How about I pop you in the bin?Anybody want to pop this in pastebin so I wade through?
If you’re on an iPhone hit “print” and it turns the article into a pdf which you can send to yourself and read at your leisure.Anybody want to pop this in pastebin so I wade through?
When did you get tech-savvy?If you’re on an iPhone hit “print” and it turns the article into a pdf which you can send to yourself and read at your leisure.
My son showed me how to do it.
Mods I don’t need my tagline anymore.
My son showed me how to do it.
This is why context is your friend rather than a tweet:We live in a post truth world.Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
So the full quote includes him admitting that his opening line is a lie, then.This is why context is your friend rather than a tweet:
“The thing people say about how I wave my arms (negatively) at my team-mates. That has never happened. That is completely a lie.
“I can be using my arms to ask for the ball and to tell them something about where to move the ball. But never do I talk to them in a bad way. Yes, I can shout at someone if they do not pass the ball when he has to do it, or if he does not take the decision in the best way, or if he goes two-v-one and does not pass the ball to his team-mate. Then it is normal to be angry at him.”
It's followed directly on from them talking about him moaning at referees so it's pretty clearly a contextual matter where he's saying that he doesn't wave his arms around in the same manner at his team-mates but goes on to say why he might be unhappy in certain situations. It's not unreasonable overall in the context of the interview.So the full quote includes him admitting that his opening line is a lie, then.
How about I pop a cap in yo ass?How about I pop you in the bin?
Just a thought.
He’s obviously differentiating between waving your arms at someone as an act of frustration/anger after they do something he didn’t like (Cristiano Ronaldo style) and doing so to encourage/direct them while they’re still on the ball (pointing where he wanted Sancho to shoot being an example). He admits to the latter but denies the former.So the full quote includes him admitting that his opening line is a lie, then.
Thanks, mate! That’s the most useful thing I’ve learned this month! Teach me how to live plsIf you’re on an iPhone hit “print” and it turns the article into a pdf which you can send to yourself and read at your leisure.
He is part of a leadership group that also includes first-choice goalkeeper David de Gea and his backup Tom Heaton, the former England international Fernandes says is quietly one of the most important characters in the dressing room.
Two random pieces I thought were interesting.Normally, I call these the ‘referee zone’,” he says. “Because nobody marks the referee. Sometimes, this is what the coaches say to players who play between the lines, or the wingers who want to come inside, or the striker when he wants to drop. Of course, sometimes the positions are different because it can be a counter-attack, for example.
“It also depends on the way an official referees the game. Mike Dean, for example, ran very centrally, which was probably for him better to see the game, but for us as a No 10, that cannot be our position, so you have to find out where you can go.”
That seems an unusual tactic, but assessing Fernandes’ last Premier League performance, against Arsenal, there are a couple of moments when he seems to follow Paul Tierney’s movement to escape markers.
I guess this explains why he was poor last season. Jon Moss was reffing half our games.Two random pieces I thought were interesting.
"Normally, I call these the ‘referee zone’,” he says. “Because nobody marks the referee. Sometimes, this is what the coaches say to players who play between the lines, or the wingers who want to come inside, or the striker when he wants to drop. Of course, sometimes the positions are different because it can be a counter-attack, for example.
“It also depends on the way an official referees the game. Mike Dean, for example, ran very centrally, which was probably for him better to see the game, but for us as a No 10, that cannot be our position, so you have to find out where you can go.”
That seems an unusual tactic, but assessing Fernandes’ last Premier League performance, against Arsenal, there are a couple of moments when he seems to follow Paul Tierney’s movement to escape markers."
DoneMods I don’t need my tagline anymore.
I feel freeDone
He’s also very obviously either lying or just wrong. He does the former a lot.He’s obviously differentiating between waving your arms at someone as an act of frustration/anger after they do something he didn’t like (Cristiano Ronaldo style) and doing so to encourage/direct them while they’re still on the ball (pointing where he wanted Sancho to shoot being an example). He admits to the latter but denies the former.
Pretty much. I don't moan, but when I do...So the full quote includes him admitting that his opening line is a lie, then.
You're probably not an elite athlete though.Pretty much. I don't moan, but when I do...
I've played football with people like that and it's super annoying to listen to, but if you accept that it's probably a coping mechanism for them, you just let them get on with it. Some people can't though, as we've seen with his altercation with Matic.
I'm not athlete of any kid, never mind elite. I'm also not sure what your point is.You're probably not an elite athlete though.
That your park league probably isn't the same environment as theirs. I think some of you are misunderstanding what he's saying here. When he says he doesn't wave his arms negatively towards his own teammates, it means he bears no ill will, and that sometimes in the heat of the moment people can get frustrated. Like the incident with Malacia, and even to himself when Maguire shouted at him for making a mistake and he shouted back, then after the game he went and apologized.I'm not athlete of any kid, never mind elite. I'm also not sure what your point is.
Well your first sentence is just a banal observation. Yes, the environment is not the same. It doesn't follow from that that it has no similarity to it either. They still breathe oxygen, experience joy when their team scores, frustration when the opponent does. There's no reason why basic psychological dynamic should be vastly different, just because the skill level doubtless is.That your park league probably isn't the same environment as theirs. I think some of you are misunderstanding what he's saying here. When he says he doesn't wave his arms negatively towards his own teammates, it means he bears no ill will, and that sometimes in the heat of the moment people can get frustrated. Like the incident with Malacia, and even to himself when Maguire shouted at him for making a mistake and he shouted back, then after the game he went and apologized.
Eh? Bizarre accusation but whatever.He’s also very obviously either lying or just wrong. He does the former a lot.
He said it's coached I think so I imagine it's quite a common thing but hardly bought upFollowing the referee to find space is something I remember Papu Gomez mentioning in an interview. Surprised more players haven't thought of it/brought it up before.
Not really. He generally cuts a frustrated figure on the pitch when we are losing but he is more likely right than wrong.He’s also very obviously either lying or just wrong. He does the former a lot.
I don't care about the moaning. It's the diving and staying on the ground to buy free kicks that annoy me. Fergie managed to get that out if Ronaldos game and hopefully someone does the same for Bruno.He is a massive moaner - but why do fans give a shit? Rooney loved a moan, so has Ronaldo throughout his career.
None of us know the type of relationship these guys have off the pitch. He might be doing the same in training for all you know & if it's a problem he would've been pulled up by the players and the manager on it.
It's a high pressure/intensity job - you've got to somehow stay in the moment. Some people like to be vocal to stay focused or intense, and others like Martial are generally more quiet. Either is fine.
He wasn't offside. He looked it from one angle but he wasn't. I thought this myself but clever posters here proved otherwise.He told Sancho to pass ball to Marcus next time. (Goal Sancho scored against Chelsea) So next time we score goal from offside. Great.
Do you hate the word “the”?He told Sancho to pass ball to Marcus next time. (Goal Sancho scored against Chelsea) So next time we score goal from offside. Great.