June 18, 2013, 07:54:13 PM

Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - Richard G.

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 10
1
General Discussion / Another Firetrucking Issue at Hand.....
« on: Yesterday at 09:44:53 AM »
http://www.guardian.co.tt/news/2013-06-16/car-parts-racket-revealed ....and to make matters worse (or more clearer) Sammy’s Multilift Services Ltd is involved again....hmmmmm

Car parts racket revealed
 

Published:


Monday, June 17, 2013


Anika Gumbs-Sandiford


A car parts and maintenance racket has been discovered within the T&T Fire Service. A number of questionable transactions are listed in the departmental vote book for the maintenance of the Fire Service fleet. They include ordering parts for vehicles that had already been sold, costly paint jobs and oil changes, and the scope of works submitted by selected firms. It comes on the heels of the hefty $10,189,115 quotation submitted by Sammy’s Multilift Services Ltd last November to retrieve a firetruck that ran off the road in Blanchisseuse. Cabinet eventually signed off on the revised $6.8 million bill.
 
 
 
 
 
The T&T Guardian has obtained copies of the financial statements listing maintenance work on Fire Service vehicles for January-May this year. Among the items listed is a motor starter bought for $92,676. The starter, T&T Guardian learned, was purchased for a 50-seater Mercedes Benz bus that had been sold in a public auction at the Chaguanas Fire Station last October. Invoices have also been submitted for the supply of four batteries costed at $45,500 for a 1982 Dodge mobile canteen and a Rosebauer water tanker. However, the mobile canteen was auctioned off last year. A paint job on a Toyota pickup, fleet number 543, was recorded as costing $65,378. Such jobs are usually carried out by the Fire Service’s own engineering department.
 
 
 
Documents also showed that an invoice for $41,858 was submitted for oil, air and filter changes on the Toyota SUV—PCT 1633—being used by acting Chief Fire Officer Nayar Rampersad. A similar job was also done on a Volkswagen Touareg at a cost of $35,917. In March, documents showed that a voucher for $86,250 was submitted for a transmission for a Dennis water tanker, but the transmission was not received. Invoice 646152 showed that $88,527 was paid for the supply of parts and labour for an Isuzu D/Cab utility. The left front door, left rear door and left rear flare tender skirt were expected to be changed. Upon delivery, sources told T&T Guardian, concerns were raised over the repairs carried out on the vehicle.
 
 
 
 
 
Contacted yesterday, Rampersad said he intended to launch an investigation into the payments. “Based on the information provided, I am going to conduct enquiries into the matter with the procurement unit and the accounts department," he said. “Even though the matters are now coming up for payment, several transactions would have took place before my time. The Ministry of National Security has a responsibility to look into the matter and if a discrepancy is found , they have to send it back to the accounts department. "We do not print cheques at the Fire Services. The process involving the acquisition of goods and service are sent to the ministry for checking.”
 
 
 
 
 
On the issue of whether Brantec Ltd was a preferred contractor for the supply of tyres, Rampersad said, “They have a longstanding relationship with the Fire Services. There is a contracted supplier for tyres. However, I was informed by the engineering department that the tyres being offered by that supplier are not durable. When I was informed I wrote the permanent secretary asking for the tyres to be purchased on the open market.” In a January 18 memo that accountant I Kameel Hosein sent to Rampersad he said, “I wish to inform that an invoice order VV597500 dated August 27, 2012 was issued to Messrs Brantec Ltd for customs purposes to import certain sized tyres for use by the T&T Fire Services. “In this regard, we have entered into a binding agreement to purchase said tyres from that firm. “However, Messrs Brantec Ltd is not reflected as a contracted supplier. Notwithstanding that, and without prejudice, our commitment must first be to Messrs Brantec Ltd, as mentioned previously a binding agreement exists.”
 
 
 
Brantec Ltd is listed on the documents as the service provider for all four jobs. The head of Brantec Ltd, Caroline Baboolal, yesterday told T&T Guardian that she was unaware of the payments submitted on the invoices. Referring to the job carried out on PCT 1633, Baboolal said, “Oil, filter and air change could never be $41,000. It would cost around $6,500.” As to the $35,917 payment for oil and filter change, Baboolal said, “I will have to look at my invoices. It is not possible to charge $35,917 to change oil and filter.” On the transmission for the water tanker, Baboolal said, “I would have to look into that one. If Fire Services have a problem they should contact us, not call the T&T Guardian.”

2
Other Sports / Re: lil swimmers
« on: Yesterday at 09:29:49 AM »
Guy it's times like these you put them in their place. Been there and done that. Don't be afraid of dem. Too many of our national athletes get the shaft to have them talk outta dey cacahole. And it's so bago athletes been getting it for years. Sorry to hear how quickly the experience went downhill. Stay positive mi bredrin. Give the fam my regards.

Blessings and enjoy de day.
Richard G.

