http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/32982449
I'm sayin' nuffink...
Smiley GOM
Tuesday, 2 June 2015
Saturday, 30 May 2015
Assault and Blattery
Mr Sepp Blatter
Fédération Internationale de Football Association
FIFA-Strasse 20
P.O. Box 8044 Zurich
Switzerland
Fédération Internationale de Football Association
FIFA-Strasse 20
P.O. Box 8044 Zurich
Switzerland
29 May 2015
Dear Mr Blatter
Firstly, congratulations on the retention of your presidency
of FIFA. Personally, I’m mightily
pleased; I’m not sure that I could have approached the Jordanian fella with my
issue. He doesn’t look entirely cuddly
and grandfatherly like you do (which, I’d hazard, is probably the secret to
your continued tenure).
Anyway, I hope you don’t mind me writing, but I was out with
my mate from next door this evening; having a couple of pints of Spitfire at
The Woodpecker, when he outlined his dilemma to me; the timeliness of your
re-election, despite some of the scurrilous rumours that surround it, has
prompted me to drop you a line.
My friend has a ten-year-old who is deeply passionate about
the game of football. He’s never out of
the garden, constantly knocking his balls against the fence, pretending he’s
scoring the winner in a World Cup final at Wembley (which as you and I both
know is hardly likely to happen on your watch, but that’s an altogether
different issue). Yet despite his
efforts, he remains resolutely useless.
I’ve seen dachshunds exercise more control over a football than the lad
next door, but I don’t want to break his or his father’s heart in pointing out
the obvious.
The boy is desperate to get a place in the AFC Newbury under
11 squad, but just can’t get a look in. Admittedly,
it’s a very good side; they’ve just won the Under 11 Colts PHYL (Peter Houseman
Youth League) & League Cup "double", the Under 10 League Cup the
year before and another double as Under 9s in 2012-13; nice kids too, they were
also Fair Play Winners that year. But
despite them being lovely, there’s no way they’re going to make room for the
talentless (albeit enthusiastic) twit next door; which is where I need your
help.
Given their astounding record, it’s clear to me that they
could quite easily “carry” someone with the limited talents of my neighbour’s
son. I’m sure they could pop him up
front alongside their target man and he could chase the ball all afternoon
without causing too much damage to their pursuit of another championship. Simply put, however, they are unlikely to do
that unless there is an influential intervention.
I appreciate, of course, that such matters are a little
beneath your sphere of activities.
However, I don’t doubt that you would be able to have a word in an
appropriate ear to ensure that the authorities of AFC Newbury were cognisant of
their need to widen the appeal of the game to a larger audience (the boy is a bit of a puddin’).
I realise that this would naturally divert attention from
significantly more pressing engagements (and I suspect you may well have one or
two of those on the horizon) so I contemplated sending fifty quid with my
letter to compensate you for your time.
However, my good lady wife rightly asserts that you’re likely to
delegate the task to one of your associates; if you’d prefer then, I’ll direct the
funds elsewhere, just let me have the account details and I’ll wire the money
to the appropriate account.
I know it’s only a small thing for you, but it would be a huge
thing for the lad next door and his dad.
Not only that, but it would get the kid out of his garden and onto the
pitch at AFC Newbury, meaning he’d stop knocking seven bells out of my fence
and dislodging the blossom from my creeping Hydrangea in the process. That would please me no end.
One last thing, have you considered dispensing with the
democratic process at FIFA? The charade
around voting is just a little unseemly, it’s not terribly becoming of an
organisation that is so much a reflection of the man who runs it. Just a thought.
Yours sincerely
Craig Brown
GOM in Training
GOM in Training
Tuesday, 2 December 2014
Eh? What?
It's official. I am getting increasingly old and knackered. To imagine otherwise would be delusional, it's happening to us all. However, there's a difference between blissfully ignoring the ageing process and having it confirmed by a doctor possibly young enough to be one's daughter (always assuming I made a very early start on the reproductive process).
The casus belli of my latest attack on Old Father Time was, I thought, the ceaseless evening roadworks on the A34; which lies just one mile to the south of our home. Lying in bed, readying myself for sleep, I found my slumber delayed by the steady grind of a heavy roller flattening newly laid tarmac in what I believed to be remedial work to the pock marked surface that is our closest arterial route. Night after night this irksome nuisance hummed in the distance, consoling me only with the thought that it may be a terribly nice surface to take the bike onto, save for the cars and trucks flying by at close quarters at 70 mph.
