Vipers don't live in dens. That's lions. Or fat middle-aged men with big houses, irritating wives and Sky+.I think `a nest' of vipers is the appropriate cliche. In French you have a `knot' of vipers but in English it's a nest.And if we're going to be really picky a viper is unlikely to turn on you unless you actually stand on it. Usually they piss their pants with fear at the sight of a person, or even a football benefactor
There is a snake called 'Malcolm's tree viper': co-incidendence? I don't think so.
Quote from: Villadawg on September 04, 2010, 12:07:59 AMHe said we have to get to grips with the wage bill and sell players. He said it on the first day of pre-season training immediately following his son posting an attack on the manager. It may be pure coincidence that we lost our manager, sold our best player and made £20m profit this summer. If it is a coincidence, we'll see them return to investment in January or next summer. If they don't, we'll know it wasn't a coincidence. As things stand, I think they deserve the benefit of the doubt.As for a host of players who don't get used much. We have only 17 experienced players in our squad, no other squad competing for CL places is as weak. We were very fortunate with injuries last season, let's hope this season is as fortunate. 17 experienced players. So you reckon Habib Beye represents good value for money? Or Curtis Davies?Does it not strike you as relevant that the manager fucked off at precisely the time he usually awoke from his summer hibernation and realised that he needed to sign players? Wouldn't you expect there to be something of a glitch in signing plans when the manager leaves at that point?Here's what he said about the wage bill / selling playersQuote2. I am not sure what needs to be clarified in my statement. We have supported Martin for the past 4 years...and are willing to support again. At the same time, that support has to make sense. It isn't "all about money" but to think that we can just throw money around...keep players on the wage bill that aren't going to get on the Pitch...and have a successful Club is not reasonable or good business. Adding players without respect to the total outlay of the Club is the quickest way to get into danger...and this was reiterated many times over the past weeks. It was NOT a case of spending money...it WAS a case of the weekly wage bill. This was not a shock to Martin or anyone else...it is just smart business and something that even the wealthest Clubs must watch.I've bolded the important bits, as I suspect those are the ones you've been doing your best to avoid reading up till now. Incidentally, what is your take on the General's comments today on the circumstances of MON's leaving?I trust you believe him to be lying on that, too. Incidentally, I see you telling everyone of what a shit job the board are doing, how they're skinflints etc etc on threads all over the place, other than General Krulak's thread. Why not raise it there?As for 17 experienced players, yes, your hero has spent 120 million pounds and managed to accrue 17 experienced players.Maybe if he hadn't spaffed 9 million pounds on a fourth choice centre back, 3.5m and 60k a week on a striker who goes into a catatonic state when he gets within 10 feet of goal, 8.5 million on a midfielder he ostracised after he looked at him funnily, 5m on a striker who was patently not good enough for Wigan let alone us, but who ran out the full length of his contract, and a big money contract for an ageing right back who then became third choice behind another right back and an out of position 8 milion pound centre back, maybe, just maybe we'd have been able to use that money more effectively and to build a deeper squad.
He said we have to get to grips with the wage bill and sell players. He said it on the first day of pre-season training immediately following his son posting an attack on the manager. It may be pure coincidence that we lost our manager, sold our best player and made £20m profit this summer. If it is a coincidence, we'll see them return to investment in January or next summer. If they don't, we'll know it wasn't a coincidence. As things stand, I think they deserve the benefit of the doubt.As for a host of players who don't get used much. We have only 17 experienced players in our squad, no other squad competing for CL places is as weak. We were very fortunate with injuries last season, let's hope this season is as fortunate. 17 experienced players.
2. I am not sure what needs to be clarified in my statement. We have supported Martin for the past 4 years...and are willing to support again. At the same time, that support has to make sense. It isn't "all about money" but to think that we can just throw money around...keep players on the wage bill that aren't going to get on the Pitch...and have a successful Club is not reasonable or good business. Adding players without respect to the total outlay of the Club is the quickest way to get into danger...and this was reiterated many times over the past weeks. It was NOT a case of spending money...it WAS a case of the weekly wage bill. This was not a shock to Martin or anyone else...it is just smart business and something that even the wealthest Clubs must watch.