3
Other Sports / Re: lil swimmers
« on: Yesterday at 09:18:00 AM »
Eh mi boy MaxG....ah was reading dis....is wha going on here?

http://www.ttoc.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3582%3Agive-me-a-reason&catid=2%3Alatest-news&Itemid=233

Roberts dissatisfied with reasons for CCCAN absences
 
Minister of Sport Anil Roberts demanded parents and representatives indicate in writing the reasons for their swimmers’ unavailability for the Central American and Caribbean Age Group Swimming

Championships (CCCAN) after dismissing their original reasons in a face-to-face meeting on Thursday.

And Lindsay Gillette, president of the Amateur Swimming Association of Trinidad and Tobago (ASATT) has received an extension to the deadline for entries to the June 29-July 7 CCCAN Games in Costa Rica from the organisers to today, trying to facilitate a “window of opportunity” for the nine national swimmers who were declared unavailable last week.

This although ASATT had already submitted their final entries to the games organisers on Wednesday, one day after the CCCAN selection meeting.

The Trinidad Express understands that ASATT used their good relationship with the first president of the CCCAN from the English-speaking Caribbean, Barbadian Errol Clarke to secure the extension.

On Thursday, Roberts asked the parents and representatives to make a decision about their children’s participation/availability and submit the decision in writing in a meeting that involved ASATT officials, parents and representatives of the unavailable swimmers at the Minister’s headquarters on Abercromby Street, Port of Spain. Sources who attended the meeting said Roberts, who had been in Parliament for close to 20 hours prior to meeting with ASATT officials, said commitment to national duty trumped everything. He dismissed out of hand the excuses, which ranged from sickness without a certificate to unavailability and to participation in alternative non-national team meetings and training.

According to a correspondence from ASATT president Gillette, Roberts “expressed his disappointment and displeasure with what seemed to be the apparent ‘boycott’ by these senior athletes both locally- and foreign-based and sought explanations for same”.

A source, who wished to remain anonymous because he was not authorised to disclose the details of the meeting, said one parent claimed not to be aware that the ASATT was sending a swim team to the June 29-July 7 CCCAN Games.

ASATT officials said at that meeting that they had at no time advised that the CCCAN meeting was off or that T&T was not going to send a team to the Costa Rica Games.

Roberts also sought clarification on who was representing Dylan Carter, a member of the Davies Nadadores Swim Club in Florida since August 2012, as Aerios Aquatics coach Franz Huggins had initially written ASATT on June 2 stating multiple Carifta and CCCAN medallists Carter and Joshua Romany were unavailable. The source said Huggins admitted he was not authorised to speak for Carter.
Another source said Roberts gave the example of Suriname 1988 Soeul Olympic medallist Anthony Nesty and Trinidad and Tobago’s 2004 Athens bronze medallist George Bovell as swimmers who were world ranked in senior swimming and still competed in Caribbean Islands Swimming Championships (CISC), a lower level age-group competition than CCCAN, on their way to world standard performances.

Following the meeting with Roberts, swimmers’ parents and their representatives held a meeting with ASATT officials.

On Friday, Gillette issued a memo to swim clubs and representatives updating them on the CCCAN developments.

Up to press time last night, parents and/or representatives of none of the nine unavailable swimmers--which also include US-based Alexandra Donahue and Tyla Martin, both multiple Carifta gold medallists, Canada-based Adrian Goin, UK-based Rebecca Marshall and Hannah Chatfield, US-based Emiro Goossen, and the local based Jonathan Ramkissoon--had submitted written documents.

4
General Discussion / Re: Xango Health
« on: June 15, 2013, 04:17:34 AM »
Dis sounds like ah pitch fuh Xango... ;D

Blessings and enjoy de day.
Richard G.

5
Football / Re: 2013 WoLF Thread
« on: June 03, 2013, 06:08:50 AM »
Dais ah good piece ah licks dat pass dey. One more goal and Central FC would have been even in terms of being better by goals scored against DMC.

hmmm.........Ah leaving dat alone...

Blessings and enjoy de day.
Richard G.

6
Football / Re: 2013 WoLF Thread
« on: June 02, 2013, 11:44:22 AM »
Central F.C.'s Lady Sharks beat top of the table Diego Martin Central 21-0 during the week.

DMC have many promising players, but they are all quite young and joined this league to learn and develop. I believe DMC won 11-0 the week before!

Where is the sportsmanship?

 ;D



So far the class of this (Frist Division A) seems to be Central and Tobago. Everyone else has a lot of 'learning' to do. DMC lost 13-0 to Tobago last week. smh

Blessings and enjoy de day.
Richard G.

7
Football / Re: 2013 WoLF Thread
« on: May 23, 2013, 08:36:28 AM »
I'll see if I can attend one or both matches in Tobago.

Blessing and enjoy de day.
Richard G.

