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Post by daniel300380 on Aug 3, 2023 16:07:07 GMT
Don't know anything about the new investor, but will we finally break our long standing transfer record, this season?
I'm going to say yes, in January, if we get off to a good start!
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Post by Gastafari on Aug 3, 2023 16:11:26 GMT
I've never been one that's been bothered about our transfer record.
If we keep reeling off Cureton, Hayles, Roberts, Ellington, Lambert, Collins etc for smaller fees.
Hopefully now we can keep hold of them, that's the crucial thing imo
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Post by daniel300380 on Aug 3, 2023 16:15:27 GMT
I've never been one that's been bothered about our transfer record. If we keep reeling off Cureton, Hayles, Roberts, Ellington, Lambert, Collins etc for smaller fees. Hopefully now we can keep hold of them, that's the crucial thing imo That's a lot easier, if you spend a bit more in the first place though. You could get a player like Hayles for that price then, now non league players when high scoring records, tend to go for more. Haven't Peterborough bought a few strikers for a lot more than that in the past?
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Post by kruger on Aug 3, 2023 16:15:32 GMT
We don't have to spend lots of money to get in decent players, LT, JB, JW how much would these 3 be worth if they were under contract at their previous clubs, alot more than our record signing I'd say
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yattongas
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Post by yattongas on Aug 3, 2023 16:18:35 GMT
Do any football clubs have a record signing from more than 30 years ago? Plus: drastic variance in pre-season friendly opposition; ties of two halves; and chants for players from 80-plus years ago
“Bristol Rovers’ record signing (Andy Tilson, £370,000) was made in 1992,” notes Oscar Felix Ramirez. “Do any other league clubs still have a record signing from 30-plus years ago?”
We had no idea the early-1990s was such a boom time for record signings, but it seems Bristol Rovers aren’t alone. “Steve Claridge is still Cambridge’s record signing (£252,000),” writes Russell Connor. “They actually have signed him twice, once in 1990 and then again only two years later after interim club Luton didn’t like what they saw. He seems to have been bought in the same summer of 1992 as Tilson, so not sure who came first.”
A couple of you mentioned Tony Agana, who joined Notts County from Sheffield United for £685,000 in 1991. But it’s generally accepted that Kasper Schmeichel, who arrived from Manchester City for an undisclosed fee in 2009, cost more than Agana.
And so to Scotland, where stereotypes about parsimony live on via the medium of 56-year-old transfer records. “You don’t even have to go down the divisions to find an older transfer record than Bristol Rovers’,” explains Joe Murphy. “That’s not surprising, given that the national record is still Tore André Flo in 2000. St Mirren’s record signing, Thomas Stickroth from Bayer Uerdingen for £400,000, was made in 1990. League One side Clyde have them all beaten, though. They signed Harry Hood from Sunderland for £14,000 in 1966 and he remains their record signing.”
And to think some people say 1966 was a terrible year for Scottish football.
Drastic variance in pre-season opposition “Pre-season friendlies always throw up some bizarre fixtures,” begins Jez Orbell. “Difficult to get a definitive answer but what notable differences have there been between consecutive opponents. For example: has a club played Real Madrid in one match followed by a Guernsey pub team in the next?”
“This question made me think about Norwich City’s haphazard pre-season this year,” writes Jonathan Campion. “On 12 July the Canaries played King’s Lynn Town, winning the Norfolk derby 2-0. Four days later they beat Ligue 1 runners-up Marseille 3-0.”
Jim Hearson interjects. “It would be remiss not to mention Plymouth Argyle in 2006,” he mails. “After Real Madrid claimed their hotel booking at a resort in Austria, the Pilgrims agreed to a friendly by way of compensation. Before the game, Plymouth had faced then-second-tier local side FC Gratkorn and Southern League Premier Division outfit Tiverton Town. You can read more about what went off on the Plymouth Herald’s site.”
Rhuaraidh Fleming is here to “stretch the definition of the question slightly, because the League of Ireland was in full swing in the summer of 2009. However, two days after seeing off Sligo Rovers, Shamrock Rovers then played host to Real Madrid on 20 July (with Cristiano Ronaldo making his debut) in what was a pre-season friendly for them. Madrid won 1-0. Also: Dundee United played host to Barcelona on 25 July 2007 having hosted Forfar Athletic on 23 July. And in Barcelona’s 2008 pre-season tour, they would play a Mission Hills Invitation XI of Hong Kong on 11 August before meeting Bayern Munich on 15 August.”
