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Thread: James McClean M Wrexham b.1989

  1. #1921
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    Well by writing something like that they could be done for libel I'd imagine, its a fairly strong "fact" to put in the public domain for a newspaper, and if you didn't provide proof or something they probably felt they couldn't and/or shouldn't publish that bit, either way it would be fairly divisive I'd imagine.
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  2. #1922
    Capped Player DannyInvincible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by paul_oshea View Post
    Well by writing something like that they could be done for libel I'd imagine, its a fairly strong "fact" to put in the public domain for a newspaper, and if you didn't provide proof or something they probably felt they couldn't and/or shouldn't publish that bit, either way it would be fairly divisive I'd imagine.
    Ah, I get what you mean. I should have e-mailed them the video too then. I will do so now; they might return it to its original state.

    Campbell does have history here: http://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/loc...case-1-2804930

    GREGORY Campbell has said he is pleased “justice has been done” following the conviction of a man who posted “menacing” comments about him on Facebook.

    Unemployed chef Daryl O’Donnell wrote on the social networking site that Mr Campbell “should get a bullet in his head” for comments the East Londonderry DUP MP made following the publication of the Saville Report last June into the Bloody Sunday killings.

    He appeared before Londonderry Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday charged with the offence on June 20 last year. District Judge Barney McElholm found him guilty.

    O’Donnell said his post was in response to Mr Campbell’s claims that the Saville Report had cost too much money.

    But the MP argued that there are members of the nationalist community who would try to “re-write history” and that he would not apologise for the comments he made following the report.

    Mr Campbell said yesterday: “I’m pleased that the justice system has worked in this instance and it would be good if it would work in a whole series of other instances.”

    Explaining the background to the case, Mr Campbell said: “When the Saville Report was issued, I made it very clear that the families of the people who died in Bloody Sunday had received closure because they had filed their position and been vindicated.

    “I made the point that while they had received closure, there were thousands of others who hadn’t. People had been campaigning for many years for someone to apologise for their murders.

    “There was murder and violence before Bloody Sunday carried out by the IRA. My view was there are some people in the republican community who want to re-write history.

    “They want to say that Bloody Sunday started the Troubles.

    “I was very clear that that was not the case. But there were a number of people who didn’t like the truth being told.”

    O’Donnell, from Belvedere Park in Londonderry, will be sentenced on July 29 following the preparation of a pre-sentence report.

    In the comment, which the 31-year-old denied was menacing or threatening, he wrote: “He’s a dirty Orange lying b...... and should get a bullet in the head. At least he would have got it for something.”

    Mr Campbell was alerted to the comment by his constituents.

    When asked if he feared for his life when he read it, Mr Campbell told the News Letter: “People took to Facebook and began to vilify me. I don’t have any problem with people taking issue with something I say. If it’s controversial, people will have something to say. It’s fair game.

    “But in this debate, people crossed the line. You can’t simply threaten to murder someone and that’s what this post indicated.”

    Mr Campbell, who did not attend Wednesday’s hearing, said there was a lesson to be learned from this court case.

    “People who put things on social networking sites should be careful and clear that the message they’re putting up could be used against them in a court of law.”

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    I see that the Indo piece was taken from the Daily Telegraph, either that piece is correct or Martin O Neill is not telling the truth. I would believe O Neill ahead of the Telegraph anyday, especially when the story concerns an Irishman from a nationalist background. Has the Irish Indo soccer corespondent made any comment on this story, he was unhappy that McClean did not wear a poppy last year, so it would be interesting to find out where he stands on this "story" in his paper.

  4. #1924
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    Don't always get the chance to clarify my points on here, but here goes. When I posted the original article I mentioned it was probably a beat up and from subsequent comments this has proved to be. McClean did not deserve sanction for his comments on twitter and as Danny has previously mentioned he has become an easy victim of his own infamy.

    I would disagree with Paul about his ability as he changed the game last weekend when he came on. Johnson was so predictible in his play running into space and then hoofing it into the box and really not giving his forwards much opportunity. When our James replaced him, his directness lead to Sunderland's goal and his general play showed how dangerous he can be. In the dying seconds he blasted over, when with a bit of luck, he could have scored an equaliser. O'Neill could only have been impressed by his 15 minute cameo.

    What concerned me, as I am a worrier, was that if he is not getting on with his team, that O'Neill would let him go to help team harmony, a fact that would be so detrimental for McClean. If the article is what it seems to be, my concerns are probably misplaced however!

  5. #1925
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    "Journey from footballer to political football not in McClean's interest": http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/...330697521.html

    Sunderland winger should forget Twitter and focus on his football career, writes MICHAEL WALKER

    On an ordinary weekday at the back end of the last century, an extraordinary man of that time sat in his armchair in Glasnevin, north Dublin, and talked of an Irish life that began in 1923. It was a privilege to meet Con Martin; it was shaking hands with history. Yesterday in Sunderland, meanwhile, Martin O’Neill sat back and discussed, with some wariness, and perhaps weariness, James McClean.

