so, to summarise, two men, and one of their wives, were on the same flight, and didn't speak to one another.
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so, to summarise, two men, and one of their wives, were on the same flight, and didn't speak to one another.
Yes, to summarise, that just because we in the age of where boredom hits in after a mere second of dead air, where a radio news reports needs to to have an audible background beat, does not mean that the act of shunning between 2 of the most compelling characters in the world of football is not an interesting slice of intense action drama.
http://www.rte.ie/news/2015/0619/709...y-keane-court/
Taxi for Fateh Kerar (as Keane is acquitted of the road rage incident) and who goes in to the witness protection programme :)
http://waterfordwhispersnews.com/201...ction-program/
Were the Jury all UTD Fans.
Mind you if the Trial was in Manchester that is unlikely….. boom boom…...
https://twitter.com/JoeyThorpe96/sta...853824/photo/1
Sky Sports think this is actually Roy Keane or are in on the joke?
Of course they're not in on the joke. The news media is gradually just turning into **** People On Twitter Said.
Someone needs to set up a "**** people on twitter said" account on twitter, and let the whole mess collapse in on itself
Roy Keane book openly criticises cramped conditions in mother's womb
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Roy Keane's new autobiography is set to dominate the back pages of newspapers and much office chatter if the details slowly emerging ahead of its publication are anything to go by.
The book, provisionally titled Everybody is a Pr*ck Except Me, largely focuses on the later years of his playing career, and brings the reader right up to 2014.
One detour from this formula sees the Cork man discuss one of his earliest childhood memories - being stuck in a cramped womb.
'Very little planning went in to the whole construction, obviously. We're talking about a bodily process that has seen billions born throughout the history of mankind and here I am, a future United captain, struggling for room to fully stretch out my legs,' reads the opening of the third chapter of Keane's book.
'You've, what, nine months to really plan it; to make changes, adjustments - Jesus - even get a decent light in the place but they didn't, and by the time I was born I had plenty to say to my parents about it. My first words were 'amateur hour' and 'I'm disappointed in you'.
Keane's book, which is sure to be a bestseller, also covers much of his time away from the game post-retirement. 'I had played at the highest level and never really had an opportunity to enjoy some time off,' Keane says, as he details the year he spent travelling the globe in an attempt to see some of the world's greatest cultural sites and feats of human achievement.
'Visited the Sistine Chapel: boring. Sh*t technique for a painter if we're being honest. The Pyramids: built too far out of town with poor public services and feckin* sand everywhere. Gaudi's cathedral: the pr*ck never bothered to finish it, like...' Keane goes on like this for 4 chapters.
Keane's ghostwriter, Roddy Doyle, revealed that the experience was arduous at times. 'I wrestled with Roy on the number of character assassinations he should put in the book,' explained Doyle, 'but in the end he got his way and the bit about Gandhi being 'f*cking useless in a street fight' stayed in'.
(c) Waterford Whispers http://waterfordwhispersnews.com/
Linked with the vacant Hull job.
How great would it be if there was an Irish manager in the Premier League again?
The natives may look at it differently but from an Irish perspective, it could mean an opportunity for Lenihan, a chance for Meyler to push his Ireland credentials and who can forget all the Irish players he signed for Sunderland?
I very much doubt he is going to get the Hull job. He just seems to be the token name linked with anyone and everyone in the bottom half of the Premiership or the top half of the Championship when a vacancy arises.
I like this photo of him celebrating all the same. Shows there is a human/football supporter side to him. You can see Martin O'Neill though thinking about what to do next.
Attachment 2442
Class photo! He really took off, which is possibly more unusual seeing as it was a penalty. I think the fact that it went in off the post added to the relief though, there was that split second when you think it's been missed.
If he had used that high jumping ability in his playing days, he might have been a half decent player.
was watching Barcelona train today
Stephen Elliott's latest piece has a bit lamenting Roy Keane's decision to cancel 2006-07 Championship-winning Sunderland's celebratory street-parade: https://www.sportdec.com/app/article...l1mjwuau0pjf2h
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stephen Elliott
Tommy Tiernan recalls the time he got the Roy Keane ‘scowl’Quote:
Stephen Elliott
"It turned out to be a great night where leading Irish comedian Tommy Tiernan played a blinder in performing a fantastic little gig for us.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9MU5vM4mRE
Roy ain't a people person ...........and for at least some of his football management he wasn't a footballers person either.............
I hope he is working on it if he wants another go at management............