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Robbie Savage reveals footballers' tricks to engineer a transfer

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Comments

  • edited August 2013
    He forgot looking like a blonde bird to win over interested chairmen!
  • Utter cnut
  • I think most of it makes him sound like a XXXX.
    Would hate to have staff like that in any industry.
  • He comes across as a complete prick there!
  • Think its unfair to just label such behavior just to him. Many, many players in the game have this this past and present. He's been pretty open and honest about it at least. I actually like him as a pundit.
  • Am sure he's not the only one to have done it... Good honest insight into what Footballers can be like at clubs

    Wonder if anyone at Charlton has ever taken those steps (other than Scott Parker)
  • No surprises there.
  • got a few lines into it it and thought what a tool he is, skim read the rest and ended up thinking grow up ffs.

    does that really warrant an article on the BBC website?
  • Macronate said:

    got a few lines into it it and thought what a tool he is, skim read the rest and ended up thinking grow up ffs.

    does that really warrant an article on the BBC website?

    Probably cost the organisation a few grand of tax payers hard earned money that
  • Macronate said:

    got a few lines into it it and thought what a tool he is, skim read the rest and ended up thinking grow up ffs.

    does that really warrant an article on the BBC website?

    Thought the same.
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  • Well when you consider that 90% of talk in the Barclays Premiersnore at the moment is regarding Suarez, Bale and Rooney (and the transfers that probably aren't even going to happen!) it hardly comes as a surprise that BBC ran it.
  • Macronate said:

    got a few lines into it it and thought what a tool he is, skim read the rest and ended up thinking grow up ffs.

    does that really warrant an article on the BBC website?

    Well as many players do the same thing to engineer transfers, it's useful background information.
  • Once a prick always one, what ahelmet
  • Wow what a w@nker thinks he's untouchable and to have the cheek to admit such things. It's not a crime, but that should cost him his bbc punditry role.

    Of course other players use such techniques (perhaps) to get what they want but wouldn't brag about it like it's something to be proud of and pass on the message.

    Sad.
  • edited August 2013
    BBC are as much to blame for publishing the rubbish.
    Wonder if he's learnt how to pull the lavatory chain yet!

  • He comes across as a complete prick

    Fixed that for you

  • Hang on, there have been countless threads on here about how pundits are hated and how they provide little insight. You may not like Savage or the way he may have conducted himself at times as a player on and off the pitch, but his job is to inform those on the workings of the game from an insider's perspective. That's exactly what he is doing.

    You might not agree with it being 'right', but the purpose of the piece is to demonstrate some of the things that happen that the average supporter isn't privy too. Much more interesting than Mark Bright or Alan Hansen telling us things that we already know week in, week out.
  • edited August 2013
    The thing is that, back in the real world, if you got sussed for doing any one of these things long term at work

    Sulking
    Stop communicating
    Faking injury/illness
    Make up newspaper stories (to the detriment of your employer)
    Using the media (to the detriment of your employer)
    Undermining the manager
    Fighting with team-mates
    Moan to backroom staff (about the management/company)
    Be a bad influence
    Don't put the effort in
    Let other firms know you want to move

    then you would likely be disciplined/sacked. But the article almost tries to excuse all this as being just "what you do".



  • If you change the heading to 'how to get attention as a child' the responses largely still fit.

  • Off_it said:

    The thing is that, back in the real world, if you got sussed for doing any one of these things long term at work

    Sulking
    Stop communicating
    Faking injury/illness
    Make up newspaper stories (to the detriment of your employer)
    Using the media (to the detriment of your employer)
    Undermining the manager
    Fighting with team-mates
    Moan to backroom staff (about the management/company)
    Be a bad influence
    Don't put the effort in
    Let other firms know you want to move

    then you would likely be disciplined/sacked. But the article almost ties to excuse all this as being just "what you do".



    Peter Osgood once told a story about Dave Sexton, his manager at Chelsea .. Osgood was as ever playing the fool during training. Sexton (the son of a pro boxer) had had enough. He collared Osgood and said words to the effect of :'If you don't stop f***ing about Osgood, I am gonna break your nose, kick your fat f***ing arse, chin you, knock you out, and than tear up your f***ing contract' and make sure you are never paid another f***ing penny by this club' (I paraphrase)
    Osgood then proceeded to do 100 press ups and five laps of the field with no problem. They don't make 'man managers' like that any more
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  • JiMMy 85 said:

    If you change the heading to 'how to get attention as a child' the responses largely still fit.

    Hence reports in the press about players, "throwing their toys out of the pram".

  • Am sure he's not the only one to have done it... Good honest insight into what Footballers can be like at clubs

    Wonder if anyone at Charlton has ever taken those steps (other than Scott Parker)

    Probably Danny Murphy to get his move to Spurs.

    Andy Reid - great bloke though he is - probably nudged along his move to Sunderland as they were quadrupling his wages.
  • Savage is a tool.
  • He mentions letting others down but forgets about letting himself down.
  • Must be sickening for clubs who pay tossers like him millions in wages and have to put up with them acting like that.
  • And the kids who sadly don't make it who would give their right arm to be a footballer!
  • Bloke is a complete tool
  • Didn't think he 'revealed' anything really, stuff like that has been going on for years (or at least since the PL started).
  • Savage won the FA Youth Cup with Man Utd in 1992 and played in the side that were then Runners Up the following season. However, he did not make a single first team appearance for the Club. Wonder why?

    Doesn't seem to have occurred to Savage that after the start he had to his career, the difference between playing for a top Club and drifting from Crewe to Leicester, Birmingham, Blackburn and Derby is "attitude" and professionalism. He still hasn't grown up.
  • edited August 2013
    I can't stand Savage .. BUT .. on the topic. I was reading recently a write up on Arthur Horsfield in which he states that Andy Nelson 'forced' him to sign for Watford, much against Arthur's wishes. Errr sauces for goose and ganders comes to mind here. When football managers have done with you, you are out, gone, done, farewell and 'good luck'.
    The point? .. football is a ruthless business where often lip service is paid to niceties but the stab in the back, the wilful bad behaviour, the overnight falling out of favour, and the forked tongue conversations would do justice to a fascist (or communist for that matter) dictatorship.
    Back to (orrible) Savage. It must be assumed that if any of his mangers had wanted him out the door, his feet would hardly have touched the ground. We poor naive fans may not like it but football on all fronts, player, managerial, ownership, is full with self serving horrible people who would eat us lovely 'civilians' alive if necessary
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