    McClean is back in the headlines in the week that Con Martin’s death one month short of his 90th birthday also, rightly, made news. Martin’s passing was momentous; McClean’s Twitter-tweeting was apparently frivolous, but

    . . . maybe not. What connects the two men is the game they play, who they have played it for, and Irish identity.

    More than 60 years on from Con Martin’s pivotal presence in an escalating dispute between the Belfast-based Irish Football Association (IFA) and the Dublin-based Football Association of Ireland (FAI), the identity issue remains – and it remains contentious.

    The reaction to James McClean’s recent tweet concerning a Wolfe Tones song has been stronger than the 23-year-old from Derry anticipated, though it did not require much foresight to think the DUP might not appreciate it. They haven’t, just in case you’ve missed it, building on a dislike of McClean that springs from his movement from the sporting jurisdiction of IFA to FAI.

    There is very little McClean could ever do to win over the constituency represented by Gregory Campbell.

    Strident sense

    The prospect of him wanting to is equally thin. McClean has previously and continues to display the belligerent self-righteousness of many a young man. He would appear to have a strident sense of his Derry self and plenty would say fair play to him for that. And by the way, was Wolfe Tone himself not rather loud on the topic of self-determination?

    The problem for McClean and Sunderland is that they are in England and his current newsworthiness is Irish and literally unsporting. McClean is fortunate that in O’Neill he has a manager who knows the geography of the issue. O’Neill said yesterday that the player has not been fined two weeks’ wages – but even the manager’s empathy may have been tested by the repetition of McClean’s darts into broadcast.

    The message to the player from his manager was to “clear his head” of non-football matters and concentrate on rediscovering the form of 12 months ago. O’Neill, as he said, wants McClean to consider why Pablo Zabaleta marked him more closely this season than last and what the winger is going to do about that.

    Sunderland need McClean to be a nuisance to the opposition, not to Sunderland.

    So the young man is off Twitter until the end of the season at least. But that’s been said before and there would hardly be shock were McClean to reappear on the medium in the near future. He may have shown naivety in not expecting such a broadside response, although having received death threats in the past and endured the Poppy-day furore, he should know already what he means to some people.

    Political football

    Deep down there must also be some personal awareness that in the journey from footballer to political football, McClean loses part of the reason Sunderland want him in the first place. This is a moment when McClean’s career can go either way.

    It was the same, only different, for Con Martin. Martin’s incredible ability saw him make his Eire – as they were known – debut in June 1946 as a goalkeeper. Five months later he made his Ireland – as Northern Ireland were then known – debut in Scotland at left back.

    At the time he had left Drumcondra for Glentoran and found digs at the top of Belfast’s Shankill Road. It was an imaginative choice for a Dublin Catholic.

    Martin was not alone in playing for both Irelands. The kits were the same and often so were the personnel. In 1932 a united Ireland team was all but agreed – Wolfe Tone would have been delighted – only for IFA and FAI bureaucracy to break down. But team-swapping continued. Until the late 1940s this was the way of things.

    As Martin said: “When I went there [Glentoran] I was asked to play for Northern Ireland and I did and I enjoyed it. There was no conflict between the IFA and the FAI.

    All played

    “I can remember playing for Northern Ireland at Windsor Park on a Saturday and the south of Ireland on a Monday at Dalymount Park. Players like Peter Farrell, Bud Aherne, Tommy Eglington, they all did that. Jackie Vernon, Davie Cochrane, Billy McMillan, they all played for the south.”

    In April 1949 Eire left the Commonwealth as a consequence of the Republic of Ireland Act and six months later, at Goodison Park, the team representing the Republic of Ireland became the first from outside the UK to beat England on English soil.

    Con Martin, playing now at centre-half, scored the first in that historic, symbolic 2-0 win.

    “We were the first foreign team to beat England at home, though we weren’t put down as a foreign team,” Martin recalled. “But that established the Republic of Ireland at international level.”

    Growing self-confidence within the FAI meant that the following March, when the IFA called for Martin again, and Manchester United’s Johnny Carey, there was tension. Now at Aston Villa, where he alternated between goalkeeper, defence and midfield, Martin went to play for “Northern” Ireland on the weekend Villa were playing Man United. Matt Busby did not allow Carey to go.

    Next day

    United won 6-0 and as Martin explained: “The next day the Villa chairman called me into his office and showed me a lot of letters from people in the South calling me Judas for playing for the North.

    “Villa were getting threatening letters saying they wouldn’t be welcome in the South if I kept playing for the North. That was when the director of Aston Villa asked me to refuse to play for Northern Ireland ever again.”

    Martin agreed, reluctantly. Others did the same. “I was very sorry; that was the turning point.” Martin sadly recalled that he stayed in touch with the people he lived with on the Shankill Road until the late 1960s when they advised him that it was best for them if he ceased contact.

    The times were changing. But as Con Martin’s past and James McClean’s present prove, just not that much.

