Amazon Search and Bookmark
AFFILIATE SEARCH | Shop Amazon.co.uk using this search bar and support WHO!

Potter Sacked!

West Ham Online's Football Forum
Post Reply
THUNDERCLINT
Posts: 910
Been liked: 219 times

Potter Potter Sacked!

Post THUNDERCLINT »

Had enough of this arogrant no mark now.  

11 games, 27% win ratio and 0.66 goals per game.

Either the break clause is true or this flake quits otherwise were proper fucked.
Pub Bigot
Posts: 730
Old WHO Number: 255703
Has liked: 889 times
Been liked: 336 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Pub Bigot »

El Scorchio" wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:21
eusebiovic wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:00 I know that Jacob Steinberg and The Guardian in general has it's critics on here but the restrained contempt by him regarding Sullivan is getting more pointed by the week...

Good! 

https://www.theguardian.com/football/20 ... ier-league
 
One well-placed figure says West Ham’s structure is totally outdated. It is all about Sullivan’s whims. All about his mood. There is no oversight. Other board members have no real power. Every major move comes from one man. There is no respect for expertise. No understanding of how to appoint top-level executives. It has been this way for 15 years. No wonder West Ham look lumpen next to Brighton, Brentford and Bournemouth.

Damning. And accurate.
Why have the media suddenly turned on the little cսnt? Is something more significant brewing about his personal life, which is enabling the character assassination of his professional life? 

Whatever the reason, it’s about time. 
chevy chase
Posts: 194
Old WHO Number: 20579
Has liked: 3 times
Been liked: 15 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post chevy chase »

Don't know the details but it's to do with comments she made "tarmac" 💩 and things to that effect.
Alfs
Posts: 1016
Old WHO Number: 12872
Has liked: 85 times
Been liked: 193 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Alfs »

I believe that there's some history between him and Brady as she has been vocal in the past (not publicly mentioning his name) that he's a perverted, misogynistic, little cսnt (allegedly), hence his hatred of her and the board.

She's a shit figurehead at West Ham but does have some redeeming qualities when it comes to calling out deviants like Keys, and you will never seem him hired again by a British broadcaster as he's on 'The Savile List' as its colloquially known within the industry.
eusebiovic
Posts: 389
Old WHO Number: 15391
Has liked: 728 times
Been liked: 145 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post eusebiovic »

Massive Attack" wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 17:21 The sexist hairy armed Dinosaur Presenter Keys gets it spot on...

Good luck to Nuno. He’s going to need it at West Ham. It was a certainty Potter would go once Brady and Sullivan started getting it in the neck, but what a treacherous manner in which to sack the coach.

The morning after you’ve let him conduct his weekly press conference and part way through preparing the team for their next game.
Look. He was a poor appointment. He was never ever going to be the man ‘to deliver further success’ as Brady predicted. He’s a myth. A rich one mind you.

The press decided he was a genius because he tried to ‘play the right way’. He’s not. He’s a nice guy heavily over backed and over promoted. He won’t get another big job.

As for West Ham - Nuno will eventually regret ever having taken the job. It’s only a matter of time before he leaves saying exactly the same things about Brady and Sullivan as all the other coaches they’ve abused.

I’ll say it again - I genuinely feel sorry for West Ham fans. Coaches will continue to come and go through the revolving door there and the club will remain a mess behind the scenes.

You could do something about those things but what they can’t change is the fact they play in an athletics arena. Hammers fans were sold a dream, but in reality it’s a nightmare. They were conned. Brady delivered that con. She should follow Potter out of the door.
I've never been a fan of the smug, hirsute, sasquatch but when even he starts showing us some sympathy you know that time is finally up...one way or another something has to budge 🙄
Massive Attack
Posts: 5720
Old WHO Number: 321955
Has liked: 3319 times
Been liked: 1647 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Massive Attack »

The sexist hairy armed Dinosaur Presenter Keys gets it spot on...

Good luck to Nuno. He’s going to need it at West Ham. It was a certainty Potter would go once Brady and Sullivan started getting it in the neck, but what a treacherous manner in which to sack the coach.

