it about Liverpool that stirs such antipathy? The tasteless “always the victim” chants from United visitors can be consigned to the shameful shadows where they belong when set against the bravery of so many Liverpool campaigners fighting for justice over Hillsborough. (During the run-in, April brings the 30th anniversary of the disaster, which will keep even the thought of a mere trophy, a mere sport in proper perspective). Opposing fans accuse Kopites of a sense of entitlement, of living in the past, singing “we won it five times” about their European Cup feats, but great clubs do cherish their history. And if Chelsea fans’ banner of “making history, not reliving it” is a dig at Liverpool, they cannot also slam the Kop for revelling in the present. Isn’t this what every fan wants? A proud past and a future full of hope? Liverpool are in a good place then. Firmino is one third of a Liverpool front three that has been whipping up a stormALAMY Rival fans spluttering about what Kopites will be like if they were to end 29 years without the title should imagine their own reaction if they had waited that long. Desperate for the trophy. Those holding on even longer, the likes of Everton and Spurs, should take heart that persistence may be rewarded. Even if Liverpool fail to outrun Guardiola’s champion thoroughbreds, there is so much to admire. Liverpool possess many principles that should be valued even more in a changing, more corporate world. The game should be about glory, about trophies, which Klopp’s men chase and the Kop craves. Football should not be about the battle for fourth, the amassing of dividends for shareholders or who has got the biggest, busiest megastore. Liverpool seem to have the balance right between one foot in the community and one foot in the commercial world. So those who decry the Kop, who believe that Liverpool fans are a “cult” with their banners and anthems should not forget that it was Liverpool supporters, along with Arsenal’s and a few others, who led the fight against Premier League clubs’ avarice on ticket prices. In February 2016, the Kop called their owners out over the scandalous £77 charge for a seat for 90 minutes in the new stand, staging a walk-out and chorusing “you greedy bastards, enough is enough”. Fenway Sports Group (FSG), in fairness, backed down (although some issues remain). Liverpool’s chief executive, Peter Moore, recently took to social media to address fans’ frustrations about the members’ ticket sales process. There seems an accountability at Anfield not always found among elite English clubs. Just talk to Arsenal fans. They would love to talk properly to their increasingly distant club. At Liverpool, FSG appointed Tony Barrett, formerly a football writer of The Times, as head of club and supporter liaison, a conduit between the terraces and corridors of power. When Liverpool visited Roma last May, it was Barrett, standing outside the Stadio Olimpico with many fans and too few open gates, contacting Uefa, urging them to react quickly. Uefa rarely respond with the requisite speed but Barrett got them to, preventing a bottleneck. No wonder his unstinting commitment to fans’ welfare earned him an award from the Football Supporters’ Federation. Other clubs are considering following Liverpool’s example, liaising better with supporters. Good. Liverpool do many things right, keeping club close to community. They have a manager in Klopp who cares, who used his Christmas message to hail the NHS and the work being carried out at Alder Hey hospital “with absolute world-class staff supporting those brave children and parents fighting some of life’s most important battles. I cannot tell you how high my respect and admiration is for everyone there”. Most clubs would love Klopp representing them so passionately, engaging with fans, clearly loved by his players. And yet, beyond the bonhomie is a driven, almost ruthless figure, drawing fully on sports science to prepare his team. Liverpool even employ a specialist throw-in coach. Klopp is about marginal gains as well as inspiring man-management. He is a man who understands his environment, whether dressing room, stand or surrounding streets, and connects with them emotionally. How many other managers do? Mourinho didn’t. Liverpool have kept their soul amid their pursuit of the Premier League titlePHIL NOBLE/REUTERS Klopp’s players are committed to their community work, like their peers elsewhere of course. Everton’s are exceptional. Arsenal In The Community has been changing — and saving — lives since 1985. Liverpool players certainly understand their responsibilities. The captain, Jordan Henderson, organised a whip-round at Melwood for Fans Supporting Foodbanks and met up with Liverpool fan Ian Byrne and Evertonian Dave Kelly, two of the driving forces behind this vital initiative. A foodbank van is