Welcome everyone to One-Eyed Richmond's Tiger Forum Cheers from mightytiges and WilliamPowell.
Its not nice to get someone hopes up
It'd be very nice to get an option to buy him outright
Quote from: Judge Roughneck on January 16, 2014, 12:14:18 PMIts not nice to get someone hopes upJust reporting the news man. Big Rogic in the Big V.
1. Coe2. Geria / Galloway3. Leijer / Ansel4. Pablo Contreras5. Traore / Dylan Murnane6. Rashid Mahazi7. Finkler8. Jeggo 9. Archie 10. Rogic11. Troisi
Jeggonis not poohouse He bossed mooy. And co. Not worse than Milligan all sweat and no finish product. Or Nicholas the soft thing
rOGIC Ill pay to go watch victory games to see him in action
Melbourne Victory can today confirm it will play its upcoming AFC Champions League qualifying match at Kardinia Park in Geelong on Saturday, February 15 at 7:45pm.Melbourne Victory will play one of Muangthong United (Thailand), Pune FC (India), Hanoi T&T (Vietnam), Tampines Rovers (Singapore) or South China (Hong Kong) who will battle it out in early February for the right to make the trip to Geelong.
And this passion cannot be extinguished by draconian measures like banning drums and signs and ejecting the odd fan who splutters a profane four-letter word. The passion will always remain.In a radio interview after the Melbourne pub incident I was asked if football’s active fans realise that their activities are keeping other fans away from football games. But in fact the opposite is true. The active fans actually attract other fans rather than repel them because it is they who provide football’s unique match experience.Go to any Wanderers’ match at Parramatta and observe what happens in the 80th minute when the Red and Black Bloc (RBB) does the "Poznan". Observe how the fans around the rest of the arena all stand and turn their backs on the pitch, copying the RBB. And that includes small children and little old ladies. These fans, these otherwise non-active fans, come to the games not just to see the Wanderers play but more to be part of the football match experience.The propagators of the culture war and its aggressors are those who are hostile to football, not those who love it. You will notice that in their language and their references to the "soccer mob" or the "soccer acolytes", as though we were all a marginal subculture, like some racially unique tribe, and not like the rest of Australian society. But I have news for them. We are just like other Australians. We too love to see the Aussies beat the pants off the English in cricket or the Wallabies do the same to the All Blacks.The sinister forces conspiring to halt football’s growth and appeal, especially in the media, are real, whether it is evidenced by primitive commentary in opinion columns, Channel Seven executives admitting in court that the NSL rights were bought only to keep the game off screen or Channel Ten chiefs of staff allegedly instructing their colleagues to go look for evidence of crowd trouble at A-League games.
Bwb has said on twitter its a done deal & announced next week [Rogic]