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'Classy' Gallas scores own goal!

Tuesday, 05 September 06, 11:11 PM · Comments (57)

Predictably, from the enemies’ camp, the huge knives are out to carve up Chelsea. And, as has become customary in these times, the Fickle Fans Brigade are also out in force with their own little razor-sharp blades to do complementary damage to their club in an attempt to appear ‘unbiased’. Chelsea’s crime is that they’ve chosen to clarify the situation that led to the sale of William Gallas, after days of anti-Chelsea and anti-Mourinho sniping from the player. But, perhaps if these crusading Chelsea-haters (both within and outside the club) had asked the right questions, maybe they’d have better answers than their thickheaded responses so far. Of course, there are also some well-informed and decent fans and football followers who still think the club needed not to have made the statement on Gallas, even if what they claim is true; but the fact remains they haven’t proffered any superior reason why the club shouldn’t inform their fans about the situation, except to say it makes the club sound “petty” and “childish”. Yet, what is really petty, childish and dangerous is Gallas’s conduct before and after leaving the club; not Chelsea’s measured response to his insults against the club, the fans, the manager and staff of the football club.

Was Chelsea’s statement necessary? Are they obliged to keep the fans informed about why Gallas was used in part-exchange for Ashley Cole after consistently claiming he wasn’t going to be sold? Did Chelsea need to respond to Gallas's post-August 31st anti-Mourinho and anti-Chelsea barbs? What has Gallas’s subsequent, but generally expected denial proved? To discerning and honest observers, the key facts are no mysteries; they are there for everyone to see. Chelsea’s account isn’t actually surprising, because most people would have guessed before now that the fact that Gallas wasn’t playing couldn’t possibly be because he was unfit or not picked (especially when he goes and puts in a good performance with his national team). If anyone was in doubt, Mourinho’s challenge to Gallas to call a press conference and explain to the world why he wasn’t playing should have settled it. Not surprisingly, Gallas didn’t take that challenge before joining Arsenal, yet he couldn’t wait to cross over before aiming missiles Chelsea’s way. Rather than for some to look at the facts of what Gallas has been saying post-August 31st, they are more comfortable attacking the club for taking the respectable option of clarifying the facts about why Gallas was sold.

Chelsea have sold on many players during transfer windows, just like they’ve brought in many, but have never felt the necessity to issue statements, even when some of those sold could be considered fans' favourites. However, none of these players acted in the way that Gallas had acted; none of them disrespected the club and the fans to the extent of keeping away from pre-season training or refusing to play when asked to do so. In fact, most left in harmonious circumstances and have always looked back with fondness at their time at the club. Wherever they’ve gone, they’ve continued to compliment the club, the manager, the staff and Chelsea management. The club are consistently showing that they’re even very interested in the post-Chelsea happiness of people who’ve played for the club. This can be seen in the way they handled the transfers or releases of Crespo, Veron, Gudjohnsen, Huth, Duff and a host of others, even if it means the club losing money in the process. So, why is Gallas’s situation different? The difference is in Gallas’s attitude. The club owed him no more than contractually agreed and the club have never asked of him to do more than contractually stipulated, yet Gallas had consistently gone to the brink in order to force the club’s hands to let him go, even where there were no offers from other clubs and even where clearly he still has a contractual obligation to the club. The club have always treated him with kid gloves all this while, not only because he has considerable talent, which, when he chooses to apply it for the benefit of the team (and himself, of course) made a difference, but more because it has never been the policy of the club to wield the big stick against players (except where involved in drug offences). The club, like the majority of the fans had hoped that whatever his grouses, he’d come around to realize that they do appreciate him. They had hoped he would sign the vastly improved contract that had been on the table for over half a year.

However, when Gallas didn’t relent and in the frenetic movements of deadline day Chelsea fans saw him cross over to Arsenal in horror, many were up in arms against the club, even though it was essentially a good deal from the financial point of view. At that point still, the club did not feel the necessity to inform the fans the reason it became necessary to sell Gallas, even though Wenger was reported later as having told Ashley Cole that he would have still sanctioned him going to Chelsea, even if he didn’t get Gallas. However, Chelsea’s hands were forced when Gallas, even before being unveiled by his new club, began attacking Chelsea, the manager and the staff in a number of statements in the press. The worst of these was his attack on Mourinho, which in the light of the fact that Mourinho had been one of those that truly stood by him in his face-off with the club, was pathetic. Chelsea could have called a press conference to clarify things, but they chose the low-key avenue of the club’s website, because primarily, it was a statement for the benefit of the fans. Of course, it was inevitable that the larger press would pick on it, but that’s not Chelsea’s problem. Their fans need to be told the truth behind Gallas’s sale. They need to know that it wasn’t a case of Chelsea just deciding out of the blue to throw him in the bargain for Cole, it was necessary that the club be rid of such a disruptive and unprofessional character, no matter how talented as a footballer. The club couldn’t leave itself open to the law of diminishing return by holding on to a player that effectively wouldn’t have been useful to their campaign in any way.

Some of the club’s critics are blaming Chelsea for mentioning that Gallas had won nothing more than a second division title in France before coming to Chelsea and for also saying he was hawking himself to the highest bidder. On the first charge, why shouldn’t Chelsea state this fact? Throughout this face-off, we’ve been inundated with claims of how the long-suffering Gallas had been neglected by the club, even as he’d given hundred percent on the pitch. But since when has the relationship between players and clubs become one-sided. Every time a player goes out there on the pitch, he’s not only doing so for the club or the fans, but mostly for himself. Because it is a short heavily-paying career, players are always in the shop window when playing. When he’s bursting his sinews out there, he’s doing so because he wants to keep his value and, because the club employ and pay him, they inevitably reap some benefit. It isn’t a one-way street. Chelsea picked Gallas from obscurity and made him arguably the best centre-back in the world. He earned his first national cap under Chelsea’s guidance, using Chelsea’s facilities and personnel, including established Chelsea stars (who made themselves available to show him the ropes). In all this, he was urged on, supported and celebrated by Chelsea fans.