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  7. #1926
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    Was McClean roundly booed yesterday by his own club's supporters or is this more overblown nonsense?: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/foo...ter-farce.html

    And the moment [McClean] stepped on to the Stadium of Light pitch to replace £5.5million striker Danny Graham, jeers and boos rang round the Wearside ground.

    McClean’s first touch resulted in more boos and the abuse continued as he struggled to make an impact and help his side to a vital victory after three consecutive defeats.

    McClean was presented with several opportunities to provide crosses for top scorer Steven Fletcher, and one chance to shoot at Mark Schwarzer, but he squandered possession.

    The unhappy reception followed McClean’s latest run-in on Twitter earlier in the week which forced the 23-year-old to delete his account, under advice from his manager and the club.
    And why are they still repoting that O'Neill forced him off Twitter?

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    Quote Originally Posted by DannyInvincible View Post
    Was McClean roundly booed yesterday by his own club's supporters or is this more overblown nonsense?: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/foo...ter-farce.html



    And why are they still repoting that O'Neill forced him off Twitter?
    He has become an easy target for such rags, particularly when the team are not playing well. Have they commented on last week's performance when he nearly got Sunderland a draw in 15 minutes of football? Probably not. McClean has a lot to offer Sunderland and I am sure O'Neill sees that.

  9. #1928
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    He appears to have split opinion on the Sunderland forum: http://www.readytogo.net/smb/showthread.php?t=764480

    Sympathy is evident, as is condemnation of the boo-boys, who were a minority, from what I can make out. He's also subject to criticism himself on the basis of both his ability and personality, however, whilst others are in acknowledgement of his talent and utility.

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    Quote Originally Posted by DannyInvincible View Post
    He appears to have split opinion on the Sunderland forum: http://www.readytogo.net/smb/showthread.php?t=764480

    Sympathy is evident, as is condemnation of the boo-boys, who were a minority, from what I can make out. He's also subject to criticism himself on the basis of both his ability and personality, however, whilst others are in acknowledgement of his talent and utility.

    Wow that's a long thread, 860 posts since Feb 13, in comparison I think there are about 70 posts in this thread since the same date.
    If I have a spare week I might read the thread, seems to be a very busy forum there, but even so he is attracting a lot of interest
    I can't see a longer thread there, the next biggest I saw was only about 250 posts.

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    Maybe James was trying to get more twitter followers than Rihanna?

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    The hotel didn't have colouring in books, so James did this instead!


    http://www.independent.ie/sport/socc...-29146119.html

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    I think he did well against Poland, so it is no surprise that Trap is going to start him. He is a bit different to the normal type of wide player you find in the English premier league these days, so he will always be an asset to a manager who has enough self-confidence to not worry too much what the media and public consenceses is this week. I hope he does well tonight and help us get a draw, which would keep us in hunt for qualification. There is enough about him that can cause the best defences problems.

  15. #1934
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    Quote Originally Posted by wonder88 View Post
    I hope he does well tonight and help us get a draw, which would keep us in hunt for qualification.
    Get us a win ya mean!?
    Folding my way into the big money!!!

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    An away draw would certainly keep us in the hunt, i.e. at least until we meet Austria next tuesday.

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    Quote Originally Posted by wonder88 View Post
    I think he did well against Poland, so it is no surprise that Trap is going to start him. He is a bit different to the normal type of wide player you find in the English premier league these days, so he will always be an asset to a manager who has enough self-confidence to not worry too much what the media and public consenceses is this week. I hope he does well tonight and help us get a draw, which would keep us in hunt for qualification. There is enough about him that can cause the best defences problems.
    I agree totally. I think while in many ways he's quite predictable, he is dangerous enough with it to cause any defender problems.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bungle View Post
    I agree totally. I think while in many ways he's quite predictable, he is dangerous enough with it to cause any defender problems.
    We had a player called Richard Myles in our team a few years ago. All he did was run really fast in a straight line and cut the ball in from the end-line. We called it "the Myler", and even though you knew exactly what he was going to do, it was absolutely devastating!

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  20. #1938
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    Fairly dire today, though nearly the whole Sunderland team was. He tried to run at the United defence at times, but lads like Rafael, who can match his pace, dealt with him no problem. Seems like a real flash in the pan type player at club level now.
    Author of Never Felt Better (History, Film Reviews).

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    He was poor enough alright but, as you say, Sunderland were generally awful. They didn't look remotely like a team fighting for their lives. I think McClean was one of the few who looked committed at least. I can't see Sunderland staying up now, especially without Fletcher and Cattermole. It will be interesting to see what becomes of McClean and O'Shea if they do go down, if anything.

  22. #1940
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    Sunderland have just "parted company" with Martin O'Neill: http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/21985808

    You have to wonder why now exactly? Losing 1-0 to league-leading Manchester United, albeit at home, isn't exactly a "final straw" type event. It reminds me of Wolves sacking McCarthy at a relatively late stage of the season previously. Sunderland are surely doomed to relegation now. I hope this doesn't affect McClean negatively. I'd imagine O'Neill had a good understanding of him that a new manager will be unlikely to possess.

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