stationed on club land on Anfield Road on match-day. Moore is a regular contributor and there is a drop-off point for donations in the Anfield shop. Liverpool have kept their soul, not always easy for a club in the money-obsessed Premier League. Trent Alexander-Arnold hosted a lunch for the lonely and disadvantaged on Christmas Day, Henderson funded an event for underprivileged or disabled children two days before Christmas and handed out presents, while Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain visited a charity in Toxteth. Many players do this, as they should, using football as a force for good, but it is worth noting in the feverish debate about Liverpool that their squad is a collection of good characters as well as good players. On the pitch, their talent is clear. It is important for the overall lustre of the Premier League that such a thrilling team, who have never won the title in the present format, are in contention. That might add a fistful of dinars to the next overseas broadcast deal. Everybody benefits. Anybody who loves exciting, fearless football should appreciate the attacking from full back of Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson towards the predatory poetry in motion of Mo Salah, Sadio Mané and Roberto Firmino, who can whip up a storm in an instant. As one Liverpool fan posting on the Red And White Kop forum observed: “We aren’t walking through the storm now — we are the storm.” The storm has built gradually and shrewdly under Klopp, a lesson to clubs, whatever the vicious views of rival fans. Stan Kroenke, Arsenal’s absentee owner, could certainly look at what his compatriot John W Henry oversees at Liverpool: an outstanding, balanced recruitment structure, investing properly in ability, seeking out bargains such as Robertson at £8 million and also spending £75 million on a centre back of Virgil van Dijk’s commanding nature, rather than Sokratis and Shkodran Mustafi, defensive makeweights who cost Arsenal £53 million between them. So ignore the tribal screams; Liverpool should be seen as a model club in many ways.
    7 points
  4. Following a google search and discussions with the wife it was actually Newcastle not Wolverhampton and it wad 91, Capes was oddjob, great times . Linda Lusardi was Snow White, I mixed with all the z listers me on the coattails of my wife, 1990 was Wolverhampton, I got to meet the great Bobby Davro that time. Touch me
    7 points
  5. This is literally insane. We have the best manager in the world, all our best players locked into contracts for the next 4 years, and are top of the league. None of these players seem to be making any effort to get out of the club; on the contrary, they seem happy to be at Liverpool. Not to mention it would cost at least 100 million for any of the players you mention, and several of them would cost well above that figure. So in short: - the club wants them to stay - the players want to stay - no one could afford to buy them
    6 points
  6. Well that easier than I thought. Foolishly, I’d convinced myself that Arsenal could give us real problems. I’d described them as being “like us before we signed Virgil”. I take it back, that’s massively insulting to our lads. Arsenal are as flaky as ever and this was a stroll in the park. In my defence, the reason Arsenal concerned me is because they do have firepower and are dangerous going forward. My reasoning was that unlike most opponents we’ve faced this season, they have the players to hurt us and they won’t come here to try and keep the score down. Emery left Lacazette on the bench though and that played into our hands. He needed to fight fire with fire, and he didn’t. He was caught between having a go and being careful. The end result was a hammering and Aubameyang only touching the ball 14 times, six of them from kick offs. Arsenal should have gone for it and hoped to turn it into a shoot out, because their defence is a fucking joke. As concerned as I’d been all week, that changed when I saw Arsenal’s team. Talking to the lads before the game, my outlook immediately flipped when I saw that defensive unit they were putting out there. I believe my exact words were: “Look at that defence, none of them can run. Our forwards will fucking destroy them”. And they did. Five goals for the front three and Arsenal actually got off lightly. It could easily have been worse for them, but much of the second half was a case of our lads conserving a bit of energy and Klopp looking to rest a few players. If we’d needed more goals we’d have gotten them pretty easily. Arsenal did show why I was right to be concerned about them at the other end though. They carried a real menace early on before the game eventually got away from them. I’ve always thought that Iwobi was shite but he was their best player by some distance. Trent had the most difficult