Just beat me to it Syd. Been at home this morning and this has broken on BBC News as well. To be fair, Brown and O Shea offer us a wealth of experience and that Man Utd background which will be vital after the young lads struggled in the latter stages of the season. Both are excellent acquisitions and a we shouldn't under emphasise the positive strides made by the Chairman and Manager here. All of our signings to date (with the exception of Westwood) have been courted by other EPL clubs. There are some for whom it would have meant both O Shea and Brown could have stayed close to home but they have been sold SAFC by the SB and SNQ and chosen us instead. I am absolutely delighted by the players we have attracted thus far and they will all make a massive difference for the new season. Reports are suggesting that Vaughan will be next and that he too will be a solid and good signing. I wonder as the Aston Villa players desert the sinking midlands ship, whether any ex-players are looking at us and thinking what if? For me there are 2 more vacant positions to fill. Left midfield/winger (no guesses) and an experienced striker/forward in the Judas mould. With that, I think we are ready to rock and roll next season and I feel that this will be a team that will impress and challenge. Great stuff.
Great signing for sunderland, and its not the first, you guys have been superb in this window, and could seriously be challenging for top 7, its out of you and your arch rivals newcastle, will be one intresting season. I personally like newcastle as an english team, as i now live in england so must really choose one to follow to get along with friends with the bit of banter, cause not that many know much about benfica tbh, but i dont really understand that hatred between newcastle and sunderland, tbh, but then again what do i know?
Couldn`t agree more re O`Shea - Brown not so certain about but fingers crossed. Would love to see a proven striker to join up with Gyan but I wonder if we have the resources to get another Bent type... Have a feeling we might be more in the DJ Campbell market - but if that means we have the cash to splash on say Nzog (apologies for using the name that should not be spoken!) then crack on!
Couldn't agree with this more. Wickham is a fantastic signing showing a real effort by SAFC to build a future. Gardner is a fantastic signing as he offers a bit of bite and quality going forward from midfield. But O'shea for me will be the signing of the season. A quality player, truckloads of experience, and historically one of SAF's first names on the team sheet for big games. Will solidify our defense and be a candidate for captain in my opinion.
Happy with this one O'Shea is versatile and has plenty to offer excellent signing, Brown on the other hand im not so sure about but I'll back him.
Let me help you pal. A rivalry with roots in kings and coalRichard Stonehouse traces a great enmity between fans that predates football The Observer, Sunday 23 October 2005 01.45 BST Article historyAt 1.30 this afternoon, about one million people in Tyne and Wear and an additional million more from the North-East's diaspora, will watch and listen to what they consider to be the most important match of the season. Yet, to the rest of the watching world, the outcome will be observed with indifference. The Tyne-Wear derby may be perceived by the uninitiated as parochial and unsophisticated, but like the world's greatest derbies it has a historical conflict as its bedrock. And if anything, as a basis for a rivalry, the Sunderland-Newcastle derby is the most legitimate conflict anywhere. Some of the great derbies are based on issues that are trite and irrational. The historical class difference, for example, between the Milan clubs - Milan traditionally unionist and working-class, Inter upper-class and conservative - is now moot, given the chairmanship of the right-wing Silvio Berlusconi at Milan. Their historical reason for difference has dissipated, as it arguably has for Juventus-Torino, Real Madrid-Atletico, and Panathinaikos-Olympiakos. The Celtic-Rangers rivalry has been written about extensively, and needs no elaboration. Other than to say that if football can act as a metaphor for international and jingoistic warfare, then the Old Firm is the most articulate. But the Tyne-Wear derby wins in its secular and concise regional conflict. It does, after all, predate football by 226 years. It is a conflict that has divided two cities, 12 miles apart, for more than three centuries. In the epoch before the 1600s, King Charles I had consistently awarded the East of England Coal Trade Rights (try to contain your excitement) to Newcastle's traders, which rendered the Wearside coal