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Post by Bush Ranger on Aug 17, 2010 10:22:21 GMT
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Post by Lonegunmen on Aug 17, 2010 10:29:34 GMT
And we are signing..................?
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Post by cpr on Aug 17, 2010 10:59:41 GMT
Blimey! Thought he on a wind up, expected him to go to foolem!!!
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Post by Zamoraaaah on Aug 17, 2010 11:15:46 GMT
Bloody hell. What percentage of his wages will Cardiff be paying? It can't be much, they're skint.
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Post by Bush Ranger on Aug 17, 2010 11:23:48 GMT
I think city are paying most of the 85K!!!!!! Sounds like something we would do
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Post by eastpaddoknutta on Aug 17, 2010 11:47:29 GMT
i cant belive that they have managed to convince bellamy to sign to be honest
what with there transfer embagos etc that was going on wtf are they doing signing any one let alone bellamy
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 17, 2010 12:23:06 GMT
And supposedly Premiership clubs were interested in him. Very strange.
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Post by klr on Aug 17, 2010 12:40:28 GMT
Withou question, Man City's stand out performer last season & this is how they treat him ??!
What a waste!
They seem to get rid of all their players that have actually played well for the club such as Dunne, Bellamy & Ireland, players that had the fans & heart & soul of the club in them, only to be replaced by foreign mercenaries like Adebayor & Yaya Toure, its embarrassing, what a truly tacky & cheap little club Man City have become / are becoming.
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pkloft
Gerry Francis
pkdecorators@btinternet.com
Posts: 35
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Post by pkloft on Aug 17, 2010 12:54:22 GMT
think that could be the signing of the season for Cardiff & could be the difference of them making just the play off's and finishing in the top 2.................just the kind of signing that would almost guarantee us going up surely he will get at least 25 goals
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Post by superckat on Aug 17, 2010 13:00:36 GMT
With both Bellamy and Chopra they would need to mess up really badly to not get promoted.
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 17, 2010 13:02:35 GMT
I didnt even have Cardiff in my playoff consideration. Thought finances and missing out and jaded Jones would put them out of it...
Still injuries might happen. The rest of the team might crunch...Or this might be like Keegan to Newcastle as player
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eskey8
Dave Sexton
www.cycle2austria.com
Posts: 2,274
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Post by eskey8 on Aug 17, 2010 13:05:59 GMT
No chance of signing Chopra now
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 17, 2010 13:10:18 GMT
Betfair Cardiff Cut To 7/1 As Bellamy Joins 17 Aug 2010 Cardiff City have shortened to as little at 7/1 to win the nPower Championship following the signing of Manchester City forward Craig Bellamy. Bellamy, who has been frozen out at Eastlands by Roberto Mancini, has joined the Bluebirds on loan until the rest of the season, prompting Cardiff to fall from a high of 20/1 on Sunday to just 7/1 with Extrabet. The Welsh side are best price 11/1 with Totesport, BlueSQ and 888sport. The cut sees Cardiff drop to second favourites for the Championship title, behind QPR who are a general 6/1. The trio of Burnley, Nottingham Forest and Middlesbrough are all available at a best price of 9/1 throughout the market. Bellamy has also been installed 10/1 best price with Skybet and Stan James for the Championship top scorer, behind Middlesbrough’s Kris Boyd at 9/1. betting.gamingsupermarket.com/news/5337/cardiff-cut-to-71-as-bellamy-joins
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Post by blatantfowl on Aug 17, 2010 13:10:41 GMT
Man City are so keen to avoid letting Bellamy go to a Premiership club that they are willing to pay all his wages and drop him down a division. Every day this game gets more perverse. To me this is just the latest way in which too much money is ruining football.
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Post by Lonegunmen on Aug 17, 2010 13:21:22 GMT
Well I hope this is looked into. Cardiff deserve to be folded or expelled. They should have to front up at least half of his wages and that would surely bankrupt them.