job of any of our lads in trying to keep him quiet. Everyone else won their battles comfortably. Trent won his too, eventually, but at least Iwobi made him work for it. It was a stroll for everybody else. Especially the midfielders. I like that Torreira but he looked like a little kid against the magnificent Wijnaldum. What a performance from him. Bobby is the star man because of his hat-trick, but Gini was top class. Arsenal were on the front foot early on and played with belief that they could do something. They pressed high up the pitch and had some joy with it, in part due to some sloppy passing from us. Fabinho gave the ball away carelessly with a reckless cross field pass. He seems to have one of those moments in him every game. So far he hasn’t been punished but he needs to clean it up. Poor old Dejan isn’t so lucky. Anything he does wrong usually ends up being costly. Blaming him for the goal is harsh though and Klopp even said afterwards the problem was that no-one was showing for the ball so he just hit it long. I’d give Arsenal credit for it. They were closing us down well and we had a few uncomfortable moments passing it around in our own defensive third with a lot of Arsenal players hunting the ball. Lovren’s pass forward wasn’t the greatest but for it to result in a goal then other things need to go wrong as well. We had players back but Arsenal worked it very well. Iwobi’s cross was brilliant and Robertson couldn’t get back in time to stop Maitland-Niles finishing at the back post. Initially I thought Robbo must have switched off and let him run off the back of him, but it wasn’t that. He sprinted to try and get back in but he was just too far up the field when we lost the ball to get back in time. If that had been Moreno he’d have been slaughtered for it, but my view on it is that it’s simply a consequence of how we play. The full backs are asked to push right up and play as wingers as well as defenders. To do that you need to be high up the pitch when the team has the ball. If possession is lost then it’s a problem. Maybe Robbo shouldn’t have been that far forward but none of us really know because it all depends on where Klopp wants him to be. It felt like the end of the world though. Not because I didn’t think we’d come back, but because we conceded a goal and it put a dent in our wonderful record. Any goal conceded now puts me on a massive downer because I love how miserly we’ve become. Imagine beating the record for fewest goals conceded! It could happen. For so many years it’s been our big weakness and if I’m being honest I’d gotten used to winning 4-3 rather than 1-0 and was actually quite happy with that. "Clean sheets are boring, we’re the fucking entertainers!!" Actually no, clean sheets are fucking boss as long as they aren’t achieved through shithouse footy. I don’t want to watch a defensive side. Been there, done that, and it’s only palatable when it delivers trophies. Take the trophies away and it’s fucking shit. I want to watch an attacking side who are also boss at defending. That’s what we have now and this season has been a fucking ball so far. You can tell the players are obsessed with clean sheets too, and when Arsenal scored they were fuming. They couldn’t wait to get the game started again and within five minutes they had the lead. Score against us? The fuck do you think you are? Bing, bang, bosh, pow. 4-1 before we’d even reached half time. Ian Wright in the BT studio was screaming “WHY DID WE HAVE TO UPSET THEM!?!?|” Love Ian Wright me you know. Funny guy, wears his heart on his sleeve. Probably my favourite Gunner now. It used to be Club Shop Ty, but he was a bit of a knob in his post match with Arsenal Fan TV so he’s slipped down the pecking order now and Wrighty is number one. The response to going behind was great though wasn’t it? You can say Arsenal let us back in with their terrible defending and naive play in midfield, but I’d prefer to take the view that we forced them into those errors. Pressure causes mistakes, and after going behind our lads just intensified the pressure they were putting them under and Arsenal cracked. There was a big slice of luck about the equaliser, as one Arsenal defender smashed the ball against another, leaving Bobby with a tap in. I didn’t know at the time how the ball ended up at his feet, but I saw it at half time on the TV screens under the Main Stand. Every goal that was shown was greeted with a cheer, but the angle that showed the ‘no look’ finish got the loudest one. The ‘no look’ thing bothered me initially as it’s unnecessary showboating and there’s a risk (however small) that it could backfire. I generally don’t like that sort of thing. As a comparison, in the NFL last year one my Bears players had a clear run to the end zone but he slowed right down with a few yards to go as he wanted to look cool by