well yes ......pelau boy i have the advantage on the 1st leg.
like mi pelau with chicken eh no beef,hold d pepper
honestly dont see u catching mi.........but stranger things have happened
after all i overturned a 15 pts deficit in the 1st round to win by 15
freakazoid, junior, ajay or whatever your real name is.. excellent showing this gameweek..
but read the following article and tell me if you're familiar with this phenomenon.. read it slowly and let it soak in good before i launch my query with the authorities..
Football: Uefa to probe Abramovich (freakazoid) in crackdownIndependent on Sunday, The, Jun 19, 2005 by TIM COLLINGS
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4159/is_20050619/ai_n14674575Chelsea's
(freakazoid express) special relationship with their owner Roman Abramovich's favourite Russian club, CSKA Moscow
(jus add water), is expected to be at the centre of a new investigation by Uefa
(Warrior nation) as European football's ruling body launch a clampdown on possible
dual ownership and the sort of outbursts that last season landed Chelsea's manager, Jose Mourinho, in so much trouble.
Lars-Christer Olsson, Uefa's chief executive, last night expressed concern at the ownership of some clubs involved in European competition and laid out plans for a new Code of Ethics to eradicate bad behaviour by players, managers and fans.
It was ironic that on a day when belligerent behaviour by fans was the leading item on the executive's agenda, 25 members of the Not for Sale consortium of Manchester United fan groups protesting against Malcolm Glazer's takeover stormed into a meeting room at the City of Manchester Stadium at the end of a media briefing after a Uefa executive committee meeting. 'He listened to them and understood their point of view,' said a Uefa spokesman after two of the protest group's leaders had been given 10 minutes to state their case to Olsson.
The anti-Glazer fans' case for a hearing was not helped when, as they departed, one of their group took with him a reporter's backpack, containing a laptop computer. The bag and laptop were duly returned, but the incident highlighted the forces that are at loggerheads as Uefa, and Olsson in particular, tried to present a new approach to such thorny problems as hooliganism, on and off the pitch, misbehaviour by coaches and managers, and a widespread lack of respect shown to referees.
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He said Uefa planned to instruct national associations what behaviour levels are acceptable from coaches, players and fans, and issue clear instructions to referees. Olsson also made it clear that Uefa will work in consultation with the top coaches in European football to create a new Uefa Code of Ethics for introduction in 2006-07. In effect, Olsson said that Uefa were rewriting their rules on discipline for all involved.
He did not mention 'the special one' by name, but it was clear that last season's prolonged spat involving Mourinho and Uefa's senior staff, not to mention the controversy that followed Chelsea's visit to Barcelona for a Champions' League quarter-final first-leg tie in late February, had stimulated this action. When Abramovich's involvement with the Uefa Cup holders, CSKA Moscow, is added, it is plain that Uefa's executive are determined to stamp out all suspicions attached to the English champions.
'We are increasingly concerned about several developments to do with the ownership of clubs,' Olsson said. 'We are looking into it because there is a risk that the credibility of our competitions will be in jeopardy. We already have in our club licensing system that one person is not allowed to own more than one club in the same competition.'[/size]
Uefa took no action last season when Chelsea were drawn to meet CSKA in the group phase of the Champions' League, despite the fact that Abramovich owns Chelsea and has a majority holding in Sibneft, the Russian oil company that last year announced a pounds 30 million three-year sponsorship of the Moscow club. Some said the issue was being swept under the carpet at the time, but yesterday, at the home of Manchester City, the ownership issue was brought into focus again.
In a comment on all the issues under discussion, Olsson said: 'You can't run a football club like a business on the stock market.' Now he has to try to turn those words into deeds in protection of the traditional values of European football.