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Richard Head

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Posts posted by Richard Head

  1. 5 hours ago, exAtyeoMax said:

    Fairport Trivia #2

    i used to see a lot of bands at Essex University in the late 1960s - The Who, Pink Floyd, Bluesbreakers etc, one was Fairport Convention and I read years later that while they were waiting to go on they drew on a blackboard in the room they were using as their dressing room. The next day they hurriedly sent a photographer there before it got rubbed off and it appeared as the cover of What We Did On Our Holidays.

    • Like 2
  2. The old phrase “He’s lost the dressing room” springs to mind. That performance plus what LM said in the interview after is enough evidence for me. Cardiff scored from their first corner, regardless of all Pat Mountain’s coaching, says it all. LM is out of his depth as a coach without a DoF to do the hard stuff off the field (which Tinnion isn’t capable of). But whilst JL is “leading” the club his ego won’t let that happen.

  3. Seb Palmer Houlden was sent to Newport on a season’s loan under Nige’s management. Isn’t it a case of horses for courses based on individuals’ needs rather than one size fits all (apologies for the mixed metaphors!)

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  4. 14 minutes ago, pillred said:

    Every time Sammy Szmodics scores I think, if only, that seems to be happening a lot this season.

    I’ve been following him since he was at Colchester, my home town club. I was really excited when City signed him, then a combination of LJ not knowing what to do with him and Swiss Toni being persuaded to sell him to Posh when he wanted to stay summed up that pair. I always thought he had the potential to be another Jamie Vardy with his pace and eye for goal. 

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  5. In the early 70s I used to go to Cold Blow Lane (wonderful name) with a mate who was a Lions fan. In those days many of the supporters worked in the docks, there was a great bond between the fans and the players and brilliant humour in the shouting and singing. They had a reputation then for aggression, I think after they smashed up the  coach of a visiting team (might have been Portsmouth) but I never saw anything serious. I think it really kicked off later on that decade.

  6. 4 hours ago, downendcity said:

    Probably more apposite for this thread are the words of the American philosopher, Rumsfeld, who said:

    " There are known knowns. These are things we know that we know.

    There are known unknowns. That is to say, there are things that we we know we don't know.

    But there are also unknown unknowns. There are things we don't know that we don't know."

     

    To be is to do - Socrates 

    To do is to be - Plato

    Do be do be do - Sinatra 

    • Haha 2
  7. 15 minutes ago, Port Said Red said:

    Just had a look at how the game is going, no mention of him so far, Newport do have a player with one of the greatest names I have ever seen though....

    Priestley Farquharson :)

    Actually his full name is.

    Priestley Tyler H. Farquharson, no record of what the H stands for. 

    Herbert? Hubert? Horace?

  8. Regarding the discussion about an English national anthem, I read this on Billy Bragg's Facebook page, after he played at the Cambridge Folk Festival during the match, somebody told him the score and he spontaneously led the crowd in "Jerusalem":

    As I began to repeat the line ‘give my greetings to the new brunette’ a wave of jubilation swept through the audience, a cheering, air punching burst of emotion that hit me like a tsunami. CJ and JJ had to end the song. I was screaming with joy, arms aloft, eyes filling with tears. A song immediately came to mind. Not ‘Sweet Caroline’, nor ‘Football’s Coming Home’, but Blake’s ‘Jerusalem’. We sang it together in celebration of the victory of England’s women. ‘And did those feet….’
    It seemed fitting on a number of levels. Firstly, Hubert Parry, who wrote the stirring tune and was appalled that it was used to stir up jingoism in the First World War, gave the copyright to National Union of Women’s Sufferage Societies, led by Millicent Fawcett. They referred to it as the Women Voter’s Hymn.
    Secondly, England is a nation without an official national anthem: the Lionesses sang the UK’s anthem God Save the Queen before their games. ‘Jerusalem’ is by far the best candidate for the role among the ‘Rule Britannia/Land of Hope and Glory’ type songs sung at the Last Night of the Proms as, unlike the others, it actually mentions the name of our country.
    And thirdly, most anthems are declarations of national exceptionalism: we are great! ‘Jerusalem’ is a song of aspiration. It challenges us to improve what we have, to undertake a mental fight to build a better society in our green and pleasant land. Over the past month, the Lionesses have certainly made a contribution to that better society, inspiring girls and women to reach their full potential, challenging men and boys to recognise females as equal in their pursuit of sporting excellence and in their aspirations as individuals.
  9. Sammie S and KP are very different footballers. SS thrives on quick runs off the last defender which is how both Colchester and Posh used him. LJ didn’t have a clue what to do with him and he looked lost in the handful of games he played for us. I remember reading that Darragh MacAnthony asked Swiss Toni to sell him after his loan, Toni declined and SS wanted to stay with us. DM said he persuaded Toni to let him go (I don’t knows what sweetened the deal, maybe he paid in Swiss francs or offered a night out in Peterborough’s Latin Quarter?) I do wonder what Nige could have made of SS in his natural role.

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