merchants redundant. People died because of it. Coal and ships were Sunderland's raison d'etre. But when, in 1642, the English Civil War started, and Newcastle, with good reason, supported the Crown, Sunderland, because of the trading inequalities, sided with Cromwell's Parliamentarians, and the division began. It became a conflict between Sunderland's socialist republicanism, against Newcastle's loyalist self-interest. A purposeful enmity if ever there was one. Unlike rivalries between other clubs, the differences between Newcastle and Sunderland date back to fighting based on the necessity to live and feed one's children, and benefit one's city. The political differences between the two culminated with the battle of Boldon Hill. A loyalist army from Newcastle and County Durham gathered to fight an anti-monarchist Sunderland and Scottish army at a field equidistant between the two towns. The joint Scottish and Sunderland army won - and Newcastle was colonised by the Scottish. It was subsequently used as a Republican military base for the rest of war. And while this is a lucid basis for two cities hating each other, it has, like every other modern-day derby, developed profoundly irrational manifestations. It has been noted that some Newcastle fans refuse to buy bacon, because of its 'red-and-white appearance' - the pinnacle, regardless of any jovial flippancy, of irrational behaviour. Likewise the past Mackem boycott of a particular breakfast cereal, because of the Newcastle-orientated marketing of its brand, is silly beyond words. However, these are benign occurrences. In March 2000, more than 70 Sunderland and Newcastle hooligans took part in some of the worst football-related violence ever seen in Britain. It was not even a match day. What the police called 'usually respectable men and fathers' had decided to meet in mutual territory with their enemies, to fight with knives, bats and bricks. Sunderland fans boarded a ferry towards Tyneside, found the awaiting 'army', and fought. One man was left permanently brain-damaged. Dozens of people were arrested, and years upon years of prison-time was sentenced. The continuation of tension involves a new sense of injustice. For well over a decade, Sunderland's population has bemoaned that they have been paying their local taxes to finance both the Newcastle Metro and airport. A perceived bias towards Tyneside in the regional and national media further compounds a feeling of inequality. It seems that history is repeating itself for the people of Sunderland, albeit in a less livelihood-threatening sort of way. Perhaps a more trivial, city-image sort of way. But this makes little sense. Let's just hope that despite the hijacking of the game by the corporate class, and the working-class ostracising that comes with it, there remain terraces from which Mackems and Geordies can vent their invariably abusive opinions of each other without violence and civil war. Why Mackems and Geordies? The derivations are uncertain, but both have theories based in historical political allegiances. 'Geordie' because of Tyneside's staunch support of the Hanoverian King George II during the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion - 'Geordie' is a common diminutive of 'George'; and Mackem because of Wearside's accommodation of the Scottish 'Blue Mac' army during the civil war. It is more likely, however, that the origins stem from aspects of the shipbuilding and coalmining industries. The Tyneside coalminers preferred George Stephenson's 'Geordie' safety lamp over the more widely used Humphry Davy lamp. And it has been accepted almost universally that Mackem is derived from the phrase Mak(e)'em and Tak(e)'em, coined by Tyneside shipbuilders to insult their counterparts on the River Wear, who would build the ships and have them taken away by the richer classes. http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2005/oct/23/newsstory.sport Hope this helps, Im sure if you had asked any Mag, he would have told you exactly the same. [ TONGUE FIRMLY IN CHEEK ]
Excited about the 2 experience United lads. They have performed solidly in recent year, which is key as this hopefully means we aren't just getting old plodders living off their past glory (Sorry Syd ) The only thing that I have questions about, is their wages, as they wont come cheap. I posted on the Newcastle board about our wage situation, with some general guesses at our new player wages based on gossip and what we know. I did the same for some of our deadwood, and it REALLY made me worry about us not shifting said deadwood. We would be a hell of a lot better off financially with them shifted, hundreds of thousands of pounds better off per week and thats no exaggeration.