Craig Posted 24 April 2008 Posted 24 April 2008 When I first set foot through the doors at the Walkers Stadium, I would never have envisaged what lay in store for me.The last 15 months have probably proved to be the most challenging I've ever experienced within the game but I must stress that every decision I have made has been in the best interests of Leicester City Football Club. Article continues Advertisement However, one major positive to have come out of my time here is your undivided loyalty. Your support and faith in me and the team has never wavered and I'd like to thank you for buying in to the promises that I have made and continue to honour. Our average attendances continue to grow and your overwhelming backing has been nothing short of amazing. You have helped give me that energy to move forward and I promise you that I will be doing everything in my power to give you the success you deserve - this great club warrants Premier League football. One way you can pledge your support to the cause is through the purchase of a 2008/09 Season Ticket. There is no denying the fact that I had initially planned to increase prices for next season, but after careful consideration, I felt your tremendous loyalty deserved better. That is why I have agreed to freeze prices for all City fans until our deadline date of May 31, 2008. We have worked hard to ensure that Season Tickets remain as affordable as possible and hopefully even more of you will now be able to come and support us on a regular basis next season. Thank you for your on-going support during testing times. By uniting and working together towards that same goal, we WILL be successful.
Ric Flair Posted 24 April 2008 Posted 24 April 2008 He's got the buzz back. I reckon he's going to be even more ruthless now, he means business. Ten managers next season, 100 players, open top bus rides after defeats, I can't wait.
davieG Posted 24 April 2008 Posted 24 April 2008 He's got the buzz back. I reckon he's going to be even more ruthless now, he means business. Ten managers next season, 100 players, open top bus rides after defeats, I can't wait. He should contemplate buying the bus as we could see it many times
Kilworthfox Posted 24 April 2008 Posted 24 April 2008 He's got the buzz back. I reckon he's going to be even more ruthless now, he means business. Ten managers next season, 100 players, open top bus rides after defeats, I can't wait. All in all very good news! Well done MM for seeing sense
OriginalRobboFOX Posted 24 April 2008 Posted 24 April 2008 Come on Milan, lets buy Ronaldinho..... put yer money where your mouth is....
Daggers Posted 24 April 2008 Posted 24 April 2008 Come on Milan, lets buy Ronaldinho..... put yer money where your mouth is.... Idiot! We want Messi.
mikelcfc Posted 24 April 2008 Posted 24 April 2008 id rather have a combination of torres ronaldo and santa cruz
Master Fox Posted 24 April 2008 Posted 24 April 2008 I'd rather have a cross mutated form of Barry Hayles and a walrus.
brookfox Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 Another message from Milan... I should not have come here . . . but now I will rebuild Leicester, vows Mandaric By NEIL MOXLEY To lose one manager in 12 months might be considered unfortunate; to lose two, careless. Hope for glory: Mandaric ponders City’s future Heaven knows what Oscar Wilde would have made of Milan Mandaric, who has been through five in the last year? Since last April, Leicester's managerial cast list — leaving aside two brief caretaker regimes this season — has read: Rob Kelly (sacked a year ago); Nigel Worthington (caretaker from April to May); Martin Allen (sacked last August); Gary Megson (joined Bolton last October) and Ian Holloway, a positive veteran after five months in the job. To outsiders, the chairman has got what he deserved. Leicester are two points from the relegation zone and defeat on Saturday against Sheffield Wednesday, who are third from bottom, will endanger their record of never having played outside the top two divisions. But underestimate Mandaric at your peril. Approaching 70, he still has a twinkle in his eye and admits he throws his toys out of the pram. But he can be self-effacing, too. "Everyone in football says they learn, I don't know whether I have learned, looking at the results this season," he admitted. "I did make a mistake when I came here. I'm not perfect. I came here too soon after Portsmouth. I resigned, looked at this wonderful opportunity and jumped straight into it. I wanted the due diligence done. I wanted the club bought. I wanted to be in straight away. But it takes time, it takes energy and when I got here last season, it was too late. I was exhausted. "And I'm a bit of a loner. My biggest problem was I didn't have someone to share these problems with, so I got Paul Aldridge in, a strong personality who has seen a lot in the last 10 years at West Ham. "But I'm an optimist. And that's why I believe it will get better from here. I firmly believe we will beat Sheffield Wednesday. I can handle difficult times. I feel good about building things up. We will