walking in. He got caught from behind and the ball was knocked out of his hands. Bobby hasn’t been caught out yet, but what if he misses by doing this? It’s probably a thousand to one chance that he does, but why risk it? That’s been my view of it, but he’s always going to do it and clearly Klopp has never told him not to, so fuck it. No point me worrying, may as well just buzz off it like everyone else. A minute later he was zig zagging his way through the defence and leaving a trail of Arsenal bodies in his wake. What a great goal. It was also the exact type of goal I expect to see us scoring against Arsenal. Rob them in midfield and then BANG! Arsenal will never learn. That’s how we used to do them when we had Suarez, Sturridge and Sterling too. I’m made up for Bobby. He’s not been scoring many but it never gets him down as he’s all about the good of the team over personal glory. That’s why Klopp loves him so much and why his team-mates feel the same. Soon after it was 3-1. Arsenal cleared a corner but didn’t mark up properly as they pushed out. Robbo’s cross field ball picked out Mo in space and he intelligently squared it for Sadio to bury. Game over. No way were we allowing Arsenal to score two more. It was all about how many we’d score now. The fourth was fantastic. Ok, it was a penalty, but I’m taking about the play to lead up to it. Alisson’s pass to pick out Bobby on the right wing was stunning. The reaction around the ground when he hit that said it all. It felt as though there was a collective “whoa!” from fifty odd thousand people. Bobby fed Mo and he did that thing he’s so good at. Not going down a pen, I’m talking about how he’s happy to dribble the ball into the tiniest space to go around the defender. They’ll always show him the line to keep him off his left foot and to narrow the angle, but he’s happy to just go outside and he’s scored from that position loads of times. This time he didn’t get a shot away because Sokratis had two nibbles at the back of his calf. Was it enough for him to go down naturally or he did he dive? Who knows. It was a foul though and were it not for what happened against Newcastle a few days before I don’t think there’d even be any discussion about this one. There was a long delay before he got to take the pen, and at one stage I saw an Arsenal player (Ramsay I think) in his face trying to put him off. It didn’t work. The penalty went up the middle and just about went in. Arsenal weren’t happy about it but they only have themselves to blame for their schoolboy like defending. Arsenal’s players acted like dicks for most of the game I thought. Actually I take that back, most of them were fine, it was the defenders who were all acting up. The old timer at right back spent virtually the entire game slaughtering the officials and being a snide. Sokratis was just as bad too. He had a real hard done about Mo winning that penalty against him and tried to start something in the tunnel at half time. Big Virgil just stepped in and put a stop to any of that nonsense though. Even after the game Klopp went over to Sokratis (his former player at Dortmund) and he was still fucking bitching about it. You kicked at his ankles, twice, stop blaming Salah for you being shite and slow. I suppose it was Mo’s fault that you and Mustafi both ended up flat on your arses watching Bobby slalom through to make it 2-1? Dick. The second half was a procession. We only scored one more but that often seems to happen in these games that are over by half time. It was another soft pen, as Kolasinic needlessly shoved Lovren in the back. Did he go down easily? Possibly, but if you get firmly shoved in the back then it’s a foul. It wasn’t one of those when a defender puts his hands on a player’s back to stop him from backing in and the player feels it and hits the deck (otherwise known as “doing an Ashley Barnes”). It was a push in the back. End of. Mo insisting Bobby took the pen to get his hat-trick was nice. Look how delighted he was for him when he scored too. The front three are looking like they’re back in last season’s groove now. All scoring, all creating for each other and all just generally loving it. We all know how obsessed Mo has become with scoring goals but he gave that up so Firmino could get his hat-trick. Could you imagine Kane doing that for Son or Alli? Bobby is the most selfless player in the league and his team-mates all know it. Mo owes him than anybody and it’s great to see him recognise that. Klopp was blown away by the gesture. I doubt he’d have felt the same had the scoreline been closer, but at 4-1 you can afford a liberty or two. I don’t actually think there’s much between them when it comes to pens anyway, as frankly I don’t trust either of them, and I wouldn’t have much confidence in Sadio either. I don’t mind them taking them when Milner isn’t on the