@iplumb1983 He has an opportunity to continue building the team he wants here, rather than inherit someone else’s and having to start again. Makes sense to stay.
@MadelaineLucyH Oh I would. Dogs are usually easy to read and most are friendly. I find that with men too. It’s only the occasional one that turns feral and pisses up your leg before trying to rip your throat out. I just rely on my instincts to avoid the dangerous ones.
@charliewring1 No, they just think cheats are scummy and they don’t want to see football’s reputation get trashed. It’s worrying that you’re not demanding better from your club, but it will lead to good banter next season
@KieranMaguire Agree. All I’ve seen is deflection, no accountability, or real remorse. Really does show the ugly side of sport, where competitiveness and greed become so extreme that they become destructive. Will take years to rebuild the club’s reputation.
@secondtierpod They cheated then lied about it and tried to cover it up. Feel sad for the fans that the manager‘s lack of decency and intelligence lead to this disaster.
@secondtierpod He knew. They all knew. He wanted success at any cost. It devalues sport when people behave like that. Feel sad for the fans that they have to be associated with that, due to 1 person.
@ttmttm0852@sikocyan Doesn’t matter what happened during the bout. You should shake hands and walk away afterwards. Emotions get very high during sport, kids need to learn to control it, or they won’t get far in the sport.
@SouthamptonFC How can you trust someone like that? He still doesn’t even feel that he did anything wrong. No respect for the rules, or for fairness. Not good for the sport’s reputation, or the club’s. He knew it was wrong to do it here, but he did it anyway.