Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

As we're unlikely to see terraces again at football, this is the virtual equivalent where you can chat to your hearts content about all football matters and, obviously, Arsenal in particular. This forum encourages all Gooners to visit and contribute so please keep it respectful, clean and topical.
User avatar
augie
Posts: 30963
Joined: Mon Jun 18, 2007 3:03 pm
Location: Ireland

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by augie »

KingHenry wrote:
Sat Jul 26, 2025 10:35 pm
mcdowell42 wrote:
Sat Jul 26, 2025 6:37 pm
Wonder how long b4 the 1st whinging starts about this signing 🤔 🤣
Arteta drinking at the last chance saloon. If he doesn't win the league next year he's gone



Dunno if that is the case it absolutely should be the case, but if you listen to reports (both online and in person) many are still going with the narrative that he has doing a brilliant job despite spending almost £800m since the cup win and no trophies. I dont know if people are too easily influenced by others nowadays and follow the popular narrative, or if it is a knock on effect from modern day teachings where we tell kids that playing is important and winning isnt that has somehow diluted the need to win, but it does seem that modern day fans accept failure a lot easier than in the 60s, 70s and 80s, and for a lot of them that dont even class not winning as failure :? :shock:

User avatar
Arsenal Till I Die
Posts: 5418
Joined: Tue May 18, 2010 6:06 pm
Location: North London

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by Arsenal Till I Die »

augie wrote:
Mon Jul 28, 2025 6:30 am
KingHenry wrote:
Sat Jul 26, 2025 10:35 pm
mcdowell42 wrote:
Sat Jul 26, 2025 6:37 pm
Wonder how long b4 the 1st whinging starts about this signing 🤔 🤣
Arteta drinking at the last chance saloon. If he doesn't win the league next year he's gone



Dunno if that is the case it absolutely should be the case, but if you listen to reports (both online and in person) many are still going with the narrative that he has doing a brilliant job despite spending almost £800m since the cup win and no trophies. I dont know if people are too easily influenced by others nowadays and follow the popular narrative, or if it is a knock on effect from modern day teachings where we tell kids that playing is important and winning isnt that has somehow diluted the need to win, but it does seem that modern day fans accept failure a lot easier than in the 60s, 70s and 80s, and for a lot of them that dont even class not winning as failure :? :shock:
Many have come out and said Gyokeres is a Berta signing, after Berta convinced the board that a ready made striker is what the team needs rather than one with potential (Sesko); Arteta wanted Sesko. Berta doesn't seem to be a 'yes' man like Edu, and clearly has a vision in mind to build a winning team - if Arteta falters this season, and Berta DOES have influence with the board, then the pressure could come down on Arteta quite fast.

User avatar
augie
Posts: 30963
Joined: Mon Jun 18, 2007 3:03 pm
Location: Ireland

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by augie »

Arsenal Till I Die wrote:
Mon Jul 28, 2025 2:53 pm
augie wrote:
Mon Jul 28, 2025 6:30 am
KingHenry wrote:
Sat Jul 26, 2025 10:35 pm
mcdowell42 wrote:
Sat Jul 26, 2025 6:37 pm
Wonder how long b4 the 1st whinging starts about this signing 🤔 🤣
Arteta drinking at the last chance saloon. If he doesn't win the league next year he's gone



Dunno if that is the case it absolutely should be the case, but if you listen to reports (both online and in person) many are still going with the narrative that he has doing a brilliant job despite spending almost £800m since the cup win and no trophies. I dont know if people are too easily influenced by others nowadays and follow the popular narrative, or if it is a knock on effect from modern day teachings where we tell kids that playing is important and winning isnt that has somehow diluted the need to win, but it does seem that modern day fans accept failure a lot easier than in the 60s, 70s and 80s, and for a lot of them that dont even class not winning as failure :? :shock:
Many have come out and said Gyokeres is a Berta signing, after Berta convinced the board that a ready made striker is what the team needs rather than one with potential (Sesko); Arteta wanted Sesko. Berta doesn't seem to be a 'yes' man like Edu, and clearly has a vision in mind to build a winning team - if Arteta falters this season, and Berta DOES have influence with the board, then the pressure could come down on Arteta quite fast.