field but all three of them have a miss in them. Mo’s scored from the spot in consecutive games but I didn’t particularly like either pen. The first one he telegraphed big time. His whole body shape screamed out where the ball was going. The keeper went the right way but didn’t get there. This one went down the middle but was almost saved. If Milner isn’t there then I’m happy enough for Mo to be the taker but I don’t have a great deal of faith in him. Bobby has missed a few as well, but they’ve been a bit unlucky (hitting the post and the bar if I remember rightly) and at least he looks like he’s confident when taking them. Klopp suggested afterwards though that he hardly ever scores them in training, so that’s a little bit of a concern. Still, worrying about who’s taking penalties makes a welcome change from wondering why we aren’t getting any. Love how everyone is fuming about it like we’ve been getting pens every week. Keep clutching those straws, you bitter bastards. The best thing about this victory is that we were brilliant without ever really hitting top form. Actually I might be being a little harsh there. Had we finished off some of the absolutely stunning moves we put together than we might be talking about one of the all time great performances, but because we didn’t I’m left thinking that we can play significantly better than this. Off the top of my head I can think of a few moments that would have put a completely different spin on the performance. There was Fabinho hitting the keeper after Mo’s exquisite drag back and flick put him in. Also, Mo not going round the keeper after Shaqiri’s fucking delicious ball with the outside of his foot. Then there was that Harlem Globetrotters move when Hendo hit a cross field volley to Bobby as everyone piled forward. If we’d scored there that would have been replayed for decades, like Terry Mac’s header against Spurs. There were others too. Some of the football was unreal but we didn’t finish those moves off. We still scored five though. I’m running out of words to describe this team. I still think there’s another gear for them to go to if they need it too. This is something genuinely special we’re living through right now. I was saying to my Dad afterwards, imagine being an opposing manager facing this Liverpool side. What do you do? Where do you target? It used to be a case of hanging on in there and waiting for set-pieces, because we were shite in the air. Now Virgil just heads away everything. Failing that, they knew they could get at Moreno because eventually he’d do something stupid. Now the best left back in the world has that flank locked down. Ok, so maybe target the teenager on the other flank. Nope, Trent ain’t having that and he’s not a teenager anymore. Ah well, there’s always the keeper, he’s a weak link. Newsflash, Mig is on the bench and Karius has been banished to Turkey. No weakness there. The only way anyone (other than maybe Spurs, Man City or possibly Chelsea) is beating us if we have an off day and the opposition have a considerable amount of luck. That can happen, and it might happen, but what I’m saying is that you can’t really plan on how to beat this team because they’re too good. To beat us, 95% of the league need us to play badly or they have no chance. City are the only ones who could beat us when we’re playing well, and even then they’d probably need the rub of the green. That game later this week is going to be fucking epic. If we were to play Thursday’s game ten times, I’d expect to win five, draw a few and maybe lose a couple. So I’m confident we’ll win but certainly not complacent about it. City could beat us, no question about it. If they play as they can and we’re even a little bit off, we won’t win. The magnitude of the game tells me our lads will be right at it though. They usually are in these big games. We’ve come a long way in that regard. We’ve come a long way in every regard actually. The game isn’t a title decider because if we lose we’ve still got a nice cushion. If we win though I do believe it’s virtually over, because with a ten point lead it’s hard to see this team of ours letting that slip. We could easily drop 10 points between now and May, but City and/or Spurs would have to win every game and neither look capable of doing that. There’s far more pressure on City in this game so let’s go there and turn the screw on the fuckers. Come on you mighty Redmen!!! Team: Alisson; Alexander-Arnold, Lovren, Van Dijk, Robertson (Clyne); Fabinho, Wijnaldum (Lallana); Shaqiri, Firmino, Mané (Henderson); Salah:
    5 points
  7. The revolution will be televised, but only the last few mins of MOTD
    5 points
  8. First team to lose a Premier league game in 2019.
    5 points
  9. Even the grinch with his life falling apart around him is positive about this team. We’ve one hand on the league title.
