Soccer / roy keane

kelemino
Roy Keane uses three words, to sum up Liverpool.
Roy Keane with two sky sports pundits were hosting a panel, as they were talking about football and, he was now talking about Liverpool and how important Liverpool is in the premier league this season. While speaking about football Roy Keane used two words to describe Liverpool Roy Keane alongside Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher we're playing a game of words, the first thing that came up in their minds was Liverpool. When talking with the club legends Garry Neville gave his verdict about Liverpool, and he didn't sound so good about Liverpool, but Roy Keane when Asked, said that Liverpool is a fantastic team and a great team, he gave them the credit that they deserve and that they are a brilliant team this season. The Anfield outfit is arguably one of the best teams in the world, and this set of players are the greatest of players in Liverpool history, with jurgen Klopp at the helm, u can have a team like Liverpool who can give any other club a run for their money. But sad to say that Liverpool are competing with one of the greatest clubs at the helm of pep Guardiola’s Manchester City who isn't a small club, so Liverpool winning the trophy this season won't be an easy task but put that aside Liverpool's current team is one of the best in the history the club have produced. Up next Liverpool has to show they are a great team. when they face off Chelsea football club on Sunday in the carabao cup finals, hope they can dominate the game at Wembley and prove why there are one of the greatest teams in Europe. So I am tipping them to clinch the cup ahead of Chelsea on Sunday.
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kelemino
Roy Keane uses three words, to sum up Liverpool.
Roy Keane with two sky sports pundits were hosting a panel, as they were talking about football and, he was now talking about Liverpool and how important Liverpool is in the premier league this season. While speaking about football Roy Keane used two words to describe Liverpool Roy Keane alongside Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher we're playing a game of words, the first thing that came up in their minds was Liverpool. When talking with the club legends Garry Neville gave his verdict about Liverpool, and he didn't sound so good about Liverpool, but Roy Keane when Asked, said that Liverpool is a fantastic team and a great team, he gave them the credit that they deserve and that they are a brilliant team this season. The Anfield outfit is arguably one of the best teams in the world, and this set of players are the greatest of players in Liverpool history, with jurgen Klopp at the helm, u can have a team like Liverpool who can give any other club a run for their money. But sad to say that Liverpool are competing with one of the greatest clubs at the helm of pep Guardiola’s Manchester City who isn't a small club, so Liverpool winning the trophy this season won't be an easy task but put that aside Liverpool's current team is one of the best in the history the club have produced. Up next Liverpool has to show they are a great team. when they face off Chelsea football club on Sunday in the carabao cup finals, hope they can dominate the game at Wembley and prove why there are one of the greatest teams in Europe. So I am tipping them to clinch the cup ahead of Chelsea on Sunday.
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kelemino
Roy Keane uses three words, to sum up Liverpool.
Roy Keane with two sky sports pundits were hosting a panel, as they were talking about football and, he was now talking about Liverpool and how important Liverpool is in the premier league this season. While speaking about football Roy Keane used two words to describe Liverpool Roy Keane alongside Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher we're playing a game of words, the first thing that came up in their minds was Liverpool. When talking with the club legends Garry Neville gave his verdict about Liverpool, and he didn't sound so good about Liverpool, but Roy Keane when Asked, said that Liverpool is a fantastic team and a great team, he gave them the credit that they deserve and that they are a brilliant team this season. The Anfield outfit is arguably one of the best teams in the world, and this set of players are the greatest of players in Liverpool history, with jurgen Klopp at the helm, u can have a team like Liverpool who can give any other club a run for their money. But sad to say that Liverpool are competing with one of the greatest clubs at the helm of pep Guardiola’s Manchester City who isn't a small club, so Liverpool winning the trophy this season won't be an easy task but put that aside Liverpool's current team is one of the best in the history the club have produced. Up next Liverpool has to show they are a great team. when they face off Chelsea football club on Sunday in the carabao cup finals, hope they can dominate the game at Wembley and prove why there are one of the greatest teams in Europe. So I am tipping them to clinch the cup ahead of Chelsea on Sunday.
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eoghan.mcmonagle
Roy Keane: Looming in the Background but Jealous of the Limelight
A salvo of expletives signaled Roy Keane's latest retreat into his own caricature. "You're a f***ing p***k, you're a c**t". As if confronting the twilight of his own influence, this was Keane raging against the dying of the light. Face to face with his own sporting mortality, he, as if desperate to recapture relevance, succumbed to regressive bullying instincts. Harry Arter and Jonathan Walters, both injured, were chastised for having the temerity to follow medical advice and refrain from training. Obviously, Keane must share Jose Mourinho's medical code of ethics, as he deemed this an unacceptable breach worthy of vituperative condemnation. "I’m sick of people pulling out with injuries, what the f*** is wrong with ya?" thundered Keane as he excoriated the pair. Walters, an irascible figure himself, didn't take kindly to having his integrity questioned and squared up to his coach; the pair eventually having to be physically separated. Tensions continued to simmer, again reaching boiling point when, some time later, Arter picked up a knock during a training session, which called for a return to the treatment table. Keane's response was again indignant, ‘When are you going to train you f****** p****?’, he chided Arter. "You’re a f****** p****, you’re a c*** you’ve been all your life" Keane continued, now so consumed by self ordained righteousness, that Arter's attempts to assuage the situation were treated with dismissive hauteur. Keane's disposition lends itself to toxic masculinity, he is the hard man with the brittle ego, always seeking to reassert his dominance so as to mask his insecurities. Keane's response to his vindictive assault of Alf Inge Haaland in 2001 exemplifies an almost childlike morality of, as he describes it, "an eye for an eye". Haaland had "f***ed me over" so Keane "f***ing hit him hard". For a supposedly complex character, there is no subtlety of thought here; reasoned reconciliation is eschewed in favour of cowardly physical reprisal. Even when reflecting on the past, his words are those of a self-mythologist, a fraud in his own skin who, so consumed by a public identity, in forgetting what he is angry about, remembers only that he should be angry. So used to bending others to his own will, Keane has now bent the laws of physics and reshaped them in his own image - the universe is now post-causal, effect is all there is.