rebuild Leicester City." Mandaric is spitting mad at suggestions he will quit if the worst comes to the worst. "I would not leave my friend in trouble," he said. "I am not going to leave this football club in a worse state than I found it. I want to be in the Premier League. We can put another 10,000 seats in the stadium. Leicestershire will support a good Premier League team." That may sound like wishful thinking but Mandaric, who made his fortune as a young engineer in communist Yugoslavia, then added to it in Silicon Valley during the Seventies, has profited from every football business with which he has been involved. So what is the story with all those managers? "Football is a puzzle," he said. "If it was a case that one plus one equals two, then everyone would do it and it wouldn't be a secret. "At Portsmouth, Harry Redknapp and myself, we had the right puzzle. Harry went to Southampton, there wasn't any chemistry. That's what I mean, it's a puzzle. "I needed an aggressive, enthusiastic, young manager. I had Rob Kelly, a really nice man. As a coach, he fired my desire. I wanted him to stay with the club as a coach. I had Iain Dowie lined up at the time but Coventry came in and I lost that one. I stayed with Rob and things didn't go right. "I felt I had to make changes. The key to success is the summer preparation. You have to physically prepare the players. Get it into their heads what you want from them. If you don't have that, you are always behind, always chasing. "Things didn't work with Martin Allen, for a lot of reasons. Our recruitment didn't work. Some of my friends in the media think I'm quick to fire people but as owner I have to look at the overall picture. I didn't see we could continue the way things were. "I hired a proper guy in Gary Megson. He knows his business and has tremendous capabilities of getting teams out of this division. If Bolton do go down, Megson will get them back up. He's firm, disciplined, organised. He gets the best out of players. "I know my supporters weren't fond of him and he's not going to play the prettiest football. I can't stand the long-ball stuff. But at the end of the day I desperately want to get out of this division. I would work with the devil if he could get me what I wanted. "And how would I know that six weeks after appointing Megson Bolton would come for him? So we went for Ian Holloway. Enthusiastic, driven. Yes, we have our moments, but then it was never easy with Harry." Stories vary as to how much Mandaric paid for Leicester. Some suggest as little as £400,000 with bank guarantees in excess of £20million, but to have bought Premier League players such as Matt Oakley, Stephen Clemence and Steve Howard, he must be paying decent wages. "People say I don't want what's best for the club. Why wouldn't I? I'm spending my money. I got it the old-fashioned way. I earned it. "The key is to find a formula to work together to be successful. What have I done with my life? I have bought bankrupt companies. I have turned them around. You do that with the help of other people." Passionate? Yes. Slightly eccentric? Certainly. But if Leicester win tomorrow, Mandaric is going to take a week off to recharge his batteries, then come back and start planning for next season. It looks like Ian Holloway had better be ready . . .
Daggers Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 Well - seeing as you are starting to see reason again Milan...the shirt launch for next season - the colour you have chosen is shit. It should be RED.
Guest Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 Well - seeing as you are starting to see reason again Milan...the shirt launch for next season - the colour you have chosen is shit. It should be RED. I was clearing out my folks house the other week and aside from my City memorabilia, I found a very old programme from when my folks first started going city and I'm sure they were wearing a red away shirt on the cover. I tell thee, it looked reet good
Daggers Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 I was clearing out my folks house the other week and aside from my City memorabilia, I found a very old programme from when my folks first started going city and I'm sure they were wearing a red away shirt on the cover. I tell thee, it looked reet good I know - we did - more than once. It's part of our heritage but some idiots at the club aren't listening...they want shit colour that won't sell. We want red. (And by we I mean me and three others)
Fat Ron Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 Well - seeing as you are starting to see reason again Milan...the shirt launch for next season - the colour you have chosen is shit. It should be RED. I would love this kit
