Excuse the 10 sec advert http://m.hartlepoolmail.co.uk/sport...f-his-skills-on-the-training-ground-1-5825154
Good video, it's great to have a manager that gets on the training pitch and shows them what he wants them to do
Do you think that kind of training is the norm? I remember doing that training when I was 8. You'd think professional footballers would now how to do this basic stuff.
Some of your players seem a little uncomfortable with the ball at their feet. PDC was probably the best player there
It's day 2 of pre season and that was a 30 second clip. Lets not start getting judgmental on training methods after that!
A legend of the game with arguably the best goal in premiership history, who wouldnt want to take on board what he is saying, when he gets over the basics i bet there are no cameras around
De ja vu is a difficult thing to explain at the best times, you know when you feel you've seen it before but you know you havnt? Déjà vu, from French, literally "already seen", is the phenomenon of having the strong sensation that an event or experience currently being experienced has been experienced in the past, whether it has actually happened or not. Scientific research The psychologist Edward B. Titchener in his book 1928 A Textbook of Psychology, explained déjà vu as caused by a person having a brief glimpse of an object or situation, before the brain has completed "constructing" a full conscious perception of the experience. Such a "partial perception" then results in a false sense of familiarity.[1] The explanation that has mostly been accepted of déjà vu is not that it is an act of "precognition" or "prophecy", but rather that it is an anomaly of memory, giving the false impression that an experience is "being recalled".[2][3] This explanation is supported by the fact that the sense of "recollection" at the time is strong in most cases, but that the circumstances of the "previous" experience (when, where, and how the earlier experience occurred) are uncertain or believed to be impossible. As time passes, subjects may exhibit a strong recollection of having the "unsettling" experience of déjà vu itself, but little or no recollection of the specifics of the event(s) or circumstance(s) which were the subject of the déjà vu experience itself (the events that were being "remembered"). This may result from an "overlap" between the neurological systems responsible for short-term memory and those responsible for long-term memory, resulting in (memories of) recent events erroneously being perceived as being in the more distant past. One theory is the events are stored into memory before the conscious part of the brain even receives the information and processes it.[4] However, this explanation has been criticized that the brain would not be able to store information without a sensory input first. Another theory suggests the brain may process sensory input (perhaps all sensory input) as a "memory-in-progress", and that therefore during the event itself one believes it to be a past memory. In a survey, Brown had concluded that approximately two-thirds of the population have had déjà vu experiences.[5]
**** me there are some beasts in our side now. little ****ers lick Suarez will never get a header from a corner in now
Love to see that **** take a bite out of Alfie or Modibo. Break his teeth off of their steel like skin
Great to see a manager with such enthusiasm and willing to get stuck in. If the players show half as much we are in for a treat this season
Layman's terms? For a slip second one part of the brain works faster than another creating the illusion of deja vu?
pdc may do crazy things but if i worked for a guy like that it would be infectious and spur me on, hope it grabs his players the same.