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I can’t help but think how the media reaction would be different had this been one of United’s star players.
Yeah personally I think perpetrators of violent crimes against women should be treated the exact same as gowls who put a few bets on.Leaves Southgate looking a bit stupid, insisting on selecting him for squads over the past season after Toney had admitted his guilt.
Yet he wasted no time in insisting that Greenwood would never play for England again. Seems he has one rule for some offenders and not for others.
Give the newbie a thumbs up, this is spot onPlaying devil’s advocate here I’ll point out you’re actually comparing someone found guilty of a crime versus someone who had all charges against them dropped, so yes, they should be treated differently.
I’d also point out that the guilty until proven innocent brigade are usually the first people who would scream blue murder if they lost their job and reputation as a result of allegations that were later dropped.
Toney was guilty. Greenwood's case got thrown out.Yeah personally I think perpetrators of violent crimes against women should be treated the exact same as gowls who put a few bets on.
In fact we should just have one penalty for every single crime to make it really, really even and fair.
Luckily we don't have to base our opinions or pick our football teams based on whether charges do or don't get dropped, because "innocent until proven guilty" isn't a concept that applies outside a very defined legal context.Playing devil’s advocate here I’ll point out you’re actually comparing someone found guilty of a crime versus someone who had all charges against them dropped, so yes, they should be treated differently.
I’d also point out that the guilty until proven innocent brigade are usually the first people who would scream blue murder if they lost their job and reputation as a result of allegations that were later dropped.
I was gonna defend this post thinking it was about the Foden/Greenwood incident but I see it's about the other incident. No.Leaves Southgate looking a bit stupid, insisting on selecting him for squads over the past season after Toney had admitted his guilt.
Yet he wasted no time in insisting that Greenwood would never play for England again. Seems he has one rule for some offenders and not for others.
pretty sure he was just betting for funNo, a factory worker like myself believes in a product that said company is making, decides to put a few pound on product, insider as working on it but no clue if it comes off, my question is what did he bet on, Brentford to lose?
Only Thuram/Dembele on free would sufficedang 8 months makes it more interesting than 6. Now it is on the cusp ha. Wonder if we could get him for a cut-rate deal and then find a better loaning/cheap option than Stupid ass Wout to last until that window. Depends on if EtH views rash as more a CF than LW.
Would happily pay around £80m plus addons for Kane because has proven himself over seasonsid be fine taking Kane for 60, just highly doubt levy remotely plays ball. Hate that man and part of the reason id be fine letting kane rot in spurs for another year winning nothing. Im in agreement with you, which is why im laughing at the people acting like signing someone who cant play until january is somehow the worst idea in the world if it means we have solved our CF issue for a long time.
No he wouldn't. Utd bought a player like him in the 80s Gary Birtles, came with similar attributes as Tony, he couldn't hit a barn door for Utd. So no he's never good enough for any top 4 side imo leave Gunners buy him..How is the third best striker in the league behind Haaland and Kane, while playing at Brentford, not good enough for United?
You realise he’d probably score more in a better team right?
If we want to get down to legal technicalities, Toney was never even accused of a crime.Toney was guilty. Greenwood's case got thrown out.
He could also be compared to Dwight Yorke who came here from a lesser PL club and played a major role in us landing the treble. It's a crap shoot, but if he could be signed for 40-50 million then it may be worth a try.No he wouldn't. Utd bought a player like him in the 80s Gary Birtles, came with similar attributes as Tony, he couldn't hit a barn door for Utd. So no he's never good enough for any top 4 side imo leave Gunners buy him..
I am arguing that Southgate stating that Greenwood would never play for England again before the legal process had run its course was stupid - suspend him yes, if you must, but jumping to such a conclusion served no useful purpose.Luckily we don't have to base our opinions or pick our football teams based on whether charges do or don't get dropped, because "innocent until proven guilty" isn't a concept that applies outside a very defined legal context.
Most of us also have the capacity to understand that being accused of an extremely serious crime is quite often more damaging than being found guilty of a relatively harmless infringement of FA rules. And therefore requires very different treatment.
Anyone seriously arguing that Southgate should have treated Greenwood with more leniency than Toney, even while claiming to just be playing devil's advocate, is severely lacking in both emotional and actual intelligence. These are not comparable situations and it's insulting to try and do so.
That was painful, he tried so hard to score at OT and it just wouldn't happen for him, away from OT he wasn't so badNo he wouldn't. Utd bought a player like him in the 80s Gary Birtles, came with similar attributes as Tony, he couldn't hit a barn door for Utd. So no he's never good enough for any top 4 side imo leave Gunners buy him..
That's a very slippery slope, not specifically for football but society in general, you end up with a mob mentality, we seen that happen before and in this day and age of social media and AI it'll only get worseAgreed, but what happens then? You just treat him as if he is guilty?
30-35MWhat is half the price?
Agreed. Which is why Southgate's stance is unhelpful.That's a very slippery slope, not specifically for football but society in general, you end up with a mob mentality, we seen that happen before and in this day and age of social media and AI it'll only get worse
I seem to have missed his stance position, when did he make it?Agreed. Which is why Southgate's stance is unhelpful.