Part of the reason his first post-August 31st statement about Arsenal fans being the best in the world is so bad isn’t because he said so, but because he said so at the time he did. Players sometimes try too hard to ingratiate themselves to their new fans, but that is hardly a crime. However it is impolitic for Gallas, a very experienced player, to say the things he said at the time, considering also the acrimony that followed his departure from Chelsea. Saying so implies that he has no consideration for Chelsea fans, especially those who stood by him throughout his face-off with the club’s officials and who weren’t shy to partly blame their club officials for the problem with the player. He could easily have gotten around this by first paying tribute to the Chelsea support he’d evidently received over the years (from fans and staff) before going on to ingratiate himself with his new fans. Even if after then he still calls Arsenal fans the best in the world (despite not having played for them yet), that wouldn’t be an issue with Chelsea fans. But he not only insulted Chelsea fans with his statement, he also attacked the staff and Mourinho who’d spent time making him into who he is. The same Gallas who’d publicly praised Mourinho for his role in his face-off with the Chelsea hierarchy now says Mourinho is bad, because the latter told him what every decent person thought of his unprofessional and disrespectful conduct of staying away from Chelsea's pre-season training camp in the United States.

On the second charge, we know that over time, players grow fond of the club they represent to the extent that the money consideration becomes secondary. In other words, things happen that demand that players show some kind of attachment to the club for the club’s sake. When Del Piero declared during the Juventus demotion crisis that he’s staying with the club come rain or shine, people believe him, because they recognize a player who has given himself to the cause beyond money. When Terry continually states that he’d remain with Chelsea forever, true Chelsea fans know that he’s saying this from the heart, not because of how much he earns today. However, when such an opportunity presented itself to Gallas, an opportunity for him to show that the club and the fans mean more to him than money or any grouse he’s got with anybody at the top, Gallas kicked and screamed to be let out! He royally failed the most basic of Chelsea loyalty test. Those who say this isn’t about money should ask themselves why Gallas threatened last-minute to scupper the deal to Arsenal over money. They should tell us why against all expectations and the so-called Arsenal salary-cap, he today is paid more at poor Ashburton Grove than Chelsea the supposed moneybags were actually offering! Not only did Arsenal break their much-vaunted salary—cap principle, they even tore up their principle of not giving a player almost at thirty, at thirty or over thirty more than a year’s contract. Gallas at 29 bagged a four-year deal! Only God knows what people like Pires or Berkgamp will make of that now.

As expected, the pick of the criticisms have come from Gallas himself in the form of what has been generally dubbed his denial. But, in truth, is it a denial? Well, if it is a denial, then it is only in part, because the substantive part of the accusation remains unchallenged and in the subsequent din that’s enveloped the spat, people are losing sight of this. All he’s denying is the claim that he said he was going to score an own goal. He didn’t deny the fact that he refused to play for Chelsea at the FA Cup semi-final against Liverpool; he didn’t deny the fact that he’d refused to play for Chelsea at those times the club claims he did so. He said he was “firm” about his wanting to leave, but never explained how he expressed this firmness. He is not telling us why he refused to do his job or why he wanted to leave, promising only to tell us at a latter date! Now, isn’t that surprising? Monsieur Gallas who usually has a lot to say; who’s accused Chelsea of all sorts is now suddenly telling us to wait until he’s ready to tell us why he refused to work, why he wanted to leave, as though we don’t know that already! Didn’t he tell us he wanted to go abroad to face new challenges? Hasn’t he overdone the excuse of wanting to leave because he was disrespected by Chelsea directors already? Didn’t he in the same statement of denial blame the “new leaders” of the club even though he never exactly had a better relationship with the former leaders in the Ken Bates era? What possible reason can he have that we haven’t heard already? If indeed there are, what is the reason for waiting to say them “in due time”? What better time than now to say them?

The facts again are clear. Gallas has no answers to Chelsea’s statement. He of all people is accusing the club of lacking class, but in truth, he’s worse than lacking class. He’s a selfish, uncultured, unprofessional lying twat — a mercenary, who though a good footballer, thought he could use his talent to blackmail the club. People who cannot from his supposed denial decipher the truth are themselves hypocrites. Of course, one expects this to run for sometime in the press, but in the meantime one must give kudos to such intelligent columnists as Shaun Custis of the Sun who’s called Gallas's action for what it is. As for Jason Burt of the Independent, he should go hide his head in shame. Rather than address the issue, all he could do was a Gallas praise-worship based on figments of his own deplorable imagination. I don’t blame him though, I blame the editors and proprietors of the newspaper who give him space to drag the name of the institution he represents in mud and who, most curiously, pay him for doing so.

As for Chelsea, they’ve said their bit and are moving on. When the serious business of football resumes, they will do their talking on the pitch and people will realize then from the ‘language’ of the players how this whole thing has made them stronger as a team and as a family. I can’t say the same for Arsenal now that they’ve got a Gallas in their midst. A leopard never changes its spots.

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Posted by Kenn Emetulu | Comments (57)

57 Comments · Add yours

Jonathan Dyer
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Jonathan Dyer Wrote: | 05.42BST | Sep 6, 2006

Fickle Fans Brigade? Chelsea Haters within the club? Name and shame these unprincipled cads immediately!

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 05.57BST | Sep 6, 2006

Jonathan,

Look around the various Chelsea websites, you’ll find them.

Jonathan Dyer
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Jonathan Dyer Wrote: | 06.07BST | Sep 6, 2006

The odd one or two, maybe. Although there are plenty of people just voicing their opinion that the club haven't handled it as well as they might. Which of course they are entitled to do.

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 06.15BST | Sep 6, 2006

Jonathan,

“…Although there are plenty of people just voicing their opinion that the club haven’t handled it as well as they might. Which of course they are entitled to do”.

Yes, I acknowledged that. But I’ve also pointed out that these “well-informed and decent fans and football followers who still think the club needed not to have made the statement on Gallas, even if what they claim is true… haven’t proffered any superior reason why the club shouldn’t inform their fans about the situation, except to say it makes the club sound “petty” and “childish””.

Jonathan Dyer
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Jonathan Dyer Wrote: | 06.24BST | Sep 6, 2006

Good enough reasons for me!

Simon Franks
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Simon Franks Wrote: | 06.41BST | Sep 6, 2006

Hi Ken,

I hope this leopard never changes his spots. A screamer from outside the box like the one he scored in the last minute against Tottenham last season will do me nicely!

All the best.

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 06.43BST | Sep 6, 2006

And what are these “good enough reasons", Jonathan? Since when has a statement of clarification become “petty” and “childish”? Did anyone accuse Wigan of being petty and childish when they released a statement on Chimbonda? Did they accuse Valencia of being childish and petty when they released a statement on Ayala? Did anyone call Manchester United childish and petty when they issued a statement clarifying their differences with Ruud van Nistelrooy? Okay, I get it now – it’s “childish” and “petty” because it’s coming from Chelsea!