I don't get out much these days, my commute to work was reduced to 14 stairs and a 30 foot hallway back in April, so when I did finally venture forth to the A34, I expected to drive along a velveteen smooth roadway flatter than the Bonneville Salt Flats. What I discovered instead, was the un-remediated asphalt on which I had driven many times before, vibrating through the steering wheel as my car lumbered over its worn and battered surface. At the time I thought little of it, but hearing the sound of the underachieving roller again at the end of the day, I was compelled to consider that perhaps all was not as it seemed.
It was upon hearing the roadworks closer to home in the middle of the day that I determined to investigate. The strident grumble of the heavy machinery saw me flip off my work slippers and don my sandals* for a quick wander to the source of the industry. As I opened the door, the sound vanished. I returned to my desk; the rumble resumed. I opened the door; it ceased. Either a prankster was silencing the roller as I opened my door or I was hearing things; or not, as the case may be.
The human brain is a remarkable piece of kit. When our hand rests on something hot, the reflex to pull away is almost instant. A cut or scrape is felt immediately with our brain delivering a resulting sense of pain through our nervous system. In the inner ear, hair cells reside in the cochlea and send impulses to the brain for it to interpret sound. When something is awry and the hair cells don't send a signal to our grey matter for interpretation, it decides to check out what's going on and sends its own signal back, this signal is commonly known as tinnitus, and frankly, I would rather my brain didn't bother - the silence would be infinitely preferable.
A short period of research on the interweb revealed that there was little that I could do to stop the noise. I have to confess that I greet most treatment suggestions that begin with the words "to help you achieve a positive state of mind" with a healthy degree of skepticism; even if it is the gospel according to the NHS. Other options proposed included sound therapy to fill the silence with neutral, often repetitive sounds to distract you from the sound of tinnitus. I have a 12 year-old daughter who is relentless in her pursuit of a puppy. Repetitive sounds I can do without - they're hardly a welcome distraction. An alternative was to have the radio or television on, or to listen to natural relaxing sounds. When I experience it most, at the point of trying to sleep, I don't want to watch TV or listen to the radio, the only thing I want to do is generate a natural sound, that of my snoring, albeit, Mrs. Brown will be the first to tell you that that particular noise is not remotely relaxing.
As a consequence, I paid a visit to my GP. He was an older gent and nodded sympathetically as he listened to me through his ear horn. "Well", he hollered at me. "Either you're schizophrenic, or your hearing things. Sometimes, there's no difference," he chortled. "I can't tell!".
I was hoping he was a better doctor than a comedian. "Of course," he added. "There's bugger all we can do for you." Confirming to me instantly that he might be better suited to a career in stand-up. In turn, however, he referred me to the local audiology department, whereupon I met the adolescent medic to whom I referred in my opening stanza.
Our meeting began with a surreal debate about my age. The hospital, it would seem, had recorded my date of birth to coincide with my 8th birthday. I could read in her face, instantly, that she considered me not to be weathering well. I reconciled this obviously slight to 36 year-olds across the country by considering the further cause of her distress, that before her might be sitting "the wrong patient". The tabloid press in the UK is quick to seize upon stories of healthy limbs being amputated or the removal of the functioning lung as a result of being presented with dodgy data. I worried momentarily that her investigation might be a little more invasive than I had expected, but we quickly established that although her information lacked integrity, I was still there for a routine hearing check.
Happily I was not advised to adopt aural therapies, instead, she confirmed the worst; that I am suffering what is otherwise known to millions across the planet as hearing loss. "What's that you say?"
"Hearing loss dear. You're going deaf".
The great news is that I've got at least five to ten years before I'll require the installation of an hearing aid. The decline in auditory capability she says, is simply part of the aging process. Yep, she was young, and in the young, the aging process is something that's greeted with enthusiasm. First it gets them to a driver's license, then to an off-license before graduating to a marriage license; but not necessarily in that order.
An alternative view, once one has achieved those milestones, is to look at life through the lens of certification - birth certificate, marriage certificate and... let's not go there.
Instead, let us content ourselves that there is a decline over which we can grumble. After all, there's much worse in this world than the gradual deterioration of one's hearing. Personally, I will content myself in the knowledge that when Pippa next asks us to get a dog, I can respond, with the sincerest legitimacy, that I didn't quite hear what she said.
