So Sir Alex has come out after the match and made comments directed towards Luis Suarez that he
thinks he is a disgrace and should never play for our club again.
"He's a disgrace to Liverpool Football Club, that certain player should not be allowed to play
for Liverpool again."
I personally think Sir Alex is a Hypocrite with a very short memory of his own "Honourable"
club.
Goal: What we learned this week... Wayne Rooney deserves a second fine from Sir Alex
Ferguson after another rotten display
The striker was woeful in defeat to Newcastle, Andre Villas-Boas was snubbed by the cool kids,
Suarez & Dalglish disgraced Liverpool (again), and Barton was a whopping hypocrite
View the full story here: Goal
A news article on 2012-01-06 07:54:00 from: Goal
This news item has been reproduced from today's media.
Goal: What we learned this week... Wayne Rooney deserves another fine from Sir Alex
Ferguson after another rotten display
The striker was woeful in defeat to Newcastle, Andre Villas-Boas was snubbed by the cool kids,
Suarez & Dalglish disgraced Liverpool (again), and Barton was a whopping hypocrite
View the full story here: Goal
A news article on 2012-01-06 07:54:00 from: Goal
This news item has been reproduced from today's media.
Goal: What we learned this week... Wayne Rooney deserves a second fine from Sir Alex
Ferguson after another rotten display
The striker was woeful in defeat to Newcastle, Andre Villas-Boas was snubbed by the cool kids,
Suarez & Dalglish disgraced Liverpool (again), and Barton was a whopping hypocrite
View the full story here: Goal
A news article on 2012-01-06 07:54:00 from: Goal
This news item has been reproduced from today's media.
David Moyes's post-match comments after his Everton's side 2-0 defeat to Manchester City on
Saturday were remarkable. And not in a good way.
After sending his team out to once again play their own unique brand of thuggish anti-football,
he had the temerity to accuse City's captain, Vincent Kompany, of "doing" Tim Cahill after the
Everton man had attempted yet another two-footed scissor lunge on the City player.
Mario's artistic side Manchester City striker Mario Balotelli might be a nutcase, but he is not a
hypocrite. And he's also surprisingly media savvy. Well, that's one way of viewing his latest
antics. City's players we given 'I ♥ MCR' t-shirts to show solidarity with the city in the wake
of last week's riots.
Photo by Ed Schipul
How essential is watching an all star game to being a fan of a sport?
That's the question I am asking myself with the MLS All Star Game later tonight. ESPN2 will be
broadcasting MLS All Stars v. Manchester United (The Rematch) beginning at 8:30 PM ET and I suspect
the ratings for the event will be decent (relatively speaking).
As usual, by Monday mid-day SI.com's teeming soccer site will include my comprehensive MLS
review. There, you'll get the scoop and skinny on Week 19, complete with updated Power
Rankings.
Here's a supplemental attachment, if you will, with a couple of important points you won't find
in the SI.
So the season MLS wanted to stop thuggish play has become the season where talented players get
their legs and ankles broken. Last night Javier Morales of Fake Salt Lake joined Dallas's David
Ferreira and our own Steve Zakuani on the inactive-for-months list with a broken ankle. The
challenge on Morales was cynically issued by a well-beaten Marcos Mondaini, who showed zero
interest in going after the ball.