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 17, 2010 13:25:12 GMT
And confirmed on Cardiff SiteCardiff Official Site - OFFICIAL: CRAIG BELLAMY COMES HOME Tue 17 Aug 2010 Cardiff City Football Club are delighted to confirm that an agreement has been struck with Manchester City on the season long loan of Craig Bellamy. The agreement was made at midday on Tuesday, seeing the Welsh Captain coming home and being available to join the squad in readiness for our home game against Doncaster on Saturday, subject to ratification from the Premier League and Football League.Craig said of the move, "I'm thrilled to be coming back home to Cardiff and am excited at the prospect of wearing the shirt and playing for the club I've supported since I was a boy. I'll be working hard with my new team-mates to bring success to the club and look forward to our next Championship game on Saturday. I'm sure that all 'City fans will play their part in driving us forward this year. It has been my dream to play my part in taking my hometown club to the Premier League, which would be fantastic for the football club, the city of Cardiff and Wales." Cardiff City Manager Dave Jones said, "Bringing Craig to Cardiff is another big step in the development of this football club and I am delighted that he has agreed to join us on a season long loan. Like recent additions Jason Koumas and Seyi Olofinjana, Craig is a great talent and adds to the quality players that we have here. We will continue to work on taking the next steps as a club and hope that all Cardiff City supporters join us in welcoming Craig by turning up in high numbers this season." Cardiff City Chief Executive Gethin Jenkins added, "We are delighted to have secured agreement with Manchester City in the loan of such a high calibre player in Craig, which works for us not only on the pitch, but also from a business perspective. As current Wales Captain, Craig is a fantastic addition to our squad. We would like to thank Manchester City and specifically their senior executives for their help in brokering the deal. " Also recognition should be given to TG and to Vincent Tan for their support with the deal and should lay to rest any questions of their ongoing commitment. Together with the other members of the squad, coaches and staff it reiterates our commitment to take this club forward." Craig will be unveiled at a press conference at Cardiff City Stadium at 3:30pm on Tuesday. He will wear squad number 39. For tickets to see Cardiff City against Doncaster Rovers at 3pm on Sunday at Cardiff City Stadium, call the ticket office on 0845 345 1400 or buy online via e-ticketing. www.cardiffcityfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10335~2125334,00.html
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 17, 2010 13:56:01 GMT
Maybe Cardiff should be made to pay their bills FIRST..Wales online
Motherwell threaten Cardiff with winding up order Aug 17 2010 MOTHERWELL have threatened to issue the Bluebirds with a to issue the Bluebirds with a winding up order. The Scottish club are furious at Cardiff's activity in the transfer market as they say the Championship club still owes them £175,000 from the Quinn's move last summer. A remarkable Motherwell statement read: Further to an initial statement issued on Thursday 22nd July, Motherwell Football Club have today issued the following press release relating to the transfer of Paul Quinn to Cardiff City FC. Cardiff City owe Motherwell Football Club £175,000 plus interest and costs for the transfer of Paul Quinn which took place in June 2009, almost 14 months ago. Fully understanding their difficulties, the Board of Motherwell FC have pursued this claim firmly but courteously. Having failed to receive a proper business like response, the Club eventually had no option but to pursue the matter in Hamilton Sheriff Court. The petition was considered on Friday yet Cardiff did not even turn up or submit a defence to our petition. Commenting, Motherwell Chief Executive, Leeann Dempster, said: “It is critical that clubs work constructively with each other to ensure we can manage a very difficult financial climate for the game. We have given Cardiff every chance to do the right thing. “The Board now believe that Cardiff’s position is untenable given their activity in the transfer market acquiring Jason Koumas, Tom Heaton, Danny Drinkwater, Seyi Olofinjana, Martin John and today, the loan signing of Manchester City’s Craig Bellamy. “Given all these circumstances and with legal and moral weight behind us, Motherwell FC have no option but to immediately pursue all legal routes to ensure this significant sum is paid to us as quickly as possible. “These may include issuing a winding up order, arresting assets or physically sending bailiffs to their ground on match day to take possession of cash. Every option will be fully considered and implemented as soon as possible. “We want Cardiff fans to know that we appreciate the concerns this will give them. We can only urge them to look to how they would feel in our position and urge them to put pressure on their own Board to ensure the excellent long-term reputation of their club is not diminished by the leadership of one board. “We have a job to promote and protect the interests of our own employees, fans and shareholders and we will. We would also suggest to the Championship and the English FA that they look with great care at the conduct of Cardiff in handling this matter. “Even at this very late stage, I would urge Gethin Jenkins of Cardiff to pay this money plus costs and interest by return in order to save his club acute embarrassment and the football community in general unwarranted bad publicity”. www.walesonline.co.uk/footballnation/cardiff-city-fc/2010/08/17/motherwell-threaten-cardiff-with-winding-up-order-91466-27079668/
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 19, 2010 6:52:53 GMT
BBC
Football League warns Cardiff on Craig Bellamy signing Football League chairman Greg Clarke has told Cardiff City that they must be able to prove they have the means to fund Craig Bellamy's loan move.
