,agreed ,ive been a bit harsh and he did arrive with a bit of a rep.suppose drinkell and wegerley were more alike ,wegerley never started a game as I remember , and drinkell needn't have botherdWhile he was a bit of a disaster as a player you cant compare him to Drinkell. Drinkell was an established pro, Pressley was a young lad.....
So if SP is our version of the messiah , who is Biggus Dickus ?
No sniggering at the back !!
After returning from the pre season tour in the summer I came on here to say that I was really impressed with SP and the way he motivated the team and had em playing and im so glad that hes proved my faith in him so what has he done to make us one of the top teams in this division :
I think playing a front 2 forming a partnership and pressurising from the front is a massive part of our success if you don't give teams time to settle on the ball they become unnerved and make mistakes
Getting John fleck fit and making him the lynch pin in midfield he has talent way beyond this division and also forming a strong partnership with Thomas is paying off. we look comfortable on the ball ( more than we have for a long long time )
And team spirit seems very high in adverse conditions that's got to be a credit to the management and coaches
The way the team is playing now can only be good for SISU (OTIUM) in my opinion, its far easier to negotiate when the team is playing so well - it has seemed to have stopped the doomsday merchants that were hoping we would be relegation fodder.
apart from that...?
The "Dead Parrot" sketch was inspired by a "Car Salesman" sketch that Palin and Chapman had done in How to Irritate People. In it, Palin played a car salesman who repeatedly refused to admit that there was anything wrong with his customer's (Chapman) car, even as it fell apart in front of him. That sketch was based on an actual incident between Palin and a car salesman.[1] In Monty Python Live at Aspen, Palin said that this salesman "had an excuse for everything". John Cleese said on the same show that he and Chapman "believed that there was something very funny there, if we could find the right context for it". In early drafts of what would become the Dead Parrot Sketch, the frustrated customer was trying to return a faulty toaster to a shop. Chapman realised that it needed to be "madder", and came up with the parrot idea.
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