The morning after you’ve let him conduct his weekly press conference and part way through preparing the team for their next game.
Look. He was a poor appointment. He was never ever going to be the man ‘to deliver further success’ as Brady predicted. He’s a myth. A rich one mind you.

The press decided he was a genius because he tried to ‘play the right way’. He’s not. He’s a nice guy heavily over backed and over promoted. He won’t get another big job.

As for West Ham - Nuno will eventually regret ever having taken the job. It’s only a matter of time before he leaves saying exactly the same things about Brady and Sullivan as all the other coaches they’ve abused.

I’ll say it again - I genuinely feel sorry for West Ham fans. Coaches will continue to come and go through the revolving door there and the club will remain a mess behind the scenes.

You could do something about those things but what they can’t change is the fact they play in an athletics arena. Hammers fans were sold a dream, but in reality it’s a nightmare. They were conned. Brady delivered that con. She should follow Potter out of the door.
Fauxstralian
Posts: 3565
Old WHO Number: 321173
Has liked: 59 times
Been liked: 460 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Fauxstralian »

Sullivan not liking the team selected for Man U away & telling Potter he had to win or lose his job sums up the little cսnt
Owners appoint football people & let them live & die by their actions
Trying to pick the team is mental 
Did I say Sullivan is a little cսnt?
Massive Attack
Posts: 5720
Old WHO Number: 321955
Has liked: 3319 times
Been liked: 1647 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Massive Attack »

Not run like a Circus anymore...🎪 


Inside Graham Potter’s eight months at West Ham: Intense pressure, clashes with key figures

By Roshane Thomas 👌

It was during a team meeting on Saturday morning that West Ham United’s squad suspected something was different.

Training at the club’s main hub, Rush Green, was scheduled to start at 9.30am and head coach Graham Potter arrived early to prepare for Monday’s match away to Everton. But that session with his squad was disrupted by the 50-year-old wandering in and out of the room. It was not common for him to behave in this manner, which confused the players.

It turned out Potter, who only succeeded summer 2024 appointment Julen Lopetegui in January, had been told he too had been relieved of his duties. The former Brighton and Chelsea manager then informed the players and said his farewells, with many of the squad shocked at the timing of the decision. Club secretary Andrew Pincher tried to ease their concerns by reassuring them someone new would be overseeing training at 12.30pm.

The players were initially unaware that person would be Nuno Espirito Santo. Former West Ham manager Slaven Bilic held conversations with the board over a return, but Nuno was their preferred option. They first entertained the possibility of the Portuguese replacing Potter earlier this month, when he was sacked as Nottingham Forest head coach.

West Ham officially announced Potter’s dismissal at 10.35am and confirmed Nuno, who has signed a three-year contract, as his successor four hours later. The 51-year-old will be assisted initially by academy coaches Mark Robson, Steve Potts, Gerard Prenderville and Billy Lepine, with a further announcement on his coaching staff expected in due course.

“I am very pleased to be here and very proud to be representing West Ham United,” Nuno told the club’s website. “The work has already started and I am looking forward to the challenge that is ahead.”

Potter won only six of his 25 games during his eight months at West Ham, including two (against Fulham on January 14 and Leicester City on February 27) of his 12 home matches. Supporters turned on him during the 2-1 defeat by visitors Crystal Palace last Saturday with chants of, “You don’t know what you’re doing”, and, “You’re getting sacked in the morning”. But, despite being under pressure, he did not expect his week to end like this.

He oversaw training on Monday, gave the squad Thursday off with the Everton match not until Monday and conducted his usual media duties on Friday. At that pre-match press conference, Potter spoke about his appreciation of the board, the need to fix West Ham’s problems together and the rather peculiar viral face-swap trend that involves him.

But as he acknowledged in a statement released after his departure, “the results have just not been good enough up to now”, and he leaves with West Ham 19th in the 20-team Premier League.

The Athletic has talked to people at the club close to the hierarchy and to players, and people close to the outgoing head coach. Everyone spoke under the condition of anonymity, to protect relationships.