* For the record, I continue to cling to youth by sporting bare feet beneath my sandals.
The casus belli of my latest attack on Old Father Time was, I thought, the ceaseless evening roadworks on the A34; which lies just one mile to the south of our home. Lying in bed, readying myself for sleep, I found my slumber delayed by the steady grind of a heavy roller flattening newly laid tarmac in what I believed to be remedial work to the pock marked surface that is our closest arterial route. Night after night this irksome nuisance hummed in the distance, consoling me only with the thought that it may be a terribly nice surface to take the bike onto, save for the cars and trucks flying by at close quarters at 70 mph.
I don't get out much these days, my commute to work was reduced to 14 stairs and a 30 foot hallway back in April, so when I did finally venture forth to the A34, I expected to drive along a velveteen smooth roadway flatter than the Bonneville Salt Flats. What I discovered instead, was the un-remediated asphalt on which I had driven many times before, vibrating through the steering wheel as my car lumbered over its worn and battered surface. At the time I thought little of it, but hearing the sound of the underachieving roller again at the end of the day, I was compelled to consider that perhaps all was not as it seemed.
It was upon hearing the roadworks closer to home in the middle of the day that I determined to investigate. The strident grumble of the heavy machinery saw me flip off my work slippers and don my sandals* for a quick wander to the source of the industry. As I opened the door, the sound vanished. I returned to my desk; the rumble resumed. I opened the door; it ceased. Either a prankster was silencing the roller as I opened my door or I was hearing things; or not, as the case may be.
The human brain is a remarkable piece of kit. When our hand rests on something hot, the reflex to pull away is almost instant. A cut or scrape is felt immediately with our brain delivering a resulting sense of pain through our nervous system. In the inner ear, hair cells reside in the cochlea and send impulses to the brain for it to interpret sound. When something is awry and the hair cells don't send a signal to our grey matter for interpretation, it decides to check out what's going on and sends its own signal back, this signal is commonly known as tinnitus, and frankly, I would rather my brain didn't bother - the silence would be infinitely preferable.
A short period of research on the interweb revealed that there was little that I could do to stop the noise. I have to confess that I greet most treatment suggestions that begin with the words "to help you achieve a positive state of mind" with a healthy degree of skepticism; even if it is the gospel according to the NHS. Other options proposed included sound therapy to fill the silence with neutral, often repetitive sounds to distract you from the sound of tinnitus. I have a 12 year-old daughter who is relentless in her pursuit of a puppy. Repetitive sounds I can do without - they're hardly a welcome distraction. An alternative was to have the radio or television on, or to listen to natural relaxing sounds. When I experience it most, at the point of trying to sleep, I don't want to watch TV or listen to the radio, the only thing I want to do is generate a natural sound, that of my snoring, albeit, Mrs. Brown will be the first to tell you that that particular noise is not remotely relaxing.
As a consequence, I paid a visit to my GP. He was an older gent and nodded sympathetically as he listened to me through his ear horn. "Well", he hollered at me. "Either you're schizophrenic, or your hearing things. Sometimes, there's no difference," he chortled. "I can't tell!".
I was hoping he was a better doctor than a comedian. "Of course," he added. "There's bugger all we can do for you." Confirming to me instantly that he might be better suited to a career in stand-up. In turn, however, he referred me to the local audiology department, whereupon I met the adolescent medic to whom I referred in my opening stanza.
Our meeting began with a surreal debate about my age. The hospital, it would seem, had recorded my date of birth to coincide with my 8th birthday. I could read in her face, instantly, that she considered me not to be weathering well. I reconciled this obviously slight to 36 year-olds across the country by considering the further cause of her distress, that before her might be sitting "the wrong patient". The tabloid press in the UK is quick to seize upon stories of healthy limbs being amputated or the removal of the functioning lung as a result of being presented with dodgy data. I worried momentarily that her investigation might be a little more invasive than I had expected, but we quickly established that although her information lacked integrity, I was still there for a routine hearing check.
Happily I was not advised to adopt aural therapies, instead, she confirmed the worst; that I am suffering what is otherwise known to millions across the planet as hearing loss. "What's that you say?"
"Hearing loss dear. You're going deaf".
