Tag: Manchester

  • ADVANTAGE  ROONEY

    ADVANTAGE ROONEY

    Wayne Rooney’s new £300,000-a-week five-year deal shows Manchester United’s desperation. Just like in 2010 Wayne Rooney has taken advantage of Manchester United when they have been at their weakest – they need his name and reputation as much as his goals

    You have to hand it to Wayne Rooney and Manchester United have, in astronomical terms because the England forward certainly knows how to play the money game to his advantage.

    Rooney has finally agreed a new five-and-a-half year contract to stay at Old Trafford until close to his 34th birthday and he will be paid £300,000-a-week to remain in the No 10 shirt.

    Not for bad for a player who, just 12 months ago, was hurtling towards the exit door following the breakdown of his relationship with Sir Alex Ferguson.

    Back then, Rooney had lost form and fitness, Robin van Persie had usurped him as United’s main man and the ultimate kick in the teeth was looming on the horizon with Ferguson proceeding to name him as a substitute in the decisive Champions League defeat against Real Madrid last March.

    At that stage, United and Ferguson were prepared to offload Rooney to any club willing to offer in the region of £25million while the player was also quickly coming to the realisation that his future would be best served elsewhere.

    The fact that we have now arrived at the situation where United and Rooney have made up to the extent that he has committed the rest of his career to the club is remarkable.

    It is also perhaps a sign of United’s current position of weakness and the reality that Rooney genuinely had few better options elsewhere.

    To suggest that United and Rooney are stuck with each other would be over-playing the point, but there is certainly a sense that the new contract has been the result of a climb-down by both sides.

    Rooney was ready to leave last summer, prepared to end his nine-year spell at United to play for Chelsea.

    The 28-year-old was seeking a new challenge, wanted to be loved and treated as the central figure again following his final, wasted season under Ferguson.

    And while United would have been prepared to let him go had Ferguson remained in charge, the danger of losing the club’s poster boy in the first weeks of David Moyes’s reign as manager was simply too damaging to contemplate.

    Still, United were not prepared to throw a new contract under Rooney’s nose last summer. Far from it.

    The view from inside the club was that the player had hardly earned the right to hold a gun to United’s head having just ended his worst season at Old Trafford.

    Ed Woodward, David Gill’s successor as United’s deal-maker, admitted that the club were ready to wait until the summer of 2014 before taking a view on Rooney and that there was even the possibility of allowing him to run his contract down to become a free agent in 2015.

    United were happy to talk tough at the same time as telling Chelsea where to go, but that was then and this is now.

    From being the champions last summer and the dominant force in English football, this season has seen a dramatic changing of the landscape.

    United have had a shocker. They currently sit languishing in seventh position in the Premier League, are out of both domestic cups and relying on an unlikely triumph in the Champions League final in May to play in the competition again next season.

    From holding all the aces on Rooney in July, they have now seen the tables turned, with the player’s return to form this season restoring his negotiating power.

    The end result is that Rooney, just like in October 2010, when he used interest in Manchester City to spook United into handing him a lucrative new contract, has taken advantage of the club when they have been at their weakest.

    Strangely enough, while his form in the early months of the campaign hinted at a return to his best form; recent weeks have been less impressive.

    The persistent groin injury which forced him out of the team in January has clearly blunted Rooney’s effectiveness and 2014, to date, has been a wash-out, with no goals in five games as United have struggled.

  • Manchester fan  carps AY Show

    Manchester fan carps AY Show

    In a short piece, titled: ‘show up or shut up!’ Gbolahan Macjob, an ardent follower of The Nation online, is bothered about the production qualities of some of Nigerian produced TV programmes in the Diaspora. In what looks like a critique of the popular AY Show on TV, Gbolahan, who resides in Manchester, United Kingdom expressed disdain for what he described as a work unsuitable for the international audience.