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 06.54BST | Sep 6, 2006

Simon,
Yeah, he scores that type of screamer everyday, just like he whines every minute. So, if you have a Chelsea-like patience, you might still be able to squeeze out another five years from him before telling him to shove off. I’m not criticizing Arsenal for signing him; I just fear for the harmony of the squad, especially now that he might begin to think being French and being Henry’s friend and being 29 gives him the absolute right to do what he does best, which is disrupt a dressing-room. At Chelsea, there were big leaders in the team who via a combination of diplomacy and firmness managed him well; but I just fear that at Arsenal, considering how he’s started by upturning your salary-scale and the principle of not giving people like him close to thirty more than a year’s contract (he has four!), he might take liberty for license. It’s his nature. The leopard, I repeat, never changes its spots.

Neil
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Neil Wrote: | 06.58BST | Sep 6, 2006

Classy’ Gallas scores own goal!”
The question now is do we (CFC Fans) want the FA to get involved and prove Jose right?
It'll be messy and probably best to avoid, but I can see that being the only way to stop the detractors and worry the Gooners about his (WG) future behaviour.
I think that if the FA think Chelsea will be disrupted by it, then they are sure to get involved

Jack Wild
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Jack Wild Wrote: | 07.32BST | Sep 6, 2006

It was not said because it was chelsea, we are getting stick because we lack class, I mean coming out and slagging off a player in public because he wanted to move to all be it, a bigger and better football club, to work under the best manager in world football. The funniest thing for me was the club claiming they have have a wage structure LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

cfcforever
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cfcforever Wrote: | 07.32BST | Sep 6, 2006

Brilliantly written Kenn.

When you really consider his actions, basically what he did was to discredit his own integrity to the point where he rendered himself useless to the club in order to get the “leverage” he needed to force his move through. (He made himself untrustworthy).

This is a despicable tactic!

So why should Chelsea (and it was totally the right thing to do) make this fact public?

1. Because the club cannot allow a tactic like that to go unpunished as it would then essentially give other players the permission to follow a similar tactic in the future.

2. Because he continued to attack the Club and its management in the press, so why on earth should we “protect” him by concealing his tactics?

Chelsea FC did the only right thing to do and should be applauded for standing up against this “selfish, uncultured, unprofessional lying twat” (to use the term Kenn eloquently used).

I think it has some fair points! ;-)
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I think it has some fair points! ;-) Wrote: | 07.49BST | Sep 6, 2006

Hey, no mention of CSKA Chav$ki tapping up Cole?!

You need to correct one fact about Arsenal's over 30's contract policy. Arsenal only offer one year extensions ONCE PLAYERS REACH THEIR 30s and their current contract is due to expire! Gallas is not in his 30's.

Henry just got a few years despite hitting 29. Pires and Bergkamp had multi year deals and were well into their 30's before they were offered the one year extension.

Also could you please explain the 'wage structure' nonsense that the CSKA statement talked about? Exactly what is the Russian's wage structure?!

Gooner
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Gooner Wrote: | 07.54BST | Sep 6, 2006

You make me laugh - thought I'd read what the Blues thought about this issue and Head in the Sand.

If you stand by your club for this statement - it is sad.

It was never needed to be said - and you don't mention he behaviour of Ashley Cole ? How can you slate one player for his behaviour and not mention another whom has in public acted in far more serious manner - but that doesn't count does it.

Truely Sad.

Chelsea used to be a club with true fans and ambitions - it won't be long before the 2nd division looms again - be it 5 years or 10.

The Chelsea haters you name within the club are probably football fans - the Conduct of Chelsea does nothing for Football.

Nothing.

cfcforever
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cfcforever Wrote: | 07.57BST | Sep 6, 2006

And to all your Chelsea FC haters;

If this was pure fabrication on the part of Chelsea, surely Gallas will take legal action against the club? Somehow I doubt that will happen very much – as the club is spot on….

cfcforever
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cfcforever Wrote: | 08.00BST | Sep 6, 2006

Gooner

read my posting #11

thats why it needed to be said.


and in reference to my posting #14

Prove us wrong Gallas! Its in your hands.


Game over Gallas!

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 08.05BST | Sep 6, 2006

Jack Wild,

Stop being funny; you’re an Arsenal fan!



Neil,

Already, a Guardian report is indicating that officials of the FA are not keen to come in and that even if they are, Chelsea won’t give them information to act on. Of course, all that is speculation really, except a credible FA person actually comes up to say something. They do not need to be invited to take action, because the accusation here is one of bringing the game into disrepute. They are obliged to act, but being that this is Chelsea, your guess of the action (or inaction) we’ll see is as good as mine.

My real prayer is that he does what some of his misguided supporters are asking him to do, which is sue Chelsea for defamation or libel. In fact, the Chelsea people will be praying for this because, in their position, they couldn’t sue him for a breach of contract because they’ve never had the policy of using the big stick against players. But it would be a different thing if Gallas is the one suing – as he should do if he has any ounce of decency in him. Gallas should feel that Chelsea have made damaging accusations against his person and sue to clear his name, but would he? Of course, he doesn’t have the heart! He doesn’t have the heart because he knows it’s true.

If he sues, Chelsea would have no choice but defend themselves and truth is an iron-clad defence in this situation. He would make Chelsea call up the witnesses who heard him say these things. Chelsea would have no problem providing the evidence required and in fact, Gallas himself cannot be sure where the evidence would come from, because he strikes me as someone who would recklessly go out amongst supposed friends or people he thinks he can trust to boast of how he used this tactics to twist mighty Chelsea’s hands. He can’t be sure who’d turn up in court to give evidence against him. Besides, from latest reports, a former coach at Marseille, Javier Clemente has come on record to say Gallas had actually blackmailed him in this form before. In court, such evidence from his antecedents would be very useful.

But, he won’t take the challenge of going to court to ‘clear’ his name. He would bank on the fact that the media are anti-Chelsea and since this is so, they’ll always back anyone fighting against Chelsea, including William Gallas. What he doesn’t know though is that already he’s been hit badly. His name forever will go down in infamy as one unprofessional footballer no decent club should touch with even a long pole.

