by stealthpapes » 03 Jul 2013 14:08
by Simon's Church » 03 Jul 2013 14:09
by The Real Sandhurst Royal » 03 Jul 2013 14:21
by Hoop Blah » 03 Jul 2013 14:39
Sebastian Lots of comments on the Jobi thread about how he's an excellent captain but, realistically, what the hell does a captain do in modern football?
They seem pretty pointless.
by melonhead » 03 Jul 2013 15:19
by TBM » 03 Jul 2013 15:33
by creative_username_1 » 03 Jul 2013 15:59
Simon's Church It's a well known fact that a good captain can improve a team's performance by between 17 and 22%. It's actually just behind motivational booing on the list of 5 most important factors in the Brendan rodgers guide to promotion handbook.
by melonhead » 03 Jul 2013 16:09
Strangely, the most successful side I played in had the most unappreciated captain. Thinking back, there were a lot of things that were ignored or swept under the carpet simply because things were going so well for us on the pitch, but the one thing that still grates, despite the good times, was that our captain will go down as one of the most successful in the club's history without really earning it. Selfishness is the worst trait a captain can have and this player had it in spades.
On one occasion our club did not want to negotiate. We had exhausted most of our bargaining power and on the day that we were due to sign (all bonuses have to be submitted to the league by a certain date) we had one last option, which was to boycott the team photo. This may sound like a fairly hollow threat, but from a sponsorship and political point of view, it is a huge deal. On the morning photo shoot we refused to change into the new kit. The chief executive pleaded with us, but we stood firm, all except one. Outside on the pitch, alone, stood our captain, in full kit and ready to go. At a time when we needed a leader he had sold us down the river. He was never forgiven, and from that moment was shunned by the squad; anything he tried to organise fell on deaf ears and any time he needed a favour he didn't get it. It was no coincidence that this lack of leadership contributed to a very tough time for the team on the pitch.
by kwik-silva » 03 Jul 2013 16:30
melonheadOn one occasion our club did not want to negotiate. We had exhausted most of our bargaining power and on the day that we were due to sign (all bonuses have to be submitted to the league by a certain date) we had one last option, which was to boycott the team photo. This may sound like a fairly hollow threat, but from a sponsorship and political point of view, it is a huge deal. On the morning photo shoot we refused to change into the new kit. The chief executive pleaded with us, but we stood firm, all except one. Outside on the pitch, alone, stood our captain, in full kit and ready to go. At a time when we needed a leader he had sold us down the river. He was never forgiven, and from that moment was shunned by the squad; anything he tried to organise fell on deaf ears and any time he needed a favour he didn't get it. It was no coincidence that this lack of leadership contributed to a very tough time for the team on the pitch.
i make the captain in the right there.players obviously taken it too far with an actual boycott.
by melonhead » 03 Jul 2013 16:32
by Ouroboros » 03 Jul 2013 16:46
melonheadStrangely, the most successful side I played in had the most unappreciated captain. Thinking back, there were a lot of things that were ignored or swept under the carpet simply because things were going so well for us on the pitch, but the one thing that still grates, despite the good times, was that our captain will go down as one of the most successful in the club's history without really earning it. Selfishness is the worst trait a captain can have and this player had it in spades.
if the secret footballer is kitson, then that captain would be murts woukdnt it?
by Bandini » 03 Jul 2013 21:18
Sebastian Lots of comments on the Jobi thread about how he's an excellent captain but, realistically, what the hell does a captain do in modern football?
They seem pretty pointless.
by Wizard » 04 Jul 2013 06:12
melonheadOn one occasion our club did not want to negotiate. We had exhausted most of our bargaining power and on the day that we were due to sign (all bonuses have to be submitted to the league by a certain date) we had one last option, which was to boycott the team photo. This may sound like a fairly hollow threat, but from a sponsorship and political point of view, it is a huge deal. On the morning photo shoot we refused to change into the new kit. The chief executive pleaded with us, but we stood firm, all except one. Outside on the pitch, alone, stood our captain, in full kit and ready to go. At a time when we needed a leader he had sold us down the river. He was never forgiven, and from that moment was shunned by the squad; anything he tried to organise fell on deaf ears and any time he needed a favour he didn't get it. It was no coincidence that this lack of leadership contributed to a very tough time for the team on the pitch.
i make the captain in the right there.players obviously taken it too far with an actual boycott.
by RoyallyFcuked » 04 Jul 2013 16:00
by melonhead » 04 Jul 2013 16:07
typical lefty union typeWizardmelonheadOn one occasion our club did not want to negotiate. We had exhausted most of our bargaining power and on the day that we were due to sign (all bonuses have to be submitted to the league by a certain date) we had one last option, which was to boycott the team photo. This may sound like a fairly hollow threat, but from a sponsorship and political point of view, it is a huge deal. On the morning photo shoot we refused to change into the new kit. The chief executive pleaded with us, but we stood firm, all except one. Outside on the pitch, alone, stood our captain, in full kit and ready to go. At a time when we needed a leader he had sold us down the river. He was never forgiven, and from that moment was shunned by the squad; anything he tried to organise fell on deaf ears and any time he needed a favour he didn't get it. It was no coincidence that this lack of leadership contributed to a very tough time for the team on the pitch.
i make the captain in the right there.players obviously taken it too far with an actual boycott.
Not really. It's like a strike. I know train drivers who won't talk to other train drivers because they came in during a strike in the 1980s. I would say the captain got off lightly.
by Ian Royal » 04 Jul 2013 16:46
by Royal91 » 05 Jul 2013 00:18
by soggy biscuit » 05 Jul 2013 08:05
RoyallyFcuked I have read the secret footballer and tbh I don't think its Dave Kitson.
by Z175 » 08 Jul 2013 22:37
soggy biscuitRoyallyFcuked I have read the secret footballer and tbh I don't think its Dave Kitson.
It is so obviously him
by The Rouge » 08 Jul 2013 23:48
Z175soggy biscuitRoyallyFcuked I have read the secret footballer and tbh I don't think its Dave Kitson.
It is so obviously him
It's definitely a footballer who started non league, won promotion to the PL, had a teammate who won his first England cap, made a big money move before falling out of favour and has captained a team. Oh and who had an idea for a semi autobiographical book.
http://www.portsmouth.co.uk/sport/pompe ... -1-3026897
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