8
"Hot topic:Are there any gays in the TT pro league or the National Side??" hmmmm Jamal Gay

You're wrong. If he wasnted Jamal Gay he woulda used proper english ans asked for Gay. He asked for gay which is entirely different.... ;D :yellowcard:

9
Football / More Fallout as Warner Fiasco hits FIFA's Havelange..
« on: April 30, 2013, 10:04:51 AM »
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2013/apr/30/joao-havelange-resigns-fifa

João Havelange resigns as Fifa honorary president over 'bribes'

• Sepp Blatter's handling of ISL scandal described as 'clumsy'
• Fifa president cleared of 'criminal or ethical misconduct'
Share 159

Press Association
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 30 April 2013 10.22 BST

The long-awaited report by Fifa's ethics committee into the scandal involving collapsed marketing partners ISL has named Havelange and two former executive committee members, Ricardo Teixeira and Nicolás Leoz, as receiving bribes. All three have since resigned from Fifa.

The report by the Fifa adjudicatory chamber chairman Hans-Joachim Eckert also calls the current Fifa president Sepp Blatter's handling of the scandal "clumsy" but says it did not breach ethics rules.

The report states: "Mr Havelange has long held solely an honorary position, which does not qualify him as an 'official' under the code of ethics. Further, Mr Havelange resigned his position as honorary president effective 18.04.2013."

Blatter immediately issued a statement welcoming the fact that he had been cleared of misconduct. He said: "I also note with satisfaction that this report confirms that 'president Blatter's conduct could not be classified in any way as misconduct with regard to any ethics rules'.

"I have no doubt that Fifa, thanks to the governance reform process that I proposed, now has the mechanisms and means to ensure that such an issue – which has caused untold damage to the reputation of our institution – does not happen again."

Eckert does, nevertheless, question Blatter's role in the scandal. He states: "It must be questioned, however, whether president Blatter knew or should have known over the years before the bankruptcy of ISL that ISL had made payments [bribes] to other Fifa officials.

"The report states that in 1997, Blatter authorised the transfer of 1.5m Swiss francs (£1m) to Havelange after ISL mistakenly sent it to Fifa. But Blatter, who was then general secretary of the organisation when Havelange was president, told the ethics investigation "at that time he did not suspect the payment was a commission".

"President Blatter's conduct could not be classified in any way as misconduct with regard to any ethics rules," says the report. "The conduct of president Blatter may have been clumsy because there could be an internal need for clarification, but this does not lead to any criminal or ethical misconduct."

The ethics report does not state the total sum of bribes paid but says they took place over eight years between 1992 and May 2000.

"From money that passed through the ISMM/ISL Group, it is certain that not inconsiderable amounts were channelled to former Fifa president Havelange and to his son-in-law Ricardo Teixeira as well as to Dr Nicolás Leoz, whereby there is no indication that any form of service was given in return by them.

"These payments were apparently made via front companies in order to cover up the true recipient and are to be qualified as 'commissions', known today as 'bribes'."

Court documents state Havelange, now aged 96, received at least £1m and Teixeira at least £8.4m, and in total the pair may have received up to £14.5m. Leoz, now aged 84, was named in court as having received at least £80,000.

10
Don't know and honestly don't care. Was on the same team with at least one as a pro-footballer. He played football while on the pitch and was cool and normal off of it. Everyone knew he was gay. No one really cared. Play football. I'm not for the lifestyle (or choice as many would say), but people are people still.

Blessings and enjoy the day.
Richard G.

11
Football / Re: Jack dimisses Concacaf probe PM STUNNED
« on: April 28, 2013, 01:59:17 AM »
I do think even Sepp Blatter will be probed too. FIFA watch out.

Lucky Warner.
A very lucky Jack: Part VII of a Special Investigation
By Camini Marajh: Head Investigative Desk


How lucky can a Jack get?

Well, if the Jack in question has the last name Warner, stupendously lucky.

Not only does he get cash gifts of $60 million from party financiers, he gets debt forgiveness on a US$6 million Centre of Excellence (CoE) construction loan; another US$20 million worth of investments in the CoE from the world football governing body, FIFA; maintenance money for his CoE acquisition of US$50,000 a month from Concacaf, the body which represents football federations from North and Central America and the Caribbean of which he was president; and miscellaneous cash gifts from Australia and other countries bidding to secure lucrative and prestigious World Cup hosting gains.

And while United National Congress (UNC) party financier Krishna Lalla contends that the $60 million was a loan to be repaid and the Sir David Simmons-led Concacaf Integrity Committee has made findings of criminal fraud in relation to some of the big ticket CoE items, Warner has remained resolute in his claim that they were cash gifts meant for his personal benefit.

Warner has presented conflicting accounts of the circumstances surrounding these so-called CoE gifts, last Thursday pulling private correspondence he refused to share with the Simmons enquiry out of his political hat at a public meeting with adoring Chaguanas West constituents as proof that former FIFA president Joao Havelange had gifted the CoE to him and the Caribbean Football Union (CFU), of which he was president.

There are several problems with Warner’s various and conflicting accounts.

In the case of the UNC party financier, he initially branded him a liar, telling his then political leader Basdeo Panday that he never received any money from Lalla.

As reported previously in this series, Warner recanted his story when Lalla filed a lawsuit to get back his money. The new version, Warner told Panday, was that the cash gift was $30 million and not $60 million. Lalla had sued for recovery of the cheque payments only, which was about $30 million.

