Yeah, definitely something wrong with him. They were talking on the radio about the fact that he thought it was a good thing that one of his players out on loan had a heart attack while playing on the same night he lost a league cup match as it distracted negative attention away from the loss.
I think it was Adrian Durham that said he maybe should not be involved with the game because of this. In the end they agreed that they appreciated his honesty, but this is something (among other things) that he should have kept to himself.
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'When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, 'it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.'
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'When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, 'it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.'
Arsenal have suffered another injury scare after Laurent Koscielny withdrew from the France national squad for the upcoming international friendlies against Portugal and Armenia with an Achilles problem.
Oh man, Manchester United are so lucky! Not just one Wayne Rooney but two!
Quote:
David Moyes compared Adnan Januzaj to Wayne Rooney as the finest young talent he has seen and believes the 19-year-old will go on to become one of Europe's top players.
"Adnan Januzaj is, in my managerial time, the best young talent up there with Wayne Rooney. You can see what he can become. When we had Wayne at Everton you could see the potential.
"Adnan Januzaj has got all that at the same age as Wayne. He's one of the best young talents in Europe and he will go on to become one of the best players.
"Wayne was different but in the same way as we saw something special in him at Everton we saw that in Adnan Januzaj. I can only see the boy going right to the top."
Manchester United v Arsenal: Pizzagate revisited - 10 years on
By Sam Sheringham BBC Sport "All eyes turned and all mouths gawped to see this pizza slip off that famous puce face and roll down his nice black suit."
The excerpt from Ashley Cole's autobiography may sound like a tale from a school dinner hall.
In fact, it is a snapshot from the farcical scenes in the Old Trafford tunnel that followed Manchester United's tempestuous 2-0 victory over Arsenal on 24 October 2004, a result that ended the Gunners' 49-match unbeaten run.
As players and officials from both sides clashed in the tunnel, United manager Alex Ferguson was struck by a slice of pizza thrown by an Arsenal player, later alleged to be Cesc Fabregas.
Further details of the so-called "Battle of the Buffet" have always been sketchy, with some tabloids claiming at the time that soup and sandwiches were among the edible projectiles deployed by rival players.
With the help of testimonies from managers and players on both sides, and fresh insight from Phil Neville, who was at the heart of United's midfield on the day, BBC Sport revisits "Pizzagate", 10 years on.