Gooner
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Gooner Wrote: | 08.08BST | Sep 6, 2006

That is not the point - Gallas may have acted poorly - but for the Club to lower itself to that level was not needed.

Did you notice Wengers words to Cole - thanks and good luck - Do you think Cole acted in a reasonable manner ????

That is Why you have no Class.

Not to much between the ears as well if you can't see the wood for the trees.

Guilliaum
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Guilliaum Wrote: | 08.43BST | Sep 6, 2006

Because chelsea make what they call an "official" statement
it does not mean it is true.

It could also be pure invention or part truth blown out of all proportion.



Chelsea would have you believe in a black and white world where they wear an untainted white hat, which I find dangerous..

Subscribe to that and you are in need of help.
Believe what you want to believe because of football bias and you are in need of help.

Who knows what went on?

None of you!

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 08.48BST | Sep 6, 2006

I think it has some fair points,

“Hey, no mention of CSKA Chav$ki up Cole?!”

I have no idea who or what you’re referring to; but if your query is that I didn’t mention the Chelsea-Ashley Cole tapping-up affair, I think you need to know a few things. First, the affair has been dealt with by the authorities and punishment handed out to guilty parties, even though the hearings left a lot to be desired. Nonetheless, the point is that those involved have served their punishment or paid their fines as stipulated. There is nothing in the ruling that says Ashley Cole cannot go to Chelsea at a future date.

In fact, if anything, a charge of hypocrisy ought to stick to Arsenal who, after their highfalutin moralization over the affair, after hypocritically reporting Chelsea to the FA while they themselves were busy tapping up Baptista then of Sevilla, they have no scruples collecting Chelsea’s money for the same player. If Arsenal had any iota of principle, they shouldn’t have sold Cole to Chelsea under any circumstance.

Secondly, your story about Arsenal’s position on over-30 contracts is circumlocution. Everyone knows that before now, Henry was the exception to Arsenal’s rules on salary or age. The differences between Gallas and all the other situations are clear. The others were ALREADY Arsenal players long before they turned thirty or over thirty when the policy takes effect. The reasoning behind even giving them a year at a time, depending on what Arsene thinks, is because he knows these players, have worked with them, have seen how they can be part of the team. In Gallas’s case, apart from him being French like Wenger, none of these apply. Arsenal, to the best of my knowledge under Wenger, have never signed a 29-year old from another club, talk less of signing him on such a long contract.


“Also could you please explain the ‘wage structure’ nonsense that the CSKA statement talked about? Exactly what is the Russian’s wage structure?!”


Again, I don’t know who or what you’re talking about. But if you’re asking me to explain the Chelsea wage structure, you can first do the honours by explaining the Arsenal wage structure. At least, I know that Chelsea have not come out anywhere to say this or that is the ceiling for our wages (and yes, you can have a structure without having a ceiling), while Wenger and Arsenal have. Anyway, let me not run ahead of myself, do the honours, explain Arsenal’s wage structure first.




Gooner,

“It was never needed to be said - and you don’t mention he behaviour of Ashley Cole ? How can you slate one player for his behaviour and not mention another whom has in public acted in far more serious manner - but that doesn’t count does it”.


Why should I mention Cole when he’s been the epitome of propriety? He had his differences with Arsenal, but made himself available for selection and said so publicly. Arsenal shafted him by refusing to let him go even after a bid above the reported buy-out clause had been lodged by one club, but he didn’t make any threat. He reported to pre-season training when asked to; he played with the reserves when asked to and he never said he had any problem with Wenger football-wise. When all is said and done, it was Arsenal that opted to sell him; Cole never said he wanted to be sold. If deadline day had come and gone and Cole had found himself at Ashburton Grove, he would have still done his job for Arsenal as a true professional. You can’t say the same for Gallas.

AJ
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AJ Wrote: | 09.49BST | Sep 6, 2006

Dear Kenn

Thank you for this nice peace. The only reason i post here is cuz most of the other forums, are jam packed with chelsea haters, i ask u guys kindly to remove those gooners from this blog. Their accusations are baseless and its really a waste trying to explain anything to them.

let this site become the voice of the chelsea fan not emirates airlines fc.

I feel the club took the right steps in telling the fans wot really happened, in fact am pleased they have stood their ground and did not give in to gallas's demands and threats.



^^ beautiful.

William Phallus
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William Phallus Wrote: | 11.08BST | Sep 6, 2006

Great article Kenn.

And I totally support the club in the position it's taken.

I believe that the statement was primarily for the fans, so they could understand why Gallas
couldn't be kept, and why it was not done via a press conference. Jose had dared him to speak up about the situation, he said nothing. Gallas is a world class football player, this does not give him the right to behave as poorly as he has.

To call gooners the best fans in the world is a slap in the face for all the Chelsea
fans who have supported him for the last five years. To be at odds with his club or
management is one thing, to behave the way that he has is unforgivable, as I'm sure
he'll find out when he returns to Stamford Bridge in December.

Today I read that Vieira said about Gallas “He’s really happy, as he always is,” and is unaffected by it all, if you were to ask his former team-mates whether he was always happy, the replies would indicate that he's always been moody, good riddance. The ar$e
have evolved into this personification of gallic arrogance, he should fit in well.

Jolly goon
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Jolly goon Wrote: | 11.09BST | Sep 6, 2006

It's all about spin innit?

The same facts written subjectively by people with different agendas. I'm not dissing you guys but factualy your club acted in a way that does not reflect professionalism. I'm not blaming the fans for this sillyness that your club, namely your P.R department made.

I think it is a shame that your club lashed out at who was once a faithful servant to your club. Gallas was a good, even great player for your club at times and the fact remains that something changed in him. Be it the want for money or a perceived slight or a real slight.

If Gallas wanted more money your club should and could have been able to give it to him, your club has more money to spare than Arsenal who are paying off our stadium debts. It's pure speculation but it seems that Gallas was already disillusioned, he did request tranfer earlier in the season if i'm not mistaken.

If it was a perceived slight it should have been dealt with instantly. The same with a real slight. But it seems that the problem was never dealt with effectively, the inaction more than the rest exacerbated the situation. If the case were indeed like stated above it seems a real shame that your club didn't try to sort it out.

Let's see what happens when Gallas has his say, we've yet to hear the other side of the story.

Nick Percival
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Nick Percival Wrote: | 11.48BST | Sep 6, 2006

If he was a crap player it would not upset the fans to the degree it has - him being such a good player is why you're moaning and whining.