    “If you have watched a Nigerian comedy variety show recently on TV, then you might understand of what I’m talking about,” he began.” This is not a personal attack, but a plea to the makers of the numerous half-baked, badly presented, poorly filmed, shallow and humiliating materials that has flooded the Nigerian airwaves to please keep these ‘filth’ away from International Television for the love of God.”

    What exactly could be wrong with these productions by his countrymen? Gbolahan’s argument portrays that of a man who has some ideas about film or television production. “With all due respect, these shows are amateurish at best, and need a lot of professional help, ranging from plot to camera work, lighting, costume…oh and the ability to ‘ACTually’ ACT!” he stated.

    Giving a clue, he said: “Recently, I saw the AY Show on OHTV and it beggars belief how much rubbish I had to endure for 30minutes. It started with an unpleasant Vox Pop… “My pikin fall inside jongolova” I mean really? What a way to kick-off a show that’s supposedly the best comedy show in Nigeria. I dare say such material is an insult to the country.

    “AY and his creative crew should offer better materials if they want to be on TV. It takes more than buffoonery or foolhardiness to make a comedy material suitable for TV. It takes talent first, which I will admit AY does possess, but you need to know about TV production before you muscle in and not feed crap to the audience.

    “The moral of this story, according to this Nigerian “is stop dishing out half-baked materials, put some work into your craft, hire professionals and writers to develop your materials before coming anywhere near the TV and for God’s sake, your materials are not good enough for International Television, so take it off until you are ready.”

    He said doing a public live show is a different thing entirely from television. “Make no mistake; doing shows at O2 Arena in London for Nigerian audience does not necessary mean that you can put the sort of ‘filth’ like “my pikin fall for jangolofa” on the air. It’s lazy and it’s an insult to professionalism and that’s where my grievance lies.”

  • Julius Agwu plans first Manchester Crack Ya Ribs

    Julius Agwu plans first Manchester Crack Ya Ribs

    COMEDY merchant genius Julius Agwu is leaving no stone unturned as he plans big for this year’s Crack Ya Ribs. The ace comedian disclosed this recently in a press briefing which had music and comedy titans in attendance. Among them were Kcee, May D, Akpororo, Harrisong, Bovi and Funny Bone.

    According to Julius, Crack Ya Ribs which has become an annual tradition in London will for the first time hold in Manchester and Abuja.

    Speaking on the reason the comedy brand is going to Abuja this year, Julius in his characteristic manner, said, “I was expecting that question and the reason is that see finish don dey for Lagos. In fact, I’ve decided to starve Lagosians of Crack Ya Ribs until they start asking for it again. But apart from the see finish, I think it is time for Abuja residents to get a feel of Crack Ya Ribs. And as you know Abuja is the citadel of power, I have spoken to Honourable Abike Dabiri on the need to use this platform as a tool to rebrand Nigeria. Any government that must make impact cannot afford to undermine the use of entertainment as a vehicle for development. Entertainers are worthy ambassadors. Whether it’s music, movie or comedy, we are the ones that have put this country on the world map.”

    On sponsorship, Julius explained, “Getting corporate sponsorship is hard I must tell you. For those corporate bodies who still have the large heart to back our event like Diamond Bank, Kato Services, Lebara Mobile and Arik Air, I want to use this opportunity to say thanks. Some of them though, still inconclusive for now, but we want to thank them for even listening to us. I also want to thank my colleagues for their support. All the artistes you see here today have come on board for close to nothing.

    “The London show held on the 21st of August. By the way, it is the first time we are holding it at the Indigo 02. And we have never done Manchester; last year we experimented with Glasgow, it worked but this year we are taking it to Manchester. From London we are hitting Manchester on 25th of August at Methodist Hall. It’s a long roll call. For the London show we have Bovi, Funny Bone, Dan de Humorous, Akpororo, and Eddie Kadi. And for music we have Kcee, who you know is the rave of the moment. Others are May D and Harrisong and other UK-based artistes. When we return, we will then face Abuja for the grand finale which comes up 29th of August.”