    5 points
  10. Silva has gone full Koeman red Crimbo tree wind-up merchant by calling their home ground Woodison in an interview. https://mobile.twitter.com/jonnyturton/status/1080145292295577600?s=12
    4 points
  11. Imagine going to Anfield this season, being part of that buzz as we're swatting teams aside, singing our way to victory. And on the other hand there's the odd moody cunt, refusing to sing, arms crossed and stoney faced, not willing to get excited until the day we actually win it. For me the journey is just as exciting as the outcome.
    4 points
  12. If you want to be a miserable bastard until the day we've mathematically sealed it, then fair enough. I'm usually a fairly pessimistic person so I understand the sentiment. As for me, while I'm certainly not celebrating it as over and done with yet, I'm allowing myself to feel excitement about the possibility. The spring of 2014 when Suarez was doing bits and we were just destroying the league was one of the most fun times in my football-supporting life, even though it didn't end in victory. For that matter, our CL run last season was as well - totally unexpected, just joy after joy, and if it didn't end in a big trophy that's a shame but I won't let it ruin the enjoyment I had up to that point.
    4 points
  13. I did this one last year. The eggs were a disaster We work with what we have in the colonies
    4 points
  14. First breakfast of 2019 Venue: Market Cafe, London Fields Price point: £9.50 Detailed ingriedients: Unfortunately it wasn’t fully disclosed on the menu, so I didn’t know it didn’t include black pudding... but anw, 1 x Sausage, 2 x Bacon, 2 x friend eggs, sautéed mushroom, grilled tomato, hash brown, beans, a slide of sourdough bread. Verdict: It was quite nice, but way overpriced. The sausage was tasty, I enjoyed the fried eggs, nice enough mushroom. Would’ve liked to have at least a slice of black pudding with it. I thought about ordering it as extras only to find out that they’re charging £2+ for it.
    4 points
  15. Fun New Years for me. Was getting some muscle tiredness/weakness in arms and legs. Checked into emergency about 845pm last night. They had had no idea until they ran more blood tests and discovered that my level of phosphates was so low it was undetectable. So I’m on an overnight stay hooked up to a drip as they fill me with phosphates. Phosphate levels? I didn’t even know that was a thing until tonight! Not sure the cause. I’m not an alky- didn’t even get a chance to have a sip for New Years! Can’t sleep as a) I’m in a hospital, and b) this bloody blood pressure monitor is going off every 15 mins. Oh well. Happy 2019!
    4 points
  16. I've had 3 hours sleep and am dealing with a grumpy baby. Negged
    4 points
  17. I can't work out whether CS is a WUM who's definitely not a Liverpool fan., or someone who's so negative and depressed they should be giving football a swerve for the effect on their mental health. If there's ever a time to enjoy being a Liverpool fan (and there have been lots), what we might do this year and what we could do the next few years, it's now. Negged for over the top pessimism pissing on everyone's parade. Don't we have a negative thread for the terminally doomstruck?
    4 points
  18. Truly a prophet is never recognised in his own land.
    3 points
  19. It takes real skill to make fried eggs look like crumpets.
    3 points
  20. Another Brekkie? Fucking hell Ardja, you aren't taking this thread lightly. Fair play.
    3 points
  21. Have they ripped off the door of a washing machine and used it to serve the breakfast on?
    3 points
  22. What a great end to the year, well done GF, you all did yourselves proud again in 2018. The last 3 pages are why I keep coming back to this asylum, you gang of crackpot, dick slappers.