The great news is that I've got at least five to ten years before I'll require the installation of an hearing aid. The decline in auditory capability she says, is simply part of the aging process. Yep, she was young, and in the young, the aging process is something that's greeted with enthusiasm. First it gets them to a driver's license, then to an off-license before graduating to a marriage license; but not necessarily in that order.
An alternative view, once one has achieved those milestones, is to look at life through the lens of certification - birth certificate, marriage certificate and... let's not go there.
Instead, let us content ourselves that there is a decline over which we can grumble. After all, there's much worse in this world than the gradual deterioration of one's hearing. Personally, I will content myself in the knowledge that when Pippa next asks us to get a dog, I can respond, with the sincerest legitimacy, that I didn't quite hear what she said.
* For the record, I continue to cling to youth by sporting bare feet beneath my sandals.
Saturday, 18 October 2014
It's not just on the pitch he doesn't work...
Having been a tad critical of the boy Balotelli in my recent letter to the lad, I was a touched surprised to find a response sitting on my doorstep a few days ago.
I needn't have been. The chap's so lazy that he failed to:
a) Use my address
b) Add a date
c) Personalise the salutation
d) Write the letter himself
Presumably the club didn't want to wake him from his nap, or perhaps, as he so frequently does during a game, he was hiding.
I needn't have been. The chap's so lazy that he failed to:
a) Use my address
b) Add a date
c) Personalise the salutation
d) Write the letter himself
Presumably the club didn't want to wake him from his nap, or perhaps, as he so frequently does during a game, he was hiding.
Wednesday, 1 October 2014
Balotelli's fearsome fungi
Mario Balotelli
c/o Liverpool Football Club
Anfield Road
Liverpool L4 OTH
Anfield Road
Liverpool L4 OTH
1 October 2014
Dear Mario
I’m sure you can appreciate that, as a Liverpool fan, I was
somewhat disappointed that the team failed to gain a point against Basle
tonight in the Champions’ League.
Bitter pill as that was to swallow however, that is not the
reason for my note; what follows has more to do with concerns for your
health.
I noted, during the course of this evening’s game, that you
appear to have a growth atop your head which isn’t perhaps entirely natural.
I have done some considerable research on this phenomenon
and can only conclude that you have developed a nasty fungal infection leading
to the ivory colouring coursing the centre of your bonce.
Further investigation has revealed that your disfigurement
has probably emerge as a result of immobility; borne of your natural tendency
to remain stationary during the course of a football match. There are some nasty airborne infections one
can acquire when stood motionless in the open air for prolonged periods and I
would hazard that you are more prone than others to be affected given your
regular stasis.
In the interest of your wellbeing, I have consulted with a
number of experts in the field and, universally, they are of the opinion that
if you moved during the course of a game you would not only avoid the fungi
finding refuge on your noodle, but you might also contribute to the team’s
performance; the corollary of which might be to influence a result that is
somewhat more positive than the one I witnessed tonight.
I presume that movement is not a natural state for you and
that you would perhaps benefit from some guidance on how best to do this. May I suggest that you request recordings of
some of last year’s games where you can review the work of Luis Suarez, who
will, l assure you, provide you with a master class in how to perform on a
football pitch. Do however stop short of
adopting his more carnivorous instincts, you’re likely to develop a gastric
complaint if you embrace all of his tendencies.
You may note that many of your teammates are a little less
static than you and also, that none of them have been similarly afflicted. May I propose that you follow their lead,
move about a bit and see what unfolds? I
suspect that not only will you manage to shed the fungus, but you may also find
yourself part of a team capable of delivering more favourable results.
For the sake of my health, I beg you to do
this. The increases to my blood pressure
that your lack of effort engenders is of considerable concern to my nearest and
dearest.
Yours sincerely
Craig Brown
GOM in Training
GOM in Training
Saturday, 19 July 2014
Almost... but not quite
"Amazing", Jamie said, as we watched Rory McIlroy tee off on the first hole on the third day of The Open Championship whilst having breakfast this morning.
A short flutter of joy coursed through me as I considered that, finally, he was showing some appreciation for sport. Then he continued...
"We have managed to invent a game even more boring than cricket."
<Sigh>
Sunday, 15 June 2014
Evolving football knowledge
As a follow-up to Jamie's attempt to build a world eleven, we had a go today at naming 10 football teams. It was a struggle to eight, then he considered the World Cup. No problem with his geography...
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