Another major hurdle in the Warner credibility chart is his Havelange story.

The private letters he produced as proof of a gift do not specifically match the interpretation he has placed on it. Further, legal experts counter that even if Havelange did in fact give the CoE at Macoya as a gift to Warner, he did not have the authority to give away a corporate asset.

Legal experts say Havelange cannot give away an asset that is not his to give and the absence of FIFA board minutes and other documents tell its own story about Warner’s claim of the fabulously-expensive real estate gift.

The Simmons Report also detailed a slew of fraudulent Warner dealings in relation to the CoE.

As reported in the April 17 installment of this series, Warner and his accountant-in-chief Kenny Rampersad had listed the CoE, named after Havelange, as a freehold asset on the balance sheet of the region’s ruling football body.

The Express series raised questions about the Rampersad-audited Concacaf financial statements and the apparent material misrepresentation of an asset described as freehold property to which Warner held legal title.

The Rampersad-audited accounts showed the Dr Joao Havelange Centre of Excellence as an asset on the books of Concacaf from inception in the late 90s right up to 2010. The Simmons report found that far from being an accounting oversight, it was intent to deceive.
Investigations by this newspaper show, however, that it was a deception known to Zurich.

FIFA insiders say Sepp Blatter, Warner’s former close pal and the man he fraudulently helped elect as FIFA president in a bid-rigging scheme more than a decade ago, knew about the CoE scam.

FIFA board minutes show that Blatter defended Warner’s many financial improprieties and ran interference to requests for censure from some FIFA Executive Committee (ExCo) members.

As reported in the April 17 installment, the CoE was not only listed as an asset on the books of Concacaf, it was billing the Confederation for use of its facilities. It was very clearly stated in black and white that Concacaf derived no income from its freehold property in Trinidad and instead was paying hundreds of thousands of US dollars to Warner for use of the sprawling sporting complex paid for with FIFA money.

The financial statements in which Rampersad played both a bookkeeper and auditor role, showed a one-way money flow to Warner.

And as with almost everything else in the halcyon Warner-Blatter days, no questions were asked and no explanations provided.
Warner described Blatter as a great leader. Blatter called him: “A wonderful and loyal friend”. From all accounts, it was a mutually-rewarding relationship, the two men made very rich deals and, up until early 2011, they had each other’s back.

Blatter gave a US$1 million gift to Concacaf to spend as it chose. Persons familiar with the situation say the money went to Warner. And as Warner himself would admit in the wake of the 2011 tsunami break-up between the former football allies, Blatter provided many gifts over the years, including to “all members” of the Caribbean football bodies.

He said gift giving was a part of FIFA’s culture. It was in the FIFA DNA.

In a startling statement carried in a live international broadcast on Sportsmax and local TV stations, Warner, on Thursday night, admitted his role in a 1998 vote-rigging scheme to ensure Blatter’s victory in FIFA’s presidential race.

In a public admission of fraud, Warner told how Vincy Jalal, the girlfriend of Horace Burrell, president of the Jamaica Football Federation, cast a proxy vote for Haiti and shouted “oui” during the roll-call of delegates.

He said Blatter won the FIFA presidency on the strength of his (Warner’s) vote-scheming.

Persons with knowledge of the situation told a more sinister tale of the then Haiti Football Association president, Dr Jean-Marie Kyss, being detained in Haiti on the instruction of the then Secretary of Sport at a time of political turmoil.

Kyss’ passport was seized but he got out desperate calls to Warner and former general secretary of Concacaf, Chuck Blazer, briefing them on the situation and his inability to make the scheduled Paris Congress.

And while FIFA’s rules do not permit proxy voting, Warner, a former Blatter general, told the huge meeting of party supporters on Thursday that Blatter was one of the “most hated” football officials” at the time and were it not for Concacaf’s support, he would “never have seen the light of day as FIFA president”.

He said: “With Blatter’s permission, I got Captain Burrell’s girlfriend to vote as the Haitian delegate by saying ‘oui!’ when Haiti’s name was called. In 1998 therefore, I had delivered and since then I emerged the second highest sporting personality in FIFA.”

Warner did not say whether his No. 2 standing in the Blatter-run House of FIFA was connected to the 1998 vote-rigging scheme, but he was clear that the two had much in common and a mutual admiration for each other.

His change of loyalty to a wealthy Qatari by the name of Mohamed bin Hammam created a tectonic shift on the FIFA playing field.

New alliances were formed, old friendships came undone and tsunami threats were being unleashed in the full glare of rolling TV cameras. The former football allies had come to the end game, each desperately fighting to score, each waiting to offload their own truck-load of dirty secrets.

—In Wednesday’s Express, some of those secrets are revealed.


