by sandman » 12 Oct 2014 18:04
by YateleyRoyal » 13 Oct 2014 12:13
sandman I'm sure with book deals and money that comes his way for writing TSF that he was really going to admit to being the player behind it to some bloke in the queue for the papers.
by tidus_mi2 » 13 Oct 2014 13:01
YateleyRoyalsandman I'm sure with book deals and money that comes his way for writing TSF that he was really going to admit to being the player behind it to some bloke in the queue for the papers.
But he looked him in the eye.
by Forbury Lion » 13 Oct 2014 14:24
by Silver Fox » 13 Oct 2014 17:19
by Ian Royal » 13 Oct 2014 18:23
Forbury Lion If you bump into him again, can you pass on some advice re: punditry.
1. Avoid wearing a stripy shirt or white on the tv, stripes causes inference and white is dull.
2. Remember the camera is always on you, So when Leroy Rosenior is speaking look at him. Your eyes sometimes roll all over the place.
by Forbury Lion » 14 Oct 2014 12:20
by PieEater » 14 Oct 2014 13:47
by Forbury Lion » 14 Oct 2014 13:57
by Armadillo Roadkill » 14 Oct 2014 19:41
by GH Royal » 15 Oct 2014 09:04
by JSK » 17 Oct 2014 00:10
by Ouroboros » 17 Oct 2014 09:44
by RoyallyFcuked » 23 Oct 2014 20:58
by Westwood52 » 25 Oct 2014 09:58
Handsome Man Good thread starter
He is the secret footballer though
by From Despair To Where? » 25 Oct 2014 13:07
Westwood52Handsome Man Good thread starter
He is the secret footballer though
Not sure-don't think he has had the number of Clubs/Money referred to in the books.
Bullard perhaps ?
by Dawn » 30 Oct 2014 15:22
Three weeks ago, I was talking to an American player who I know extremely well. He was capped many times by his country and tagged with the “all-American” label from the age of 15.
He went on to play in Europe with a great deal of success and actually made a fortune by sending his wages back to the US when the exchange rate was two dollars to the pound … but I digress.
And he always tries to persuade me to join him in the MLS whenever we talk on “Skype”.
Up until now, I haven’t been all that interested, but then he moved to New York and the football snob in me came racing to the surface.
The Red Bulls have a collection of very good footballers. Thierry Henry is there, Tim Cahill and, of course, my friend. The Red Bulls are a team that I could certainly get on board with.
So I asked my agent to explore the possibility and what he came back with was interesting, if not disappointing. A representative told him that the offer was $35,000 (£20,800) a year.
Now I don’t know if you’ve ever tried to rent an apartment in New York – I used to own one – but a family could not afford a shoebox in Manhattan, let alone have money to live on, for $35,000 a year.
A few days later, my friend called me. “How did you get on?” he asked. I told him about the offer and there was a strange silence at the end of the phone before he said: “Well, what did you expect? It’s the experience that you want, not the money, right?”
It was a lesson for me. We may speak the same language, we may like the same things and we may appreciate a good footballer when we see one, but clearly my American cousin and I are still very capable of losing the meaning of something in translation.
Trust me, I would love to play for the Red Bulls. But if players are earning millions of dollars a year, why on earth would anybody, effectively, pay to play for them?
And yet, that is exactly what has happened.
In 2013, Peguy Luyindula signed for the Red Bulls from cash-rich French club Paris Saint-Germain. It was strange because PSG had just been acquired by the multibillionaire Qatari fund, Qatar Sports Investments.
The club went on to sign a host of world-class players for eye-watering transfer fees. Luyindula seemed to be leaving the club just as the big money was arriving.
“I thought you wanted to do what Peguy did,” my friend said. “He got a huge pay-off to leave PSG and the Red Bulls gave him a crappy contract but he didn’t care because he wanted his family to come to America to live.
“We got his whole family green cards, visas and jobs so that, when he finishes playing, they can still live in America. I thought you just wanted to come to live in the States, too?”
No wonder it’s taken the Americans so long to fall in love with the beautiful game.
by Royalcop » 23 Nov 2015 22:46
by stealthpapes » 24 Nov 2015 08:55
Royalcop Just bumping this to say his latest book TSF: Access all Areas is an entertaining read though with a very sobering (and genuinely upsetting) ending. It's also so blatantly Kitson now it's hilarious; tells a story of him getting a red card at Old Trafford, a game his club then managed to get a draw from with 10 men. What I do like is that his love for our club continually shines through and he clearly regrets leaving when he did.
by Ian Royal » 24 Nov 2015 20:03
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