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https://www.est1892.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?p=4002484#post4002484
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Paul.S
And Hoddle looks far more into it than Waddle. The geordie doesnt look like he wants to be there, probably too busy thinking about that pelanty he would sky in Turin.
Waddle is so funny...just swaying around with his damaged left arm dangling weirdly....and piping up to sing "May daymond lates I'll always want you" "
Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’
Glenn Hoddle apologises for comments made during Sky Sports commentary
• Hoddle made remark during Chelsea's game at Fulham
• 'I can only apologise to those who took offence,' Hoddle said
Evan Fanning
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 15 February 2011 10.55 GMT
Glenn Hoddle has apologised for comments made live on air while providing commentary for Sky Sports during last night's Premier League match between Fulham and Chelsea.
After Chelsea's £50m striker, Fernando Torres, miscontrolled a ball played over the top of the Fulham defence Hoddle remarked: "When it's not going for you, it's not going for you. It's come off his chest, his knee and his toe. It's almost like the Chinky player Knee Shin Toe."
"I can only apologise to those who took offence," Hoddle said today. "There's no excuse. It's an old football expression and I understand I can't say things like that."
Sky Sports recently parted company with Richard Keys and Andy Gray after a series of off-air recordings were leaked, while Hoddle lost his job as England manager in 1999 for comments he made about disabled people in newspaper interview.
Looking back, what did the gentlemen themselves think ?
Well there’s no comments from the Hoddle, but the Waddle has spoken in passing about it.
He was quoted in an Observer article which was taking a look at the spiritual one not long after Spurs dismissed him after a dismal run. In this piece Andrew Anthony looked at if it was Hoddle’s arrogance (in relation to his ‘what you sow you reap’ comment which got him out of the England job) which pretty much doomed him in his managerial career.
Chris Waddle defended his old Spurs and England midfield counterpart:
“…Yet Waddle disputes the popular image of Hoddle as arrogant. ‘It’s not arrogance, it’s confidence. I know people a lot larger than Glenn. I think he’s down to earth. He’s not a centre of attention. He’s not Billy Big Time.’ Waddle thinks that Hoddle has an inner core of self-belief that protects him from the uncertainties that afflict most other mortals. He cites a Top of the Pops performance of ‘Diamond Lights’ – the embarrassing pop record the duo made together in 1987 – as a memorable example of Hoddle’s sang-froid. ‘I was petrified,’ says Waddle, ‘he was confident. He enjoyed it. He’s a positive guy.’
As to what Chris thought of the actual single – The Guardian’s Small Talk caught up with him in 2003, asking him first what music he was listening to at the time:
What was the last record or CD you bought? “That would have been the Good Charlotte album [Small Talk later checks with its young, heavily-pierced cousin to discover it's that Nu-metal-type business]. I’m getting into them, and blink-182, New Found Glory, Bowling For Soup, that kind of stuff. But I can also listen to something like Simply Red. The only thing I don’t like is reggae and all this rap stuff.”
Odd that you and Glenn opted for the soft-rock balladeering of Diamond Lights, then. Any regrets? “None at all, but I’m not joking when I say that standing on that stage was more nerve-wracking than taking that pelanty in Turin. I’d sung in the bath and in the car, like everyone does, but to actually stand in front of millions of people on TV and do something you’ve never done at any great level before, well it was absolutely petrifying. It never amazes me how many people remember that record. I wouldn’t be surprised if someone did a cover version of it.”
Gazza, maybe? “Oh no! Although it might be good if he covered it so people would finally realise that our version wasn’t so bad after all.”
Oh but it was, Chris. What impresses your two kids [boy 9, girl 15] more: Diamond Lights on TOTP, or your achievements as a footballer? “Well they both spend more time going on about the fact that I once… well… I used to have a mullet.”
Did you really? “I did, and when they see shots of me at Spurs or Marseille with it long at the back, they just can’t accept that mullets were in back then. I never regretted having one, before you ask. In fact it was funny that after I had mine done, 50% of professional footballers were sporting the same hair style. Same at Marseille, all the crowd copied that hair cut straight away.”
They’re a mad bunch! Returning to Diamond Lights, was there a follow up? “There was, it was a song called (It’s) Goodbye. Quite fitting really ‘cos Glenn had just left Spurs for Monaco. In my opinion it was a far better song with a video and everything, but then Glenn moved to France and because of the tax reasons he couldn’t come back to promote it. It got shelved, which was a shame, because it was a lot faster and a much better record.”
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