Clarke warned that the League may not register Bellamy, on a season loan from Manchester City, without assurances. Cardiff have debts estimated at £30m and have missed tax bill deadlines. "Our job is to make sure there is an integrity of competition, which people only take on liabilities that they can meet," Clarke said. "We have to register the player and we've asked Cardiff for some information, which will be confidential between them and us, which will allow us to appraise whether we are going to register that player or not. "Without pointing the finger directly at Cardiff, I have an abiding principal that people in business and their personal lives should always pay their debts. "It depends what money they've got available and it depends whether they intend to take on an obligation and extinguish their other obligations at the same time. "I don't know the answers to that, but we'll find out the answers. But certainly I wouldn't approve of any club taking on more obligations if they couldn't pay their existing ones." Cardiff issued a statement on Wednesday night, promising to take up the matter with the Football League at the first opportunity. "The club are fully aware of the comments made by Football League chairman Greg Clarke on Wednesday," said the Cardiff statement. "We are extremely disappointed that he has chosen to discuss these matters in public without waiting for an opportunity for Cardiff City to provide a full and private response. Click to play Click to play Bellamy delighted to 'come home' to Cardiff "As we have stated previously, we are fully confident that this deal adds up in a business and sports context. "It should be remembered that the club have released 10 players this summer and to date have brought in two free agents and season-long loan players. "We are extremely proud to have reached a sensible deal with Manchester City which has allowed us to bring Craig home to realise his dream of playing for his home-town club and to help us pursue our ambition of challenging to join the Premier League. "This deal has also been fully supported and underwritten by our Malaysian investors who have shown unprecedented support since joining the club. "We will be in contact with the Football League on Thursday morning to discuss these matters further." Cardiff still owe Motherwell £175,000 for the transfer of Paul Quinn in July 2009 and the Scottish club's chief executive, Leeann Dempster, has been publically critical of Cardiff's recent signings. "They [Cardiff] have signed a high-profile player, which has really annoyed us," Dempster said this week. "They should have their debts settled from last year before they are allowed to sign any players." Cardiff have not spent any money up front on permanent signings this summer, relying instead on loans to bolster Dave Jones' squad since their transfer embargo was lifted earlier in August. The transfer ban was imposed due to a delay in paying debts, including £1.3m owed to HM Revenue and Customs. As well as the surprise capture of Bellamy, midfielders Jason Koumas, Seyi Olofinjana and Danny Drinkwater have all arrived for the season from Premier League teams. It is thought that Manchester City will continue to pay the bulk of Bellamy's wages, but Cardiff's combined wage bill for their new recruits will still be significant. Cardiff chief executive Gethin Jenkins has promised Motherwell that their situation "will be resolved within the next seven days". Jenkins has also pointed out that increased ticket sales and merchandising sparked by Bellamy's signing on Tuesday will have a beneficial effect on the Championship club's finances. newsvote.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/c/cardiff_city/8926215.stm
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 19, 2010 6:57:17 GMT
After all the financial "issues" with Cardiff over the past couple of seasons, you'd think they investigate this very very carefully and look at current unpaid debts!Football League demand answers on Craig Bellamy move Aug 19 2010 by Chris Wathan, Western Mail THE Football League are demanding answers from Cardiff City over their financial situation before giving Craig Bellamy the green light to make his Bluebirds bow on Saturday. Greg Clarke, chairman of the Football League, last night threw a shock spanner into the works of their sensational loan swoop for the Wales captain by revealing he is seeking urgent talks with the Cardiff hierarchy over their finances. Until those discussions take place, and the