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    Whiskey Nose plays down Shrek talk

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/foot...em/8983208.stm

    Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson has refused to discuss Wayne Rooney's current off-field problems ahead of Saturday's match at Everton.

    Rooney has been at the centre of allegations about his private life ahead of the trip to his former club.

    But Ferguson would not be drawn on the kind of reception the striker might face from home fans at Goodison Park.

    "Let's put it to bed straightaway. I am not discussing any of my players' personal lives," said the Scot.

    Ferguson did admit, however, he expects a tough game despite Everton's indifferent early-season form.

    "We know the dangers of Everton. We got slaughtered by them last season, well and truly beaten.

    "The atmosphere is always good there. It's a hard place to go, but it's also a fantastic place to go and we've got a good record there."

    I'm not exactly best of friends with Wayne so I've not been hanging around with him that much

    Everton defender Phil Jagielka

    Everton manager David Moyes was also unwilling to discuss his former striker ahead of Saturday's game.

    Speaking at his pre-match press conference, he said: "I think if you are a good football journalist you don't ask those kind of questions.

    "If you are a gossip journalist you ask me those questions. I am interested in talking about the game and that's what I'll do."

    However, Everton defender Phil Jagielka has predicted that fans at Goodison will not hold back in dishing out some "stick" to the 24-year-old star, who left Everton for Old Trafford for £20m in the summer of 2004 after bursting on to the football scene as a 16-year-old.

    "It should be amusing," said the centre-back who has been on England duty with Rooney.

    "It is always interesting playing against people you've just been away with in the week. No doubt I'll give him a bit of banter if he plays.

    "There is a good chance he will get slaughtered. He normally gets quite a bit of stick anyway. I can't see that changing come Saturday."
    Wayne Rooney celebrates a goal in 2003 with Everton boss David Moyes
    Rooney made his name under Moyes at Everton

    But he continued: "I'm sure Wayne can deal with it. He is tough and will let his football do the talking.

    "I will enjoy the battle against him. I like playing against good players and Wayne is definitely a good player."

    Rooney was influential in helping England beat Bulgaria last Friday and, after allegations concerning his private life were made public in the News of the World and Sunday Mirror newspapers at the weekend, he scored in the 3-1 victory in Switzerland on Tuesday.

    England boss Fabio Capello praised his display, but Jagielka said he could not offer any more of an insight into the striker's mindset.

    "He seems his normal self but I haven't got an in-depth view of how he has been feeling," he added.

    Former Manchester United star and England team-mate David Beckham said Rooney would get plenty of support from Ferguson and his staff.

    "He's definitely at the right team and has the right manager to help him cope with any situation," said the LA Galaxy midfielder.

    "I know that from my own personal experience of being at Manchester United for so many years, it is a club that puts its arms around you and supports you, so he's got that."
    Possibly the wrong phrase to use!
    Justice for the 96

    #2
    .
    Suppose you have a physicist and a sociologist standing at the side of a field, observing a set of events unfolding on the field. The physicist does [describes] it using the terminology of mass and velocity and frequency of radiation and the rest. And the sociologist does it by describing it as a rugby match.



    May the Lord bless this post.

    Comment


      #3
      Actually how did Beckham survive so well after that Rebecca Loose affair? Somehow the press and public decided to forget about it and he's still the perfect man

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by -V- View Post
        Actually how did Beckham survive so well after that Rebecca Loose affair? Somehow the press and public decided to forget about it and he's still the perfect man
        Got a bit of a crush have you?

        Comment


          #5
          haha funny. You know what i mean though, im talking about how he is thought of by the public

          Comment


            #6
            Of course . People have short memories. It's exactly what Rooney will have been told by his PR people over the last week or so: ride the storm for a few weeks and come October no one will even remember it.

            Comment


              #7
              heard a line of a song the Everton fans are gonna sing. To the tune of Bob Marley 'no woman no cry' yep you guessed it, 'no woman no Kai'
              “Me having no education. I had to use my brains.”

              Sir Bill Shankly


              Quote:
              Matt Dickinson ‏@DickinsonTimes
              Terry painfully has to recount to court the song from Liverpool fans about his "mum loving Scouse cock"

              Comment


                #8
                Like it

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Pablo1981 View Post
                  Of course . People have short memories. It's exactly what Rooney will have been told by his PR people over the last week or so: ride the storm for a few weeks and come October no one will even remember it.
                  I'm not sure it's because of short memories - I think people forget because they don't really care. That's a good thing. Maybe one day we'll get to the point where people won't be interested in who did what to whom and the papers won't bother filling the front pages with such drivel.

                  OK, some hope.

                  I think the Beckham thing is partly because people felt the level of hatred he received when he was sent off against Argentina was OTT. The fact he's more use to the media if they're on the same side probably didn't do any harm either.

                  From hate figure to national icon and subsequently from sex rat to national treasure - it shows he's got pretty impressive publicists, if nothing else.
                  .
                  Suppose you have a physicist and a sociologist standing at the side of a field, observing a set of events unfolding on the field. The physicist does [describes] it using the terminology of mass and velocity and frequency of radiation and the rest. And the sociologist does it by describing it as a rugby match.



                  May the Lord bless this post.

                  Comment

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