Ric Flair Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 Another message from Milan...I should not have come here . . . but now I will rebuild Leicester, vows Mandaric By NEIL MOXLEY To lose one manager in 12 months might be considered unfortunate; to lose two, careless. Hope for glory: Mandaric ponders City’s future Heaven knows what Oscar Wilde would have made of Milan Mandaric, who has been through five in the last year? Since last April, Leicester's managerial cast list — leaving aside two brief caretaker regimes this season — has read: Rob Kelly (sacked a year ago); Nigel Worthington (caretaker from April to May); Martin Allen (sacked last August); Gary Megson (joined Bolton last October) and Ian Holloway, a positive veteran after five months in the job. To outsiders, the chairman has got what he deserved. Leicester are two points from the relegation zone and defeat on Saturday against Sheffield Wednesday, who are third from bottom, will endanger their record of never having played outside the top two divisions. But underestimate Mandaric at your peril. Approaching 70, he still has a twinkle in his eye and admits he throws his toys out of the pram. But he can be self-effacing, too. "Everyone in football says they learn, I don't know whether I have learned, looking at the results this season," he admitted. "I did make a mistake when I came here. I'm not perfect. I came here too soon after Portsmouth. I resigned, looked at this wonderful opportunity and jumped straight into it. I wanted the due diligence done. I wanted the club bought. I wanted to be in straight away. But it takes time, it takes energy and when I got here last season, it was too late. I was exhausted. "And I'm a bit of a loner. My biggest problem was I didn't have someone to share these problems with, so I got Paul Aldridge in, a strong personality who has seen a lot in the last 10 years at West Ham. "But I'm an optimist. And that's why I believe it will get better from here. I firmly believe we will beat Sheffield Wednesday. I can handle difficult times. I feel good about building things up. We will rebuild Leicester City." Mandaric is spitting mad at suggestions he will quit if the worst comes to the worst. "I would not leave my friend in trouble," he said. "I am not going to leave this football club in a worse state than I found it. I want to be in the Premier League. We can put another 10,000 seats in the stadium. Leicestershire will support a good Premier League team." That may sound like wishful thinking but Mandaric, who made his fortune as a young engineer in communist Yugoslavia, then added to it in Silicon Valley during the Seventies, has profited from every football business with which he has been involved. So what is the story with all those managers? "Football is a puzzle," he said. "If it was a case that one plus one equals two, then everyone would do it and it wouldn't be a secret. "At Portsmouth, Harry Redknapp and myself, we had the right puzzle. Harry went to Southampton, there wasn't any chemistry. That's what I mean, it's a puzzle. "I needed an aggressive, enthusiastic, young manager. I had Rob Kelly, a really nice man. As a coach, he fired my desire. I wanted him to stay with the club as a coach. I had Iain Dowie lined up at the time but Coventry came in and I lost that one. I stayed with Rob and things didn't go right. "I felt I had to make changes. The key to success is the summer preparation. You have to physically prepare the players. Get it into their heads what you want from them. If you don't have that, you are always behind, always chasing. "Things didn't work with Martin Allen, for a lot of reasons. Our recruitment didn't work. Some of my friends in the media think I'm quick to fire people but as owner I have to look at the overall picture. I didn't see we could continue the way things were. "I hired a proper guy in Gary Megson. He knows his business and has tremendous capabilities of getting teams out of this division. If Bolton do go down, Megson will get them back up. He's firm, disciplined, organised. He gets the best out of players. "I know my supporters weren't fond of him and he's not going to play the prettiest football. I can't stand the long-ball stuff. But at the end of the day I desperately want to get out of this division. I would work with the devil if he could get me what I wanted. "And how would I know that six weeks after appointing Megson Bolton would come for him? So we went for Ian Holloway. Enthusiastic, driven. Yes, we have our moments, but then it was never easy with Harry." Stories vary as to how much Mandaric paid for Leicester. Some suggest as little as £400,000 with bank guarantees in excess of £20million, but to have bought Premier League players such as Matt Oakley, Stephen Clemence and Steve Howard, he must be paying decent wages. "People say I don't want what's best for the club. Why wouldn't I? I'm spending my money. I got it the old-fashioned way. I earned it. "The key is to find a formula to work together to be successful. What have I done with my life? I have bought bankrupt companies. I have turned them around. You do that with the help of other people." Passionate? Yes. Slightly eccentric? Certainly. But if Leicester win tomorrow, Mandaric is going to take a week off to recharge his batteries, then come back and start planning for next season. It looks like Ian Holloway had better be ready . . . He's got that twinkle back in his eye. Good article.