We can reveal for the first time what went wrong for Potter at West Ham, including how:

He was under intense pressure as early as May
He clashed with players Edson Alvarez and Jean-Clair Todibo
His concerns over captain Jarrod Bowen’s ability to lead the team
The summer departures of Michail Antonio, Aaron Cresswell and Vladimir Coufal proved detrimental to team spirit.
Before Potter signed a two-and-a-half-year contract to manage West Ham in January, a picture leaked online of him meeting their then technical director Tim Steidten in the foyer of a hotel. This annoyed Potter, who felt holding talks in such a public place was an amateurish move. But despite his frustration, he felt it was the right time to return to the touchline, 20 months after being sacked by Chelsea in April 2023.

“As soon as I spoke to this club, it felt right for me,” Potter said in his first West Ham press conference. “I spoke to the board and everyone connected with the club. This one felt like the right one. I’m really excited to be here with a passionate and brilliant fanbase. I think it’s a good fit.”

Potter learnt Spanish and sought advice from former England manager Roy Hodgson and current England rugby union head coach Steve Borthwick during his time away from the game. He was also heavily linked with the England job before Thomas Tuchel’s appointment late last year, so his arrival at the London Stadium was considered a coup.

But it was a relationship that was strained from the start, given protracted negotiations over the length of his contract. Majority shareholder David Sullivan was initially only willing to give Potter a deal until the end of last season, terms he was reluctant to accept. Karren Brady, the vice-chair, then led negotiations, and all parties agreed to Potter’s terms.

In his first week, he called a team meeting at the training ground and was happy with the players’ response about where improvement was needed. But he then got off to a rocky start on the pitch, losing 2-1 away to Aston Villa in the FA Cup in his first game in charge. Despite an encouraging performance that night, striker Niclas Fullkrug and winger Crysencio Summerville suffered hamstring injuries that would keep them out for three and seven months respectively. West Ham won only one of their next five games.


After the 1-0 home loss to Brentford on February 15, a team meeting was held. The players were aware that performance was not up to Potter’s standards. An honest discussion ensued, which yielded a positive display away to Arsenal a week later.

Bowen’s solitary goal secured the win on what will be remembered as just about the only day in the Potter era where it clicked. His 5-3-2 formation worked, and the team spirit was palpable after full time: Potter embraced his backroom staff, Alvarez mischievously celebrated in front of the Arsenal fans seated behind the dugouts and Todibo hopped on fellow defender Aaron Wan-Bissaka’s back. Bowen led the walk to the away enclosure, where supporters serenaded the squad with various chants.

Back in the dressing room, Potter told the players they had the next day off. It was not “Champagne football”, as he admitted in his post-match press conference, but it was a step in the right direction.

Hours later, Potter was pictured travelling on the London Underground. He had a funny exchange with an Arsenal supporter, who was not best pleased to see him. But for the coach, it felt like a match where he was rewarded for his efforts on the training ground.

A 2-0 home victory over Leicester a few days later meant West Ham had kept consecutive clean sheets for the first time since the November (when they drew 0-0 with Everton at home and won 2-0 away to Newcastle United under Lopetegui), and had their first back-to-back league wins since previous March, when David Moyes was still the manager.

The positive run, though, was not to last. By the May 11 visit to Manchester United, West Ham were winless in eight games.

Potter made three changes to the starting XI, with Coufal and midfielders Guido Rodriguez and James Ward-Prowse brought in to replace Emerson Palmieri, Lucas Paqueta and Fullkrug. Kyle Macaulay, the head of recruitment, emailed the team sheet to Sullivan, who was not pleased with the line-up. Potter was informed failing to win that day could cost him his job, but West Ham ended up leaving Old Trafford with a 2-0 victory, courtesy of goals from Bowen and Tomas Soucek.

Despite the team’s underwhelming performances, Potter remained confident he was the right man for the job. He thought his squad were responding well to feedback from him and his backroom staff.

In April, Potter spoke about the benefits of sharing “home truths” with the players. “You have to look people in the eye and speak honestly,” he said at a press conference. “They help clear the air and give people a chance to voice their frustrations. That’s something we do all the time. It helps us understand and look under the bonnet to see things clearer.”

