Anyone got one for the spurs fulham game?
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It's a bit tight at the bottom isn't it. Yesterday Roy keane was under pressure because sunderland were second bottom. Currently they're winning 2-1 at blackburn, and have moved up to 11th.
What a goal by danny wellbeck. That is the way to make your debut. Fergie has just leaned over to make a joke with tevez after watching wellbeck equal his league tally for the season inside 8 minutes.
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I'd be interested in an answer to Harry's question.
In the meantime, the latest attempt to scare 101 Great Goals into submission.
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“Wanker! Wanker! Wanker!” were the deafening cheers whenever he was fouled or lost the ball. “Wanker, give us a wave, wanker, wanker, give us a wave!” got a couple of rounds, as well as songs about him being a cheat bastard and wanting to go to Real Madrid.
From here.
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ursus arctos wrote:
"No footballer should be subjected to that. No spectator, either."
Was this Mr. Weaver's first professional football match?
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Perhaps the police were trying to stop such foul abuse in advance ;
Policing of Stoke fans raises serious concerns
Frightening new police powers have emerged following the shocking treatment of Stoke City fans prior to their team’s away fixture with Manchester United last Saturday, November 15, 2008.
An estimated 80 Stoke supporters visited the Railway Inn pub in Irlam, Greater Manchester, on their way to Old Trafford. The pub was a natural stop-off point, being on en route to the stadium via the M6 and a local railway station. By all accounts that the Football Supporters’ Federation have heard it was a relatively quiet atmosphere, with little singing, never mind trouble.
However, at 1.15pm a number of officers from Greater Manchester Police (GMP) entered the premises and told fans they would not be allowed to leave the pub, would be forcibly taken back to Stoke, and not be allowed to visit Old Trafford.
Each supporter was then issued with a Section 27 from the Violent Crime Reduction Act of 2006. This allows police to move someone from a specified area for a period of up to 48 hours. You do not actually have to have committed any offence for the act to be enforced. Section 27 gives police the powers to move anybody, from any place, at anytime, if they think there’s a possibility an alcohol related offence may be committed.
Stoke City fan Lyndon Edwards, who is making a formal complaint to GMP and the Independent Police Complaints Commission, was one of those in the pub: “I asked for it to be stated on the Section 27 form given that I was not intoxicated and that there was no evidence of any disorder on my part. This was refused so I refused to sign the form. I was told to sign it or I would be arrested. We were then loaded onto buses and had to sit there for what seemed like an eternity.”
“There were no football chants being sung at the Railway Inn and no evidence of disorder whatsoever. If there had of been we would have left the pub and made our way elsewhere.”
The Stoke supporters were then driven back in convoy to Stoke city centre, regardless of whether this was actually where they were from, without compensation of any sort.
“I have spoken to a number of Stoke fans who were there and I am quite satisfied that they did absolutely nothing wrong, but they end being hauled back to Stoke against their will and missing the game,” said Malcolm Clarke, chair of the FSF and a Stoke City fan.
“They were treated very badly by the Greater Manchester Police. This new law gives the police a great deal of instant power which can severely affect the basic civil rights of football supporters, if they happen to be in the wrong pub or on the wrong train at the wrong time.
“If the police had any evidence that the people in that pub included some risk supporters, or people with banning orders, they should have taken appropriate action against those people alone. There can be no excuse for taking this draconian action against ordinary innocent supporters who happened to be using the same pub.”
“We are most concerned about how it is being used, and will be taking this up at the highest level.”
If you were one of the Stoke City fans who received this treatment please click here to read about how you can take it up with the relevant authorities. Read more on the story here.
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This doesn't inspire too much confidence either ;
Police to receive 10,000 Tasers to tackle violent crime
Government expected to unveil plans to make stun guns available to officers, amid concerns from Amnesty
Haroon Siddique and agencies guardian.co.uk
Monday November 24 2008 10.05 GMT Article history
Plans to make 10,000 Taser stun guns available to police officers across England and Wales are expected to be unveiled by the government today.
The weapons, which Amnesty International claims have been responsible for 320 deaths in the US, are currently only deployed by specialist firearms officers in the UK.
But the home secretary, Jacqui Smith, told the Sunday Times that £8m would be made available to increase the supply of Tasers and train 30,000 police officers to use the 50,000-volt electric guns.
She said she wanted to give police "the tools they need to confront dangerous people".
The move follows year-long trials of Tasers by frontline officers in 10 police forces.
The home office minister Alan Campbell told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that during that time Tasers had been deployed more than 600 times, but used on only 93 occasions.
According to the BBC, police officers in England and Wales have fired the stun guns more than 1,000 times since 2004.
They deliver a powerful electric shock that temporarily incapacitates targets and causes them to "freeze" or fall to the ground.
Amnesty International does not oppose stun guns altogether but believes their use should be restricted.
Oliver Sprague, an arms expert at Amnesty International UK, told Today that use should be restricted to "a limited number of highly trained specialist officers and in response to genuinely life-threatening or very dangerous situations".
He said the human rights group's research showed that 320 people had died after being Tasered in the US since 2001.
Sprague added that 90% of those killed were shocked multiple times and were not armed.
In 2007, a Polish man, Robert Dziekanski, died shortly after being Tasered at Vancouver International airport in a notorious incident that was captured on video.
Campbell said he did not recognise Amnesty's figures.
"The independent medical advice we are getting is that there is a very low risk of death or serious injury," he told Today.
"I don't think we should run away with the idea that they are going to be widely available," he added.
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The crackdown has begun.
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League - Dutch Eredivisie.
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