I believe the qpr fan running aftv came out with this line too, and I have to be honest that pleased me cos I have no faith in the cone boy's selections

Does anyone remember back to when the madrid galactico era started under calderon ? Obviously back then they were making massive splashes that no-one else could live with (it was pre state owned clubs and pre oligarch's :roll: ), but it then meant that in other positions they had fcuk all money to spend and the spanish media called their transfer policy "the zidanes and the pavon's" with the insinuation that the pavon's were not good enough for this team. Reason why I am bringing this up is cos I am wondering if we are running a similar (but less high profile) policy now - the brentford midfielder at 31 years of age is a head scratcher for me when merino can surely play that role, and had any of us heard of the valencia centre back 2 months ago ? I know I certainly hadnt. I'm not slating the policy as such cos I continually say that we havent got an endless pit of money, but again it makes signing the chav reject for massive money all the more puzzling

User avatar
OneBardGooner
Posts: 48263
Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 9:41 am
Location: Close To The Edge

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by OneBardGooner »

Put it this way... If Big Vik works out and leads us to the Title; which I'm sure we are ALL hoping he will, then REZULT! ... If he flops and as a result Captain Black gets the Chop! Then it could be said to be a Win-Win situation.


See Mantis! And you said I was one of the 'Miserable' one's on here!

Image



:wink: :wink: :wink:

User avatar
rodders999
Posts: 22748
Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2008 1:59 pm
Location: Diamond Club

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by rodders999 »

I don’t really buy into the Arteta signing, Berta signing. I think there’s a list drawn up with an order of preference but that’s no different than before.

Once upon a time there was a list that read -

1. Mudryk
2. Trossard

Bullet dodged there!

Another list was

1. Rice
2. Caicedo

or vice versa depending on who you believe. You got to have a back up plan. I think Sesko was first choice this summer but when his agent positioned him at 90 mill we told him to go fuck himself and pivoted to BCG.

User avatar
Natural Born Gooner
Posts: 3385
Joined: Tue Aug 28, 2007 12:06 pm
Location: Taking aim, ready to FIRE!

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by Natural Born Gooner »

https://archive.is/20250726180803/https ... -transfer/
Inside Viktor Gyokeres’ transfer to Arsenal: Tough negotiating, Berta’s role and why Sesko interest cooled
James McNicholas and Mario Cortegana
July 26, 2025 6:00 pm

When the white smoke emerged from Arsenal’s transfer conclave, it spelt out the name of Viktor Gyokeres.
Heading into the window, manager Mikel Arteta and sporting director Andrea Berta saw the No 9 position as the north London club’s most critical piece of business.
After months of speculation over Gyokeres, Benjamin Sesko, Ollie Watkins and others, Arsenal’s wait for a new striker is over — and their team’s key requirement has been addressed. The 27-year-old has joined from Portugal’s Sporting CP for a €63.5million fixed fee (£55m, $75m) with a further €10m possible in potential add-ons, signing a five-year contract.
Arsenal are confident they have landed a player ready — and utterly determined — to make an immediate impact. He is a striker for the here and now: someone who Arsenal believe can be a difference-maker this season.
To tell the inside story of this deal, The Athletic has spoken to sources from clubs involved and linked to players, who spoke anonymously to protect relationships.

