Becchio virker ikke å ha vært mer enn en "placeholder" for van Wolfswinckel som kommer til sommeren. Unlucky.. Drittklubb.
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Show posts MenuQuote from: Bjørn Ødegaard on April 17, 2013, 10:09:01Quote from: Bites Yer Legs on April 17, 2013, 09:21:43
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5V430M59Yn8
...ehhh..ok...eller??
Quote from: Promotion 2010 on April 15, 2013, 15:30:24
Brian McDermott - teambuilderen - har sagt sitt om hvem som skal være involvert med førstelaget i fremtiden:
Brian McDermott Manager
Nigel Gibbs Ass Manager
Neil Redfearn Coach
Richard Naylor Coach
Leigh Bromby Coach
Så får vi se hvem som følger Developement Squad og Under 18s!
I hvert fall fint å se at både Redfearn og Naylor følger med videre. Jeg ser på Naylor som en vinner og i kombinasjon med solid karer som McDermott, Gibbs og Redfearn kan dette blir veldig bra!
http://www.leedsunited.com/news/20130415/redders-to-continue-senior-role_2247585_3144913
Quote from: B-m on April 13, 2013, 15:49:40
fyfan, er helt gåen..
Grattis gutter og jenter vi klarte det!!
Quote from: Glenn K on April 13, 2013, 11:32:39
Er ikke så veldig bekymret for hva Sheffield Wednesday har å komme med på denne dagen. Hadde vi møtt Sheffield Saturday derimot hadde nedrykksspøkelset begynt å plage meg i natt..
Quote from: MacMurder on April 10, 2013, 23:32:26
Breaking, fra alltid pålitelige The Sun
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/sport/football/4882073/Brian-McDermott-set-to-be-named-Leeds-manager.html
Quote
News
DEVELOPMENT SQUAD: 10 MEN OUSTED BY LATE GOAL
09 Apr 2013
Last-minute goal beats injury-hit squad...
United's Development Squad went down to a last-minute goal at Sheffield United on Tuesday.
Jordan Robertson's 90th minute breakaway ensured an injury ravaged United side ended up on the wrong end of a 1-0 scoreline.
United were down to 10 men when the Blades scored after losing Jordan Snodin to an ankle injury with 20 minutes still remaining.
By that stage, first year scholar Alex Purver had already been taken hospital with a shin injury while further substitutions had been made, Habib Habibou and Rudy Austin both playing for an hour before being replaced.
It was a game of few chances, and United had enjoyed the lions share of the possession. While Eric Grimes had been called upon to make a couple of decent saves, Habibou had gone closest to opening the scoring when he missed from close range.
Lewis Walters also went close for United before the last-minute strike settled matters.
United: Grimes, Coyle, Killock, Austin (Coker 60), Snodin, Purver (Tiesse 60), Lenighan, Hall, Habibou (Parkin 60), Poleon, Walters. Subs: Atkinson, Antelmi.
Quote from: auren on April 06, 2013, 17:57:11
Slutt. 2-1. Elendig. Vanligvis så ser man litt endring ved et managerbytte, men her var det visst minst like ille.
auren
QuoteThis was not the Neil Warnock that Leeds United thought it signed
by Oliver Harden
Even as the chorus of ‘time to go’ reached its most deafening levels yet, all the subject could muster was an awkward, limp wave of the left hand before exiting stage right, in a situation that would once upon a time seen have him offer a two-fingered salute in the direction of his pilgrims-turned-pursuers.
There were often hints of the expected characteristics, of course: the bouncing along the touchline, the picking up of a handful of expletives by a stray television microphone, the uncontrollable berating of opposition managers, players, perhaps an official or four.
Yet it all lacked a certain, outwardly odious venom, a â€" for want of a better word â€" passion.
It was just all so un-Warnocklike, wasn’t it?
This was not the Marmite Man that Ken Bates, Shaun Harvey and Co. had assumed to have employed 13 months ago, the manager that would sail and surf the seismic waves of Leeds United’s watertight support.
Perhaps that, above a loss of tactical powers and an apparent inability to attach to any form of blame, was Neil Warnock’s biggest mistake at Elland Road.
Still nursing the pain of his departure from Queens Park Rangers (similarly to how Brian McDermott is currently recovering from his sacking at Reading, it is worth suggesting) before, as and after he arrived at Leeds, a rebounded, self-pitiful Warnock, you feel, failed to genuinely endear himself to supporters who, as they continue to watch their club tumble and squirm through the very depths of mediocrity, require a loyal leader to lean upon.
