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John Terry yang masih perasan dia English Captain

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Post time 21-6-2010 11:09 PM | Show all posts |Read mode
John Terry nie tak sedar2 lagi ke dia bukan captain. Memandai jer pecah belahkan skuad. Masih berdendam kat Fabio sebab strip captaincy dia. Siap boleh buat press conference mengalahkan Steve Gerrard, tegur cara Fabio manage the team. Dia nie mmg patut jer hantar balik england. Bolehlah dia minum bir dgn wife Toni dan Veronica dia tue.

http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/182063/World-Cup-2010-John-Terry-s-trouble-is-this-isn-t-Chelsea

WORLD CUP 2010: JOHN TERRY'S TROUBLE IS THIS ISN'T CHELSEA  

World Cup 2010: John Terry wants to tell Fabio Capello how to run the England team
Monday June 21,2010
By Mick Dennis  
JOHN Terry's biggest problem today is that Roman Abramovich does not own the Football Association.

Billionaire Russian oligarch Abramovich does include Chelsea in his extravagant portfolio of interests, of course – and he indulges Terry.

So Terry can lord it at the London club’s plush training ground and strut around Stamford Bridge secure in the knowledge that, as long as he is one of the owner’s favourites, he is bullet-proof and has much more power than most of the other hired hands.

But although Abramovich owns several substantial properties in England, he does not own the FA and control the England football team.

So there is no special protection for Terry today as he stands alone with his one-man mutiny. Now, football fans regard things in binary terms. Players are either brilliant or rubbish. Managers are either geniuses or buffoons. And fans want issues to be equally clear-cut.

But there has to be a more nuanced appraisal of the Terry mutiny. Goodness knows something needed to be said after the two flaccid performances England have produced here in the World Cup. Without some sort of rallying call, this tournament could be over for England this week; another wasted opportunity, another four years of hurt to add to the decades of disappointment.

And if you will feel deflated and defeated if England do not survive the least demanding of qualifying groups, imagine the crushing blow it will be to the tens of thousands of supporters who are out here. They have taken time off work, spent their own hard- earned cash and, in many cases, driven hundreds of miles across inhospitable terrain to cheer their country.

They deserve better, far better, than they have been served so far. And if one of the senior players is prepared to stand up and try to revive this flagging campaign, then that is a very good thing. Much that Terry said is true.

Locking the players up in their isolated training base has been a disaster and there must be some relaxation of the regime. But only someone of such supreme arrogance could have gone about seeking alterations the way Terry did.

First there was the plea to let the boys have a few beers, naturally. Then, after eight of the blokes stayed up chewing the fat and picked the team for manager Fabio Capello, Terry chose to go public with his version of events.

Challenging Capello so blatantly – and crucially naming his co-conspirators – was extraordinary behaviour, but entirely understandable when you consider Terry’s status at Chelsea. A year ago, Terry was considering a move away from Chelsea. Manchester City were prepared to spend £30million to take him to Eastlands. Many good judges believed that would be exceptionally good business for Chelsea, considering Terry was 28 and increasingly hampered by wear and tear.

But Terry had a chat with Abramovich and asked him what his plans were for Chelsea. When he was satisfi ed with the answers, “good old JT” announced that he would stay. Only a footballer who feels no self-doubt could behave like that and so it was perfectly natural for Terry to assume he could do something just as audaciously conceited for England.

So Terry told the world that he wants his mates in the team. And if Capello gets the hump with him for saying so then, well, he can stick it. The others who sat around supping beer with Terry might have a very different version of what was said and what should happen next and are entitled to be angry with the self-appointed spokesman.

A much more sensible course of action would have been for the chaps with grievances to have deputed Steven Gerrard – he is still captain by the way – to approach Capello. Or they could have asked David Beckham to talk to him. Beckham’s amorphous duties are said to include acting as an intermediary between the players and management.

And then the players should have waited until Wednesday’s match was over before telling the world about their meeting. Instead, Terry has blithely assumed he has the right to speak for the others and, by going public, has issued a direct challenge to the manager.

That is divisive and destructive – and the act of a contemptuous egotist.
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Post time 25-3-2011 12:48 AM | Show all posts
nyampess....!!!!
capello plih jgk die jd kapitan akhirnye!!!!:@
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