12
Jokes / Re: HOW DO COURT RECORDERS KEEP STRAIGHT FACES????
« on: April 26, 2013, 11:08:04 AM »
HAHAHAHAHAHAAHA ;D ;D :rotfl:

13
Football / Re: Goalkeeping Central: All About the GK's
« on: April 25, 2013, 03:52:18 AM »
Did some research and found this (checked against another website it's pretty accurate minus a penalty here or there). I think it's a pretty decent assessment of the success and failure rates of penalties. Interesting to note the actual statistic of GKs saving penalties is only 16%. BTW a save is a save (I've always preferred the GK made the save... ;) Sounds so much better to my biased ears..lol)

http://www.myfootballfacts.com/Premier_League_Penalty_Statistics.html

Penalty Stats 2002-03 to 2012-13

Home Penalties %           63.20
Away Penalties %           36.80
Penalties Scored %   79.11
Penalties Missed %   4.77
Penalties Saved %   16.12


14
More than meets the eye perhaps? Maybe she's getting a sense of how dangerous the situation has become. Watch de ride!!! (Mods merge threat with whichever you see fit...if you do)

http://www.newsday.co.tt/politics/0,176737.html

Kamla: I met with US State Dept officials
Wednesday, April 24 2013

PRIME MINISTER Kamla Persad-Bissessar on Monday night pointed out that her decision to accept the resignation of Jack Warner as National Security Minister came after her meeting with US State Department officials. As she gave an account of the circumstances surrounding the resignation of Warner at the UNC’s Monday Night Forum at Penal Junction, the Prime Minister said, the decision came, “After careful scrutiny of all the facts.”

“After a careful, meticulous review of the facts brought before me, having just returned – you will remember I was in Washington and I met with the State Department there – and having come back from that visit and meeting with my colleagues, counter-balancing the interest of the Cabinet...having considered all of this I accepted the resignation of Minister Warner as Minister of National Security,” Persad-Bissessar said.

The Prime Minister, however, did not give any explicit details or make an explicit connection.

On Saturday, Persad-Bissessar deferred questions on the responses of US authorities to the Government’s queries on reports relating to Warner’s family to Minister of Foreign Affairs Winston Dookeran. Dookeran said the US State Department had blanked a request for information citing standard policy.

15
Football / Re: Goalkeeping Central: All About the GK's
« on: April 24, 2013, 08:20:30 PM »
AH man tell me ah should put dis up fuh all to see. Hopefully peace will reign after some edumification of our football brains  ;D ;D ;D

This is why being a goalkeeper is so incredibly difficult. We' re not supposed to save penalties but we do :)

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/ymgMNLPw1yY" target="_blank" class="new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/ymgMNLPw1yY</a>

Blessings and enjoy de night.
Richard G.

16
Is dis much corruption normal? STEUPS!!! :cursing: :frustrated: :pissedoff:


17
Iz Jack Warner have allyuh so? BWDMAID!!!! Steups!!  :banginghead: :arguing: :whip: :Police: :afro: :busshead: :challenge: :flamethrower: :timeout:

Blessings and enjoy allyuh day oui.
Richard G.

18
Football / Re: Goalkeeping Central: All About the GK's
« on: April 19, 2013, 07:35:33 AM »
http://www1.skysports.com/football/news/12040/8627549/Contrasting-keepers


On Monday evening against Manchester City, David de Gea was just 17 minutes away from matching the longest time Peter Schmeichel ever went without conceding a Premier League goal for Manchester United. With that achievement in his sights, Ryan Giggs attempted an ambitious and ill-advised backheel and the ball soon fell to James Milner whose deflected strike flew past the outstretched fingertips of the young Spaniard. The plaudits that would come with eclipsing Schmeichel were not to be. That just seems to be the way it goes for De Gea.

"I could have bought Joe Hart for £100,000 so we all make mistakes," admitted Sir Alex Ferguson in February of last year. "If you look at the England goalkeeper situation for the last 20 years, I would think he's easily the best." Perhaps it wasn't meant to be a slight on the young goalkeeper in possession of the No.1 shirt at Old Trafford but the message was clear: Hart is just about the best around.

Indeed, the perceived contrast between the form of Hart at Manchester City and the high-profile errors of De Gea at Manchester United became a key narrative of last season's title race. For the second season running, Joe Hart picked up the Premier League Golden Gloves award after keeping the most clean sheets of any top-flight goalkeeper. De Gea, meanwhile, made an error on his league debut against West Brom and endured an ongoing struggle to shake off the stigma for the remainder of the campaign.

So while Hart was named in the Premier League team of the year, De Gea faced a summer of seemingly endless debate about his future and suggestions that Anders Lindegaard might take his first-team place. England goalkeeping legend Gordon Banks summed up the mood of many in putting Hart on a different level to either of the United options.

"I am not sure about the two keepers at United, not at all," Banks told the Daily Mail last year. "Sir Alex Ferguson could have got a better keeper than either of them. I am sure he wishes he had signed Joe, who is the best English goalkeeper by a mile and could become the best in the world. He is now making terrific saves for Manchester City, while these lads at United look as if they can let in important goals."

