Byrne and Marshall are the 2 most recent cheap poaches, so yes we do. However, it's not the end result, it's the manner. You wanted Lee B and offered a ridiculously low amount. Upped it 3 times to still nowhere near the club's valuation on him. Then you come again with another cheeky and insultingly low bid for Festy. Rooney has said repeatedly that no player he wants to keep is going anywhere. Millwall offered a daft fee for Sibley. DCFC has done all it can to put put there that most players are staying and nobody is going for peanuts. Maybe it's indicative of the poor standard of schooling in Notts (bottom of the country or thereabouts) that they don't understand English.
Jesus MA I exected better from you.
When a shark strikes, it doesn't try to devour its prey immediately.
It jumps in with a strike, then withdraws to see if the prey bleeds out.
Why risk yourself hurt, when all you have to do is wait?
Rooney can say all he wants. That clock keeps ticking and every second his confidence will be chipped away.
Right now, DCFC is leaking drip drip.
You may get a full transfusion to live, or you may need an amputation.
That's battle field casulaties for you.
NB. Can I just remind you, that we once had to sell Morgan and Bamford in a hurry on the cheap, to block administration.
There comes a time when everyone just has to face up to it.
Never mind my club, several others are getting miffed that Derby are not selling while in admin, never mind losing the golden ticket.
TTR, might it be that, as happened up the road with the Foxes back in 2002, the Administrator has decided that the best for all parties is to keep as much of the current squad as possible together rather than sell off the better players for peanuts?
That's ok, even his paper admits DCFC supporters have mental health problems
Personally, I thought it was all of you
How has Rooney given them a chance of staying up?
Rooney has shown his players a league table minus the points deduction, which has Derby mid-table, to motivate his squad and he has given his number to the supporters’ trust to strengthen the bond with fans. Supporter groups have appealed to fans to buy tickets for Sunday’s home game against Birmingham, expected to attract their biggest crowd of the season, and they discussed selling “virtual tickets” at a meeting with the administrator. The trust has highlighted the human impact on fans, some of who have raised mental health concerns, with many sharing their #MyDerbyStory on social media.