By Tony Attwood We’ve discussed several times the fact that just at the time when the media put in bids to show English football matches that were way above anything previously seen, so TV audiences for football have come down. Several reasons have been mentioned. For example there is the undeniable fact that tastes endlessly …
by Don McMahon Don is a retired referee who worked at NASL and international level That which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. I recently read an article about the France-Spain friendly played last week and its successful use of video refereeing technology. There were numerous comments from pundits and retired …
by Tony Attwood Writing about other team’s new stadium is always tricky, and can often bring abuse. My little piece about Everton’s stadium for which Liverpool Council are giving financial guarantees in order to get the cost of lending down, brought a lot of comments (not all of which were published here) to the effect …
By Tony Attwood Robbie Savage predicts that games will go on long into the night. The Daily Telegraph says that “Doubts remain”. But video technology is finally, after years and years of attempts at delay, going to happen. It won’t mark the end of incompetent refereeing, nor of match fixing, but it will be a …
By Tony Attwood All organisations need to have standards. Football clubs need to obey public safety standards and the special rules that apply specifically to football matches. They also have to obey the laws on finance and accounting, on employment contracts, as well as football rules such as that relating to not taking youngsters across …
by Tony Attwood I won’t deny it, it’s been a really naff week for football news. Take this headline for example… £50m Chelsea raid, Liverpool defender swoop, Man United talks, Arsenal exit wanted You have to plough through quite a few adverts and bits of tittle tattle to get to the “Arsenal exit wanted” bit …
by Dr Billy “the Dog” McGraw. With England as we have long since learned, it is different. Somehow the standards demanded are, well, not to put too fine a point on it, lower. Lower as in, below floor level. Lower than that in fact. Sub-basement, although that still seems a bit high. Having lost any …
by Tony Attwood I recently ran a little article here about Granit Xhaka which was taken from a Swiss newspaper and it created a little bit of interest I felt, not least because it gave a different interpretation to the piece from the way in which it was handled by the English media. (Although …
By Sir Hardly Anyone and an abacus. During international weeks there are 14 potential football stories for the media to play with and invent. They fall into three simple groups: the managers of PL clubs, the players of PL clubs, and the internationals themselves. Because the internationals always come out with the same stories, the …
By Tony Attwood One of the multiple problems with the way the mass media reports football is that it does it by themes – or what some journalists like to call “talking points”. These themes are said to be the issues that are on everyone’s lips and so they are hammered away at until either …
by ARSENAL 13. A quick google of the words subjective and objective will give you this: “An objective perspective is one that is not influenced by emotions, opinions, or personal feelings – it is a perspective based in fact, in things quantifiable and measurable. A subjective perspective is one open to greater interpretation based on …
By Tony Attwood What is going to happen to Arsenal for the rest of the season? One of the interesting factors in the recent debate about the management and ownership of the club is that many people do present the view that they not only know what will happen in the next game against Man …
By Tony Attwood One of my regular arguments about the media and their handling of football is that they first select the agenda, then second warp it in some way, and then finally deliver their answers. Those who see things from a different perspective never get a look in. Nowhere is this clearer than in …
By Tony Attwood Everton look to become the latest Premier League to benefit from state aid. West Ham, Liverpool and Manchester City have paved the way in terms of stadia deals that have been supported by greater or lesser amounts from tax payers money; now Everton have been promised part of the cash that English …
By Tony Attwood There’s been a bit a bit of a fuss about FA Cup semi-final tickets as Emirates Airlines are offering tickets for the semi-finals and final at Wembley in exchange for 15,000 air miles. Given that I fly from time to time to Australia to see my daughter and have used Emirates on occasion, I …
By Tony Attwood Granit Xhaka has given an interesting interview to the Swiss newspaper, “24 hours“, the title of which translates into Xhaka: “I was made to look like a mindless idiot” In the article Granit is called “The heart of the Swiss team” and it notes that Granit “has been very much criticised in England …
By Zuruvi Change is often good. Change is sometimes bad. Change can bring new excitement. Change can bring great despair. Change (like taxes and death) is a constant feature in our lives. What can change bring to Arsenal? Arsene Wenger has stated that Top 4 is NOT Arsenal’s target. He stated at the beginning of …
By Tony Attwood Yesterday evening, working through the multiplicity of comments that had come into the site, I spotted one in particular which seemed to me to be a perfect case of “that sums it all up” as they say before each game. The writer in question picked up on Walter’s comment about referees, and …
By Tony Attwood Since our two reviews of referee decisions across the first 160 Premier League games of this season, complete with the links to video evidence the PGMO (the highly secret organisation that runs refereeing using the approach that led to the Italian refereeing scandal of 2006) has been preparing to make a riposte. When we …
By Tony Attwood This is not the first time Arsenal has suffered from relentless attacks from the mass media, and the “broken phone” metaphor seems to be utterly apt for the regular fights that have beset Arsenal over the years. In fact it seems to happen every ten years or so, which in a way …
by Blacksheep Sitting here listening to Liverpool !! vs Citeh on the BBC whilst reading Untold reminds me that I’ve been trying to think of an article to write for the site weeks without inspiration. Like Tony and Walter, and most if not all of those that write for Untold, I am an Arsenal supporter …
by Tony Attwood Perhaps the biggest problem for all single issue campaigns of the Wenger Out type is what they do after they have got their way. There is a second biggest problem, but I’ll come to that in a moment. I like to try and keep problems in an orderly queue. The movement that …
By Bulldog Drummond The question on everyone’s lips is would you support Arsenal if Pulis were made manager? Actually it isn’t on everyone’s lips as I just made that up. But I find it an interesting ponderable (a new word it seems, but I reckon there needs to be an opposite of imponderable.) Would I …
By Tony Attwood Every weekend the journalists who have spent a little too much time in the saloon bar the night before and haven’t come up with a semi-decent invention to parade before the fake football news department of the paper for whom they work, generally slink away and cook up their “Ten things to …
By Bulldog Drummond West Brom under Pulis have pulled themselves up the league somewhat, and have maintained their position in the last few weeks… (stats from Statto.com as always). Game Date Opposition Venue Result Pos Pts 22 21.01.2017 Sunderland home W2-0 8 32 23 31.01.2017 Middlesbrough away D1-1 8 33 24 04.02.2017 Stoke City home …