Max appears to be ~21 points from the article I just read.Snowball wrote:Maybe they'll get a 40-point deduction, and we'll be saved
ho ho
Right I see.tidus_mi2 wrote:What do you want? I posted the key point, read the whole article yourself if you want, long story short, Brum's finances are an absolute shit show.leon wrote:And what?tidus_mi2 wrote: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/46765090
Chinese-owned Blues lost £37.5m in the 12 months to the end of June 2018, over double the previous year's deficit, largely as a result of an increased wage bill from £22m to almost £38m.
't'were joke, IanSnowflake Royal wrote:Max appears to be ~21 points from the article I just read.Snowball wrote:Maybe they'll get a 40-point deduction, and we'll be saved
ho ho
Obviously I thought it was interesting though... higher than I expected and enough to save us potentially.Snowball wrote:'t'were joke, IanSnowflake Royal wrote:Max appears to be ~21 points from the article I just read.Snowball wrote:Maybe they'll get a 40-point deduction, and we'll be saved
ho ho
I often feel Leeds have it tough as nearly everyone has it in for them, but the more I read into this the worse it looks for them. I agree that if found guilty this is blatant cheating and has no place in the English game! The consequences should be severe!Pepe the Horseman wrote:Leeds have been busted spying on Derby's training. Sure they'll get away with a tap on the wrist, but that's just blatant cheating isn't it?!
Looks like they have been reported but EFL has said to sort it out themselves, unitl an official complaint is made, according to the beeb. Unless the guy rolls over and shows them that he had been directly sent by clubs management, doubt anything will come from this except red faces at Leeds for attempted cheating.Rea Ding wrote:I often feel Leeds have it tough as nearly everyone has it in for them, but the more I read into this the worse it looks for them. I agree that if found guilty this is blatant cheating and has no place in the English game! The consequences should be severe!Pepe the Horseman wrote:Leeds have been busted spying on Derby's training. Sure they'll get away with a tap on the wrist, but that's just blatant cheating isn't it?!
Pepe the Horseman wrote:Leeds have been busted spying on Derby's training. Sure they'll get away with a tap on the wrist, but that's just blatant cheating isn't it?!
well, think they'd prob set up in training as they would in a game - ie playing a bit of 11 aside in the preferred systemManeki Neko wrote:Pepe the Horseman wrote:Leeds have been busted spying on Derby's training. Sure they'll get away with a tap on the wrist, but that's just blatant cheating isn't it?!
just don't see the point.
"some of them are wearing red bibs and kicking the ball in the net, and some of them are in yellow bibs and are trying to stop them, and there are some goal keepers doing their own thing on the other pitch."
Guess they might have the starters all in the same bibs, otherwise agreed. Seems like a lot of effort to go to for not much gain.Maneki Neko wrote:Pepe the Horseman wrote:Leeds have been busted spying on Derby's training. Sure they'll get away with a tap on the wrist, but that's just blatant cheating isn't it?!
just don't see the point.
"some of them are wearing red bibs and kicking the ball in the net, and some of them are in yellow bibs and are trying to stop them, and there are some goal keepers doing their own thing on the other pitch."
The 2007 Formula One espionage controversy, also known as Spygate and Stepneygate, was a set of accusations among Formula One racing teams that confidential technical information was passed between them. It involved the McLaren team, the Ferrari team, and the Renault F1 team.
The original case involved allegations made by the Ferrari Formula One team against a former employee (Nigel Stepney), a senior McLaren engineer, Mike Coughlan, and his wife Trudy Coughlan concerning the theft of technical information.
These allegations were the subject of legal action in Italy and an FIA investigation. A High Court case in England was dropped after Ferrari reached an agreement with the Coughlans.
An FIA hearing into the matter took place on 26 July 2007 but did not result in any penalty for McLaren, however a second hearing took place on 13 September 2007, and by then in receipt of compelling evidence resulted in several penalties for the team. The most important of these were the team's exclusion from the 2007 Constructors' Championship and a record-breaking fine of $100 million (USD).
Thanks for that insight.Snowflake Royal wrote:It's going to be about getting an edge on shape and set piece routines isn't it. Plus maybe a bit of sledging ammunition.
Bet it goes on all the time.
Playing Viveash was the real advantage for our opposition.Mr Angry wrote:Pardew used to hate Nobbers watching the training when it was at Sonning; he felt people watching then going on here to say "The team are going to play 442, with Viveash at the back" was giving the opposition an advantage.
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