We should taunt them all ferociously, like this >>>>> It's the future [video=youtube;o2Q0ywtyRFo]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o2Q0ywtyRFo&feature=related[/video]
We don't owe him anything, we offered him an olive branch from LCFC. The end. He was rewarded in his work by a not so insignificant salary, then he decided to **** off. He's a twat and I hope the boring ****ing dick gets sacked before the season is out and ends up managing in the ryman league. He's an untrustworthy sheister.
He did what he got paid to do while he was with us and did a good job, so for that reason I wont boo him. I understand that he left for greater fortunes, but what I am dissapointed about is the sneaky way he went about it, to the board, the players and the fans. and again while I wont boo him, I have no respect for him. He came across as an old school bloke but he,s no better then the likes of Bullard, and that dissapointed me.
He is a **** pure and simple. We should get all the young kids from the North Stand to be there when he steps off the coach and throw chocolate gold coins at him. All this we are bigger than that and thank him for the job he has done is bollocks give him the abuse he deserves. Money grabbing ****. "Get back to the people i care about" fuk off you ****. We are Hull you are scum.
Dont forget the 2k lester fans that will be singing his name all game just to wind us up.Its our duty as football fans to let the judas twat know he is a **** Ffs
From the Yorkshire Post Barmby keeping Hullâs focus on winning again NICK BARMBY has warned his Hull City players not to get side-tracked tomorrow by the return of Nigel Pearson less than a month after his shock resignation. The Tigersâ former manager seems set for a hostile reception when he heads back to the KC Stadium in charge of new club Leicester City. During Hullâs last three games, fans have voiced their anger over Pearsonâs decision to walk out and Barmby admits the pre-match focus is likely to be on the 46-year-old Foxes chief. However, Barmby is also at pains to stress that his players must not lose sight of their main target â sealing a return to winning ways after back-to-back defeats. Hullâs caretaker manager said: âThe attention is going to be on Nige coming back. I am sure it (Pearsonâs reception) will be quite hot and I am sure the fans will let him know they are there. âI am not saying for one minute that the fans should do this or should do that. Fans are passionate about the club and I wouldnât tell them what to do. âI have had it in the past as a player, where you return to a particular club and get a lot of stick. I am sure Nige knows he will get a bit of stick, there is no getting away from that. âThey love the club and will see fit to sing what they want, within reason obviously. âBut I am also sure our fans will get behind us, as they always do.â Asked if there was a danger of the Hull team, the vast majority having been signed by Pearson, being swept up in the emotion of Pearsonâs return, Barmby replied: âThe way our players go about their jobs, they give their all anyway. âWhen I hear about players giving 110 per cent, there is no such thing. You give your all and that is it. Our players will do that as usual. âThere will be a lot of attention on Nige coming back but the lads are up for it in the same way they have been for all three fixtures since he left. âThey wonât be approaching the game any differently. They will be professional and looking to win the game. âThe main issue is not getting wrapped up in it (Pearsonâs return). We have to focus on our job. We need to get back to winning ways and to get back to keeping clean sheets. That is our focus.â Pearson spent 16 months in charge at the KC Stadium, initially steadying the ship following relegation from the Premier League before the Allam family could save the club a year ago with a multi-million pound takeover. Backed by significant transfer funds in the January transfer window, he then set about rebuilding the Hull squad as Matty Fryatt and Aaron Mclean arrived for seven-figure fees along with a host of other signings. Despite a big improvement in results, a play-off push proved to be just beyond the club last term but this time around they are among the challengers. Barmby, who stepped up to join Pearsonâs coaching staff during the summer of 2010, said: âHe did a really good job here, under difficult circumstances after we had fallen out of the Premier League. âUnder the circumstances, with the debt, players having to take wage deferrals when he first came in and then a takeover, it was a very difficult time as a manager. âBut the way he dealt with it was fantastic. It is important to remember that. Lads had to defer wages when he first came in so that wasnât ideal. But he dealt with it brilliantly and the squad he assembled was talented. âThe club needed someone like Nige. I learned a lot, mainly his leadership and management. I would never bad mouth him. âJust because he has left, my respect for him doesnât change. I will always have that. But he has left and so we have to get on with it.â Pearson has enjoyed an encouraging start to life back at Leicester, having led the club to two wins and a draw in his first three games to lift the Foxes into the play-off places â something that proved beyond Sven Goran Eriksson during his year in charge. Tomorrowâs game will see Leicester take on a Hull side made up almost entirely of players signed by Pearson, meaning the Foxes chief is in no doubt about the task that lays ahead. Pearson said: âThere will be sub-plots to the game and I can understand why, but I have to just focus on the game. The focus remains the same and outside of that I canât influence anything else. âI am going to try and remain focused on our team and just because we know their players doesnât mean we are going to change our approach. It will be, as always, about what we do. We are aware that it will be a tough place to go to. âI am sure the game will be a quick tempo. They have good players so we will have to strive to be at our best. âObviously we know a lot about the players because the majority are players we signed when we were there. I am sure they will be looking to develop themselves now and it will be tough, because they have been unlucky in the last few games.â Hull have no fresh injury concerns following the midweek defeat to Southampton, while two long-term absentees â Seyi Olofinjana and Richard Garcia â both took part in a behind-closed-doors friendly yesterday at the clubâs Cottingham training ground. http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/spor...eping_hull_s_focus_on_winning_again_1_4025327
I thought IO was falling into the 'cheer for Barmby camp and ignore Pearson', but your post has convinced me we should do the traditional thing and slag the two-faced twat from start to finish!