Thracian Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 Another message from Milan...I should not have come here . . . but now I will rebuild Leicester, vows Mandaric By NEIL MOXLEY To lose one manager in 12 months might be considered unfortunate; to lose two, careless. Hope for glory: Mandaric ponders City’s future Heaven knows what Oscar Wilde would have made of Milan Mandaric, who has been through five in the last year? Since last April, Leicester's managerial cast list — leaving aside two brief caretaker regimes this season — has read: Rob Kelly (sacked a year ago); Nigel Worthington (caretaker from April to May); Martin Allen (sacked last August); Gary Megson (joined Bolton last October) and Ian Holloway, a positive veteran after five months in the job. To outsiders, the chairman has got what he deserved. Leicester are two points from the relegation zone and defeat on Saturday against Sheffield Wednesday, who are third from bottom, will endanger their record of never having played outside the top two divisions. But underestimate Mandaric at your peril. Approaching 70, he still has a twinkle in his eye and admits he throws his toys out of the pram. But he can be self-effacing, too. "Everyone in football says they learn, I don't know whether I have learned, looking at the results this season," he admitted. "I did make a mistake when I came here. I'm not perfect. I came here too soon after Portsmouth. I resigned, looked at this wonderful opportunity and jumped straight into it. I wanted the due diligence done. I wanted the club bought. I wanted to be in straight away. But it takes time, it takes energy and when I got here last season, it was too late. I was exhausted. "And I'm a bit of a loner. My biggest problem was I didn't have someone to share these problems with, so I got Paul Aldridge in, a strong personality who has seen a lot in the last 10 years at West Ham. "But I'm an optimist. And that's why I believe it will get better from here. I firmly believe we will beat Sheffield Wednesday. I can handle difficult times. I feel good about building things up. We will rebuild Leicester City." Mandaric is spitting mad at suggestions he will quit if the worst comes to the worst. "I would not leave my friend in trouble," he said. "I am not going to leave this football club in a worse state than I found it. I want to be in the Premier League. We can put another 10,000 seats in the stadium. Leicestershire will support a good Premier League team." That may sound like wishful thinking but Mandaric, who made his fortune as a young engineer in communist Yugoslavia, then added to it in Silicon Valley during the Seventies, has profited from every football business with which he has been involved. So what is the story with all those managers? "Football is a puzzle," he said. "If it was a case that one plus one equals two, then everyone would do it and it wouldn't be a secret. "At Portsmouth, Harry Redknapp and myself, we had the right puzzle. Harry went to Southampton, there wasn't any chemistry. That's what I mean, it's a puzzle. "I needed an aggressive, enthusiastic, young manager. I had Rob Kelly, a really nice man. As a coach, he fired my desire. I wanted him to stay with the club as a coach. I had Iain Dowie lined up at the time but Coventry came in and I lost that one. I stayed with Rob and things didn't go right. "I felt I had to make changes. The key to success is the summer preparation. You have to physically prepare the players. Get it into their heads what you want from them. If you don't have that, you are always behind, always chasing. "Things didn't work with Martin Allen, for a lot of reasons. Our recruitment didn't work. Some of my friends in the media think I'm quick to fire people but as owner I have to look at the overall picture. I didn't see we could continue the way things were. "I hired a proper guy in Gary Megson. He knows his business and has tremendous capabilities of getting teams out of this division. If Bolton do go down, Megson will get them back up. He's firm, disciplined, organised. He gets the best out of players. "I know my supporters weren't fond of him and he's not going to play the prettiest football. I can't stand the long-ball stuff. But at the end of the day I desperately want to get out of this division. I would work with the devil if he could get me what I wanted. "And how would I know that six weeks after appointing Megson Bolton would come for him? So we went for Ian Holloway. Enthusiastic, driven. Yes, we have our moments, but then it was never easy with Harry." Stories vary as to how much Mandaric paid for Leicester. Some suggest as little as £400,000 with bank guarantees in excess of £20million, but to have bought Premier League players such as Matt Oakley, Stephen Clemence and Steve Howard, he must be paying decent wages. "People say I don't want what's best for the club. Why wouldn't I? I'm spending my money. I got it the old-fashioned way. I earned it. "The key is to find a formula to work together to be successful. What have I done with my life? I have bought bankrupt companies. I have turned them around. You do that with the help of other people." Passionate? Yes. Slightly eccentric? Certainly. But if Leicester win tomorrow, Mandaric is going to take a week off to recharge his batteries, then come back and start planning for next season. It looks like Ian Holloway had better be ready . . . =========== "I know my supporters weren't fond of him and he's not going to play the prettiest football. I can't stand the long-ball stuff. But at the end of the day I desperately want to get out of this division. I would work with the devil if he could get me what I wanted." =========== That's some outpouring for a chairman and quite refreshing in some ways. But it's the bit above I don't like, where he refers to Megson. It's a man prepared to fly in the face of his principles to achieve an end. I'd admire him more if he stood firm in his beliefs and still got us up. And got people around him to give him to offer support in those beliefs when things get dicey and when it gets tempting to compromise.
