Ke1t Posted March 28, 2018 Share Posted March 28, 2018 When our players are 'hot' we need to sell the fuckers for the most we can get. This 'building a team' horseshit might have some credence if we went out and strengthened the team on the back of an offer for one of our better player, but usually we go through a transfer window by signing no-one/shirt fillers. Weren't we offered cash for guys like Maguire (A million, if I recall correctly) and... it might have been a pound fifty for Diamond...? ...but we should have grabbed that 1,000,001.50 and ran to the fucking bank with it. We develop players to a certain level and then they begin to stagnate. Any potential market value rapidly declines, and instead of getting a sack of cash for Chris and Zander we got... well... we got pretty much what they were worth, in the end. Sell them when they're at peak mediocrity. Take the cash and use it to, fuck, I don't know... fund a new stadium or some silly shit like that. If we can get a stupid offer for McKenna we should take the money and run. Link to comment
mcdougall(4) Posted March 28, 2018 Share Posted March 28, 2018 good point that kelt sell high essentially, key part is knowing when would help to have a hype machine to help like the tims and huns do in our media Link to comment
reekie_dock Posted March 28, 2018 Share Posted March 28, 2018 Fuck selling the great white hope £40 million or sook stewarties bellend Link to comment
Chewie37 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 He's the 57th Aberdeen player to be capped for Scotland.....fun fact Link to comment
maryhilldon Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Why don't the evening express or p and j talk up big Clark?Fucks sake, no-one outside the north of Scotland reads them. You serious? Link to comment
Chewie37 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Fucks sake, no-one outside the north of Scotland reads them. You serious?They get sold inEdinburgh....... Link to comment
dj_bollocks Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Imagine if we'd taken a chance on a few more young loons that managed to step up given more than 2 minutes in a match... 1 Link to comment
NEM Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Our media hyping up rangers and Celtic players, as in the Glasgow media? Why don't the evening express or p and j talk up big Clark? Are the P&J and Evening express sold nationwide like? Link to comment
DD1903 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Are the P&J and Evening express sold nationwide like?I've seen it sold in Glasgow Link to comment
BWG Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Are the P&J and Evening express sold nationwide like?It's a point Millerman refuses to accept. "National" newspapers and it's just constant old firm shite. 2 Link to comment
NEM Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 It's a point Millerman refuses to accept. "National" newspapers and it's just constant old firm shite. He probably knows full well, just being a contrary bellend as usual 3 Link to comment
maryhilldon Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 I've seen it sold in GlasgowAye? I haven't. Link to comment
DD1903 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Aye? I haven't.Well that's that then. I've also seen it sold in Perth Link to comment
Andy_123 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 good point that kelt sell high essentially, key part is knowing when would help to have a hype machine to help like the tims and huns do in our media Dundee Utd managed it a few season ago. Just need to think of a nickname to give him like "Mini Maldini" or something Link to comment
maryhilldon Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 As far as I know, yes?Ive lived down here for 25 years and i've never seen it in a shop, or anyone reading it. Maybe get it in Central or Queen St stations? Link to comment
V for Vendetta Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Scotsman and Herald are more like regional papers nowadays - used to be national and they still claim to be and they claim to cover national and international news but really they sell fuck all copies. They are actually even more irrelevant than the P&J which I've always thought was pretty crap. Link to comment
V for Vendetta Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 As far as I know, yes? Not sure they are really nationwide, smaller newsagents in the central belt probably don't carry them. But they still probably still outsell dwindling shite like the Scotsman. Link to comment
StandFree1982 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Nobody buys newspapers anymore. The paper is dead. You don't see anyone under 30 buying a newspaper anymore, unless it's a boy in a van with a bottle of Coke tucked into the back pocket of his jeans. Link to comment
reekie_dock Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Only time il buy a paper is in heliport and then its only a P&J Will never buy ether oh those two rags Link to comment
Chewie37 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Aren't most of the sports articles from Allsports or whatever it's called and all the newspapers just print the same stories except the odd exclusive? Fuck Aberdeen Journals, i.e. DC Thomson and other Dundonian wank Link to comment
dave_min Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 He's the 57th Aberdeen player to be capped for Scotland.....fun fact That wasn't fun, which makes my question if its factually correct. Link to comment
Ramandu Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Funner fact: More folk read the P&J than the Herald, the Times, the Scotsman, the Evening Times, the Evening News, the Guardian, the National... Link to comment
Chewie37 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 That wasn't fun, which makes my question if its factually correct. @@Dad thought it was fun Funner fact: More folk read the P&J than the Herald, the Times, the Scotsman, the Evening Times, the Evening News, the Guardian, the National...That is funner Link to comment
Chewie37 Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 That was too quick to be spontaneous Link to comment
mcdougall(4) Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Now as many capped Dons as young boys I've molested - terrific. Link to comment