A tie of two halves “Bodø/Glimt beat Linfield 8-0 in the second leg of their Champions League qualifier, having lost 1-0 in Belfast. Is this the biggest ever win in European competition by a team who lost one of the legs?” asks Karl Reilly.
Well, it depends whether you are talking the aggregate score (8-1) or the result of the game itself (8-0). “In the second round of the 1979-80 European Cup, Ajax beat Omonia Nicosia 10-0 in the first leg,” writes Dirk Maas. “In the second leg, Ajax took their foot off the pedal, allowing Omonia to win 4-0.”
That means Ajax’s 10-4 aggregate victory is trumped by Bodø/Glimt’s 8-1. Can anyone beat either the 10-0 or the 8-1? If so, drop us a line.
Bodø/Glimt Bodø/Glimt’s Elias Kristoffersen Hagen takes a shot at goal during their 1-0 win in Belfast. Photograph: Charles McQuillan/Getty Images Knowledge archive
“Down at Dulwich Hamlet’s Champion Hill stadium every match we still sing two terrace chants in celebration of Edgar Kail, the last non-league player to represent England and a one-club man who last played for Hamlet in 1933, 80 years ago,” wrote Robert Molloy-Vaughan in April 2013. “I wonder what clubs can beat us for antiquarian bygone-dom in celebrating old players through song?”
A couple of clubs still laid claim to singing the praises of players even longer departed than the great Kail. “Derby County’s idolising of Steve Bloomer takes some beating,” wrote Matt Lewis. “He played for the Rams from 1892 to 1906, then moved to Middlesbrough, before returning to Derby in 1910. He eventually hung up his boots for good in 1914.
“With 332 goals, he is by far Derby’s all-time top scorer and only Jimmy Greaves has scored more goals in the English top flight. He [now sits joint 11th] on England’s all-time top scorers list, with 28 goals from 23 games, despite playing his last international match more than a century ago. The song Steve Bloomer’s Watchin’ is played before every game at Pride Park.”
And in Scotland those on the terraces at Parkhead also have long memories. “Celtic fans still regularly belt out The Ballad of Willie Maley,” wrote Mark Sheffield. “Maley played for the club from 1888-1897, before taking over as manager, a post he held until 1940. The song also references Jimmy McGrory, another player who would later manage the club and whose last appearance as a player came in 1937; and Charlie Tully, who last turned out in the Hoops in 1959.”
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Post by eric on Aug 3, 2023 18:23:53 GMT
Don't know anything about the new investor, but will we finally break our long standing transfer record, this season? I'm going to say yes, in January, if we get off to a good start! My hunch is the new investor will want to make a statement of intent and we could see a big signing during this window. A quality defensive centre midfielder in the Coutts mould or a striker
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Post by DrFaustus on Aug 3, 2023 18:30:52 GMT
Don't know anything about the new investor, but will we finally break our long standing transfer record, this season? I'm going to say yes, in January, if we get off to a good start! My hunch is the new investor will want to make a statement of intent and we could see a big signing during this window. A quality defensive centre midfielder in the Coutts mould or a striker You could be on to something there, Eric. An experienced, less unlucky than Jordan Rossiter injury wise type of player, I reckon.
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Post by toggsy2 on Aug 3, 2023 22:01:22 GMT
Don't know anything about the new investor, but will we finally break our long standing transfer record, this season? I'm going to say yes, in January, if we get off to a good start! Would like to think it would be broken but these days most transfers are now undisclosed especially the lower leagues so if the new investors were to spend big the chances of it being disclosed are very slim to say the least it's just the way things have become in the modern game. Spending big doesn't always reap rewards
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pirate
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Post by pirate on Aug 4, 2023 3:12:01 GMT
According to the Post a "fresh injection of investment is expected to aid Joey Barton's playing budget for the new season and further transfer windows" with the Taylor deal "thought to be independent of the additional investment expected into the club from Kuwaiti businessman Hussain Al Saeed." So why not be ambitious and expect quality additions for the level and make a statement signing or two and lay down a marker? Quality League One standard players under contract will cost decent money and sometimes you have to (in Barton's words during Having a Gas interview) "speculate to accumulate". Someone in the mould of a Sam Nombe and an Owen Moxon would be nice. With the league so open there will probably never be a better time to have a go at it. 🤞
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Post by percy on Aug 4, 2023 5:03:52 GMT
Would definitely rather we spent the money on nombe than jch. If there is some to spend. Or maybe we go for a class DCM now and wait til Jan to see where we need to spend to push on.
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