michael foulger has tweeted that culverhouse will not be at ncfc for much longer. gutted to hear that as i thought lambert would struggle without his help and he would be ideal to make a smooth transistion from one manger to the new one.
Is it definitely him, though? He only has 878 followers, where McNally has well over 11,000. There are several Chris Hughton accounts on twitter, but none are genuine, as there was a message from the club yesterday that he has no twitter account - Dave
If he (and Karsa) are on their way, which looks the likely outcome irrespective if this is the real Michael Foulger or not, I reckon Hughton has grilled them for their opinions (and possible documents etc.) on Norwich's current squad as well as discussed scouting reports of our potential transfer targets.
I see that assistant coach Kevin Mcdonald (who had been at villa for 17 years) has been let go, so its only a matter of time
It did get a bit breezy for a while, high winds coming off the sea coinciding with a high tide, though not a bore
Unfollow? and another one I heard recently unlike! What is happening to our lauguage? At least Graham Taylor did manage 'not like' all those years ago - sorry Dave cannot abide this modern bollocks speak.
I only posted what it says on the tin! You can follow someone which will send you their tweets, then, when you don't want to know about them anymore, you click the button which says "unfollow!" I agree with your dislike of the term, I feel very much the same when I have a redundant programme on my pc which I have to "uninstall!"
Never travel to America then! The one that really bugs me is 'burglarised!' that's not a real word. I'm used to 'unfollow' and other similar words though, but that may be because I am a yoof!
Be sure not to listen to BBC weather forecasters then Bushby. Their misuse of English is as bad as their forecasts.
Re: the modern use of English, I think you'll enjoy this piece http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/14130942 Interesting how some 'Americanisms’ have become so much everyday usage, we regard them as 'ours'. Our language is in a constant state of evolution, always absorbing and adapting words from other languages, but the modern habit of blindly adopting American English as 'right' is maddening.
I got rather annoyed when exam boards decided to change the spellings of some chemicals so sulphur became sulfur. At least alumininium hasn't become aluminum