A year ago, few foresaw this outcome. Before Berta’s appointment in March, Gyokeres was not someone who figured prominently on Arsenal’s recruitment lists.
Given his goalscoring feats for Sporting, the now 26-cap Sweden international was on their radar. When assessed by Berta’s predecessor Edu and his recruitment staff, however, Gyokeres was profiled as a secondary-tier player — one who could be complementary to Kai Havertz, but was not necessarily an upgrade over the German. His physical attributes and finishing prowess were not in doubt, but he did not look an obvious fit for Arsenal’s game model under Arteta.
The preferred target at that stage was RB Leipzig’s Sesko — a deal Arsenal had explored in the summer of 2024, and planned to return to this year.
In March, Edu’s interim successor Jason Ayto was planning a visit to Germany to try to make advances in that direction. It appeared Arsenal were set for the summer of Sesko.
Then, at the end of that month, Berta was appointed, and the dynamic changed.
Ayto’s Germany trip was shelved, and Gyokeres’ name came firmly into contention. Berta was a longstanding admirer of the player, and felt he could be the forward Arsenal need to help them end their current five-year wait for silverware.
Personal preferences were set to one side as Arsenal — with the support of their owners — decided to explore the parameters of both deals. That way, their merits could be discussed and debated from an informed perspective.
Over the previous 18 months, Sesko’s camp had built a strong relationship with Edu and Ayto, as the groundwork was laid for a potential deal to take their man to the Emirates Stadium.
When Berta arrived, it was a different relationship — and although the Sesko camp still believed the 22-year-old Slovenian was Arsenal’s first choice, his representatives did harbour some concerns that the turnover in personnel might jeopardise the transfer.

Sesko’s handlers were wary of committing early, too. They did not want to close down their options, and took an aggressive negotiating position in talks with Arsenal — which did not go down well in north London.
Nevertheless, constructive contact with Sesko’s agent, Elvis Basanovic, continued — Basanovic was a guest of the club at Arsenal’s final home game of the season against Newcastle United.
Arsenal and Berta did explore the purchase of Sesko — lengthy talks were held with the player’s camp, and Leipzig were aware of their interest. The German club’s preference was for a deal to be struck sooner rather than later, to provide clarity and help accelerate their rebuild after finishing just seventh in the Bundesliga last season.
Sesko’s age profile and potential appealed to Arsenal. They had undertaken significant background work on him, having tracked his progress for several years. The idea of recruiting a young player with upside and the prospect of increasing in value while at Arsenal was attractive to the club’s owners.
Limited progress was made. In terms of the fee Leipzig demanded, Sesko’s salary expectations and associated commission, the cost was too high for what Arsenal considered a development project. Sesko’s potential is clear, but Arsenal are in a phase that requires immediate impact.
Sources at the German end of the mooted deal suggest that if the numbers were too steep for Arsenal’s liking, they were simply part of a standard negotiating process and that there was flexibility and room for further conversation. Arsenal struggled to make significant headway in the talks — their chemistry with Basanovic did not mesh easily. Later, as the balance shifted towards Gyokeres, concessions were made by the Sesko camp — but by then, it was arguably too late.

With Arsenal in advanced talks to sign Gyokeres, we analyse his strengths and style, and how it might work out for him in the Premier League
Gyokeres, meanwhile, was beginning to hold significant appeal for the Arsenal hierarchy.
Having turned 27 in June, he was experienced and a proven goalscorer. He had already played in the English league, having signed for Brighton & Hove Albion in 2018 as a 19-year-old and subsequently been loaned to Swansea City and Coventry City, who he later joined permanently. At a time when Arsenal were searching for the missing piece to turn them from contenders into winners, he looked like a player primed for an immediate impact.
Another factor was that Gyokeres believed he had an agreement with Sporting which could allow him to leave the Lisbon side this summer for a fee of €60million (£52m/$69.8m) with a further €10m in add-ons — substantially below his €100m release clause. Berta began exploring the conditions of a deal.
Arteta, however, still needed to be convinced.
Throughout the process of Arsenal’s hunt for a striker, the manager’s preferences have evolved.
His admiration for Alexander Isak has been consistent, but once he’d helped Newcastle qualify for next season’s Champions League, Arsenal felt that signing would be beyond them. By the time Isak made it clear he wanted to leave Newcastle in late July, Arsenal had committed to alternative plans.
In January, Arteta had been fully behind Arsenal’s pursuit of Watkins, but ultimately the club were not prepared to meet Aston Villa’s £60million asking price.