De Gea comes within 17 minutes of eclipsing Peter Schmeichel's record for minutes played without conceeding a goal for Manchester United and the best they can come up with is talking about Joe Hart's Golden Gloves and Premiership Team of the Season accolades (of last season).  De Gea has shown himself to be mentally tough and that has shown in his performances furing this 2012-2013 season. Remember Sir Alex had his head on the chopping block when he seemingly found the formula and he's still there, numerous championships and titles later. He's still very young and has a lot to grow into. He's done very well and I will venture to say we've all seen his level of confidence grow as he's had a chance to stamp his own personality and style to Manchester United (very key to his improvement as a GK).

So what should be said about Joe Hart's errors of this season? hmmmm.....Look..as of right now Joe Hart is the perceived best GK in the premiership. De Gea is working his way up the ladder. I'll have fun watching both grow into two of the world's best.

Blessings and enjoy the day.
Richard G.

Well the whole article kinda answered that....it was too long to post. Keep remembering the fact that DDG still young. Also remember that Hart is English..thus by default the English media sees him as the best in the world.
[/b]

  to further reinforce your point...I watching "My Beautiful Game" on FSC right now..."greatest Player" is the theme....David Seaman say Paul Gascoigne is the best he has ever seen....he even go as far as to say he find Gascoigne better than Maradona and Messi. "he is more of a complete package" he say.  Ah guess he still eh see the package Ronaldinho deliver on he ass in Japan.

I left out that point on purpose. It's very evident that some bias would play into personal opinions.

Blessings and enjoy the day.
Richard G.

19
Football / Re: When is the forensic audit results?
« on: April 19, 2013, 07:30:00 AM »
OOOOOOOOHHHHHH...this should be fun  :) ;) :D ;D :challenge: :applause: :wavetowel: :whip: :praying: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup:

20
Football / Re: What is enough time to prepare teams.
« on: April 18, 2013, 06:09:02 AM »
It takes years not a year. There's too much to be done to make sure a group of individuals become a football team. It helps with future development of a philosophy and immediate understanding between players, even when players are separated via professional football teams and/or lives. Same problem since........

Blessings and enjoy the day.
Richard G.

21
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Re: Richard G. music mix thread.
« on: April 17, 2013, 05:32:02 AM »
D'Coach 2013 Dancehall Mix. Download for FREE. Share with your friends. Soundclouders, add it to your personal set. Music fi whine to. https://soundcloud.com/dcoachg3/dcoach-2013-dancehall-mix

Comments are appreciated (if yuh like or doh like...doh hold back).

Blessings and enjoy the day.
Richard G.

22
Football / Re: $100m & MORE MISSING (Sunday Express)
« on: April 17, 2013, 02:09:54 AM »
Many 'Trumps' have been trumped by the US Gov't and the FBI.

Dangerous game with dire consequences. Jamaica tried the same game and lost with great embarrassment.

Blessings and enjoy the morning.
Richard G.

23
Football / Re: $100m & MORE MISSING (Sunday Express)
« on: April 17, 2013, 01:40:26 AM »
How Warner duped FIFA, Concacaf into believing they owned the $144m Centre of Excellence.
Part III of a Special Investigation Camini Marajh Head Investigative Desk (T&T Express).


THE GREAT DECEPTION

For over a decade, football power broker Jack Austin Warner hid a US$22.5 million asset in plain sight on the balance sheet of football’s ruling body for North and Central America and the Caribbean (Concacaf) of which he was president.

And for just as long, Warner was collecting hundreds of thousands of US dollars in member services and building maintenance fees from Concacaf for an asset—the Dr Joao Havelange Centre of Excellence—that many in FIFA, football’s world governing body, and Concacaf considered to be the crown jewel of the regional football federation.

The only wrinkle in this long standing arrangement between the football confederation and its ex-president of two decades is ownership of the asset.

Persons familiar with the situation told the Express that FIFA and Concacaf were duped by its ex-top official Warner into thinking that the regional football body owned the sprawling 16.9 acre sporting complex complete with artificial turf ground and 33-room hotel.

The land on which the US$22.5 million FIFA-Concacaf built and paid-for facility sits on, is owned by Jack Warner and two of his private corporations, CCAM and Co Ltd and Renraw Investments Ltd.

The Warner deception was discovered last June by Cayman banker and new Concacaf president Jeffrey Webb who retained the global law firm of Sidley Austin LLP and audit and consulting firm BDO to conduct a forensic audit into Concacaf’s finances.

At a news conference in New York last September, Webb said the Confederation’s executive committee had agreed to give investigators more time. "This audit is a massive undertaking that will set our financial house straight and ensure that Concacaf’s operations are executed in a responsible and ethical manner," he said.

Chairman of Concacaf’s Integrity Committee, Sir David Simmons, a former chief justice of Barbados, will reveal the findings of the forensic audit first to delegates of the Confederation’s annual congress in Panama City tomorrow and then to the international media on Friday.

The question of whether the Confederation should go after its former boss in relation to the loss of a valuable asset—the Centre of Excellence —will be put to the floor for a vote tomorrow, according to Concacaf insiders. Also headed for discussion is whether the Confederation should extend its forensic investigation to Port of Spain, specifically, the Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation (TTFF) of which Warner was special adviser up until 2011, said one source.

