
It wasn’t supposed to be like this. The phrase “worse than Moyes” may be wielded with significant caveats among United fans at the moment – isn’t a 5-3 implosion at least more entertaining than how Moyes would’ve lost, 1-0 with a goal off Gary Taylor-Fletcher’s arse? – but it’s still being said. Despite basically being given a bye for the first two months of the season, United have been a disaster.
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To Rejoice As a Neutral in the Good-Natured Anfield DerbyNot even thinking about defeat today. Let's twat these trophy eluding, Heysel blaming, United loving, small club of bitter bastards.
— Not Bangon (@NotArlarse) September 27, 2014
The idea of this fixture remaining the "friendly derby" while Heysel chants and bottles fly through the air is now widely regarded as laughably quaint. But a local grudge match that was rejuvenated last season by two teams playing at the height of their powers now looks a lot more desperate, as both sides struggle to escape irrelevance.
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In the last couple of years, the old clichés about the two North London clubs have been swept away in a sea of change. Arsenal have added two ostensibly world-class players at a high price to a side that had been lacking inspiration, leadership and spending. As a result, they’ve gone from a team with a good but flawed midfield and a flashy array of dainty, small, very similar attackers to the exact same thing minus £80m.
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To Spare a Thought for Asamoah Gyan
As you may have read this week, Al-Ain striker Asamoah Gyan has had to issue a statement denying being complicit in the ritual killing of a Ghanaian rapper. The rapper in question, Castro, disappeared while on a jet-ski and the press are alleging that Gyan "sacrificed" him in a bid to resurrect his career.When you decide to make that move for oil money, even the most cold-hearted mercenary must still miss real football. It must be hard to prop up the fourth wall, the sense that it all means something, to be a real-life hero or villain to millions of people. I'm not saying Gyan did it. But I am saying I bet he wished he'd just stayed put in Sunderland.
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Yes, Scottish football might basically be on life-support. But much like the idea of any two English teams contesting a "heated rivalry", or a ground having a "phenomenal atmosphere" can still be rightly scoffed at by Scots as they cling to the burning hatred they have left, so can the idea of, say, Spurs being a depressing team to support. You simply don’t know you’re born. If you think Manchester United are suffering a decline, take a look at Rangers. And if you think Forest or Newcastle are a depressing team to support… you haven’t seen anything.Let’s look at the recent track record of a club that is one of the country's biggest. Hibs produced a golden generation in the mid-2000s, then sold them and bought Liam Miller. They lost their last cup-final 5-1 to their biggest rivals. They held a relegation party to celebrate Hearts’ administration and then immediately went on one of the worst runs of form of all time and were relegated by a penalty shootout. It puts the travails of almost every other club in Britain into a new perspective.Since then, they’ve watched Hearts fans take control of their own club, completely sort out their finances, and build a young, hungry team bolstered by excellent signings who are coasting above Rangers in the second tier. Hibs, meanwhile, are still awful. Indeed, they are so bad that it looks like they’re getting in Leigh Griffiths – great goalscorer, Hibs fan, racist, arsehole – despite having five other strikers available. They have unprecedentedly managed to negotiate an emergency loan not on the grounds of injuries, but solely because they’re so fuck-awful.
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