reddogmatt.
First Team Squad
the blokes a cnut....glad i threw a bag of chips at him once...f***ing prick
Roy is not only thick as shit but he's also a c**t who I'm quite happy f**ked off when he saw the first opportunity to do so
Roys comment was childish, wym fam?
:yawn:
Have you ever actually met the bloke, or are you judging him off his TV persona?
Fuckinghell. f*** slating Roy, it's Walters who gets my attention here. Absolute poor, poor, poor bloke. f***ing brutal stuff."The majority of Keano’s ire, however, seems to have been reserved for Jon Walters, the former O’Ireland and Stoke striker, who recently broke down on an Irish TV chat show while describing a three-day period in his life last year when he lost his brother and unborn child, before discovering his daughter had been diagnosed with a debilitating curvature of the spine. “He’s crying on the TV about his family situation,” harrumphed Keane, trademark empathy to the fore. “Maybe he should lie low for a while. Have a look at his medals? That wouldn’t take long.”
Jesus Christ Roy. Back to being a rentamouth.
He's had a go at Ferguson too but I don;t think he's wrong with this one.
https://talksport.com/football/597838/roy-keane-feud-sir-alex-ferguson-manchester-united/
Roy was in Prezzo in Woodbridge when he was manager of Ipswich. We were with the grandchildren at the next table. I did not want to intrude so left them alone, but we were close enough to listen in!!
Seemed a normal family man, polite to the staff and not the evil ogre, a persona he adopts on occasions in public.
He's had a go at Ferguson too but I don;t think he's wrong with this one.
https://talksport.com/football/597838/roy-keane-feud-sir-alex-ferguson-manchester-united/
I'm more inclined to respect a bastard who is a bastard all the time rather than a part-time one who has opinions for money as Stewart Lee would say of Jeremy Clarkson.
Developing a taste for prawn sandwiches clearly.https://www.skysports.com/share/11813788
Don’t know if this signals an end to his Football Management career, but it’s going to be a hell of a ride considering some of his previous appearances.
“What I loved about Brian Clough was that he kept everything very simple,” said 48-year-old Keane, speaking on Sky Sports about Clough’s team talks.
“The beauty was it would have been simple messages, we had huge respect for him, he would always talk about our own strengths.
“We had a tough season in 1992 but the previous year we got to the League Cup final and in my first season we got to an FA Cup final.”
He added: “We had a lot of good players and Brain Clough would just say go and express yourselves.
“The big blow to us was losing Teddy Sheringham, nobody wanted to see him leave and everyone was upset about it, but when a player is determined to leave it’s difficult to stop.”
“He wanted to go back to London and joined Spurs, and without a goalscorer we struggled.
“We struggled all season, had a few injuries. I played a number of games as centre half.
“It was a tough season and it was a shocking way to end for Brian Clough’s career but we just couldn’t score goals, had a lot of pressure. “We lost a lot of games by the odd goal and that’s not good. We just struggled to score. It was a huge disappointment.”