league are satisfied with the answers they receive, Clarke warned they will not register Bellamy as a Cardiff player. The bombshell comes just hours after Bellamy’s arrival in the Welsh capital sparked a surge in ticket and shirt sales ahead of his expected debut against Doncaster. But Clarke told Sky Sports News: “Our job is to make sure that there is an integrity of competition and that people only take on liabilities they can meet. “We have to register the player and we have asked Cardiff for certain information, which will be confidential between them and us, which will allow us to appraise whether we will register the player or not. “Without pointing the finger directly at Cardiff, I have an abiding principle that people in business and in personal lives should always pay their debts. “It depends what money they have available and it depends whether they intend to take on an obligation and extinguish their other obligations at the same time, I don’t know the answers to that, but we will find out the answers. “But certainly, I wouldn’t approve of any club taking on more obligations if they couldn’t pay their existing ones.” The revelation comes just hours after Motherwell threatened to pursue a winding-up order against the Bluebirds for failing to meet repayments on the transfer of Paul Quinn, the club’s chairman John Boyle stating: “How cynical can it be that a club can be signing a raft of high-profile, expensive players when they owe a small club like us over £200,000? “It is quite simply a disgrace. It is utterly cynical, disingenuous in the extreme.” Cardiff have only recently emerged from a transfer embargo after clearing debts owed to HMRC and Charlton Athletic over the transfer of Mark Hudson, and it is not clear the exact assurances the Football League is seeking before completing the registration of Bellamy. But last night the club remained confident they could satisfy the Football League that the deal added up “in a business and sports context”. “We are extremely proud to have reached a sensible deal with Manchester City which has allowed us to bring Craig home to realise his dream of playing for his hometown club and to help us pursue our ambition of challenging to join the Premier League,” a club statement said. “This deal has also been fully supported and underwritten by our Malaysian investors, who have shown unprecedented support since joining the club. “We will be in contact with the Football League on Thursday morning to discuss these matters further.” www.walesonline.co.uk/footballnation/cardiff-city-fc/2010/08/19/football-league-demand-answers-on-craig-bellamy-move-91466-27091522/
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 19, 2010 7:13:56 GMT
A Cardiff Fan Perspective which if accurate, ties into the broader matter re signing players/bringing in money"... Cardiff's signing of Craig Bellamy has close on paid for itself already. We don't know the exact amount Cardiff have to pay in wages but it's thought to be £20K a week. 24 hours after his signing we sold nearly 4,000 shirts @ £40 each, 500 season tickets @ £300 each and the gate will be increased by about 5,000 @ £20 each on Saturday.Roughly that's about £400,000 on the back of him signing. 20 weeks of wages brought in from the first 24 hours of business.The man pays for himself. .. www.cardiffcity-mad.co.uk/news/tmnw/people_in_glass_houses_547728/index.shtml
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Post by haqpr1963 on Aug 19, 2010 7:57:56 GMT
A Cardiff Fan Perspective which if accurate, ties into the broader matter re signing players/bringing in money"... Cardiff's signing of Craig Bellamy has close on paid for itself already. We don't know the exact amount Cardiff have to pay in wages but it's thought to be £20K a week. 24 hours after his signing we sold nearly 4,000 shirts @ £40 each, 500 season tickets @ £300 each and the gate will be increased by about 5,000 @ £20 each on Saturday.Roughly that's about £400,000 on the back of him signing. 20 weeks of wages brought in from the first 24 hours of business.The man pays for himself. .. www.cardiffcity-mad.co.uk/news/tmnw/people_in_glass_houses_547728/index.shtml Similar story from the Mail today : Cardiff's 'Bellam' bedlam! Club shop runs out of 'Y's' and '9's' as Craig Bellamy signing grips City
By Phil Cadden Last updated at 12:45 AM on 19th August 2010 Comments (0) Add to My Stories
Cardiff 's shock capture of Craig Bellamy on loan from Manchester City has given them an immediate boost of nearly £500,000.