One of Potter’s first acts at West Ham was to increase the intensity in training sessions and then give players time off. Under Lopetegui, some of the squad found it hard to understand what the Spaniard was trying to achieve, with the team often playing a possession-based game in training that had the goalkeepers sometimes mixing in with their outfield colleagues.


But Potter was very much hands-on, although he delegated most of the work to assistants Billy Reid, Bruno Saltor, Narcis Pelach and Prenderville, who was promoted from the club’s under-21s setup earlier this month.

Reid, Saltor and goalkeeper coaches Casper Ankergren and Linus Kandolin have all left the club with Potter.

Many of the players enjoyed how meticulous the head coach was when going over details pre-and post-match but, as poor results continued, some felt this information went in one ear and out the other.

Potter inherited a tempestuous group when he followed the shortest-lived managerial appointment in the club’s 130-year history, with Lopetegui sacked after just 22 games. The new boss did not want history to repeat itself, although there were further dressing-room incidents.

He also had concerns about the lack of leaders in the team, and appointed James Bell as a sports psychologist to help his squad better manage stressful situations. A common theme this season has been how quiet the dressing-room was after matches. Even following heavy losses to London rivals Chelsea and Tottenham, none of the senior players were vocal. Instead, it was Potter who did most of the talking.

There were also questions over Bowen’s inability to lead the team. Although he is considered the club’s best player, he is not perhaps naturally suited to the captaincy and had a heated exchange with a West Ham supporter following last month’s Carabao Cup loss at Wolves.


Jarrod Bowen tends to do his talking on the pitch.
In April, Potter took issue with Fullkrug launching a diatribe against his team-mates after a 1-1 draw at home to already-relegated Southampton. The 32-year-old Germany international told Sky Sports of his “anger” at the display, saying “we didn’t have the ability or the motivation to push up”, and adding: “The motivation… sorry, we were s**t. I’m very angry.”

Although Fullkrug didn’t get fined over the episode, Potter was not pleased with the comments, which further cemented his view of a player who is one of West Ham’s highest earners.

To compound matters, Potter had a disagreement with Alvarez that same month and felt a summer departure for the midfielder would be best for all parties. In August, Mexico captain Alvarez joined Turkish club Fenerbahce on loan in a deal including an option to make the move permanent at the end of the season.

Todibo is another who did not have the greatest relationship with Potter. Having initially joined on loan from Nice in the summer of 2024, West Ham activated a £32.8million ($43.9m at the current rate) obligation to buy in June. Todibo, who has two caps for France, rejected a move to Juventus in favour of West Ham. Countryman Alphonse Areola also advised the defender to turn down the Italian side and join him at the London Stadium.

But Todibo frustrated Potter with his inconsistent performances and was dropped for the 3-0 defeat by Tottenham two weeks ago over bad timekeeping. He did not produce a performance in training that was up to Potter’s standards on September 11 and was called to the head coach’s office and told to improve. But then he arrived late the following day.

Full-back Emerson lost his place in the latter stages of last season. The 31-year-old wanted to stay to fight for a recall, but Potter had other ideas. The left-back was not properly fit when he reported for pre-season and arrived late for training on a few occasions. Potter told the Italy international to train with the under-21s, and he was omitted from West Ham’s pre-season tour to the United States so he could find a new club. Eventually, on deadline day at the start of this month, Emerson joined Marseille for a small fee, becoming West Ham’s tenth departure in a summer that began with Mohammed Kudus being sold to Spurs for £55million.

Antonio, the club’s record Premier League goalscorer, Cresswell and Coufal all departed in May upon the expiry of their contracts. The trio were popular members of the dressing room. Antonio, for example, was in charge of the squad’s fines system, would keep his fellow players in check and organised team-bonding sessions. Nobody has really replaced him as that figure.

There is some sympathy for Potter among the players that this situation is not all his fault. He tried his best to unite the squad, but his decisions to get rid of some big characters counted against him.

