Originally posted by Patricks_Berger
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The 'where are they now?' files
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I reckon if he truly believed he’d put 100% into his career, given it his all, it would be like water off a ducks back.Originally posted by ChesterDave View PostAye. He might get to the point where he is miserable as ****ing sin and feels trapped in his own home and he might have a mental cunting breakdown but at least he can wank himself silly over his bank blance
I reckon it’s the truth in the jibes which is getting to him, not the jibes themselves.
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In an extract from his new autobiography, John Arne Riise gives his account of the extraordinary bust-up that overshadowed Liverpool’s Champions League visit to Barcelona in 2007.
https://www.theguardian.com/football...iise-liverpool
So childish
Still think we would have won the 2007 CL Final had Bellamy played instead of Zenden
Another MASSIVE game
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Originally posted by Rigadon View PostIn an extract from his new autobiography, John Arne Riise gives his account of the extraordinary bust-up that overshadowed Liverpool’s Champions League visit to Barcelona in 2007.
https://www.theguardian.com/football...iise-liverpool
So childish
Still think we would have won the 2007 CL Final had Bellamy played instead of Zenden

Shaggy has surely hacked the guardian, that has to be a piss take.If we are all only happy when we are really winning in the end, when your race finishes, what life would that be?
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Former Liverpool, Preston and Bolton winger Peter Thompson has died aged 76.
Thompson scored 54 goals in 416 appearances for the Reds between 1963 and 1973, and won two First Division titles under Bill Shankly.
He helped Liverpool win the FA Cup for the first time in 1965 and reach the European Cup Winners' Cup final in 1966.
He was capped 16 times by England under World Cup-winning manager Sir Alf Ramsey.
Thompson was named in Ramsey's initial 28-man squads for the 1966 and 1970 World Cups but was cut from the final 22 for both tournaments.
Shankly, who died in 1981, once said of Thompson: "He could run forever, but more importantly in football he could run with the ball - probably the hardest thing to do.
"He could run every minute of every game, every week, every year better than anybody else.
"His work-rate was outstanding, his fitness unequalled, his balance like a ballet dancer. I have no hesitation in placing Peter up among the all-time greats - alongside such players as Tom Finney, Stanley Matthews and George Best."
Born in Carlisle, Thompson started his career at Preston, becoming a first-team regular at 17 before going on to score 20 goals in 121 appearances.
Following his 10-year spell at Anfield, he joined Bolton in 1973 before retiring in 1978.Modifying post.
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who's arsed?
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