Within three hours the club shop sold 3,000 'Bellamy 39' replica shirts before they ran out of 'Ys' and '9s' - so fans bought shirts with 'Bellam 3'.
Fans have snapped up tickets for his first game on Saturday, at home to Doncaster, which is expected to be a 23,000 sell-out, and there has been a run on season-ticket sales.
Cardiff chief executive Gethin Jenkins said the cash will go towards paying £175,000 owed to Motherwell for defender Paul Quinn.
Club shop supervisor Amy Barnes, overwhelmed by the interest, said: 'Craig's signing was a big shock for us all. His arrival has created a great buzz.'www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1304292/Cardiff-club-shop-runs-Ys-9s-Craig-Bellamy-signing-grips-City.htmlStill don't see how Cardiff with all their recent financial problems, etc. have managed to pull this off.
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Post by blatantfowl on Aug 19, 2010 10:39:40 GMT
Assigning all shirt sales and season ticket sales in that period to the signing of Bellamy is over simplistic.
It is still around the start of the season, a time when fans are buying shirts and season tickets anyway. They've been boosted for sure but it's not as good as they make out.
And what's more as Cardiff seem to have forgotten with regularity income does not equal profit. There are overheads and taxes to be paid on that income. I'd be surprised if they get anywhere near covering the costs of acquiring Bellamy.
If you walked into Alan Sugar's boardroom with those figures he'd probably sack you on the spot.
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Post by Lonegunmen on Aug 19, 2010 10:42:03 GMT
Exciting times if you have financial clout to back it. If our tight wad lot did that and were not phased about the dosh, that is one thing but Cardiff are in a serious financial position. If they do not win promotion this season then they are likely to be finished and banished to the Welsh league.
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Post by qprrobbo on Aug 19, 2010 11:24:38 GMT
If Baadiff are banished to the Welsh League at the end of the season, I for one will be opening the bubbly. I can't abide them or their so called supporters, and I don't understande why any of the welsh teams are competing in the English FA divisions. Kick 'em out today I say!
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Post by Lonegunmen on Aug 19, 2010 11:47:52 GMT
I work with one, oddly enough he's a great guy, not like your average Cardiff twat.
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 21, 2010 7:53:02 GMT
Independent
He's not Mr Nasty, he's 'Bellam' – and Cardiff loves him
Fans have bought so many Bellamy shirts that the shop sold out of necessary letters. The frenzy is just beginningBy James Corrigan Saturday, 21 August 2010 If Craig Bellamy requires any gauge of what might be expected on his debut today, the last Welsh superstar who rocked the game when signing for Cardiff City happened to score the winning goal in his first game. From 20 yards inside his own half. But then, in 1963, the 31-year-old John Charles was regarded as one the world's best-known players; the 31-year-old Bellamy was merely regarded as one the Premier League's best-known players. Not that the Charles comparison is about to dissipate any of the hype swirling around the Welsh capital. Last night, Bellamy's face was projected across the front of Cardiff Castle, and down below the newspaper vendors were selling the South Wales Echo with its front page mocked up as a Roy of the Rovers comic – "Bellamy of the City" it read. Meanwhile, over at the club shop the cult "Bellam 3" shirts continued to rival the "Bellamy 39" version for sales. The folklore already says that within three hours of him signing on Tuesday they sold 3,000 of the official replicas before running out of Ys and 9s; the waiting fans told the staff to print them off anyway. And in the ticket office a few doors up, the "Sold Out" sign was destined to inform only the daftly optimistic of the inevitable. All of this for a League match against Doncaster. "Bellamania" it's been dubbed... A little earlier, TV satellite trucks monopolised the car park of the training complex that Cardiff share with the international rugby side and the Cardiff Blues. "What? Are Wales playing England tomorrow?" joked the All Black No 8, Xavier Rush, as the journalists packed into the office. Inside, every question focused on the Manchester City loanee. "Am I surprised by all the attention?" said Jay Bothroyd, Bellamy's new striking partner. "Course not. It's a hero coming home. He's at the peak of his career, he could have gone to many Premiership clubs. But he wanted to fulfil a dream and play for his hometown club. There's bound to be a