Pathetic stuff from Taggart
Mancini has got inside his head again.
what did the alky do now?
Big time. He will have to retire from ill health if this keeps up.
Evans scored an own goal but flag went up for offside, ref rightly overruled the linesman and awarded the goal. Fergie was seething that a decision went against him at Old Trafford and by the fact that Newcastle had the cheek to leave United waiting on the pitch for the second half to kick off and decided to try and bully the ref and fourth official
i wish the FA had the same balls as that magner cunt and stood up to him
What an utter bullying hun cunt.
What an utter bullying hun cunt.
Iām amazed that game was allowed go ahead at Old Trafford today after the brush with death a Manchester United player had just a mere three days ago.
Great stuff from Fergie. Picked an awful team but got the three points which has a lot of ABUās foaming at the mouth tonight.
Mersey Mike Dean had a shocker and needed putting in his place. That āgoalā was clearly offside, if that is not interfering with play I donāt know what is.
Anyway Fergie is sharing a nice bottle of red with Alan Pardew as we speak.
Do people still even use this term? Was it big fat cuddly Des that originally came up with this shit? Pub I was in last night had the Stoke Pool game on, ridiculous the amount of Man United gobshite fans who were getting some strange enjoyment out of watching Stoke win a game against Liverpool. Some were even chanting shit at a telly when Suarez came on.
Baffling the mentality of the typical Irish EPL fan.
They were probably listening to the Liverpool fans cheering on Newcastle during the afternoon.
I agree though, a baffling mentality.
wtf some muldoon being a diehard manu fan :lol: :lol: :lol:
Ive seen it all now
+1
EPL Fans,GGA Fanss & Rugby fans are a laughing stock
[size=3][font=arial]Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson has accused Alan Pardew of hypocrisy after the Newcastle manager criticised his behaviour on Boxing Day.[/font][/size]
[size=3][font=arial]Newcastle manager Pardew said the FA should have punished Ferguson for confronting officials during Manchester Unitedās 4-3 win at Old Trafford.[/font][/size]
[size=3][font=arial]āAlan Pardew is the worst for haranguing referees. His whole staff [do it] every game,ā Ferguson said.[/font][/size]
[size=3][font=arial]āI wasnāt abusive of the referee - some managers push the linesman and make a joke of it,ā said the Scot.[/font][/size]
[size=3][font=arial]"Iām not making a joke of it. I think [the goal] shouldāve been disallowed, I really do. [Pardew] shoves the referee and makes a joke of it, and heās got the cheek to criticise - itās unbelievable.[/font][/size]
[size=3][font=arial]āHe forgets the help I gave him by the way.ā[/font][/size]
:lol:
Glad to see Fergie taking that creep Alan Pardew down a peg or two. One good season Pardew had and he was getting handed an 8 year contract. :rolleyes:
Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson is a great manager, but sets bad example with ugly tirades.
When Uefa launched its much-vaunted Respect campaign, its president Michel Platini called on a leading Champions League manager to say a few supportive, stirring words.
The manager, a revered figure in football, delivered eloquently on the need to respect referees.
āThere has been, over the years, an increase in attempts to manipulate the referee, such as players crowding around the referees, and it canāt do the refereeās confidence any good āyouāre undermining his authority,āā said the Manchester United manager. āThe backing-off process and respect of decisions is a step we hope will improve the quality of referees and the game itself.ā So said Sir Alex Ferguson.
So said the man who strode on to the pitch at Old Trafford on Boxing Day, remonstrating with referee Mike Dean over a contentious decision to award Newcastle Unitedās second goal. So letās run through those campaign points again.
Respect of decisions? No. Undermining the refereeās authority? Yes. Backing-off? Hardly. Ferguson was in Deanās face.
If the Manchester United manager had behaved so stroppily in a Uefa game, demonstrating such dissent, Platiniās organisation would have banned him to the stands for a game or two. Sadly, the Football Association, the Premier League and weak-willed officials like Dean are too scared of Ferguson. Heās a brilliant manager, a legend of the game, and weāll miss him deeply when he retires, but such emasculating of officials damages the game he loves with a passion.
As Ferguson set fire to the FAās own already-battered Respect document and the Premier Leagueās anaemic āGet On With The Gameāā treatise, two elements of his character glistened under the Old Trafford lights, the philosopher and the fighter. First, Ferguson was making a legitimate footballing enquiry about why Jonny Evansā own goal was allowed to stand when Papiss CissĆ© was patently interfering with play by distracting, even panicking, the Manchester United centre half. Ferguson had a point.
The combative in Fergusonās DNA then replaced the cerebral. He lectured Dean, the assistant referee Jake Collin and the fourth official Neil Swarbrick. This was potentially intimidating. Ferguson is a formidable character, a titan of his trade, and they would inevitably feel in awe, perhaps in fear. Old Trafford is the Scotās lair, and it takes men of substance to stand up to him, to remind him of the āRā word. Respect.
Remarkably, Dean failed to mention to the FA Fergusonās on-field protest which was highlighted by the BBC Five Liveās excellent commentary at the time, by Match of the Day later on and by all other journalistic outlets with editorial integrity.
The FA points out that it is unable to take retrospective action, that United would simply have thrown any charge back by saying that the referee did not have a problem with Ferguson as Dean did not either send the Scot to the stands or note the offence in his report. So the spotlight falls on Dean for either being weak or simply not wanting the grief of calling to account somebody as powerful as Ferguson. Dean let down his colleagues on Boxing Day.
Along with a complicit FA, Dean has set a damaging precedent, allowing managers to confront them without fear of punishment. As one footballing administrator observed: āA high-profile figure calling it on with a referee is not going to help the Respect campaign at any level.āā At any level: Hackney Marshes or Old Trafford. Fergusonās pitch incursion, and prolonged second-half chuntering at officials, complicates the missionary grass-roots work of FA staff, attempting to foster respect for officials. When aspiring managers and players note the most famous footballing icon squaring up to officials, they will feel less bound by the rules of Respect.
The greatest manager to dominate a dugout since Bob Paisley, Ferguson must remember he is a role model at times, a manager who sets the tone for so much in this wonderful, maddening game he has done so much for. We know Ferguson is the master of the Machiavellian, the minds-games guru who might even use an incident with a referee to fire up players and supporters when his team struggle for a spark. Ferguson is in the results business, trying to pull away in the title race, and his will to win can elbow others, even an old codger called respect, out of the way in the headlong rush to the finishing line.
Those of us long-term admirers of Ferguson feel frustration and also confusion at his stance. This is a man who talks often of the importance of respect, of how society has sadly become an increasingly questioning, adversarial place. He sees a lack of respect in some young professionals, and reprimands those who dare refer to him as āFergieā. He dislikes those reporters who attend United press conferences in jeans. Ferguson is big on respect.
This season, Ferguson has commendably spoken of the need for respect amongst supporters, even writing to those United fans travelling to Anfield in September āto stand with our great neighbours Liverpoolā after the Hillsborough findings. More recently, he called on players like Jason Roberts to show respect for the Kick It Out campaign.
Respect features in his thinking day after day, on issue after issue.
So Ferguson needs to look before he leaps on to the pitch.
Sir Alex being a hugely disagreeable, hypocritical cunt is hardly breaking news but Pardew has some neck to be putting the boot in after shoving a linesman earlier on in the year-the poor man could have been killed.
āSir Alexā again :rolleyes:
FOAD you servile cuntflap.
Dp
this is the reason fergie is so rattled latelyā¦Benitez is going to finish FergusonĀ“s reign at united by leading chelsea to the titleā¦FACTā¦ :lol: