Kes If soccer was like American Football and you could only bring Caskey on for (free) kicks he'd have been great.
Indeed - as in the Bournemouth game.
by Baines » 03 Nov 2007 08:21
Kes If soccer was like American Football and you could only bring Caskey on for (free) kicks he'd have been great.
by thefruits » 03 Nov 2007 08:43
Far Canal Darren Caskey was the best passer of a ball that I have ever seen play for Reading, even better than Super Si. The way he could put spin on a ball was just sublime. It was a shame that he could never really get the hang of tackling.
To answer the question, yes, an onform Caskey would get into this team. He had much more ability than Gunnar.
by Henleyensian » 03 Nov 2007 09:05
Cripple Creek For those who mentioned Grant Brebner. I live in Melbourne and Grant plays for Melbourne Victory where he is something of a hero. I wouldn't place too much emphasis on that however as Ozzie soccer is, frankly, of an atrocious standard. Grant has basically had a serious gambling addiction for most of his professional life and the word is that he has only recently managed to knock it on the head. He was interviewed recently in the Melbourne Age and said going to Reading was a massive blunder on his part - he went and bought a house in the Thames Valley countryside on his wages and felt completely isolated and lonely.
He doesn't blame anyone but himself that things didn't work out as they may have done and he certainly doesn't blame Reading. He actually sounded in the interview like a really nice bloke. He says he loves Australia but is planning to move back to Scotland when he retires which is where his heart is. Wish I had a link to the article but it's been taken off the newspaper's site as it was a month or two ago.
Hope that may have been of some interest although, probably not.
by The whole year inn » 03 Nov 2007 09:12
by Ian Royal » 03 Nov 2007 09:41
PREMIERSHIP_ROYAL if your talking about past players making it into our team why not go with the obvious one and say parky in the middle with harper.
but in answer to the original question yes an in from caskey could easily make it untill we sort out our midfeild and use it as our strength again
by Riseley » 03 Nov 2007 10:38
by Gordons Cumming » 03 Nov 2007 11:17
by Southbank Old Boy » 03 Nov 2007 17:12
International Royal The reason Caskey never played in the top division in his career was because he wasn't good enough. He was a traffic bollard for the second part of his career.
by Forbury Lion » 03 Nov 2007 19:40
Caskey had more hunger than any Reading player past or present.... How else do you explain his waistline?PEARCEY Osborn yes. Caskey No. Not dedicated enough although a good passer of the ball and talented enough but not convinced he was hungry enough to be able to perform with consistency at the highest level.
by Barry the bird boggler » 03 Nov 2007 19:42
by winchester_royal » 03 Nov 2007 23:10
by Barry the bird boggler » 04 Nov 2007 07:32
by readingbedding » 04 Nov 2007 12:53
Royalee On today's evidence, easilly.
by KC Royal » 05 Nov 2007 12:29
HenleyensianCripple Creek For those who mentioned Grant Brebner. I live in Melbourne and Grant plays for Melbourne Victory where he is something of a hero. I wouldn't place too much emphasis on that however as Ozzie soccer is, frankly, of an atrocious standard. Grant has basically had a serious gambling addiction for most of his professional life and the word is that he has only recently managed to knock it on the head. He was interviewed recently in the Melbourne Age and said going to Reading was a massive blunder on his part - he went and bought a house in the Thames Valley countryside on his wages and felt completely isolated and lonely.
He doesn't blame anyone but himself that things didn't work out as they may have done and he certainly doesn't blame Reading. He actually sounded in the interview like a really nice bloke. He says he loves Australia but is planning to move back to Scotland when he retires which is where his heart is. Wish I had a link to the article but it's been taken off the newspaper's site as it was a month or two ago.
Hope that may have been of some interest although, probably not.
Thanks for that. I was quite a Grant Brebner fan and thought he had potential from the first time I saw him play - at Wrexham, his first match for us. I happened to say "That boy will turn out to be very good" to the woman next to me, and she replied "I am his mother", so I was rather pleased I had said the right thing.
I understood he left Reading because of his gambling problems and went home where he could be monitored but I felt it was our loss. When you remember that he was one of Tommy Burns's imports, and that those who were still there did not show their best form until Pardew was in charge, I think he would have done quite well, and who knows what might have happened had he still been there at the time of the play-off at Cardiff.
I am glad to hear that he made something of his career in the end and is appreciated down under.
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