Voll Blau Posted 21 November 2015 Posted 21 November 2015 The proper one. Not the "And on the sixth day Sky Sports created football" one. http://www.blackpoolgazette.co.uk/sport/blackpool-fc/pool-latest/forget-ruud-our-stan-is-the-man-for-vardy-to-beat-1-7578592 Backing Vardy to match and beat it, go on lad!
My Nads Posted 21 November 2015 Posted 21 November 2015 Vardy is going to score in every game he ever plays in!
foxes_rule1978 Posted 21 November 2015 Posted 21 November 2015 Vardy will go on to score in the remaining 25 games...
Aus Fox Posted 21 November 2015 Posted 21 November 2015 Another record to chase down, since the premier league became 20 teams no player has scored against all 19 teams. 17 is the current record. Vardy is on 11 after playing 13 teams. Goals at home to West Ham and away at Spurs are needed and he has 2 chances against the other 6 we haven't played yet. Gwon Vardy!
StanSP Posted 21 November 2015 Posted 21 November 2015 Another record to chase down, since the premier league became 20 teams no player has scored against all 19 teams. 17 is the current record. Vardy is on 11 after playing 13 teams. Goals at home to West Ham and away at Spurs are needed and he has 2 chances against the other 6 we haven't played yet. Gwon Vardy! I thought Henry did this.
Izzy Posted 21 November 2015 Posted 21 November 2015 The proper one. Not the "And on the sixth day Sky Sports created football" one. Indeed. Anyone would think there as no such thing as top flight football before the Premier League or Premiership or EPL or whatever he fvck it's called these days.
Voll Blau Posted 22 November 2015 Author Posted 22 November 2015 Sky Sports News actually mentioned it last night too. Bout time.
davieG Posted 22 November 2015 Posted 22 November 2015 ......or Jimmy Dunne Between October 24, 1931 at Grimsby Town and January 1, 1932, against Portsmouth, Dunne scored in 12 consecutive Sheffield United league matches — 18 goals in all. Scorelines were bigger in those days, and totals, too — but the fact thatDunne set records that remain unchallenged, and others only equalled by goalscorers of the calibre of Alan Shearer, suggests he was no inconsequential figure. He played at a time when balls and pitches were heavier and a centre forward had to be bludgeoned half to death to earn a penalty. Just because he wasn’t on television, it doesn’t make him any less real.
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