
"The first half was good." - Mancini.
It's only a friendly and I get what he means, but their leaky defence must be worrying him.
10 goals conceded in 2 games isn't great, no matter what they are.
They competed well in the 1st half.
But similar to a few teams last season, they got caught in a 10-15 min period in the
2nd half when Spurs ran riot.
The lad who scored their goal looked ****ing lethal (just from that clip).
Could be an Inter-Roma thing. My guess, though, is that it's Lamela taking on more of a leadership role, as if he's trying to say, "No f*ucking around this year."I'm genuinely curious to find out if there was some kind of beef between Lamela and Inter. I know he's a competitive sort, as demonstrated by some of the training videos on our Youtube channel, but he seemed to be on a mission to humiliate Inter all afternoon - and bloody hell did he do that.
Rob you ****ing party pooper!
In a few years time, when Edwards has won the PFA and Young PFA awards, signed a new long term contract having hit 18 goals and assisted 13, played a key part in our FA Cup winning side, nutmegged Messi in our CL quarter final fixture and helped England win the next European Championships, I'm gonna re-quote your comment.


BAD MUSIC ALERT
You must log in or register to see media

NARRATIVE ALERT
In the last 24 hours, both Graeme Souness and Danny Murphy have both voiced misgivings about Janssen, and both of them follow the exact same "Eredivisie strikers FAIL" structure, with Murphy mentioning the £10m Fulham paid Twente for Bryan Ruiz while Souness mentions the £25m Man Utd paid for Mephis Depay.
Naturally, both of them miss the point entirely, as in both those cases the players were signed to go straight into the first team while Jansson has been signed as competition for Kane.
That's not the only point-missing the two have both conspired to make, as Souness seems to believe you can make like-for-like comparisons between a striker and an attacking midfielder while missing out on the obvious issue that countless players signed by Man Utd in the last couple of seasons looked ill-suited to the Premier League, almost as if the team were managed by an arrogant klutz who couldn't comprehend that his tactics were as counter-productive as they were counter-intuitive, while Murphy overlooks the fact that between 2011-14 Fulham were being kept afloat by the goals of Dempsey, Berbatov and (to a lesser extent) Andy Johnson - and when those players left, the club promptly fell out of the Premier League.
It's also worth bringing up the fact that Ruud van Nistelrooy, Robin van Persie and Luis Suarez are all examples of strikers who moved from the Eredivisie to the Premier League and did alright for themselves...
pundit
pʌndɪt/
noun
1. an expert in a particular subject or field who is frequently called upon to give their opinions to the public.
2. an individual who is either to inept, to scared or to pissed to go into management themselves so spout bollocks on the same subject and expect people to listen to them and/or take them seriously.
NARRATIVE ALERT
In the last 24 hours, both Graeme Souness and Danny Murphy have both voiced misgivings about Janssen, and both of them follow the exact same "Eredivisie strikers FAIL" structure, with Murphy mentioning the £10m Fulham paid Twente for Bryan Ruiz while Souness mentions the £25m Man Utd paid for Mephis Depay.
Naturally, both of them miss the point entirely, as in both those cases the players were signed to go straight into the first team while Jansson has been signed as competition for Kane.
That's not the only point-missing the two have both conspired to make, as Souness seems to believe you can make like-for-like comparisons between a striker and an attacking midfielder while missing out on the obvious issue that countless players signed by Man Utd in the last couple of seasons looked ill-suited to the Premier League, almost as if the team were managed by an arrogant klutz who couldn't comprehend that his tactics were as counter-productive as they were counter-intuitive, while Murphy overlooks the fact that between 2011-14 Fulham were being kept afloat by the goals of Dempsey, Berbatov and (to a lesser extent) Andy Johnson - and when those players left, the club promptly fell out of the Premier League.
It's also worth bringing up the fact that Ruud van Nistelrooy, Robin van Persie and Luis Suarez are all examples of strikers who moved from the Eredivisie to the Premier League and did alright for themselves...
I wonder if McNumpty can inform the readers of his article whether or not he believes that a team will be affected ahead of this season based on the sliding scale of how many players they had in the England team. How does this work, exactly?http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/36962933
<McNulty>
Tottenham
This season: 5th
Last season: 3rd
Tough call this one as Mauricio Pochettino's side were excellent last season and were right in the title shake-up for so long.
In reality, you could throw a blanket over the likes of Chelsea, Spurs, Liverpool and Arsenal in the battle for top-four places. But when you think about Spurs, will a hangover from England's Euro 2016 fiasco in France effect the likes of Harry Kane, Eric Dier and Dele Alli?
</McNulty>
Wrote that last sentence before the game against Inter did he ??