Guys. Made some phone wall papers. Feel free to use them! Two with PL logo, 2 without. Get them here: https://1drv.ms/u/s!AjiYn0DlFIE8ixT8fgRos7LW3Gc2?e=Y5MHPd
Yeah I wish Rads would p**s off so we can get an owner in who can get us back to the prem where we belong.
Valencia fans are fully aware by now that the most volatile club in European football are capable of imploding at any given moment. In fact, it’s almost become an annual tradition, as regular as Christmas and the feast of Saint Joseph. One year ago, Marcelino Garcia Toral led a furiously thrilling Valencia side full of vim and vigour to fourth place in La Liga, the Champions League group-stages and their first trophy in 11 years, outclassing Barcelona in the Copa del Rey final. Flash forward to the present day and Valencia are all the way back to square one after yet another season lurching from crisis to catastrophe.The 2001 Champions League finalists will miss out on European competition altogether next season after a disastrous ninth place finish. And, with haemorrhaging money at a remarkable rate, expect the fallen giants of Spanish football to be closer to the relegation zone than the top four in nine months’ time. Captain Dani Parejo and ankle-biting midfielder Francois Coquelin have left for Castellon coast rivals Villarreal, star centre-back Ezequiel Garay has been released and Ferran Torres, arguably the most exciting young Spaniard in the game today, moved to Manchester City while volleying a barrage of criticism towards his boyhood club. And, if reports are to be believed, Marcelo Bielsa could follow in Pep Guardiola’s footsteps by taking advantage of what is approximately Valencia’s 8,532nd crisis since Peter Lim took over in 2014. Gianluca Di Marzio claim that Rodrigo Moreno, the only centre-forward included in Luis Enrique’s most recent Spain squad, is an ambitious transfer target for a newly-promoted Leeds United side desperate for attacking reinforcements. And, according to Marca, Valencia will listen to offers of just £22 million for a player who, just two years ago, was valued at £110 million when Real Madrid came calling. “If anyone wants Rodrigo the price is £110 million,” Marcelino, who was sacked after a dramatic fall-out with Valencia’s much-maligned owners, told AS in 2018. The former Bolton loanee had produced 19 goals and seven assists the season before, explaining why Real were so keen and why Valencia were determined to demand a fee that would make Rodrigo one of world football’s most expensive players of all time. The Brazil-born 29-year-old hit the target just seven times last season but, adapting to life in a more withdrawn role behind Maxi Gomez, a tally of 11 assists suggests that Rodrigo might be more the Pablo Hernandez 2.0 than Patrick Bamford’s replacement at Elland Road. And, if one fact alone sums up how far Valencia have fallen almost overnight, it is this; their star forward is now available for £90 million less than two years ago.