It's over - you've got Cole and Arsenal have got Gallas.

You're both welcome to them.

Perth Blue
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Perth Blue Wrote: | 12.29BST | Sep 6, 2006

Gallas deserves all he gets!!! Chelsea have every right to state the reasons, especially after constant attacks from Gallas.
What about Ashley cole, I must admit not my choice, but wasn't he promised a figure by Arsenal, and then the changed their mind. Didn't he then have to do something about it, admittedly another action other than the secret meeting would have done, but please he like most of the players, are not brain surgeons of barrack room lawyers, so he went by instinct. He was wrong, but he was willing to play, and advised Arsenal so, and that he wanted to leave because of these problems. Now Gallas, his story was, another challenge overseas, (No offers) perhaps in the grape vine anyone left overseas who had the money thought better of it. Gallas was a great player for Chelsea, but will now never be spoken of in the same breath, as any of the others.
In the end the table in May will tell the tale, and Billy G can say goodbye to any more medals!!!

Perth Blue
KTBFFH

Owonatty
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Owonatty Wrote: | 14.56BST | Sep 6, 2006

Kenn,

I really appreciate the clearity you bring to this very argument. To my opinion, I dont blame Chelsea for the step they take in replying to what Gallas has been saying after Aug 31st. They are unproffessional and childish. CFC have every right to let the fans know what exactly he did to make himself available in the trasfer windows. Now i want him to go court and prove himself and explain why he refused to play those matches . I believe time will tell on whether is Gallas or Chelsea should act that way. There are alot of big clubs that have done this too, so it not a new thing and it is best in this situation for Gallas as his real altitude is revealed to the the fans. I want him to defend himself not just by denying it but prove through court or any other means which i know Chelsea will come out victorious. It will take him to reliase the damage he has caused to his career and what is there for him to lose in the future.

Only time will prove this to everybody and we shall see . Good luck to him

Up Blues!!!

Sir Henry Norris
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Sir Henry Norris Wrote: | 15.20BST | Sep 6, 2006

The plot thickens ...

"72 minutes
CHELSEA 1-1 BARCELONA: Ronaldinho's whipped in free-kick is diverted past Cech by the flailing head of Terry as the sides trade own goals"

"Davies got the better of Johnson on the left, cut into the box and saw his low cross deflected into his own goal at the near post by the unfortunate Terry."

"Chelsea panic in the league, lose to Bolton, lose to United, lose the last game of the season at Newcastle to a John Terry own-goal."

... suggest there's a thorough investigation at the bridge, and the culprits rooted out. Expect a similar statement about Terry within the next 24 hours.

Raz
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Raz Wrote: | 15.55BST | Sep 6, 2006

Please, Kenn, a Leopard never changes it's spots....can you tell me how this may relate to one Ashley Cole?! Oh how i will laugh when that particular issue come to haunt Chelsea!

Anthony
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Anthony Wrote: | 16.10BST | Sep 6, 2006

I have very mixed emotions about Chelsea releasing this statement.

As a fan i wanted to know what had been going on, and clearly what the club has had to say has made very interesting reading. Having seen Billy play over the five years, and he is a fine player, I have always suspected he was a very difficult character with the mental age of a five year old.

However I do believe the decision to issue a press release describing Gallas's behaviour is vindictive and has caused a media storm (albeit a slightly artificial one - it is international week after all) that we could do without. Further it probably has not helped our cause regarding the French Football Federation, Domenech and the Maka situation.

I think Mourinho is fantastic, he stands up for what he belives in and what Chelsea fans believe in. His management style is compulsive viewing and has won, and will win us many trophies. Despite this I think Chelsea should ditch the antagonism and aggression and adopt a more concilliatory approach in matters such as these. Football politcs involves a large amount of diplomacy and the senior managment of the club completely lacks this quality.

I do not feel in any way that I am a "Chelsea hating" Chelsea fan because of this - this is my viewpoint and I am completely entitled to it and no other Chelsea fan can tell me I am not a 'real' supporter because I do not blindly believe in everything CFC does. These are the semantics of the playground.

Gallas has clearly behaved like a complete ar$ehole and deserves the stick he will inevitably receive. The Gooners clearly despise Ashley Cole for reasons that if I were in their shoes I would empathise with however there is a fundamental difference between the two cases - Gallas went on strike and threatened to sabotage the efforts of his teammates. This is unforgivable.

Chelsea clearly believe what they have written is accurate otherwise Gallas would sue for libel - it will be interetsing to see if he ever attempts to do so. I expect a lot of threats but no real action, probably a press release slating the club and syaing Jose doesn't buy the players and bullies the cleaner or something...

I am absolutely gagging for Saturday and then a further two home games in a week.

Bring on the football PLEASE!

Trevor
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Trevor Wrote: | 16.57BST | Sep 6, 2006

Just read the original piece when the link was pulished on Football Matters. A really good piece that Kenn needs congratulating on. It is interesting to see the braindead blinkered Arsenal fans coming on here just to have a bash. Everything Kenns piece says about Gallas is, in my eyes completely true, and I endorse the actions of the Club in coming out and saying what many Chelsea fans have suspected for awhile now about our Billy G or should that now be Billy Me. Self centred egotiscal greedy unprofessional are all adjectives that will be placed in front of his name from now on.

When he goes down with a mysterious injury just before the game against Chelsea at the Bridge in December we will all know that he is running scared of facing the fans that gave him a standing ovation at the Blues Day out just before the season started and who are then told they are rubbish and the best fans in the world are the ones he never played in front of in an Arsenal shirt. Billy you really a prize plank.

Those Gooners who say Cole is just the same please show me the reports in the papers from Cole slagging off the Arsenal management, players, fans, manager et al. You can't because he has been a professional and kept his mouth shut.

Keep it Kenn.

Red Fred
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Red Fred Wrote: | 17.50BST | Sep 6, 2006

Man what a load of dross.

If Chelsea fans cannot understand why the club making an official statement bitching so much about a player they just sold is classless then maybe we know what kind fo fans chelsea attracts. The statement is so childlike. I love it!!!

As has been stated Ashley Cole has betrayed his club much more than Gallas and we have *evidence* about Cole and Chelsea, but none about Gallas.
We also have evidence several times over of Chelsea breaking rules etc. and that's just he stuff that has come to light.