massive buzz." Except that not all the reverberations have been positive in the startled days since Bellamy took what, in the Premier League era, can surely be classed as an unprecedented move down to the Championship for a player of his class and form. The euphoria in Cardiff has been mirrored by the outrage outside the city walls, as other clubs wondered how an outfit who have recently been forced to take repeated trips to the High Court to fend off winding-up orders – and who still owe £175,000 to Motherwell in transfer fees – can afford to pay a reported £35,000 of his weekly £90,000 wages. "Some people must be jealous," is how Dave Jones, the Cardiff manager, sees it. Yet even Greg Clarke, the Football League chairman, was alarmed enough to vocalise his concerns live on TV and demand information on the season-long loan before issuing Bellamy's registration. Yesterday, Jones hit back at Clarke. "I haven't heard him talking about anyone else doing it," barked the Liverpudlian. "What have we done wrong? We've loaned a player with the help of Manchester City subsidising part of his wages. Managers from clubs lower down the League have been on to me about loaning them some of our players and they have asked us to subsidise their wages. But it doesn't seem to be a problem when we agree to it. Basically, he should have waited and investigated, before saying anything. Maybe he was put under pressure from certain quarters." The speed with which the Football League proceeded to make its enquiries and then register Bellamy certainly seems to back up Jones. The longest-serving manager in the division has utter faith in the Malaysian investors who many feared would do a runner after Cardiff lost the play-off final in May. There is a plan, says Jones, and Bellamy is just a significant part of it, having loaned in Jason Koumas and others as well. "We could have taken the easy route, gone into administration and paid everyone a penny in the pound," he said. "But the board didn't, they decided to pay off the debts, which they're doing. And they should be applauded, not criticised, for coming up with something which will generate more revenue. There's not one chairman in the League who would have turned up their noses at the opportunity to pick up Bellamy if they could do it. Well, we've been able to do it, within our financial plan." Nevertheless, Jones admitted to knowing the stir it would cause. "We were ready for it," he said. The manager was also prepared for the "in his contract" whispers which greeted the news that Bellamy would instantly be made team captain. "Despite all the speculation, this is purely a football decision," he said. "He's the Welsh international captain. Craig comes with an experience and an authority." Craig also comes with a fair amount of baggage, but Jones points to his own track record of dealing with the likes of Paul Ince. "These supposed 'problem players' are only a problem if you drop off the standards they believe in," said Jones. "I'll be very surprised if I have one argument with Craig over anything other than football. He's here to do one thing – play football. He doesn't want any special treatment and has been told he won't be getting any anyway. If he doesn't toe the line he'll be fined and treated like everybody else. We've been fortunate enough to acquire a top player. But the last time I looked he still had one nose, two eyes and two ears." Jones must have missed the cape. "Yeah, he probably is being depicted as Superman, or Roy of the Rovers, or Billy's Boots in some place," he said. "And because he's coming home it has added spice to this game and the rest of the season and it'll be fantastic for this club. But he's still got his job to do as one of 11 and he knows it. He'll chip in like everyone else." This was the mood at training yesterday as the club played down the Superhero vs Arch-villain status of the new man, who in fact is rather old hat to them. When Bellamy was staying with his wife and three children at their Cardiff home, he would regularly train with the Bluebirds. "We all know him," confirmed Bothroyd. "I knew him at Coventry when I was a 17-year-old and we were room-mates. He didn't sleep. Not then anyway. But he's not like what people think or what he might seem like on the pitch. He's a humble character, a good professional." The Bluebirds faithful who now worship him will claim it has ever been thus for the tearaway from the Trowbridge estate. Like them, his reputation precedes him and like theirs, it is largely unjustified. What a contrast to the image of John Charles, the Gentle Giant. Yet Bellamy may find it interesting to learn that when Charles led out his new team on that debut 47 years ago, he actually had a cigarette dangling from his mouth. Before