The annual congress will also deliberate on whether the Caribbean Football Union (CFU) of which Warner was also president should be added to the laundry list of Warner-associated football bodies to be investigated. Reuters had reported that the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) and US tax authorities are already on the CFU case.

How was Warner able to dupe FIFA and the Confederation on the ownership of a US$22.5 million asset for so long? Insiders say the answer lies with the lack of a proper governance structure inside the Warner-controlled Concacaf and the symbiotic relationship between Warner and former close pal turned whistle blower and general secretary of the Confederation, Chuck Blazer.

Financial records and other Concacaf documents obtained by this newspaper show that the Centre of Excellence was listed as an asset on Concacaf’s books by the Warner-hired auditor, Kenny Rampersad of 3A Queen’s Park West, Port of Spain.

In the audited financial statements for 2010, presented at the May 2011 congress in Miami Beach, Rampersad lists the Centre of Excellence as a fixed asset on the Confederation’s balance sheet. His note to the account, however, Note 5 describes the asset as "freehold property," which implies ownership of both land and building. Property record searches show that Warner has legal title to the three parcels of land on which the buildings known as the Centre of Excellence sits.

Further in his audit report, in the Notes to Financial Statements, the Warner-hired accountant says this is in relation to freehold property: "Amortisation of freehold property refers to the freehold property that houses the Dr Joao Havelange Centre of Excellence. It has been computed at two per cent of historical cost."

A financial expert told the Express that amortisation is more appropriately used to describe leasehold property. Concacaf insiders say that all of the Rampersad audited statements have the Centre of Excellence listed as a fixed asset on the accounts.

The audited statements also show steady US dollar cash flows going into the Warner-run Centre of Excellence. In Note 9 of the 2010 accounts, under the heading "Member Services", Concacaf paid out US$578,608 to the Centre of Excellence for what is described as "courses". The previous year, Concacaf paid out US$650,738.

In 1999, the Centre of Excellence raked in US$1,415,388 from Concacaf for courses run at the Centre of Excellence. In 2001, the figure was US$2,291,762. And while Concacaf’s books reflect ownership of the Trinidad asset, there was no income stream from the sporting facility managed by its former president and landowner of the Macoya sporting facility.

Revenues for trade shows, concerts, weddings and other events held at the Centre of Excellence stayed with the Centre of Excellence, according to Concacaf’s records. When BDO started its investigation into Concacaf’s muddled finances last June, it discovered that the Confederation’s former president had taken an unauthorised mortgage on the Trinidad property in June 2007. The First Citizens bank charge is secured by the property—i.e. land and building.

Jack Austin Warner signed the bank charge as a director of both CCAM and Renraw Investments. His secretary of long standing, Patricia Modeste, signed as secretary to the two Warner companies. In making the Confederation a party to what BDO say is an unauthorised mortgage, Warner used his authority as president of the football body to sign an $11 million bank charge.

He had Lisle Austin, the vice president Caribbean Concacaf, co-sign the mortgage agreement but Austin, in an interview with the Express, said he did not see the preceding pages of the document he signed and did not understand what he signed in Warner’s Concacaf office at 113 Edward Street in Port of Spain to be a mortgage document. He said he was duped by Warner.

The mortgage also speaks to a Concacaf board resolution but persons familiar with the situation say the board had no knowledge of the $11 million mortgage charge created by its former president who has refused to answer questions about anything.

Rampersad, Jack’s main accountant of choice, also played a key role in another Concacaf mortgage charge drawn up in 1998 in favour of First Citizens. And while this one had the approval of Concacaf’s board, Rampersad signed as company secretary to two Warner companies—CCAM and Renraw—which hold beneficial interests in the land on which the Centre of Excellence sits.

At the time of signing, however, Warner's son Daryan was the secretary of the two private corporations, according to records at the Registrar of Companies. Rampersad was never company secretary of either of the two companies.

In a brief phone conversation with the Express, Rampersad said if his signature is there, "then it means I signed in some capacity or the other". Told that he was not the company secretary on record at the time, he said:"I really can’t remember. I stopped doing work for Centre of Excellence." He declined further comment.

Warner also received monthly US$25,000 cheque payments from Concacaf for rent of the Confederation’s Trinidad office which was situated in his building at 113 Edward Street.

He acquired the property in 1997 for $875,000. The national football federation was also paying rent for the other side of the same building which stretched across to Dundonald Street. TTFF was said to be paying about $40,000 a month.
 
—Part IV continues on Sunday with a look at Warner’s interlocking relationships.


24
Football / Re: $100m & MORE MISSING (Sunday Express)
« on: April 14, 2013, 04:07:33 AM »
The screws tighten.....

25
Football / Re: Goalkeeping Central: All About the GK's
« on: April 12, 2013, 02:29:47 AM »
http://www1.skysports.com/football/news/12040/8627549/Contrasting-keepers


On Monday evening against Manchester City, David de Gea was just 17 minutes away from matching the longest time Peter Schmeichel ever went without conceding a Premier League goal for Manchester United. With that achievement in his sights, Ryan Giggs attempted an ambitious and ill-advised backheel and the ball soon fell to James Milner whose deflected strike flew past the outstretched fingertips of the young Spaniard. The plaudits that would come with eclipsing Schmeichel were not to be. That just seems to be the way it goes for De Gea.