oh i think thats almost a certainty if lesta dont go up in may 2012. he went for his 2.2 million pay off come may.
it wont wind me up as thats what they are for. we should back Barmby up. the only thing that matters and that will have the greatest impact on everyone connected to lesta city is the scoreline. everything else is just fluff N stuff.
From CI: Hull City v Leicester City - PREVIEW This Saturday, one of our own needs our 100% backing above everything else. Everything â and I mean everything â should simply pale into an irrelevant insignificance come 3pm this Saturday. Heâs from Hull, heâs representing our club, he wants to be here, heâs prepared to take on the job on an open ended basis, so back him. No exceptions. There is no sideshow taking place. When the players and the management step out into breach to meet their counterparts this Saturday a cacophony of noise, unabridged support and vociferous cheering should be greeting our team, our manager. The Tigers desperately need three points â and you have an obligation to fulfil on the terraces. Barmby has done a magnificent job in gleaning a comprehensive away success at Derby, dominating Burnley - barring a 10 minute spell of madness - and proving to be Southamptonâs toughest test of the season. Those were Nigel Adkins words, not mine by the way, after City once again controlled the game for long spells. Barmby's winning formula though is to find a way to numb those 'mad spells'. Lamentably, City are staring down the barrel of three successive defeats as a consequence of Nick Barmbyâs opening salvo as manager. What the club has gained and what the club have probably deserved, are poles apart, but as we all know this is a result based industry. There are no points awarded for how good we can play football or artistic impression. Everyone knows the task the Tigers are facing tomorrow is a tough one. It will come as absolutely no surprise how Leicester will line up or the tactics they will employ to plunder all the points. City have been the beneficiary of such game plans to club record breaking levels. This is Barmbyâs toughest test yet. So, our support is a veritable must from the fans and being distracted from this task will not help. Do not fall in to the trap. Barmby will have to consider a side that will not have winger Robbie Brady after his straight red card invoked an immediate three game ban. Paul McKenna returns from his own suspension to bolster and steel up the midfield if necessary. Tom Cairney will be fighting hard to retain his place, though as Barmby needs to contemplate how to recover the winning feeling. Frankly, I couldnât give a flying fig what is going on in the other camp, it is all about Hull City and Nick Barmby. Do not turn up this Saturday with anything other than total and utter commitment to the people charged with getting results at our club now - the very people who want to be here, I may remind you. This Saturday, make sure you give our club, our manager and our players your unconditional support. The time is most definitely now when it is needed more than ever. Be loud, be proud, be ready for the challenge ahead. Barmby - heâs one of our own, together we need to be there for him. Ensure that you are. COYT
Agree with this, the last few results have made me even more pissed off at im for leaving us at such a vulnerable time in the middle of the season. As for the money thing, as I've said several times, if he was a binman no one could begrudge him the life-changing contract but as he was already a very wealthy football manager, and the move simply lined his pockets a bit more, I don't see it as a good reason at all. He's a ****. I just hope people give the right message, it doesn't really matter but I'd hate him to think we thought he did a crap job or something, all abuse should be chanelled correctly and down the 'greedy twat' route.