the whistle, Charlo took one last drag and crunched the butt beneath his boot. Even Craig wouldn't get away with it. John Charles' Debut When it was rumoured that John Charles – aka the Gentle Giant – was keen to leave Roma because of injuries and personal problems, no one put Cardiff City on the list of likely destinations, particularly at a knockdown price of £25,000. Since joining Juventus in the mid-Fifties, Charles had established himself as one of the world's best players. So vast were his talents that Bill Nicholson described Charles "as the greatest centre-half I ever played against" and at the same function Jimmy Greaves described Charles "as the greatest centre-half I ever played against". Cardiff, meanwhile, had just been relegated from the top division. The astonishing move came to light when a Cardiff journalist ran into Charles on an Italian beach and he blurted out the news. The hype was comparable to that of Bellamy and the big man didn't disappoint. In his debut against Norwich, he booted a free-kick more than 70 yards into the opposing area where the goalkeeper, Kevin Keelan, fumbled it into his net. Charles remained at the Bluebirds until he ended his League career, aged 35, although he played on in non-League into his forties. Bellamy timeline *February 2002 Cautioned by the police for common assault following an incident with a student in a Newcastle nightclub. *November 2002 Sent off while playing for Newcastle in a Champions League match against Internazionale after kicking out at the defender Marco Materazzi. *March 2004 Throws a chair at the then Newcastle coach John Carver after an argument at Newcastle airport. *January 2005 Has a public falling out with the Newcastle manager Graeme Souness, leading to him being left out of the side for a match at Arsenal. Bellamy refutes Souness's claims that he refused to play out of position. Fined £80,000 and told that he would never play for the club again, before being sent out on loan to Celtic. *April 2005 Allegedly sends Newcastle captain Alan Shearer abusive text messages after Newcastle's FA Cup semi-final defeat against Manchester United. Bellamy's agent claims the phone had been lost at the time. Racially abused by Hearts supporter during a league match. *November 2006 Cleared of assaulting two women in a Cardiff nightclub. *February 2007 Allegedly attacks Liverpool team-mate John Arne Riise with a golf club during a training session in Portugal, earning a fine of two weeks' wages. The incident saw him labelled in tabloid newspapers as "the nutter with the putter". Scores equaliser at Barcelona in next match, before setting up Riise for the winner. *April 2007 Forced to dismiss reports that he was looking to leave Liverpool. Joins West Ham United in a £7.5m move just two months later. *May 2008 Announces plans for the Craig Bellamy Foundation, an initiative for disadvantaged children in Sierra Leone providing coaching and a boarding school. *January 2009 After just 18 months at Upton Park, Bellamy reportedly goes on strike and storms out of training in a bid to force a move to Manchester City. Moved to Eastlands for £14m. *September 2009 Attacks Manchester United supporter who had run on to the Old Trafford pitch at the end of 4-3 derby defeat in which Bellamy had scored twice. Subsequently warned by the Football Association over his future conduct. www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/football-league/hes-not-mr-nasty--hes-bellam-ndash-and-cardiff-loves-him-2058123.html
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 21, 2010 10:15:13 GMT
You can hate Cardiff (YES!)....You Can wonder about their fiances (YES) But still bold, innovative move.. Cardiff Official Site DONCASTER SOLD OUT Sat 21 Aug 2010 The Bluebirds home game against Doncaster Rovers today is now a home sell out. The final tickets were sold early on Saturday morning. Dave Jones and the lads will run out to a capacity home crowd and the scene will be a fitting tribute to Brian Clark as we remember the great Bluebirds Striker. Make sure you don't miss out for the rest of the season, as season tickets are on sale now until Saturday September 4th. www.cardiffcityfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10335~2129871,00.html
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Post by Lonegunmen on Aug 21, 2010 10:22:46 GMT
Imaginative, bold, brave, inspiring, adventurous. Things one wont associate with QPR other than with Taarabt & Faurlin.
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Post by Macmoish on Aug 21, 2010 11:13:41 GMT
We USED to be .... The first Plastic pitch... Considered the idea to have a roof over Loftus Road The First TV Football Ad And much much more
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