Come on Hilts, what a quibble. The word "from" heavily implies that we contacted him, and that was the whole tone of the report on the radio, which is misleading. Bradley is not lying, the BBC is. Bradley himself expressly said that his representatives contacted us, and then later on the BBC said Bradley had contact from Aston Villa, indeed that Bradley himself had said that he had. These things are not true, hence the BBC is being misleading. Pretty minor point I'd have thought, "Media in not telling truth shock".
The great thing about Klinsmann, though, is the sheer combination of factors: the fact that he offers vibrant leadership, youthful (for a manager) vigour, tactical awareness, long-term vision and a desire to really do something in the game is almost priceless, not to mention his high profile. I'd be very excited were Klinsmann to roll up in B6.
It was the radio report earlier. The report on the website's fine, but for several news bulletins on the radio earlier they said Bradley had contact from Villa.
Quote from: Monty on August 22, 2010, 12:14:50 PMIt was the radio report earlier. The report on the website's fine, but for several news bulletins on the radio earlier they said Bradley had contact from Villa.Bradley has had contact from Villa. Did they say Villa contacted him first?
It was heavily implied in the news reports afterwards. They know exactly what they're doing, don't worry about that.
Lying, misleading, deliberately implying a falsehood - these are semantic differences. The BBC attempted to make the story sound much more jazzy than it was. Thus, for Villa fans worried from the, at best, ambiguous reporting of the events, I would say there's nothing new here and nothing to worry about. It's a non-story that the BBC, as per any news organisation, made a slight alteration in to make it sound more important than it is.