SKYS SUNDAY SUPPLEMENT

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.
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REB
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SKYS SUNDAY SUPPLEMENT

Post by REB »

nicked this from the front page as i feel it would be wasted on any other part of the forum
also to show that not all journos are anti arsenal.


sorry gooner ed :wink:


http://www.skysports.com/tv_show/story/ ... 25,00.html



football is out of control and must be addressed by the authorities before more damage is done to the game.

That's the view of Patrick Barclay of The Times , who was reacting after seeing Arsenal midfielder Aaron Ramsey taken to hospital with a badly broken leg after a red-carded tackle from Stoke defender Ryan Shawcross.

The injury was reminiscent of the bad injuries suffered by Ramsey's team-mates Eduardo and Abou Diaby in previous seasons, and while Barclay does not believe there was any malice on Shawcross's part, he feels there are too many wild challenges which would not be tolerated abroad.

"What we saw yesterday for me was completely unacceptable in the same way as it was unacceptable when Martin Taylor inadvertently, accidentally broke Eduardo's leg," he told Sunday Supplement.

"There's a wildness and a physicality about the English game which I don't think is healthy."

"During the match yesterday one of the best chances fell to Eduardo," he added. " A challenge came in from the side, a fairly lose desperate one, and Eduardo didn't put his foot through the ball, and that's because he broke his leg before.

"Now that is why this is unacceptable, because it is anti-football. And Eduardo's career will probably never be the same again."

Furious
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger was furious in the aftermath of the match and suggested that too many teams were over-physical against his side.

Neil Custis of The Sun agreed with Wenger's comments and believes most sides adopt physical tactics against the Gunners because they simply cannot cope with their technical brand of football.

"I have a lot of sympathy for Wenger and I think he is absolutely spot on," he said. "I think teams do go to be over-physical against Arsenal, outside of the laws.

"Their football is quick and fantastic and so wonderful to watch and when they're on form they're probably the most entertaining team around and teams go out to stop them.

"They go out to wind them up, they go out to... I wouldn't say injure them, but they certainly go out to foul and to shake Arsenal up.

"Because Arsene Wenger is not a friend of all the managers - he's not the one who has a drink with them afterwards, he's doesn't do things with the LMA and stuff like that - I think he is an easy target for a lot of managers to have a go at him as well as paint this picture that 'Wenger's just whinging' or 'Wenger's just whining'".

"You can also point to Arsenal's disciplinary action, which isn't the greatest, but I think often that is more of a reaction to referees not defending them.

"Some teams simply cannot beat Arsenal at football so they go about it in a different way and it's down to

rigsby
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Post by rigsby »

Great points, and IN A SHOCK on Talksport, Adrian Durham's actually come out with some very good points about Shawcross and Stoke. For once someone on that station has stood up and analysed them

(he even defended Van Persie's red last year)

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flash gunner
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Re: SKYS SUNDAY SUPPLEMENT

Post by flash gunner »

REBEL GOONER wrote:nicked this from the front page as i feel it would be wasted on any other part of the forum
also to show that not all journos are anti arsenal.


sorry gooner ed :wink:


http://www.skysports.com/tv_show/story/ ... 25,00.html



football is out of control and must be addressed by the authorities before more damage is done to the game.

That's the view of Patrick Barclay of The Times , who was reacting after seeing Arsenal midfielder Aaron Ramsey taken to hospital with a badly broken leg after a red-carded tackle from Stoke defender Ryan Shawcross.

The injury was reminiscent of the bad injuries suffered by Ramsey's team-mates Eduardo and Abou Diaby in previous seasons, and while Barclay does not believe there was any malice on Shawcross's part, he feels there are too many wild challenges which would not be tolerated abroad.

"What we saw yesterday for me was completely unacceptable in the same way as it was unacceptable when Martin Taylor inadvertently, accidentally broke Eduardo's leg," he told Sunday Supplement.

"There's a wildness and a physicality about the English game which I don't think is healthy."

"During the match yesterday one of the best chances fell to Eduardo," he added. " A challenge came in from the side, a fairly lose desperate one, and Eduardo didn't put his foot through the ball, and that's because he broke his leg before.

"Now that is why this is unacceptable, because it is anti-football. And Eduardo's career will probably never be the same again."

Furious
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger was furious in the aftermath of the match and suggested that too many teams were over-physical against his side.

Neil Custis of The Sun agreed with Wenger's comments and believes most sides adopt physical tactics against the Gunners because they simply cannot cope with their technical brand of football.

"I have a lot of sympathy for Wenger and I think he is absolutely spot on," he said. "I think teams do go to be over-physical against Arsenal, outside of the laws.

"Their football is quick and fantastic and so wonderful to watch and when they're on form they're probably the most entertaining team around and teams go out to stop them.

"They go out to wind them up, they go out to... I wouldn't say injure them, but they certainly go out to foul and to shake Arsenal up.

"Because Arsene Wenger is not a friend of all the managers - he's not the one who has a drink with them afterwards, he's doesn't do things with the LMA and stuff like that - I think he is an easy target for a lot of managers to have a go at him as well as paint this picture that 'Wenger's just whinging' or 'Wenger's just whining'".

"You can also point to Arsenal's disciplinary action, which isn't the greatest, but I think often that is more of a reaction to referees not defending them.

"Some teams simply cannot beat Arsenal at football so they go about it in a different way and it's down to
Agree with all of that

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augie
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Post by augie »

Paddy Barclay always strikes me as a guy that is not afraid to stand by his own opinions regardless of whether they fly in the face of the rest of the sewer inhabiting scum journo's 8)

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Dec
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Post by Dec »

Watched Sunday Supplement and was as always very impressed with Barclay, refreshing change from the other Stoke apologists.
rigsby wrote:Great points, and IN A SHOCK on Talksport, Adrian Durham's actually come out with some very good points about Shawcross and Stoke. For once someone on that station has stood up and analysed them

(he even defended Van Persie's red last year)
I mentioned on the Alan Brazil thread that I didn't want to listen to Durham - should have remembered he really doesn't like Stoke! I still won't listen or read any gutter press/radio shows - we ain't gonna get any sympathy

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g88ner
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Post by g88ner »

I was looking on the Times website yesterday to see what Patrick Barclay had to say on the matter.... but there was nothing :( thankfully, he didn't let me down after all :barscarf: top journalist! 8)

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