El Hadji Malick Diouf (Slavia Prague), Soungoutou Magassa (Monaco), Mateus Fernandes (Southampton) and Mads Hermansen (Leicester) came in over the summer, with Igor Julio joining on a season-long loan from Brighton, and Kyle Walker-Peters and Callum Wilson signing as free agents. West Ham spent around £125million altogether and, in pre-season, there was excitement from within over what they could achieve in their 2025-26 campaign. The atmosphere at the training ground, according to staff who work there, felt more together, more holistic.

But the feel-good factor evaporated following a chastening 3-0 opening-weekend loss away to promoted Sunderland. Further defeats by Chelsea, Wolves, Tottenham and Crystal Palace added to Potter’s woes.

Tara Warren, West Ham’s executive director, never usually attends their managers’ press conferences but was present when Potter addressed the media last Thursday, September 18, before the Palace game, and he faced reporters on Friday, the day before his dismissal, too.

In a statement released by the League Managers Association later on Saturday, Potter said he was “incredibly disappointed” to be leaving West Ham, “particularly without being able to achieve what we set out to achieve at the start of our journey in east London”.

Over to you, Nuno!


WOW
Massive Attack
Posts: 5720
Old WHO Number: 321955
Has liked: 3319 times
Been liked: 1647 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Massive Attack »

Some on DUMB think Potter would do well at Man Utd.

🤣🤣🤣
Massive Attack
Posts: 5720
Old WHO Number: 321955
Has liked: 3319 times
Been liked: 1647 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Massive Attack »

It'll buy him plenty of time in The Priory to get over his latest monumental managerial fuck-up. Might even buy his own wing there now. 

There you go, works out around £300k a year..

https://www.rehabguide.co.uk/how-much-d ... iory-cost/

He'll probably need 5 years worth to almost get over it all.
Eerie Decent
Posts: 944
Has liked: 143 times
Been liked: 404 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Eerie Decent »

Money like that doesn't buy you happiness, but it stops you having to set your alarm clock.
 
User avatar
Mike Oxsaw
Posts: 4722
Location: Flip between Belvedere & Buri Ram and anywhere else I fancy, just because I can.
Old WHO Number: 14021
Has liked: 33 times
Been liked: 588 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Mike Oxsaw »

Massive Attack" wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:55
Bondholder wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:44 He's the richest unsuccessful manager. Good riddance.

I'd like to know the entire amount he's made from a combined 1 years failed work between just his jobs at Chelsea and West Ham. Nearing £20M in such a short space of time? Makes me blood boil for doing such a God awful job as well. Fair play to Potter and his Agent though, they've played a blinder.
 
 
My thinking here is wondering if Sullivan was given an ultimatum to employ Potter "or else".

Can't think of anybody in his life, past or present who could wield such power though...
Massive Attack
Posts: 5720
Old WHO Number: 321955
Has liked: 3319 times
Been liked: 1647 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Massive Attack »

Yep. To be fair, I'd take all the face swapping ridicule in my stride in his new financial position. No wonder he kept grinning like a Cheshire cat in the Press Conference. 😁

Useless cսnt.
Eerie Decent
Posts: 944
Has liked: 143 times
Been liked: 404 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Eerie Decent »

Chelsea paid Brighton £22mil just to get Potter out of his contract. Add that to his weigh out, which is tens of millions.

That is absolutely mental.
Massive Attack
Posts: 5720
Old WHO Number: 321955
Has liked: 3319 times
Been liked: 1647 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Massive Attack »

Bondholder wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:44 He's the richest unsuccessful manager. Good riddance.

I'd like to know the entire amount he's made from a combined 1 years failed work between just his jobs at Chelsea and West Ham. Nearing £20M in such a short space of time? Makes me blood boil for doing such a God awful job as well. Fair play to Potter and his Agent though, they've played a blinder.
User avatar
Lee Trundle
Posts: 3751
Old WHO Number: 33318
Been liked: 720 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Lee Trundle »

Swiss. wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:16
Swiss. wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:04 As on work PC  I can't make a new post but Pepe has been sacked. Interesting to see who will replace him. 
I mean Pep..it's a monday 😞
 
 
No he hasn't.
honky cat
Posts: 1049
Has liked: 599 times
Been liked: 396 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post honky cat »

cock piss city
honky cat
Posts: 1049
Has liked: 599 times
Been liked: 396 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post honky cat »