It's not even just that it's inside trading, the rule is to protect the integrity of the game, not so much the bookies. Manipulating match results and events harms the game not just the bookies pockets.I feel like the Toney punishment is fair.
1) Joey Barton initially got 18 months, then 13 months on appeal, for over 1000+ infringements. So there's a precedent for the FA.
2) Toney's betting is essentially like insider trading. If he was working in another industry, people would be up in arms about his infringements. People go to prison for this type of stuff. I get the whole, football is surrounded by betting argument, but that doesn't excuse the fact he abused a position of privilege.
As far as I'm aware, there aren't any direct quotes. Just reports from around March that state 'Greenwood will never play for England while Southgate is in charge'. Think they originate from The Sun, so not the most reliable.I seem to have missed his stance position, when did he make it?
If he said it off the record, I could understand the sentiment, those pics video and audio are on the Internet forever now, anyone who picked him would be hounded out by the media.As far as I'm aware, there aren't any direct quotes. Just reports from around March that state 'Greenwood will never play for England while Southgate is in charge'. Think they originate from The Sun, so not the most reliable.
I feel like the Toney punishment is fair.
1) Joey Barton initially got 18 months, then 13 months on appeal, for over 1000+ infringements. So there's a precedent for the FA.
2) Toney's betting is essentially like insider trading. If he was working in another industry, people would be up in arms about his infringements. People go to prison for this type of stuff. I get the whole, football is surrounded by betting argument, but that doesn't excuse the fact he abused a position of privilege.
Surely it's only akin to insider trading if he bet on himself, which would have left himself open to a criminal case as would have raised questions around match fixing. As there is no criminal case and no evidence in the public domain that he bet on himself not sure this is anything like insider training at all.It's not even just that it's inside trading, the rule is to protect the integrity of the game, not so much the bookies. Manipulating match results and events harms the game not just the bookies pockets.
Yorke was different altogether SAF had followed him a while before signing him would have had him sooner had he not signed a new deal with Villa, then SAF couldn't get shot of him as well .. its a tough business transfers.He could also be compared to Dwight Yorke who came here from a lesser PL club and played a major role in us landing the treble. It's a crap shoot, but if he could be signed for 40-50 million then it may be worth a try.
The fact that Toney works within the football industry will expose him to nonpublic knowledge, of which he could fully take advantage of and this does not necessarily have to be information related to himself or Brentford. It's could be former colleagues, acquaintances or friends also working in football at other clubs. That's why I've compared it to insider trading.Surely it's only akin to insider trading if he bet on himself, which would have left himself open to a criminal case as would have raised questions around match fixing. As there is no criminal case and no evidence in the public domain that he bet on himself not sure this is anything like insider training at all.
On a side note the idiots at the Express newspaper released a story online saying Toney was found guilty and would be banned for match fixing - probably a nice little libel suit to cover his fine there!
The equivalent of insider trading in football terms would be if he was betting on Brentford games, in which case, more serious match fixing related charges would be brought against Toney. Whereas betting on non-Brentford games constitutes betting breaches. He's been given an 8 month ban for the latter. The punishment doesn't fit the crime.I feel like the Toney punishment is fair.
1) Joey Barton initially got 18 months, then 13 months on appeal, for over 1000+ infringements. So there's a precedent for the FA.
2) Toney's betting is essentially like insider trading. If he was working in another industry, people would be up in arms about his infringements. People go to prison for this type of stuff. I get the whole, football is surrounded by betting argument, but that doesn't excuse the fact he abused a position of privilege.
Outside of him betting I don't have further information, but as a player he can affect things like, first throw-in, first booking and things like that, this is one of the reasons players are banned from betting on footballThe equivalent of insider trading in football terms would be if he was betting on Brentford games, in which case, more serious match fixing related charges would be brought against Toney. Whereas betting on non-Brentford games constitutes betting breaches. He's been given an 8 month ban for the latter. The punishment doesn't fit the crime.
Edit: Just seen your subsequent post which clarifies your stance a little more. However, I'm not sure what sort of non-public information he would have access to that he could bet on. Maybe another footballer picking up an injury? But I'm pretty sure you can't bet on injuries.
Had he bet on games that he was involved in then I think he would have been in far more trouble.Outside of him betting I don't have further information, but as a player he can affect things like, first throw-in, first booking and things like that, this is one of the reasons players are banned from betting on football
Bit of a stretch - Yorke had nearly a full decade of top division football under his belt. Maybe Saha would be a better comparison.He could also be compared to Dwight Yorke who came here from a lesser PL club and played a major role in us landing the treble. It's a crap shoot, but if he could be signed for 40-50 million then it may be worth a try.
No doubt he would have been, but he could ring up an ex-teammate and say, kick the ball out in first min and I'll give you 10K, I'm not saying he did any of that, but that's an example of why players aren't allowed to bet because it'd be nigh on impossible to prove or stopHad he bet on games that he was involved in then I think he would have been in far more trouble.