    3 points
  23. Any player would want to work under Klopp. We haven't got the pull of everton though. Money talks.
    3 points
  24. In and out me mate. Anyway, went for a couple in the pub about 7, on the way home went to the tesco express and 2 girls came in, one was virtually naked you could see her tits and everything and she was only young, then some woman bounced in wearing a dressing gown and pyjamas with a full on face mask on then walking home walked past some fella fingering some woman outside a church community place. Happy fucking new year ffs
    3 points
  25. Ah, the lost verse from 'Auld Lang Syne'.
    3 points
  26. It’s been a fucking shit year that ended even worse. Lets finish it in style!
    3 points
  27. A few user name suggestions if anyone joins: Big Dunc Big Duncs tattoo Big Duncs elbows Big Duncs pigeons Dixie Dean 1878 1=20 Smackhead Fowler Emlyn Hughes is a cunt I hate Clive Thomas I hate Clattenberg fuck off Klopp
    3 points
  28. One of the gripes the Roma fans had with Salah was - he was too honest. He wouldn't cheat to gain an advantage, and they called him naive in the big games because players would professionally foul him with complete impunity and he wouldn't cheat or seek any kind of advantage himself. They said he was "Too nice". I think since he had his arm almost torn off by that piece of shit, he's changed that, and rightfully so. Why should he stay on his feet if someone's fouling him? Why is it okay for a defender to pull him back, but not okay for him to fall? The defender knows what he's doing. He knows that by pulling him back, it knocks him off balance as he sets up to shoot. There was an incident with Kyle Walker and Sterling a few years back, and it was the most blatant penalty you'll ever see. Walker pushes Sterling just before he shoots and Sterling misses, but because Sterling stayed on his feet nothing was given. The idiocy of English refs necessitates you have to go down to draw attention to a blatant foul. If they were capable of doing their jobs properly, nobody would need to dive.
    3 points
  29. If you can't enjoy things in moderation on the way what's the fucking point ? A life without joy is an existence. I've got a fucking big smile on my face and have had all season while you continue with the self flagellation. Whatever floats your boat, each to their own and all that.
    2 points
  30. I understand some deviants like beans, so I don't begrudge them being served; however, the sheer audacity of practically immersing the sausage, of all things, in them should be a hangable offence.
    2 points
  31. Yep, i'll own up for my twattishness as well and offer my apologies. Its a corbyn thread and that is what it should have stayed as.
    2 points
  32. Oh and naught wrong with a bit of crispy on the perimeter of the egg.
    2 points
  33. Dougies point stands though, no good screaming poverty when you’re handing out more hundreds of thousands to fat cats regardless of the mathematics, funny how the rest of the public sector has had to eat shit for the past decade. Auntie really is becoming an embarrassment.
    2 points
  34. Time for we want Meeeeeereeeenho, lad....everton aren't we!! Yes, lads, everton you are....!
    2 points
  35. What is this thread about again? The absolute bullshit on the last few pages is fucking pathetic! Complete fucking eye aids and is giving me a headache. (I may or may not be hungover).
    2 points
  36. To be fair, that does include the cost of professional counselling afterwards.
    2 points
  37. I was hungover, crabby, knackered and grumpy when I negged you but managed to get some rest and go to a mate's place to drink some more. Much better mood, so with all that in mind, negged again.
    2 points
  38. I got a decent sleep for once but everyone in our house is absolutely fucked with sickness bugs/a nasty cold, first time I've not had a drink on Hogmanay for 25 years & was in my scratcher at 11pm. Happy New Year everyone, here's to a magic 2019.
    2 points
  39. Happy New Year friends. Here's wishing for number 19 in 2019. YNWA
    2 points
  40. Fucking hell, Ted, that's rough. Just remember, if ever you need a sympathetic ear or some wise advice, keep moving; we're all cunts and quite, quite useless.
    2 points
  41. 2 points
  42. He can activate your laptop camera remotely. How do you think those pictures of you dancing around the bedroom to Wham, dressed only in your Tigger y-fronts, found their way into social media.
    2 points



×
×
  • Create New...