@ListerLawrence USA were more pro-green before Trump. They'll reverse back once he's gone.
India, China and Russia are a big challenge, but it's no excuse for us not to do our bit.
@WindyCOYS@NathanAClark How would you both feel about signing John Stones on a transfer?
I know you hate older players but bags of experience and wouldn't expect to play every game.
We don't have game time available for 4 fully fit younger CBs.
@el_drapo Detailed advert but can't see that it mentions the body colour ?
I tried to buy one a few years ago but most were leggy. Ended up with a XF SV8 which has the same engine. The supercharger whine was very addictive.
I believe we now have evidence of FIFA's World Cup ticketing shell game: FIFA is colluding with third-party resale platforms for its own supply management.
Look at this SeatGeek map (secondary market!) for Saudi Arabia vs Cape Verde. The circled areas are not random single resale tickets, but large, contiguous blocks of seats: entire rows and swaths in sections 101/102, 112/113, 119/120, 134–137, 139, ...
The blue circles appeared weeks ago, then the purple blocks suddenly showed up a day or two ago, and the red blocks seem to have appeared recently too.
That's not what ordinary fan or even commercial scalper resale looks like who resell pairs, fours, and scattered seats. Instead, this looks like inventory being dumped in bulk onto secondary markets, at prices below FIFA's official site.
Why doesn't FIFA just lower prices on its own site Probably because official price cuts could trigger refund demands, chargebacks, or consumer-protection headaches from fans who already bought at much higher prices.
Instead FIFA keeps official prices high, avoids openly admitting the market-clearing price is lower, and moves unsold inventory through third-party resale platforms instead.