Massive Attack" wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:19
Swiss. wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:16
Swiss. wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:04 As on work PC  I can't make a new post but Pepe has been sacked. Interesting to see who will replace him. 
I mean Pep..it's a monday 😞
Guardiola? After just winning 5-1 on Saturday? 🤔
 
 
They'll have to act quickly if they want Potter
Bondholder
Posts: 41
Has liked: 10 times
Been liked: 10 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Bondholder »

He's the richest unsuccessful manager. Good riddance.
User avatar
El Scorchio
Posts: 3422
Old WHO Number: 227648
Has liked: 152 times
Been liked: 863 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post El Scorchio »

eusebiovic wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:00 I know that Jacob Steinberg and The Guardian in general has it's critics on here but the restrained contempt by him regarding Sullivan is getting more pointed by the week...

Good! 

https://www.theguardian.com/football/20 ... ier-league
 
 
One well-placed figure says West Ham’s structure is totally outdated. It is all about Sullivan’s whims. All about his mood. There is no oversight. Other board members have no real power. Every major move comes from one man. There is no respect for expertise. No understanding of how to appoint top-level executives. It has been this way for 15 years. No wonder West Ham look lumpen next to Brighton, Brentford and Bournemouth.

Damning. And accurate.
Massive Attack
Posts: 5720
Old WHO Number: 321955
Has liked: 3319 times
Been liked: 1647 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Massive Attack »

Swiss. wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:16
Swiss. wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:04 As on work PC  I can't make a new post but Pepe has been sacked. Interesting to see who will replace him. 
I mean Pep..it's a monday 😞
Guardiola? After just winning 5-1 on Saturday? 🤔
Swiss.
Posts: 1766
Old WHO Number: 220150
Has liked: 261 times
Been liked: 323 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Swiss. »

Swiss. wrote: 29 Sep 2025, 13:04 As on work PC  I can't make a new post but Pepe has been sacked. Interesting to see who will replace him. 
I mean Pep..it's a monday 😞
Massive Attack
Posts: 5720
Old WHO Number: 321955
Has liked: 3319 times
Been liked: 1647 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Massive Attack »

HOW POTTER'S SACKING PLAYED OUT: 

It was during a team meeting on Saturday morning that West Ham United’s squad suspected something was different. 

Training at Rush Green was scheduled to start at 9.30am and head coach Graham Potter arrived early to prepare for Monday’s match away to Everton, but that session with his squad was disrupted by the 50-year-old wandering in and out of the room. 

It was not common for him to behave in this manner, which confused the players. It turned out Potter had been told he had been relieved of his duties. He then informed the players and said his farewells, with many of the squad shocked at the timing of the decision. 

Club secretary Andrew Pincher tried to ease their concerns by reassuring them someone new would be overseeing training at 12.30pm. 

• The Athletic


😂 🎪 
Swiss.
Posts: 1766
Old WHO Number: 220150
Has liked: 261 times
Been liked: 323 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Swiss. »

As on work PC  I can't make a new post but Pepe has been sacked. Interesting to see who will replace him. 
eusebiovic
Posts: 389
Old WHO Number: 15391
Has liked: 728 times
Been liked: 145 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post eusebiovic »

I know that Jacob Steinberg and The Guardian in general has it's critics on here but the restrained contempt by him regarding Sullivan is getting more pointed by the week...

Good! 

https://www.theguardian.com/football/20 ... ier-league
User avatar
Mike Oxsaw
Posts: 4722
Location: Flip between Belvedere & Buri Ram and anywhere else I fancy, just because I can.
Old WHO Number: 14021
Has liked: 33 times
Been liked: 588 times

Re: Potter Sacked!

Post Mike Oxsaw »

Potter clearly wasn't fit for purpose and had to go.

As others have already suggested, straight after the Palace defeat was the "right" time, to allow the club to readjust internally for the next game.

That being said, the way Sullivan has handled this was abysmally amateurish; is he trying to uningratiate himself with the whole footballing fraternity such that the only people who will deal with him/bring players to the club are his agent-mates?
Post Reply