His signing of an insultingly brief one-and-a-half year contract, instantly followed up by comments of how Leeds would be handed the honour of being his final club before retirement told as much, whilst Warnock’s admission that this was the biggest club he’d managed perhaps heralded an unnecessary change of operational mindset on his part.
Leeds United under Neil Warnock, you see, was not a collective effort â€" but a personal voyage.
His startling admission of a temptation to resign in the summer of 2012 â€" in the midst of his long-awaited yet ultimately fruitless recruitment process â€" created such an alarming sense of distance between Warnock and the club that, in truth, could never be repaired.
His constant airing of desperation in his quest to gain that record eighth managerial promotion by almost any means seemed to, consciously or otherwise, disrespect the institution that employed him, only adding to the uncertainty surrounding his future.
His signing of his former allies, Danny Webber, Paddy Kenny and Michael Tonge (whilst adopting Michael Brown), as well as several journeymen, suggested Warnock â€" despite a severe lack of funds â€" had opted for comfort rather than ambition, transforming Leeds United into a Sheffield United reunion-slash-retirement home, whilst snatching the candies of Jason Pearce, Luke Varney, David Norris and Jamie Ashdown from the infant-like grasp of Portsmouth for good measure.
Although Warnock claimed upon his departure that he had left the club ‘far healthier’ than how he had found it, you may argue that he has merely piled rubble upon rubble.
Over an Easter Weekend which we were led to believe that football had left Martin O’Neill behind, if his Elland Road tenure is to be judged in isolation, the game left Neil Warnock stranded long ago, for his time in charge will be remembered alongside Brian Clough’s 44-day reign among the most inconclusive, intrusive periods in Leeds United’s 94-year history.
How fitting, then, that it was Nigel Clough that orchestrated the final act of The Neil Warnock Show.
It is almost 12 months to the day since Warnock shook hands with Clough on the Elland Road touchline, leaning to exclaim those immortal words.
“Enjoy today â€" because you’ll never see another Leeds United team or Neil Warnock team like this.â€
There was no repeat yesterday, with Clough offering the faintest of handshakes before scurrying down the tunnel with three points bolstering his pocket, his father laughing, marvelling from the heavens.
Warnock was right, you know: Clough never encountered a Leeds United team like the pretenders of 2011/12.
This edition was even worse.
Quote from: auren on April 05, 2013, 09:25:14
Jeg regner med at Redders har en samtale med samtlige spillere i troppen rimelig raskt. Da bør han jo enkelt å greit spørre: Hvem ønsker du skal være lagets kaptein?
Den som får flest stemmer, har mest respekt og passer sannsynligvis best som kaptein.
auren
QuoteSTRIKER RECALLED FROM LOAN SPELL
03 Apr 2013
Poleon returns ahead of Charlton trip...
Caretaker manager Neil Redfearn has moved quickly to recall striker Dominic Poleon from his loan spell at Sheffield United.
The 19-year-old, who scored his first goal for the club in September, had joined the Blades on loan until the end of the season with a recall clause after the first 28 days.
Dominic has made seven appearances for the League One promotion chasers, but will return to Thorp Arch ahead of Saturday's trip to Charlton Athletic.
Poleon figured prominently in the Under-21s under Redfearn earlier in the season, scoring six goals in six games to thrust himself into contention with the first team squad.
Having made seven senior appearances, six as a substitute, Dominic joined Bury on loan before joining Sheffield United in February.
Quote
@LUFC: BREAKING...Promotion winning captain Richard Naylor will be assisting caretaker manager Neil Redfearn. Leigh Bromby has been given coaching role with under18 untill we appoint a boss
Quote from: sportcarl1 on April 01, 2013, 22:46:26Quote from: Ian Baird on April 01, 2013, 22:37:24år du seriös
Føler Mark Useless sitter i stolen innen uka er slutt
Hva med å ansette Grayson som nr. to til Redfearn på permanent bais, det hadde blitt et radarpar som står for mye av det samme og kjenner klubb og sekretærer godt, da snakker vi opprykk igjen i mai 2014!!? han är väl manager för swindon nu har väl gått sådär igår förlorade de mot doncaster, men svårt se honom säga upp sig en gång till för att komma till leeds, detta måste vara ett aprilskämt