Donating any fees received to charityRichard Conway @richard_conway
Eric Bristow's manager asked BBC for £5000 (+VAT) when asked if his client would discuss his tweets about the survivors of child sex abuse.
The **** him.![]()
Just seen you have already seen , ignore my post .. HaDonating any fees received to charity
My favourite is Sid Waddell's well considered study in hyperbole:
"When Alexander of Macedonia was 33, he cried salt tears because there were no more worlds to conquer … Eric Bristow is only 27."
There's a "I went to Leo Shultz and survived" facebook group and he's mentioned a few times but only that he oversaw the football and had links to City. Had a quick Google earlier when Chazz said the name and that group came up.
I do get where you're coming from with that.Bristow was stupid and slightly uneducated, but nothing more , some of the comments on here and particularly twitter make me despair more then the comments of a pissed 60 year old man from another generation..... people shown more loathing to him then the actual offender.
when the news broke, my first comment was why did nobody tell their father, uncle, older brother to go kick the **** out of him, uneducated maybe but I said it, just not to 100,000 followers..
maybe I should be hung too.
He went too far , but he is famous for being a wind up merchant and there is always some people who it has nothing to do with waiting to be offended unfortunately
Good post.Bristow's comments are atrocious but the way to deal with them is to educate, not shout down. The attitude of Bristow when it comes to child abuse (and sexual abuse in general) - that of trying to put themselves in the victims' shoes and coming up with a make-believe response in which you'd have behaved in a clear and coherent fashion - isn't an uncommon one, though I do think it's becoming less and less so.
I know that Brian Moore (rugby union) isn't everyone's cup of tea, but I'd strongly recommend to anyone the section in his autobiography (Beware of the Dog) where he recounts the sexual abuse he received as a schoolboy from a teacher and the effect it has had on him for the rest of his life. He was one of the most fearless English sportsmen I've ever seen on a pitch - who'd think nothing of staring down the front row of the All Blacks' scrum - openly admitting that he was still terrified of a feeble, old man somewhere in West Yorkshire who he hadn't seen in a long time. I don't think there's a person on the planet would have described Moore as 'a wimp'.
Every victim of abuse will react differently to what's happened to them; there's no right way to deal with it, but those who've never had to go through such a thing simply will not be able to empathise with those who have or second guess how they themselves would react. I hope, when this issue has died down for Bristow, that one of the victims explains to him what they went through, or someone sends him the account of one of the victims of sexual abuse. Education changes attitudes much more effectively than outrage.
I reckon Gradi is going to be implicatedwonder if any famous football coaches will be involved
I reckon Gradi is going to be implicated
Bristow's comments are atrocious but the way to deal with them is to educate, not shout down. The attitude of Bristow when it comes to child abuse (and sexual abuse in general) - that of trying to put themselves in the victims' shoes and coming up with a make-believe response in which you'd have behaved in a clear and coherent fashion - isn't an uncommon one, though I do think it's becoming less and less so.
I know that Brian Moore (rugby union) isn't everyone's cup of tea, but I'd strongly recommend to anyone the section in his autobiography (Beware of the Dog) where he recounts the sexual abuse he received as a schoolboy from a teacher and the effect it has had on him for the rest of his life. He was one of the most fearless English sportsmen I've ever seen on a pitch - who'd think nothing of staring down the front row of the All Blacks' scrum - openly admitting that he was still terrified of a feeble, old man somewhere in West Yorkshire who he hadn't seen in a long time. I don't think there's a person on the planet would have described Moore as 'a wimp'.
Every victim of abuse will react differently to what's happened to them; there's no right way to deal with it, but those who've never had to go through such a thing simply will not be able to empathise with those who have or second guess how they themselves would react. I hope, when this issue has died down for Bristow, that one of the victims explains to him what they went through, or someone sends him the account of one of the victims of sexual abuse. Education changes attitudes much more effectively than outrage.
The BBC have been fanning the flames of this sad and sordid outbreak of ***** ism, and they seem to be almost willing the numbers to keep rising, as they are in the driving seat with this story.
I remember playing them when Pete Skipper and Paul Oberg played for them.Everyone had suspicions 40 years ago Cortez. Fred put his head on the train lines at Cott.
When I played youth football and city boys Fred was about then. Someone to stay away from, you never went in his office at Schultz YC alone...
Oh I'm not saying out happened to those two either.
All this really does beggar belief, do these guys who perpetrated these acts go into football because they knew they would have access to young boys, or did they turn into these perverts whilst being in their company?. I guess it will turn out that they themselves were abused as a child and so the story goes on.