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eoghan.mcmonagle
Roy Keane: Looming in the Background but Jealous of the Limelight
A salvo of expletives signaled Roy Keane's latest retreat into his own caricature. "You're a f***ing p***k, you're a c**t". As if confronting the twilight of his own influence, this was Keane raging against the dying of the light. Face to face with his own sporting mortality, he, as if desperate to recapture relevance, succumbed to regressive bullying instincts. Harry Arter and Jonathan Walters, both injured, were chastised for having the temerity to follow medical advice and refrain from training. Obviously, Keane must share Jose Mourinho's medical code of ethics, as he deemed this an unacceptable breach worthy of vituperative condemnation. "I’m sick of people pulling out with injuries, what the f*** is wrong with ya?" thundered Keane as he excoriated the pair. Walters, an irascible figure himself, didn't take kindly to having his integrity questioned and squared up to his coach; the pair eventually having to be physically separated. Tensions continued to simmer, again reaching boiling point when, some time later, Arter picked up a knock during a training session, which called for a return to the treatment table. Keane's response was again indignant, ‘When are you going to train you f****** p****?’, he chided Arter. "You’re a f****** p****, you’re a c*** you’ve been all your life" Keane continued, now so consumed by self ordained righteousness, that Arter's attempts to assuage the situation were treated with dismissive hauteur. Keane's disposition lends itself to toxic masculinity, he is the hard man with the brittle ego, always seeking to reassert his dominance so as to mask his insecurities. Keane's response to his vindictive assault of Alf Inge Haaland in 2001 exemplifies an almost childlike morality of, as he describes it, "an eye for an eye". Haaland had "f***ed me over" so Keane "f***ing hit him hard". For a supposedly complex character, there is no subtlety of thought here; reasoned reconciliation is eschewed in favour of cowardly physical reprisal. Even when reflecting on the past, his words are those of a self-mythologist, a fraud in his own skin who, so consumed by a public identity, in forgetting what he is angry about, remembers only that he should be angry. So used to bending others to his own will, Keane has now bent the laws of physics and reshaped them in his own image - the universe is now post-causal, effect is all there is.
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eoghan.mcmonagle
Roy Keane: Looming in the Background but Jealous of the Limelight
A salvo of expletives signaled Roy Keane's latest retreat into his own caricature. "You're a f***ing p***k, you're a c**t". As if confronting the twilight of his own influence, this was Keane raging against the dying of the light. Face to face with his own sporting mortality, he, as if desperate to recapture relevance, succumbed to regressive bullying instincts. Harry Arter and Jonathan Walters, both injured, were chastised for having the temerity to follow medical advice and refrain from training. Obviously, Keane must share Jose Mourinho's medical code of ethics, as he deemed this an unacceptable breach worthy of vituperative condemnation. "I’m sick of people pulling out with injuries, what the f*** is wrong with ya?" thundered Keane as he excoriated the pair. Walters, an irascible figure himself, didn't take kindly to having his integrity questioned and squared up to his coach; the pair eventually having to be physically separated. Tensions continued to simmer, again reaching boiling point when, some time later, Arter picked up a knock during a training session, which called for a return to the treatment table. Keane's response was again indignant, ‘When are you going to train you f****** p****?’, he chided Arter. "You’re a f****** p****, you’re a c*** you’ve been all your life" Keane continued, now so consumed by self ordained righteousness, that Arter's attempts to assuage the situation were treated with dismissive hauteur. Keane's disposition lends itself to toxic masculinity, he is the hard man with the brittle ego, always seeking to reassert his dominance so as to mask his insecurities. Keane's response to his vindictive assault of Alf Inge Haaland in 2001 exemplifies an almost childlike morality of, as he describes it, "an eye for an eye". Haaland had "f***ed me over" so Keane "f***ing hit him hard". For a supposedly complex character, there is no subtlety of thought here; reasoned reconciliation is eschewed in favour of cowardly physical reprisal. Even when reflecting on the past, his words are those of a self-mythologist, a fraud in his own skin who, so consumed by a public identity, in forgetting what he is angry about, remembers only that he should be angry. So used to bending others to his own will, Keane has now bent the laws of physics and reshaped them in his own image - the universe is now post-causal, effect is all there is.
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