At the start of the summer, Arteta appeared to have a slight preference for Sesko — even if there were concerns about his readiness to make an immediate impact in the Premier League, after only turning 22 in late May.
Ultimately, however, the Spaniard came to agree on targeting Gyokeres. When weighing up the various criteria under consideration, manager and club were aligned that this was the best deal for Arsenal.
It suited the club, of course, to have the names of both Sesko and Gyokeres so prominently in the public discourse: it granted them leverage in talks. Arsenal’s understanding was that both players wanted to join them, and that ultimately they would land one of the two — when the terms were right for the club.
As the weeks went by, however, a move for Sesko began to look less and less likely. Arsenal noted that they appeared to be the only club actively pursuing him, while Gyokeres had other suitors, including Manchester United.

His team were too predictable at times last season. This summer's recruitment should give the manager more flexibility and unpredictability
Those two weren’t the only players given consideration this summer: Watkins was discussed again, although Arsenal had the same reservations over age (he turns 30 in December) and fee. Atletico Madrid’s Argentina international Julian Alvarez was also discussed. But it was Gyokeres on whom they were beginning to train their sights. Aside from his obvious quality as a goalscorer, it was a simpler, more straightforward structure of deal — and a cheaper one, too.
In mid-June, Berta flew to the Spanish island of Menorca for in-person talks with Sporting. It was a significant moment: for all Arsenal’s interest in Sesko, there had never been a summit such as this.
The difficulty was that Sporting seemingly had no intention of honouring their alleged agreement with Gyokeres. They wanted a fixed fee of €70million, with a further €10m in potential add-ons. Although still a €20m discount on the release clause, this was higher than what the player’s camp believed had been agreed.

As June ticked into July, Arteta emphasised the urgency of the situation. With pre-season around the corner, he wanted Arsenal’s centre-forward situation resolved. Their challenging early Premier League fixture list gave the club further impetus to complete a deal as soon as possible.
Agreeing personal terms with Gyokeres was relatively straightforward — throughout the process, he showed a clear determination to move to Arsenal. They also found Hasan Cetinkaya, his agent, straightforward and easy to deal with. They were impressed that he and his client committed so thoroughly to Gyokeres joining Arsenal. It’s unusual for a player of this calibre to refuse to entertain offers from other clubs, but the Swede was insistent: it would be Arsenal and only Arsenal.
Gyokeres’ representatives also handled much of the negotiating, with direct contact between the two clubs relatively limited. Throughout the process, Berta was ably supported by Arsenal’s highly rated director of football operations, James King. Arteta and Arsenal executive vice-chair Tim Lewis were also closely involved, as has been the case across the summer business.
There were direct talks at key moments, though. On the first weekend of July, Berta flew out for more face-to-face talks with Sporting. Negotiations were challenging — the Portuguese club were determined to maximise their return on a player they paid Coventry around €20million for in summer 2023.
Berta returned to the UK without a deal, but talks continued. Gyokeres had been given an extended summer break due to the uncertainty over his future. He was expected to rejoin the Sporting squad on July 11 but instead communicated to club president Frederico Varandas that he would not return under any circumstances.
Gyokeres felt Varandas had reneged on a pact: Arsenal’s offer was already in excess of the suggested €60million-plus-€10m fee, yet there was no agreement between the clubs. Varandas threatened disciplinary action while, behind the scenes, Arsenal worked tirelessly towards completing the transfer.
Eventually, a consensus was reached on the broad scope of a deal: a €63.5million fixed fee, with a further €10m in potential add-ons. With those parameters established, Arsenal submitted their first formal bid. Agent Cetinkaya also agreed to waive a 10 per cent commission payment to facilitate the transfer.