Ric Flair Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 ==========="I know my supporters weren't fond of him and he's not going to play the prettiest football. I can't stand the long-ball stuff. But at the end of the day I desperately want to get out of this division. I would work with the devil if he could get me what I wanted." =========== That's some outpouring for a chairman and quite refreshing in some ways. But it's the bit above I don't like, where he refers to Megson. It's a man prepared to fly in the face of his principles to achieve an end. I'd admire him more if he stood firm in his beliefs and still got us up. And got people around him to give him to offer support in those beliefs when things get dicey and when it gets tempting to compromise. I know what you're saying but the fact Mandaric is prepared to do whatever it takes to try and bring success here, means he'll stop at nothing to try and get it. Everyone can have their principles but if those principles are barking up the wrong tree and you don't change them, then you'll get nowhere. Flexibility and being aware of your mistakes will help you further up the ladder. Most of what Mandaric says can be taken with a pinch of salt, but I think this season will have taught him a lot and it's now down to him to see whether he has the ability to move this club forward after a disasterous season.
Fox in a Box Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 To lose one manager in 12 months might be considered unfortunate; to lose two, careless. Heaven knows what Oscar Wilde would have made of Milan Mandaric, who has been through five in the last year? Since last April, Leicester's managerial cast list — leaving aside two brief caretaker regimes this season — has read: Rob Kelly (sacked a year ago); Nigel Worthington (caretaker from April to May); Martin Allen (sacked last August); Gary Megson (joined Bolton last October) and Ian Holloway, a positive veteran after five months in the job. To outsiders, the chairman has got what he deserved. Leicester are two points from the relegation zone and defeat on Saturday against Sheffield Wednesday, who are third from bottom, will endanger their record of never having played outside the top two divisions. But underestimate Mandaric at your peril. Approaching 70, he still has a twinkle in his eye and admits he throws his toys out of the pram. But he can be self-effacing, too. "Everyone in football says they learn, I don't know whether I have learned, looking at the results this season," he admitted. "I did make a mistake when I came here. I'm not perfect. I came here too soon after Portsmouth. I resigned, looked at this wonderful opportunity and jumped straight into it. I wanted the due diligence done. I wanted the club bought. I wanted to be in straight away. But it takes time, it takes energy and when I got here last season, it was too late. I was exhausted. "And I'm a bit of a loner. My biggest problem was I didn't have someone to share these problems with, so I got Paul Aldridge in, a strong personality who has seen a lot in the last 10 years at West Ham. "But I'm an optimist. And that's why I believe it will get better from here. I firmly believe we will beat Sheffield Wednesday. I can handle difficult times. I feel good about building things up. We will rebuild Leicester City." Mandaric is spitting mad at suggestions he will quit if the worst comes to the worst. "I would not leave my friend in trouble," he said. "I am not going to leave this football club in a worse state than I found it. I want to be in the Premier League. We can put another 10,000 seats in the stadium. Leicestershire will support a good Premier League team." That may sound like wishful thinking but Mandaric, who made his fortune as a young engineer in communist Yugoslavia, then added to it in Silicon Valley during the Seventies, has profited from every football business with which he has been involved. So what is the story with all those managers? "Football is a puzzle," he said. "If it was a case that one plus one equals two, then everyone would do it and it wouldn't be a secret. "At Portsmouth, Harry Redknapp and myself, we had the right puzzle. Harry went to Southampton, there wasn't any chemistry. That's what I mean, it's a puzzle. "I needed an aggressive, enthusiastic, young manager. I had Rob Kelly, a really nice man. As a coach, he fired my desire. I wanted him to stay with the club as a coach. I had Iain Dowie lined up at the time but Coventry came in and I lost that one. I stayed with Rob and things didn't go right. "I felt I had to make changes. The key to success is the summer preparation. You have to physically prepare the players. Get it into their heads what you want from them. If you don't have that, you are always behind, always chasing. "Things didn't work with Martin Allen, for a lot of reasons. Our recruitment didn't work. Some of my friends in the media think I'm quick to