No it doesn't. > =greater than. Put it between anything and that's what it means. In this case Slippy T = Terry and Slippy G = Gerrard. He actually posted SlippyT>SlippyG
Open new window, type Terry in tears, images, bingo.....took about 15 seconds. Blooman must still be on dial-up.
Stop trying to make less of of a twat of yourself than you already are, I pointed out to you many posts back that the > represented the implications both slips had to both players.
WTF are you on about. I've shown you up for what you are and now you got a cob on. Take my ball home? How old are you ffs?
> does means greater than, correct, but the way you used it meant Terry's slip was greater than Gerrard's
Another example for you: Rodgers >Mourinho - means Rodgers is greater than Mourinho Whining Rodgers > Whining Mourinho - means Rodgers is a bigger whiner than Mourinho Once you qualify the name, the qualifier becomes the 'greater than'
Fair enough I was just helping the chelsea point scoring . I wont argue about which slip is more costly. But anelka actually missed one of the crucial penalties
Gerrard's slip didn't cost us the title - over a whole season there isn't just one reason we lost it - but Terry's slip cost you the CL.
Nope. If Terry scores it's game over and you win. If Gerrard doesn't slip we still have 3 games to play and potentially still lose the game anyway.