Even then, the deal was not done. Arsenal still had to negotiate the terms of those add-ons, with Sporting pushing for bonus payments they felt were more easily achievable. This dragged the process out for more than a week. As the squad flew to Singapore to begin Arsenal’s three-match Asian tour, Berta stayed behind to see the deal through.
In the final stages of negotiations, Sporting fielded an enquiry from Manchester United, but Gyokeres was not for turning. He was already fully committed to moving to the Emirates.
The last part of the process dragged out as Sporting dug in. It was a frustrating process — one which left Berta, Gyokeres and others greatly exercised — but finally on Friday, July 25, a full agreement was reached. People briefed on the figures say €5m of the add-ons will trigger at a set number of appearances while there are further payments tied to Gyokeres’ goal involvements and the team qualifying for the Champions League.
So Arsenal have their man, and Arteta has his striker.
Arsenal have landed a centre-forward with a remarkable resume. His last two seasons have yielded 97 goals and 28 assists in just 102 appearances. Arsenal see Gyokeres as a dynamic, dominant attacker — an aggressive runner and direct ball-carrier. They admire his movement and work-rate, both on and off the ball. Crucially, they also think he has the personality to handle the pressure and deliver match-winning moments. Gyokeres’ confidence is underlined by his decision to take the number 14 shirt once worn by Arsenal’s record goalscorer, Thierry Henry.
Gyokeres might look a less natural fit for their system than Havertz, but that may be a red herring. Arsenal will have to adapt to Gyokeres’ strengths, as much as he will have to adapt to theirs. The arrival of the Swede might herald an evolutionary turning point for Arteta’s team — a shift to a more direct, transitional style of football.
For Berta too, this is a significant signing. Although it seems the club reached a consensus on this being the right deal for Arsenal, Gyokeres was a name he championed. Their new sporting director has left his mark on this summer’s business.

Now for Gyokeres to make his mark on the pitch.

User avatar
OneBardGooner
Posts: 48263
Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 9:41 am
Location: Close To The Edge

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by OneBardGooner »

:shock:

User avatar
Midz
Posts: 5799
Joined: Sun Aug 04, 2013 6:36 pm
Location: West London.

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by Midz »

Has he scored yet?

Not wanting to get carried away until he starts banging 'em in.

mcdowell42
Posts: 18386
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 6:19 pm
Location: ireland

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by mcdowell42 »

He's 9m in the fantasy football

User avatar
DB10GOONER
Posts: 62201
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2007 2:06 pm
Location: Dublin, Ireland.
Contact:

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by DB10GOONER »

augie wrote:
Mon Jul 28, 2025 3:19 pm
Arsenal Till I Die wrote:
Mon Jul 28, 2025 2:53 pm
augie wrote:
Mon Jul 28, 2025 6:30 am
KingHenry wrote:
Sat Jul 26, 2025 10:35 pm
mcdowell42 wrote:
Sat Jul 26, 2025 6:37 pm
Wonder how long b4 the 1st whinging starts about this signing 🤔 🤣
Arteta drinking at the last chance saloon. If he doesn't win the league next year he's gone



Dunno if that is the case it absolutely should be the case, but if you listen to reports (both online and in person) many are still going with the narrative that he has doing a brilliant job despite spending almost £800m since the cup win and no trophies. I dont know if people are too easily influenced by others nowadays and follow the popular narrative, or if it is a knock on effect from modern day teachings where we tell kids that playing is important and winning isnt that has somehow diluted the need to win, but it does seem that modern day fans accept failure a lot easier than in the 60s, 70s and 80s, and for a lot of them that dont even class not winning as failure :? :shock:
Many have come out and said Gyokeres is a Berta signing, after Berta convinced the board that a ready made striker is what the team needs rather than one with potential (Sesko); Arteta wanted Sesko. Berta doesn't seem to be a 'yes' man like Edu, and clearly has a vision in mind to build a winning team - if Arteta falters this season, and Berta DOES have influence with the board, then the pressure could come down on Arteta quite fast.