fire people but as owner I have to look at the overall picture. I didn't see we could continue the way things were. "I hired a proper guy in Gary Megson. He knows his business and has tremendous capabilities of getting teams out of this division. If Bolton do go down, Megson will get them back up. He's firm, disciplined, organised. He gets the best out of players. "I know my supporters weren't fond of him and he's not going to play the prettiest football. I can't stand the long-ball stuff. But at the end of the day I desperately want to get out of this division. I would work with the devil if he could get me what I wanted. "And how would I know that six weeks after appointing Megson Bolton would come for him? So we went for Ian Holloway. Enthusiastic, driven. Yes, we have our moments, but then it was never easy with Harry." Stories vary as to how much Mandaric paid for Leicester. Some suggest as little as £400,000 with bank guarantees in excess of £20million, but to have bought Premier League players such as Matt Oakley, Stephen Clemence and Steve Howard, he must be paying decent wages. "People say I don't want what's best for the club. Why wouldn't I? I'm spending my money. I got it the old-fashioned way. I earned it. "The key is to find a formula to work together to be successful. What have I done with my life? I have bought bankrupt companies. I have turned them around. You do that with the help of other people." Passionate? Yes. Slightly eccentric? Certainly. But if Leicester win tomorrow, Mandaric is going to take a week off to recharge his batteries, then come back and start planning for next season. It looks like Ian Holloway had better be ready . . . Mandaric on Rob Kelly: "A really nice man ... as a coach ... and I stuck with him. But it went wrong and I had to make changes." Mandaric on Martin Allen: "Things just didn't work out with Martin for a lot of reasons. Our recruitment just didn't work." Mandaric on Gary Megson: "How did I know that Bolton would come calling for him six weeks after I gave him the job?" Mandaric on Ian Holloway: "He is enthusiastic and driven. Yes,we have our moments ... but it was never easy with Harry!"
Fat Ron Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 Heres a thought, how many threads can we start about the same topic??
Thracian Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 I know what you're saying but the fact Mandaric is prepared to do whatever it takes to try and bring success here, means he'll stop at nothing to try and get it. Everyone can have their principles but if those principles are barking up the wrong tree and you don't change them, then you'll get nowhere. Flexibility and being aware of your mistakes will help you further up the ladder.Most of what Mandaric says can be taken with a pinch of salt, but I think this season will have taught him a lot and it's now down to him to see whether he has the ability to move this club forward after a disasterous season. Principles certainly get tested in adversity. But Mandaric will need to have learned. And we'll need to attack if we ever get in the Premiership so we might as well go up that way, especially as he has no need to compromise. Fifteen draws this season, and not for the first time, emphasises how little we do learn but should help persuade anyone that negative tactics are likely to backfire. Our biggest hurdle in the Championship is ourselves. We give the League far more respect than it deserves. I agree though that MM will and should "stop at nothing" and "be flexible" in that he should set out to impose our game, our will on every opponent from the first minute onwards next season, whatever League we're playing in. And if it needs an entire team full of attackers to claw back a deficit he should make sure we have the bottle to use them because while cagey football might steal the odd game it won't win us titles. Holloway can recognise players even if he does make mistakes. But whether he can overcome his natural caution and get them to perform for 90 minutes is another thing altogether and whether he has the right mentality to incorporate the youngsters properly I also have my doubts. It'll need Holloway to do some learning as well as Mandaric and, unfortunately, I've never seen fast learning as a quality of our recent managers. Quite the contrary though, hopefully, there's a first time for everything.
Daggers Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 I know what you're saying but the fact Mandaric is prepared to do whatever it takes to try and bring success here, means he'll stop at nothing to try and get it. What? Even getting back our successful Red strip?
Ric Flair Posted 25 April 2008 Posted 25 April 2008 What? Even getting back our successful Red strip? Yes, but Rooster Russell holds the licencing rights to our Red kits and he's on a year long sabbatical in Wales and is un-contactable.
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