Still it looks like it could be an entertaining season watching the cracks appear ;-)

Red Fred
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Red Fred Wrote: | 17.56BST | Sep 6, 2006

"Those Gooners who say Cole is just the same please show me the reports in the papers from Cole slagging off the Arsenal management, players, fans, manager et al. You can’t because he has been a professional and kept his mouth shut."

I'm not a gooner but he has been bitching about the club for the past year. You cannot be that blinkered surely?
I expect his new book will be packed full of more of that crap. Who on earth reads all these footballer biographies that are littering our society suddenly anyway? I couldn't give a crap what Gerrard, Cole or Rooney do in their spare time or what they think when they got subbed against Accrington in the cup. About as exciting as Shearer creosoting his fence

Mickthe gooner
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Mickthe gooner Wrote: | 18.01BST | Sep 6, 2006

Trevor,
Cashley hasn't slagged off the club/management/fans etc yet, - he will be doing that when his book is published (if Chelsea let him).
As I've said before both our clubs got what we wanted, - you a left back & us a centre half.
In the grand scheme of things, who really gives a f**k whether Gallas said it or not?
Perhaps he was wrong to say that we are the best fans, - I agree that it is a kick in the teeth to those of you who have contributed to his wages. Then again Ashley hasn't behaved much better (or more to the point his agent). The alleged agreement to him being offered £60k per week and then only getting £55k, was only something that DD said to him before it was sanctioned by the board. Unfortunately for us, we haven't got a bottomless pit of money at our disposal, and the cost of the new stadium has caused us not to be able to offer top money. We are expected to pay up to £94 for a ticket at Ashburton Grove, and he was whinging about £5k a week, - money that he needed to pay his agent with. One of the reasons that he didn't get the extra £5k was that AFC do not pay agents wages.
Anyway let's all enjoy our new signings and concentrate on the CL and beating Spurs!

owonatty
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owonatty Wrote: | 18.09BST | Sep 6, 2006

Trevor,
Thats nice of you .

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 18.28BST | Sep 6, 2006

LINK

This represents exactly what I mean when I said:

>>>Of course, there are also some well-informed and decent fans and football followers who still think the club needed not to have made the statement on Gallas, even if what they claim is true; but the fact remains they haven’t proffered any superior reason why the club shouldn’t inform their fans about the situation, except to say it makes the club sound “petty” and “childish”. Yet, what is really petty, childish and dangerous is Gallas’s conduct before and after leaving the club; not Chelsea’s measured response to his insults against the club, the fans, the manager and staff of the football club.>> Bringing this out into the open and slinging allegations around does the club no credit”.

RB
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RB Wrote: | 18.45BST | Sep 6, 2006

I feel something is fishy, I don't think Chelsea FC would make such a blunder by releasing "attacking" comments on Gallas with absolutely nothing to gain out of it, except for a "Jerry Springer" type of entertainment. I am pretty fond of the "conspiration theory" at the moment. I feel something big is coming.

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 18.49BST | Sep 6, 2006

Cascarino called it right with the substantive piece on Gallas’s conduct, but then in concluding, he fell into the trap of having to blame Chelsea by describing the release of the statement as “strange”. His judgment on that is: “Gallas has gone — why not forget it and move on? Bringing this out into the open and slinging allegations around does the club no credit”.

However, the real problem is that once you begin to put that view to the test of logic and reasonability, it shatters. This is why I’m saying people like him have provided no superior reason why Chelsea shouldn’t have issued the statement. To start with, he Tony Cascarino wouldn’t have been aware of what happened between Chelsea and Gallas if Chelsea hadn’t issued the statement. He wouldn’t have known enough to criticize Gallas’s conduct if such information was not put out by Chelsea. So, why blame Chelsea for putting out information that helped you pass judgment on such a hugely dangerous thing in the game as Gallas’s conduct, especially where you are so against the action reported in the said statement? It just doesn’t make sense – without information, there’d be no informed commentary and no informed commentary condemns the source of information, especially where such information is in the public interest. There is nothing strange about Chelsea informing their fans about what led to the sale of Gallas or defending the club when a disgruntled ex-player of Gallas’s standing unjustly attacks the manager and the staff, even after earning his release through gross unprofessional conduct.



“Bringing this out into the open and slinging allegations around does the club no credit”- Cascarino.

Again, this is a very absurd and misleading claim. “Bringing it out in the open” presupposes that it was in secret before Chelsea divulged it; but the real question is what is in secret? What is Chelsea divulging? Of course, everyone following should have known by now that Chelsea DID NOT BEGIN this exposé; Gallas did when he continually ran to the press in the course of his dispute with Chelsea, most especially in the French press when he goes on international duty with France and more desperately towards the end of last season when he granted a rash of interviews to the English press, lambasting Chelsea and claiming he’s made up his mind to leave and go abroad and so on. Prior to the latest statement on Gallas, Chelsea had only issued one statement on Gallas and that was towards the end of last season in response to his claims all over the press attacking the directors while also claiming he wants to leave. Chelsea did not attack him. Chelsea merely reiterated their desire to keep him because they appreciate him as a player:

LINK


This is in spite of the fact that Gallas had been the one washing the club’s dirty linen in public, terribly badmouthing the directors and so on. Of course, since then things have rapidly degenerated, again, due to Gallas’s unprofessional conduct, for instance staying away from the pre-season camp in America and refusing to play when welcomed back into the family. Again, he had been the one running around the press within this period claiming Chelsea were stopping him from leaving when he still had a year’s contract with the club and with no club making any bid for him. The same weekend he belatedly returned, he was on the biggest TV channel in France offering his anti-Chelsea offering. A couple of days before our first season opener against Man City, he again was there running his mouth to L’Equipe. Chelsea’s consistent response through Mourinho, Buck and Kenyon had been to reiterate that he’s appreciated, he’s part of our future, he’s been given a very good contract that the club and fans expect him to sign and so on. The only thing that happened within that period was that he was appropriately disciplined, as should be expected, for failing to return to training as at when due – a routine affair for any rule-breaking player. Yet, that became a basis to declare Mourinho an enemy, even as the manager did not pressurize him to sign a new deal or put himself in the middle of his dispute with the club’s establishment. In fact, Mourinho stuck by him simply because he was a player whom Mourinho loves.