I believe the qpr fan running aftv came out with this line too, and I have to be honest that pleased me cos I have no faith in the cone boy's selections

Does anyone remember back to when the madrid galactico era started under calderon ? Obviously back then they were making massive splashes that no-one else could live with (it was pre state owned clubs and pre oligarch's :roll: ), but it then meant that in other positions they had fcuk all money to spend and the spanish media called their transfer policy "the zidanes and the pavon's" with the insinuation that the pavon's were not good enough for this team. Reason why I am bringing this up is cos I am wondering if we are running a similar (but less high profile) policy now - the brentford midfielder at 31 years of age is a head scratcher for me when merino can surely play that role, and had any of us heard of the valencia centre back 2 months ago ? I know I certainly hadnt. I'm not slating the policy as such cos I continually say that we havent got an endless pit of money, but again it makes signing the chav reject for massive money all the more puzzling
Madrid were basically a state owned team since the 40s augie. Franco and his fascist bankers financed and bailed them out on numerous occasions over the decades. In Spain they were nicknamed "the team of the regime" for a very good reason. I've always fucking despised them and the whores and all the hysterical soccer fanboy horseshit around the "el classico". Should be called el dive-ico. :censored:

Sid33
Posts: 176
Joined: Mon Dec 30, 2024 3:04 pm

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by Sid33 »

A lot of people hedging their bets here, so I'm going to ask all the usual moaning crunts on here this question!
WHO ARE YOU GOING TO BLAME IF GYOKERES IS A FLOP OR PRAISE IF HE IS A SUCCESS? Arteta or Berta?

User avatar
DB10GOONER
Posts: 62201
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2007 2:06 pm
Location: Dublin, Ireland.
Contact:

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by DB10GOONER »

Sid33 wrote:
Tue Jul 29, 2025 3:54 pm
A lot of people hedging their bets here, so I'm going to ask all the usual moaning crunts on here this question!
WHO ARE YOU GOING TO BLAME IF GYOKERES IS A FLOP OR PRAISE IF HE IS A SUCCESS? Arteta or Berta?
:rubchin:

Depends.... will you fuck off in a huff again if we say something negative about Temu Pep?


:D :wink: :wink:

Retro Gunner
Posts: 4376
Joined: Wed May 18, 2011 3:37 pm
Location: Spitalfields

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by Retro Gunner »

Sid33 wrote:
Tue Jul 29, 2025 3:54 pm
A lot of people hedging their bets here, so I'm going to ask all the usual moaning crunts on here this question!
WHO ARE YOU GOING TO BLAME IF GYOKERES IS A FLOP OR PRAISE IF HE IS A SUCCESS? Arteta or Berta?

Isn't it obvious??

We'll blame Lego Head if he flops and praise Berta if he's a success. It's the way we unashamedly roll. :barscarf: :barscarf:

:lol: :wink:

User avatar
Nick Nack
Posts: 748
Joined: Sun Dec 10, 2023 7:59 pm
Location: On a small island

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by Nick Nack »

Sid33 wrote:
Tue Jul 29, 2025 3:54 pm
A lot of people hedging their bets here, so I'm going to ask all the usual moaning crunts on here this question!
WHO ARE YOU GOING TO BLAME IF GYOKERES IS A FLOP OR PRAISE IF HE IS A SUCCESS? Arteta or Berta?
It's less about whether Gyokeres is a flop or a success, but rather whether Diet Pep can actually deliver. He's had the financial backing, he's bought the players he wants, now he's got to actually win something, regardless of Gyokeres of whether delivers, although the two are reasonably linked.

Even the old French fucker managed to deliver 3 FA cups in his worst years and it's only when he dropped out of the top 4 trophy that he was sacked.

Sid33
Posts: 176
Joined: Mon Dec 30, 2024 3:04 pm

Re: Viktor Gyökeres - aka ‘Biggus Vikkus,’ ‘Big Cock Gyok,’ ‘Gyogi Bear’

Post by Sid33 »

I've had few quid at 12/1 day after he signed! Lucky if you can get 6/1 now
And I didn't huff you Dublin Brit :wink: :lol: I was drunk :lol:

Post Reply