Quote from: sfx412Quote from: Chris SmithI think the 3 or 4 players we can get with the Milner money will make us stronger next season.Really, like we did with Barry's money?If its been posted sorry, here's the words from Mon's lips,http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/a/aston_villa/8846298.stmenjoy.Selling Milner is one thing, but that attitude is depressing, I actually feel sorry for the bloke.This was pathetic. MON needs to stop whinging about how hard life is and set about improving the team (and, concurrently, not wasting money on the wages of players that never sniff the pitch). If there were a sell-to-buy policy (which there is not), then he would only have himself to blame for the exorbitant wages spent on horrible players. The top wage earner at the club is Emile Heskey. Whose fault is that, I wonder? He has had plenty of money at his disposal and used it on a fair amount of garbage (not in total, of course, but his record in this is only so-so). He is fickle in his player selection and then, when he settles on a side, he runs it into the ground. Further, he has proved himself incapable of identifying talent outside of the country and thus is force to pay these higher wages; again, his fault. This whole moan would be laughable if it were not so infuriating.
Quote from: Chris SmithI think the 3 or 4 players we can get with the Milner money will make us stronger next season.Really, like we did with Barry's money?If its been posted sorry, here's the words from Mon's lips,http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/a/aston_villa/8846298.stmenjoy.Selling Milner is one thing, but that attitude is depressing, I actually feel sorry for the bloke.
I think the 3 or 4 players we can get with the Milner money will make us stronger next season.
General Krulak here:1. Sorry for being off the site...your "military star and illustrious fan" is back...and I didn't take the comment as sarcastic but, rather, as an indication that I am first and foremost a fan.2. I know that I have mentioned on more than one occasion that we need to understand that all Premiership Clubs...yes, all football clubs...are a business. Revenue and expenditures need to make sense. One of the issues we face, and we have talked about it before and so has MON and others is the issue of the on-going wage bill. This issue needs to be kept in perspective and needs to be understood. It is not just the cost of the transfer...it is the on-going wages. If you don't get that right, you cannot adequately pay your good players much less go onto the market and get new ones. What we see right now is the Club getting a handle on the wage side of the house. This is no different than what we have done once before. This means we have to sell some players...no different than most Premiership Clubs...you see them doing it all the time. Randy has NOT lost his passion for the Club or has he lost his vision of the goal he has always set for the Villa. He has spent more time in the UK in the last 2 months than he has ever done before...he has been focused on the Club and has been working closely with MON. As always, I am NOT going to get into a discussion of transfers BUT I will say that everyone needs to cool down a bit and see what happens.3. At some point we can discuss the World Cup...a pretty big disappointment for me.
I have always thought that Randy Lerner decided to buy Aston Villa as an investment. Thinking long-term: perhaps he had an idea that it wouldn't be that long before a European League was formed; perhaps he also had another idea about making more money out of televising games from Villa Park involving the internet or a digital pay-to-view channel; perhaps he had a really wacky idea that club franchises can be moved around (Cleveland Villa might to our Randy have a particular resonance).Thinking short-term: perhaps Randy saw the crash coming and wanted to get out of stocks and shares; perhaps he needed to shift some money out of the USA for tax purposes; perhaps he figured that buying a Premier League club was a copper-bottomed investment anyway.Or perhaps he thought of buying Aston Villa and making them the top club in the world again.As for the General: his business is PR. He's just not very good at it that's all.
Quote from: ronshirt on September 03, 2010, 06:58:08 PMI have always thought that Randy Lerner decided to buy Aston Villa as an investment. Thinking long-term: perhaps he had an idea that it wouldn't be that long before a European League was formed; perhaps he also had another idea about making more money out of televising games from Villa Park involving the internet or a digital pay-to-view channel; perhaps he had a really wacky idea that club franchises can be moved around (Cleveland Villa might to our Randy have a particular resonance).Thinking short-term: perhaps Randy saw the crash coming and wanted to get out of stocks and shares; perhaps he needed to shift some money out of the USA for tax purposes; perhaps he figured that buying a Premier League club was a copper-bottomed investment anyway.Or perhaps he thought of buying Aston Villa and making them the top club in the world again.As for the General: his business is PR. He's just not very good at it that's all.I take it you are not an investment Guru
Quote from: ronshirt on September 04, 2010, 11:57:05 AMThere is a snake called 'Malcolm's tree viper': co-incidendence? I don't think so.in Germany they have vindscreen vipers./coat