Thus, for anyone to say now that Chelsea’s statement amounts to washing dirty linen in public or “slinging allegations around” is the height of misinformation. After all, Mourinho and the club gave him an opportunity to call a press conference with his agent and explain to the world why he wasn't playing. Predictably, he shied away from that challenge because he knew he had nothing to say since he knew he and he himself alone was the reason he wasn't playing and not the manager or the club. Mourinho didn’t say anything after that; the club still went ahead and granted him his wish to leave. But Gallas was too far on the road to self-destruction to keep quiet. He continued running his mouth even when Chelsea had sold him to Arsenal. When an egg falls to the ground and shatters, you don’t go about trying to scoop it up back into its shell. Gallas had already put this in the open long before now, whatever follows are mere developments. Chelsea owe it to their fans and the general public to set the records straight when developments demand they do so. If Gallas had quietly gone on to enjoy his new Ashburton life without attacking the club, its staff, manager, management and fans, Chelsea wouldn’t have felt the need to tell their fans and the world what he did exactly to ‘earn’ that switch. This is not “slinging allegations around”; it is setting the records straight. It’s not only appropriate and necessary, it is informative. Cascarino cannot use the information the club released for the benefit of his own commentary on one hand and then turn around in the same breath to criticize the club for releasing such information. If anything the club should be commended for the patience and dignity they’ve showed in the face of Gallas’s serial provocations.



CHEERS!


NB: Another dinosaur airing his constipated view of life:


LINK


---------------------------------------------


Anthony,

You do not sound like a self-hating Chelsea fan and your arguments aren’t unreasonable. However, you have to know that it’s a case of damned if you do and damned if you don’t. Do you think the press would have gone easy on us if we’d kept quiet while Gallas railed? Do you think the press wouldn’t have questioned our credibility if we’d kept quiet while Gallas spreads his lies? Silence, they say is consent and Chelsea have no reason to be silent when the facts are there. What was said needed to be said and Chelsea have said it. Blaming them for saying what needed to be said is evidence of the vindictiveness of the press against Chelsea, not anything in defence of decency, truth or honour of the game.

More importantly, I can tell you that begging to be loved won’t take Chelsea anywhere, because their real crime is being successful and being at the top. The only way you can be guaranteed a good press is if you’re in mid-table or fighting for relegation. So, make your choice and stick with it. For me, the childish and mischievous antics of the press or the hypocrisy and selectiveness of the commentariat is water off the duck’s back. I pray and hope the club continues to treat the press attacks as such. Success isn’t gained by being supine, but by being firm and focused despite what the chasing pack say. What we achieve is the substance and not what the critics say, especially when most of what they say sprouts from nothing but envy and jealousy.


CHEERS!

enki
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enki Wrote: | 19.20BST | Sep 6, 2006

so now cole is tall enough to play in your defence. then u wonder why people think everything that comes out of the club are lies.

Prawnsandwicheater
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Prawnsandwicheater Wrote: | 19.40BST | Sep 6, 2006

I don't know if Chelsea were right to release this statement or not - only time will tell.

I do know one thing though - if the statement is even slightly untrue Gallas can sue for libel and would probably get a big payout. For a man so obviously focused on money surely that would be a no-brainer.......

......if the statement is untrue.

Gallas' denials are irrelevant, let's see what he does about this. The only thing that would convince me he is the injured party is if he sues for libel; and my guess is he won't.

Time to move on and win more silverware methinks! Come on you Blues!

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 20.02BST | Sep 6, 2006

Enki,

Yes, Cole IS NOW tall enough to play in our defence. In fact, whether or not he’s tall enough is the business of our coaching staff, not yours. And if they say he is tall enough, then he is. It’s immaterial what Mourinho said earlier, because even if Cole is a non-growing dwarf, Mourinho has a right to change his mind about him. Height isn’t the only consideration when looking for a good defender. Mourinho has had more than a year to watch him more closely and obviously Cole has done enough to change his mind. More importantly, Chelsea have acquired him by legitimate means from the hypocritical Arsenal, so get over it.

MikeL
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MikeL Wrote: | 20.06BST | Sep 6, 2006

To Gooner

That is not the point - Gallas may have acted poorly - but for the Club to lower itself to that level was not needed.
Look who is talking!!!! Going and reporting their own player to FA like gooners did just because of desire to get to Chelsea, this is probably high class!!! These funnies from Airline FC making me laugh.

Red Fred
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Red Fred Wrote: | 20.29BST | Sep 6, 2006

Gallas is not focused solely on money or he would have stayed at Chelsea and got paid for doing nothing like half the squad used to in the previous couple of years.

So one ex player has a stab at Gallas on the basis of something the club says which is totally unproven. Hardly backs up this argument to me. And that is the only article I have seen backing Chelsea's stance. All the others have been asking what the heck Chelsea are doing these days. In trouble regularly with the league, fines already been received, probably more to come, points deductions threatened but still they try to steamroller through the rule book. Maybe once the threat has actually been carried out they will actually learn a little reepect. probably not though. Probably just go and buy some more galacticos to cock up the team balance even more.

LINK

What fun!

Clive
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Clive Wrote: | 20.38BST | Sep 6, 2006

The whole thing is messy and leaves a nasty taste in one's mouth, but is this any different from Stuart Pearce and Man City?

Cole's agent demanded striker's switch to Pompey - Pearce

I think not in my humble opinion!

OM
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OM Wrote: | 20.53BST | Sep 6, 2006

Your whole article rest on an assumpotion that the rest of the football community does not take for granted; that Chelsea are telling the truth. JM and Kenyon haven't exactly held up the banner of veracity over the last couple of years.

So, if like most people, one was to believe taht Chelsea are lying in the press release imagine what comedy it reads like (mind you they tipped it off by laughably claiming he left to Arsenal for money). Lastly, on a claim like that, it is incumbent on the team to prove such an outrageous claim. In the end they know it comes to he said she said. But, they have such a record of classless behaviour that the general public knows the truth deep inside.

Lordmorf
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Lordmorf Wrote: | 21.23BST | Sep 6, 2006

Clive,

Not the same level of criticism of the player from Man City, but yes it is certainly comparable.

Then again, in their case they weren't defending themselves or their fans from insults levelled at them by a departing player who had been worshipped at the club for a number of years, like Gallas had by our fans.

With regards to the call by many on here for Gallas to sue for libel if he believes he can succeed, is it really necessary to clog up the courts with such garbage?? Even if he did so and succeeded I'm sure most people would still hold to the same opinion they have now anyway.