"I could have bought Joe Hart for £100,000 so we all make mistakes," admitted Sir Alex Ferguson in February of last year. "If you look at the England goalkeeper situation for the last 20 years, I would think he's easily the best." Perhaps it wasn't meant to be a slight on the young goalkeeper in possession of the No.1 shirt at Old Trafford but the message was clear: Hart is just about the best around.

Indeed, the perceived contrast between the form of Hart at Manchester City and the high-profile errors of De Gea at Manchester United became a key narrative of last season's title race. For the second season running, Joe Hart picked up the Premier League Golden Gloves award after keeping the most clean sheets of any top-flight goalkeeper. De Gea, meanwhile, made an error on his league debut against West Brom and endured an ongoing struggle to shake off the stigma for the remainder of the campaign.

So while Hart was named in the Premier League team of the year, De Gea faced a summer of seemingly endless debate about his future and suggestions that Anders Lindegaard might take his first-team place. England goalkeeping legend Gordon Banks summed up the mood of many in putting Hart on a different level to either of the United options.

"I am not sure about the two keepers at United, not at all," Banks told the Daily Mail last year. "Sir Alex Ferguson could have got a better keeper than either of them. I am sure he wishes he had signed Joe, who is the best English goalkeeper by a mile and could become the best in the world. He is now making terrific saves for Manchester City, while these lads at United look as if they can let in important goals."

De Gea comes within 17 minutes of eclipsing Peter Schmeichel's record for minutes played without conceeding a goal for Manchester United and the best they can come up with is talking about Joe Hart's Golden Gloves and Premiership Team of the Season accolades (of last season).  De Gea has shown himself to be mentally tough and that has shown in his performances furing this 2012-2013 season. Remember Sir Alex had his head on the chopping block when he seemingly found the formula and he's still there, numerous championships and titles later. He's still very young and has a lot to grow into. He's done very well and I will venture to say we've all seen his level of confidence grow as he's had a chance to stamp his own personality and style to Manchester United (very key to his improvement as a GK).

So what should be said about Joe Hart's errors of this season? hmmmm.....Look..as of right now Joe Hart is the perceived best GK in the premiership. De Gea is working his way up the ladder. I'll have fun watching both grow into two of the world's best.

Blessings and enjoy the day.
Richard G.

26
Other Sports / Re: lil swimmers
« on: March 24, 2013, 06:36:25 PM »
Had a small swim meet yesterday, was supposed to be today, but Power went at the pool, and todays session was cancelled. (yes, not only TT does lorse power)

Lilman & MzTing had decent swims, not their best but decent. However, Angel was quite off his game. Seem he has not fuly recovered from the sick of last week. Lilman say he(angel) was running to the toilet a fair bit. Ah think they were the only races he won for the day. Hope he feels better this week so he can get in some measure of training.  :praying:
Meanwhile, Mammy caught the bug and was down & out since Monday, just starting to recover.
Buy toilet paper by the Bale

So far me an the angel scheduled to head down to Jamaica next week, and still hoping his passport comes thru in time. My sis willstart heading to the immigration office from Wednesday.  :praying:

http://www.swimjamaica.com/CARIFTA_2013/CARIFTA_2013_Home.htm

 :praying: :)

27
Football / Re: T&T U-17s to face USA in two warm up games
« on: March 24, 2013, 05:54:20 PM »
USA 4 - T&T 0. Reports say T&T started well then tapered off.

28
Football / Re: Football alert — watch for Shaquell Moore
« on: March 24, 2013, 11:12:43 AM »
Highly unlikely. I haven't chatted with him concerning playing for T&T but let's be honest. Why would he venture into the unknown and very complicated world of T&T football when there's a certain amount of stability in US soccer? Can't see it happening to be honest.

Blessings and enjoy the day.
Richard G.

29
Football / Re: US U17
« on: March 23, 2013, 08:42:34 PM »
Nephew of mine  :) He's done very well.

Reppin for the Goddard-Moore clan :)


30
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/17/giorgos-katidis-banned-life-nazi-salute_n_2895619.html?utm_hp_ref=mostpopular

ATHENS, Greece -- Greek soccer player Giorgos Katidis has been banned from his national team for life after giving a Nazi salute while celebrating a goal in the topflight league.

Greece's soccer federation said Sunday in a statement that the AEK Athens midfielder's gesture "is a deep insult to all victims of Nazi brutality."

The 20-year-old Katidis gave a Nazi salute after scoring the go-ahead goal Saturday in AEK's 2-1 victory over Veria in the Greek league. He pleaded ignorance of the meaning of his gesture – right arm extended and hand straightened. He claimed on his Twitter account that he detests fascism.

AEK and the Greek league are considering separate sanctions. AEK fans have demanded Katidis' dismissal from the team.

Katidis has played for Greek national junior teams but not the senior side.

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 10