Plain Speaking wrote:Kladze wrote:Plain Speaking wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:Plain Speaking wrote:The more we as City fans talk about Tevez the more heated and extreme the comments become about him. Talk of sueing him for his assets! Chelsea have never been paid over Mutu.
Tevez was found guilty of refusing to warm up and now he has not attended training after trying to get permission to be absent.
Let's get his conduct in perpsective. It is highly unprofessional but it is hardly criminal.
Tevez appears a stupid man was is badly advised.
I hope the club tries its best to resolve the situation in a quiet and professional manner.
You are failing to understand the true nature of Tevez' situation. He demanded a transfer, we tried & failed to get him one at the price we were asking so he is making himself a nuisance to us whilst driving down his value in the transfer market.
He was found guilty of misconduct on five counts, not of 'failing to warm up' there is no such charge. We have simply decided it wasn't worth the hassle of trying to prove gross misconduct. He has now failed to turn up for training, whilst in a condition below that required to play Premier League football for our club; the club who pays him hundreds of thousands per week TO PLAY FOOTBALL. He has previously cried off from training with non fotball related injuries, thus maintaining a condition which sees him unfit to do the job for which we are paying him & once again, devaluing himself in the transfer market.
This behaviour would not be tolerated in any other business & it's time people like yourself stopped making excuses for these overpaid shysters. What he is doing is disgusting & totally unacceptable. Even the leader of his own union won't back him on this.
Ted, I respect your opinion. I am not sure Tevez was delibrately tring to decrease his value by troublemaking. I dont think the Bayern incident was pre-meditated on Tevez's behalf. IMO it was 2 hotheads behaving impetuously in a pressure cooker situation.
It is possible missing training is trying to stir up trouble to devalue his price as you say. However the fact he has been making numeruous attempts to get permission from staff and Mancini, only to be ignored implies he genuinely wanted permission. I assume Mancini chose to ignore his telephone messages.
Moreover without the Munich incident, IMO Mancini would have had no problem with letting Tevez go home this International break.
Strangely I believe that Tevez foolishly considers he has been wronged by Mancini!
I agree he is overpaid and spoilt and his behaviour is unacceptable.
Plain speaking?
Did you consider the alternative user name of "total bollox" ?
[highlight]I'm not sure what I have said you have a problem with? I am trying to understand Tevez's position[/highlight] as well as our own clubs. If you dont like what I say "foe" me.
Understand his position? He has no position.
You've been spouting some right rare old tosh mate (sorry but you have) the worst of which being the suggestion that Tevez might have actually done little wrong on that night in Munich.
We all saw what happened with our own eyes. Virtually NONE of us had even the most remote suspicion that there was anything other than a clear decision on his part NOT to play.
The fact that the club then only found him guilty on the lesser charge of "refusing to warm up" is fucking irrelevant - they opted for that because they couldn't prove the gross misconduct 100% (no doubt because a few of his lily livered team mates claimed to have seen and heard nothing).
Whatever mate - jog on.