Cocacolajojo wrote:Cocacolajojo wrote:Alex Sapphire wrote:Let's play a little game:
publish links to MEN articles which are clearly biased against City and we'll get a league table going. For fun we could see if there are any equally biased against them and gather evidence of the bias that some see and some don't.
Whos first?
To get your game going, here's a positive article that I found thanks to Ted:
http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/sport/football/manchester_city/s/1592340_stuart-brennans-match-report-city-1-swansea-0
You have to keep score now Alex.
I don't know if this can result in any points but the MEN did not print any stories regarding the so called 'unrest' in the squad. Surely that has to be counted as a positive point?
Ted Hughes wrote:BUMP
http://menmedia.co.uk/manchesterevening ... ie?rss=yes
Neil Leigh: City boss could learn a thing or two from Fergie
Neil Leigh
October 30, 2012
In anyone’s language, Manchester City suffered a major communication breakdown as they crashed to a disastrous 3-1 Champions League defeat as they were taken to the cleaners away at Ajax last Wednesday.
These days, of course, the public image that the Blues like to send out tends to be carefully micro-managed to the nth degree.
But peek beneath the facade, however, and it’s plain in any language that things are slightly askew in the Blue corner right now.
Otherwise why would skipper Vincent Kompany have felt obliged to launch a sidesweep at the media after Saturday’s scratchy 1-0 win over Swansea as the Belgian defender sought to quash pre-match talk of a player mutiny against manager Roberto Mancini?
However, the real nub of the issue currently stymieing the Blues was somewhat given away three days earlier by plain-speaking defender Micah Richards deep in the bowels of the Amsterdam ArenA after that Dutch spanking.
Richards revealed that the City players had problems adapting to the three- man defensive system, which Mancini suddenly adopted midway through the game, before adding that the City squad much preferred to operate around a traditional flat back four.
That revealing insight brought a flash of Mancini’s renowned spiky temper to the surface as, not for the first time this season, he slapped a high-profile England star down in public, insisting top players should be able to cope with any system.
It’s all rather unbecoming conduct for the reigning champions, hinting at the fault-lines which are hampering the Blues’ grand designs of building a global dynasty to equal and eclipse that of neighbours United.
However, the real question is why anyone should be surprised that the lines of dialogue appear to be blurred and muddled right now at the Etihad.
For months, Mancini’s weekly Friday press briefings at Carrington have been met by a growing sense of frustration from the massed ranks of the media.
Instead of clarity and insight, the hacks are often treated to a litany of anodyne platitudes.
“It is important to win,” has become one of the regular Mancini mantras, closely followed by another of his favourite soundbites: “It is football.”
Bobby Manc? It’s been more like Bobby Bland at times.
Yes, in his defence, Mancini is speaking in a foreign tongue and, yes, there is more than a suggestion that his command of the Queen’s English is much more rounded than he likes to let on in public.
But the awkward, stilted grammar and robotic football speak carry uncanny echoes of another Italian, Fabio Capello, when he used to hold baffling court with the bemused English press.
Now after guiding City to the FA Cup and Premier League within the space of year, no-one can accuse Mancini of failure.
For now, however, there appears to be a yawning chasm if not in the affections of the Blues supporters, then certainly in those of some of his players.
Maybe Mancini could do worse than heed a lesson from across town. Sir Alex Ferguson’s Glaswegian accent may never have left him but Fergie’s message is always crystal clear and understood.
And when needed, Fergie’s own code of in-house omerta is usually followed to the letter of the law – although of late even he has had problems with the Rio Ferdinand anti-racism T-shirt bust-up.
It’s also telling that when Fergie has trawled for coaching talent from abroad, he has always taken on board people with an excellent command of English such as former Portuguese head coach Carlos Queroz and Dutch guru Rene Meulensteen.
In contrast, Mancini’s latest coaching recruit, Angelo Gregucci – one of a raft of Italian back-room staff brought in to replace home-grown predecessors – hardly speaks a word of English
Maybe next time Mancini could do worse than take a leaf out of Fergie’s book.
Has anyone ever read a bigger pile of blatant, biased, arse kissing, rag PR excuse fucking shite than that ?
Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:BUMP
http://menmedia.co.uk/manchesterevening ... ie?rss=yes
Neil Leigh: City boss could learn a thing or two from Fergie
Neil Leigh
October 30, 2012
In anyone’s language, Manchester City suffered a major communication breakdown as they crashed to a disastrous 3-1 Champions League defeat as they were taken to the cleaners away at Ajax last Wednesday.
These days, of course, the public image that the Blues like to send out tends to be carefully micro-managed to the nth degree.
But peek beneath the facade, however, and it’s plain in any language that things are slightly askew in the Blue corner right now.
Otherwise why would skipper Vincent Kompany have felt obliged to launch a sidesweep at the media after Saturday’s scratchy 1-0 win over Swansea as the Belgian defender sought to quash pre-match talk of a player mutiny against manager Roberto Mancini?
However, the real nub of the issue currently stymieing the Blues was somewhat given away three days earlier by plain-speaking defender Micah Richards deep in the bowels of the Amsterdam ArenA after that Dutch spanking.
Richards revealed that the City players had problems adapting to the three- man defensive system, which Mancini suddenly adopted midway through the game, before adding that the City squad much preferred to operate around a traditional flat back four.
That revealing insight brought a flash of Mancini’s renowned spiky temper to the surface as, not for the first time this season, he slapped a high-profile England star down in public, insisting top players should be able to cope with any system.
It’s all rather unbecoming conduct for the reigning champions, hinting at the fault-lines which are hampering the Blues’ grand designs of building a global dynasty to equal and eclipse that of neighbours United.
However, the real question is why anyone should be surprised that the lines of dialogue appear to be blurred and muddled right now at the Etihad.