mcdougall(4) Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Imagine if we'd taken a chance on a few more young loons that managed to step up given more than 2 minutes in a match... As in ???? Link to comment
mcdougall(4) Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 He probably knows full well, just being a contrary bellend as usual Does anyone actually take the weirdo seriously? Link to comment
mcdougall(4) Posted March 29, 2018 Share Posted March 29, 2018 Dundee Utd managed it a few season ago. Just need to think of a nickname to give him like "Mini Maldini" or something How did that work for them and Guald? 1 Link to comment
Chewie37 Posted March 31, 2018 Share Posted March 31, 2018 Who?Don't know why he's worried about an Italian either..... https://www.transfermarkt.co.uk/luciano-gualdi/profil/spieler/150442 Link to comment
King Street Loon Posted May 28, 2018 Share Posted May 28, 2018 A decent article on McKenna in the EE.I ken it's only words, but I like the determination the lad has to succeed.He's still raw and needs a guiding hand I feel but he's going to go from strength to strength.The remarkable breakthrough season of Aberdeen defender Scott McKenna is set to continue with another Scotland appearance during the trip to South America.Centre-back McKenna will earn a third cap against either Peru or Mexico as a season where he came from nowhere to be the Dons’ Player of the Year and an international finally draws to a close.McKenna is confident his time with the Scotland squad and working with manager Alex McLeish, an Aberdeen legend, will ensure he returns to Pittodrie for pre-season training an even better player.McKenna said: “It is all about learning and trying to take as much away from my time with Scotland as I can.“These trips are a great learning curve.“You have a lot of experienced professionals around you and you can learn so much from them. I can also learn a lot from the manager.“Playing for Alex McLeish is special as an Aberdeen player because he is a legend at the club and he played in central defence too.“I enjoyed working with him. In between drills, he’ll come over and make a point or say wee things that can help out.“Hopefully that and being with Scotland will improve my performances at Aberdeen.”McKenna’s meteoric rise has not gone unnoticed and Aberdeen rejected four bids from Hull City for the defender in the January transfer window with the final offer in excess of £1 million.Interest from other clubs will inevitably continue.McKenna said: “There was interest in me in January but it was never something I really considered.“The manager said at the time, and has repeated since, that he wants me to play another 100 to 150 games and experience European football.“I might not experience that again if I go down south unless you are playing for a top team.“You also have a higher chance to get to cup finals and win silverware.”The stellar trajectory of his career has been so rapid there has been no time for McKenna to take a breath and contemplate his breakthrough.This time last year he was unsure if he would even have a Dons future as a loan spell at Ayr United had ended.The 21-year-old struggled to get game time with Ayr who were relegated to League One.His breakthrough came in September when he was pitched in from the start at Motherwell just days after a crushing 3-0 League Cup quarter-final defeat to the Steelmen at Fir Park. McKenna impressed and Aberdeen triumphed 1-0.He retained his starting slot and hasn’t looked back, twice signing contract extensions, the latest until 2023.McKenna not only earned a debut cap in March he was pitched in from the start. He was one of the few positives from the 1-0 loss to Costa Rica and retained his starting slot for the 1-0 win in Hungary.With skipper Graeme Shinnie suspended he captained the Dons in the Scottish Cup semi-final. That 3-0 loss is the only blot on an outstanding season where he won Aberdeen’s Player of the Year, Young Player of the Year and Goal of the season.He said: “I wanted to keep going until the season finished then I will finally have time to sit down and look at what has happened.“The season just seemed to keep getting better and better for me. My ambitions at the start of the season were just to try to get into the team and get between five and 10 games under my belt.“It is quite surreal what has happened.”McKenna is now one of the first names on Aberdeen boss Derek McInnes’ team-sheet.However there will be no complacency from the stopper.He said: “As a young player, the most important thing is to keep your feet on the ground.“I cannot relax, I need to keep working hard so I can kick on. I still have a lot to learn in the game and want to keep improving.“Ideally I can keep improving and my game will get better and better.”McKenna’s refusal to relax or take anything for granted is partly fuelled by his insight into the life of a part-time footballer while on loan at Ayr.He said: “Being at Ayr was a really important experience for me in all kinds of ways.“During my second spell at Ayr, I struggled a bit and was rightly dropped. I probably learned more from handling that than anything, as some games I was not even on the bench. It made me more determined to work harder.“I’ve become probably my biggest critic. I watch all my games back to see what I can do better. I am always learning. Losing my place was a reminder of how important it is that, once you get in the team, you don’t let that place go. “That’s been my attitude this season and for the most part it has succeeded.“As well as that, the players at Ayr were part-time. Boys were out grafting all day and then had to come in and train at night – that was a real eye opener.“Some were travelling an hour and a half to get to Ayr at night and then not getting home until midnight.“Then they were up at six the next morning for work.“That’s dedication and it helped me appreciate the advantages you get with being full-time.”McKenna is determined to maximise his time overseas.He said: “The key thing is for me to stay in the Scotland manager’s thoughts.“When I made the step up to international level, I felt I did okay.“Just joining the squad and maybe getting some game time was my original aim.“But after I got a chance from the start, I wanted to stay there and to be selected for the Hungary game too was great.” Link to comment
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