Ep 1836: Football Men Take Aim At Ken Again......
MercuryBoy wrote: » Is Miguel Delaney to Pochettino what Duncan Castles is to Jose Mourinho? i.e a paid cheerleader? In the last few weeks Delaney has "linked" Pochettino to the jobs at Juve and Barca, only for them to give the job to someone else a few hours later..fairly lame
Beersmith wrote: » Yeah it wasn't a good episode at all. Ken went off on strange tangents about messi inspiring other younger players via TV and mobile phones. Seemed like 4 or 4 half points balled up together and Murph didn't reel him in like Eoin would have. RH on again and he was good.
Say Your Number wrote: » Ken and Giles did seem to agree that Messi playing that way for Munich wouldn't be a problem.
Arghus wrote: » I'm sure he agrees with plenty.
Hippo wrote: » RH? Surely you mean 'Raffi'.
humberklog wrote: » I can hear new Giles audio bed already. Over on The Stand with Dunphy they had a pop and a laugh at Ken... "he mustn't know much about football". They didn't mention Ken by name, didn't need to.
EltonJohn69 wrote: » Ken got hit hard again today.... I would say his nerves are shot.
Cienciano wrote: » Dunphy also supported John Delaney up until recent enough. They need Richie on tomorrow. His bit on PSG and RB Leipzig has gone viral
ReginaldSmythV wrote: » He’s been retweeting it just in case it doesn’t.
cmac2009 wrote: » Liked the cancellation threat that Ken threw at Tim after that atrocious Irish accent attempt.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » I've always found it bewildering that foreigners use that leprechaun accent to imitate all Irish people. I remember Michael Palin doing it to mimic Bob Geldof. Do the likes of Ken and Bob really sound like Barry Fitzgerald in The Quiet Man to outsiders? Also, I never knew Murph had played in a Galway county final. I wonder was he really as bad as Ken intimates. They only lost by a few points...
Hynzieh wrote: » I didn't think it was great. There were a lot of highly contentious claims presented as if they were indisputable facts. Like when Rory Smith started going on about how vulture capitalist owners are essentially fine and how people like (large-scale political donor) Stan Kroenke are separate from politics because they are not directly involved in government (a totally naive understanding of how power and money work in the US). Or when Delaney made the claim that using a club to promote your state is exploiting people's 'childlike love of football' but buying a club just so that some already very wealth people can make yet more money off it is somehow not. Ken did challenge some of these points but he'd didn't go hard enough IMO. In fairness, he probably didn't want to totally derail the interview but I am frustrated by how narrow and lazy the conversation about money in football has become. I agree with the general criticism of the owners of PSG and Man City (for obvious reasons) but, ironically, for all the talk of 'sports washing' the only thing that is getting 'washed' in these conversations is the reputation of the other terrible, non Gulf state owners of football clubs. I fear there is a danger of people starting to think that the problem with morally dubious money in football starts and ends with the Gulf states. Take Smith's claim about the relative harmlessness of vulture capitalist investment. Has anyone heard even a hint of criticism from football journalists of the vulture fund (Elliott Management) that bought AC Milan in 2018? They have made money in some really nasty ways (Google the Guardian article titled: "Vulture funds await Jersey decision on poor countries' debts"). Again, I don't say any of that in defense of Qatar or the UAE, they are clearly horrible and need to be called out, but the moral argument these lads are trying to make doesn't have much weight to it if anything short of what the Gulf states do is essentially given a pass or if investment from sources closer to home is given no scrutiny whatsoever.
Brock Turnpike wrote: » In fairness to the SC lads, they had James Montague on to talk about his book "The Billionaires Club" when it was realised a couple of years ago. I'd recommend it if you haven't read it before. It covers not just the Gulf but owners from all over the world and how they got their wealth
the_bigman wrote: » Miguel has done loads on all different kinds of ownership, to be fair - including English. It's been a fairly big theme of his. And he went to town on Red Bull the other day. It stands to reason they'd be discussing Gulf states, when it is one of the major Gulf sportswashing projects in the final. And there are degrees of evil here. Outright human rights abuses and migrant worker deaths are more direct and worse than many of the effects of the worst types of capitalism.