garysfc
Well-Known Member
What worries me for the whole affair is how long it took MP to realise Redmond, Forster // Lemina, Pistol Pete (yep, can’t spell); in / out or really out / in.
Redmond and Forster really are on the out aren’t they. Agree it took at least five games too long but wondering if they haven’t been executed as an example to others. [HASHTAG]#vanished[/HASHTAG]
Actually this is better:
Saints are predictable. Boufal is unpredictable. We need some unpredictability
Redmond came on today, with 10 minutes to go - and did pretty much what he was asked to do.
Take on opposition with blistering pace down the wide channels before cutting inside to rifle a shot in the corner?
Bein sports doesn’t have our game available on demand damnit.
I’m agreeing totally about Boufal. I also think Tadic has turned his season around and has made the oppo looking dazed and confused more than a few times lately. His takes on success rate must be right up there. Possibly better than Boufal. And his end ball is much better. Different kinds of trickery and room for both.
Yes, but King Harold beat Harald Hadrada at Stamford Bridge in 1066, as you should recall.
I have never understood why Chelsea's ground is called Stamford Bridge. I am similarly intrigued as to why West Ham played at the Boleyn Ground and wondered if this might have been part of a manor owned by than family. I know that the Kop in Liverpool owes it's origins to the Battle of Spion Kopje but it would be curious to learn how many other grounds owes their names to incidents in British history.
The Viking King Canute the Great defeated the Anglo-Saxon King Ethelred the Unready in 1014 and was crowned in Southampton.[15] His fabled attempt to "command" the tide to halt may have taken place in Southampton. (Wikipedia)."Canute was undoubtedly the most successful "Danish" king of England and represented a high-water mark for the Danelaw"
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Stamford just means a crossing at a sandy spot and there was a Stamford Creek near the present football ground....presumably there is/was a bridge there.I have never understood why Chelsea's ground is called Stamford Bridge.
The Viking King Canute the Great defeated the Anglo-Saxon King Ethelred the Unready in 1014 and was crowned in Southampton.[15] His fabled attempt to "command" the tide to halt may have taken place in Southampton. (Wikipedia).
There is a plaque somewhere on the castle wall in Southampton....saw it a few years back. As it probably never happened, let's claim it was more likely not to have happened in Southampton.I was always taught at school that that happened in Bosham near Chichester

The Viking King Canute the Great defeated the Anglo-Saxon King Ethelred the Unready in 1014 and was crowned in Southampton.[15] His fabled attempt to "command" the tide to halt may have taken place in Southampton. (Wikipedia).