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Post by capitalgull on May 25, 2009 21:28:50 GMT
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Post by chrish on May 25, 2009 21:53:00 GMT
What a great read Andy. On a different note I noticed that David Graham is now playing for the oldest football club in England.
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Post by capitalgull on May 25, 2009 22:04:56 GMT
What a great read Andy. On a different note I noticed that David Graham is now playing for the oldest football club in England. Where Scott Partridge was also plying his trade for the first half of the season as well, scoring at almost a goal a game in the process.
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Post by stuartB on May 25, 2009 22:05:05 GMT
What a great read Andy. On a different note I noticed that David Graham is now playing for the oldest football club in England. sheffield? what a waste of a great talent!
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Post by chrish on May 25, 2009 22:18:12 GMT
What a great read Andy. On a different note I noticed that David Graham is now playing for the oldest football club in England. sheffield? what a waste of a great talent! Apparently their Coach and Horses ground in Dronfield has a boozer attached to it. The club bought the ground and the pub back in 2001. I wonder if DG hangs out with Martin Gritton who of course plies his trade nowadays at nearby Chesterfield. A classy player when fit. One of the plus sides to Leroy Rosenior's man management attributes. Only Peter Jackson came close to getting as much out of him.
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Post by stuartB on May 25, 2009 22:35:40 GMT
What a great read Andy. On a different note I noticed that David Graham is now playing for the oldest football club in England. Where Scott Partridge was also plying his trade for the first half of the season as well, scoring at almost a goal a game in the process. now at WSM
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Post by ospelgull on May 26, 2009 6:35:14 GMT
A good read. So now and then you read these kind of stories about players who go abroad and make a nice career for themselves. It won't be Barcelona or AC Milan but smaller clubs. Jimmy Hasselbaink was a fine example of a player who went abroad to a small club and eventually made it big time. German goalkeeper Lutz Pfannenstiel must be the most extraordinary example of a footballer plying his trade abroad.
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Post by capitalgull on May 26, 2009 9:55:20 GMT
I recall the story of Lutz Pfannenstiel when he was at Bradford Park Avenue and it had been thought he had died on the pitch - I hadn't realised just what a career he has had since!!! For those who don't know, check out this from Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutz_Pfannenstiel
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Post by crooky on May 27, 2009 10:17:52 GMT
Great story. However, I think he might be a tad deluded if he thinks that the top 4/5 teams in the Faroes are good enough to play in League 2 or possibly 1?
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