For months, Mancini’s weekly Friday press briefings at Carrington have been met by a growing sense of frustration from the massed ranks of the media.
Instead of clarity and insight, the hacks are often treated to a litany of anodyne platitudes.
“It is important to win,” has become one of the regular Mancini mantras, closely followed by another of his favourite soundbites: “It is football.”
Bobby Manc? It’s been more like Bobby Bland at times.
Yes, in his defence, Mancini is speaking in a foreign tongue and, yes, there is more than a suggestion that his command of the Queen’s English is much more rounded than he likes to let on in public.
But the awkward, stilted grammar and robotic football speak carry uncanny echoes of another Italian, Fabio Capello, when he used to hold baffling court with the bemused English press.
Now after guiding City to the FA Cup and Premier League within the space of year, no-one can accuse Mancini of failure.
For now, however, there appears to be a yawning chasm if not in the affections of the Blues supporters, then certainly in those of some of his players.
Maybe Mancini could do worse than heed a lesson from across town. Sir Alex Ferguson’s Glaswegian accent may never have left him but Fergie’s message is always crystal clear and understood.
And when needed, Fergie’s own code of in-house omerta is usually followed to the letter of the law – although of late even he has had problems with the Rio Ferdinand anti-racism T-shirt bust-up.
It’s also telling that when Fergie has trawled for coaching talent from abroad, he has always taken on board people with an excellent command of English such as former Portuguese head coach Carlos Queroz and Dutch guru Rene Meulensteen.
In contrast, Mancini’s latest coaching recruit, Angelo Gregucci – one of a raft of Italian back-room staff brought in to replace home-grown predecessors – hardly speaks a word of English
Maybe next time Mancini could do worse than take a leaf out of Fergie’s book.
Has anyone ever read a bigger pile of blatant, biased, arse kissing, rag PR excuse fucking shite than that ?
I would appreciate Stuart Brennan's comments on this.
Peter Doherty (AGAIG) wrote:Someone needs to inform the degenerate that wrote the article that our club aspires to be like Barcelona. Not the poisonous, cheating piss-can led scum at the theatre of american banjo-playing shopping-mall owners.
Mikhail Chigorin wrote:Peter Doherty (AGAIG) wrote:Someone needs to inform the degenerate that wrote the article that our club aspires to be like Barcelona. Not the poisonous, cheating piss-can led scum at the theatre of american banjo-playing shopping-mall owners.
Nice.
Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Mikhail Chigorin wrote:Peter Doherty (AGAIG) wrote:Someone needs to inform the degenerate that wrote the article that our club aspires to be like Barcelona. Not the poisonous, cheating piss-can led scum at the theatre of american banjo-playing shopping-mall owners.
Nice.
Stuart Brennan's response to Neil Leigh's words:
"As for Neil Leigh's piece, it is written in a weekly column intended to be provocative and strong - there have been pieces in it which have commented on problems at United as well.
Don't hide your head in the sand - what Richards said DID reveal a problem. No-one at City has denied that - what they got angry at was the national papers' suggestion that there was mutiny afoot.
Neil's take on it is fair comment, if you ask me, even if I don't entirely agree with him"
So there you are,what Neil said is fair comment as far as Stuart is concerned although of course he doesn't deal with any of the specifics apart from the one he thought he felt he could partly justify. Sorry Stuart but for me some of the positives you might have gained by coming onto the forums has just been lost by that response.
Beefymcfc wrote:Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Mikhail Chigorin wrote:Peter Doherty (AGAIG) wrote:Someone needs to inform the degenerate that wrote the article that our club aspires to be like Barcelona. Not the poisonous, cheating piss-can led scum at the theatre of american banjo-playing shopping-mall owners.
Nice.
Stuart Brennan's response to Neil Leigh's words:
"As for Neil Leigh's piece, it is written in a weekly column intended to be provocative and strong - there have been pieces in it which have commented on problems at United as well.
Don't hide your head in the sand - what Richards said DID reveal a problem. No-one at City has denied that - what they got angry at was the national papers' suggestion that there was mutiny afoot.
Neil's take on it is fair comment, if you ask me, even if I don't entirely agree with him"
So there you are,what Neil said is fair comment as far as Stuart is concerned although of course he doesn't deal with any of the specifics apart from the one he thought he felt he could partly justify. Sorry Stuart but for me some of the positives you might have gained by coming onto the forums has just been lost by that response.
Hard-hitting investigative journalism, that's what they are all about.
PS. Where did you get that from; PM?
stuart brennan wrote:I'm not going to post any more on this thread, as I don't want to wander between here and Blue Moon.
But the fact someone posted Neil Leigh's article proves my point.
Why did no-one post my article with Vincent Kompany? (it was my interview that had him laying into journalists, and I gave it to the City website).
Why did no-one post my match report from last night's paper, which strongly defended City?
Then, as soon as something with a negative City vibe comes along, it gets pounced on as proof.
Is it because some people are not trying to find out if there actually is balance, but rather trying to prove their opinion, that the MEN is unbalanced and anti-City?
stuart brennan wrote:I'm not going to post any more on this thread, as I don't want to wander between here and Blue Moon.
But the fact someone posted Neil Leigh's article proves my point.
Why did no-one post my article with Vincent Kompany? (it was my interview that had him laying into journalists, and I gave it to the City website).
Why did no-one post my match report from last night's paper, which strongly defended City?
Then, as soon as something with a negative City vibe comes along, it gets pounced on as proof.
Is it because some people are not trying to find out if there actually is balance, but rather trying to prove their opinion, that the MEN is unbalanced and anti-City?
Return to The Maine Football forum
Users browsing this forum: john@staustell, Nickyboy, Paul G and 164 guests