Fifty
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Fifty Wrote: | 21.26BST | Sep 6, 2006

Great piece Kenn.

Personally, while it's nice to know the reasons for falling outs, disputes et al, I am of the opinion they should be left 'in house'.

We're well aware of the bad press our club gets at every available opportunity, and I feel the CFC story does nothing but provide more ammunition. Of course, Gallas has acted like a complete turnip, but the fact of the matter is he wont be the first or last player to do so, can't it just be left in the past ???

Whats the point in the club being continually dragged through the mud, whether justified or not ??

Fola
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Fola Wrote: | 03.12BST | Sep 7, 2006

Kenn, comment #36 has presented a clearer picture for me......."However, the real problem is that once you begin to put that view to the test of logic and reasonability, it shatters".

Without adequate information, there would be an informed judgement and the test of Logic and reasonability only takes you above your nose. It is important chelsea makes the statement, such that the ' real chelsea fans' can adequately be informed about what transpired behind the scene and we place him at the back of our mind. if he has guts, then its time for him to confirm or prove his denial.

I was appalled by his non appearance for pre-season (without permission) and rather than spoil our team spirit, it was better he left.

The stories trailing him apparently may not help his new club either. we shall hear more when they return from internationals.

Some one said he should sue chelsea! Gallas is too greedy to part with his money to do that.

What i particulary like about our team is that when its time to focus to events at the pitch, all distractions from the chelsea-hater press does not affect us.

Commomn Chels, i can't wait for the weekend games, as i am tired of hearing Gallas's name now, i want to hear and see Chelsea 3 Charlton 0. Shevchenko, Lampard and Terry scoring.......or how do you see it! Cheers

Blue Champion
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Blue Champion Wrote: | 04.23BST | Sep 7, 2006

Gallas has been speaking out on Chelsea and Jose for the since he left and how he was ill-treated in Chelsea with two league titles. After truckloads of his garbage, Chelsea wants to make clear to everyone why he was sold and they have shared some truth about Gallas. I appreciate the courage that Chelsea had in publishing this, despite the possible threat of Gallas going legal on this. I guess he wouldn’t as I strongly believe that he is a freak.

What disgrace he is to the club and to the game of football. If the above is true, he deserves to be banned by the football authorities. This will set a good precedent for all those players AWOL type of players. Such ingratitude having won back-to-back titles for someone who has only won a decond division title before. I’m so happy that he is not here and even more happy that he is in Arsenal! Is Arsene Wenger and Arsenal happy about having a player in his team, who threatened his club that he would score own goals, get sent off and make deliberate errors? I wish he scores more own goals for Arsenal than the goals he scored for us!

Well, he may not have said “Jose Mourinho, if you play me I would score an own goal”. He could have suggested this very easily. I’m reminded of this dialogue from ‘The Good, The Bad and The Ugly’, where Blondie tells Tuco “If you cut down my percentage . . . it might interfere with my aim”, where Blondie plays the role of saving Tuco, who neck is around the rope, by shooting it.

After Chelsea’s statements, Gallas had several ways of responding - to ignore and remain silent, to sue Chelsea for defaming him or hit back with another statement. It was a very strong statement from Chelsea. And it was a club statement and not an individual’s statement (like Jose’s remark on Anders Frisk). Before Chelsea published this statement in the official website, I’m sure they would have consulted their lawyers, checked their evidences and got their facts right. But despite all this, I expected Gallas to sue Chelsea for libel. This is the last accusation a professional footballer, especially a defender, should expect from the club where he served for about 5 years. Considering the seriousness of the situation, if Gallas believed he had not done anything wrong, he should have sued Chelsea. On the other hand, Chelsea have been very kind in not officially reporting this to the authorities to have him banned or punished severely.

The fact that he has not taken it legally, confims that he just wanted to hit back but not at the risk of proven wrong. May be thats why he didn’t want to go legal. He didn’t even suggest taking it to the court. His statement of calling this accusation ‘very very petty on behalf of Chelsea’ really amuses me. What would you expect to do, if you make such stupid threats to a club which is always bigger and more important that you? Now, people say, on Ashley Cole’s departure, Arsenal did it with style by wishing him goodluck. Come on, you cannot compare the Ashley Cole situation and William Gallas situation. Now, you can’t fake that both blunders are equal or something. Ashley broke the rules and he did get penalised for it and Gallas ruins everything - professionalism, team spirit, work ethics, honesty and he goes scot-free? If Ashley had done the same thing to Arsenal, I would never have accepted him as a Chelsea fan or even as a football fan, despite all his skills and experience.

Let’s remember, till now, Gallas has not explained why he wants to leave Chelsea. He can’t say he has not won anything. Well, he has won more than he could have won anywhere else (there is a team of Real Madrid who haven’t seen anything for 3 years now). He can’t say he is underpaid as we all know that he was offered a very handsome package which he refused. He can’t say he is played out of position. We have Boulahrouz and Jose did promise that Gallas would be in centre this season. He can’t say he wants experience a different league (something he had months back) as he is going to play only for the ‘pass-pass-lose-the-ball’ crap of Arsennielle. And he says he would wait for the appropriate time. Let’s wait for another round of bullshit from Gallas. All-in-all, it was a poor clearance from Gallas.

Guilliaum
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Guilliaum Wrote: | 05.54BST | Sep 7, 2006

Mainly sour grapes from chelsea

The "coup" in snaring cole blew up their faces with arsenal holding out for gallas, which has largely been acknowledged to be one of the deals
of the transfer window in arsenal's favour.
LINK
[too many links to list all in the same vein]

They could easily have ignored gallas's comments upon leaving
but no they chose as usual to be vindictive in the name of letting their fans know the truth.
two eyes for an eye appears to be the new chelsea way
alienating more and more people as they go along.

Where there is chelsea there is now trouble generated primarily by mourinho

It never used to be this way.

I think he will depart after this season if he doesn't deliver the CL
His endless needless posturing will be seen as an unproductive liability.

cfcforever
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cfcforever Wrote: | 07.41BST | Sep 7, 2006

good article by Tony Cascarino: LINK

cfcforever
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cfcforever Wrote: | 08.07BST | Sep 7, 2006

He has done this before:

Zero credibility Gallas

LINK
LINK

Guilliaum
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Guilliaum Wrote: | 13.33BST | Sep 7, 2006

As has mourinho - his credibility = zero
My neighbour is portuguese and a porto supporter but tells me mourinho was constantly bickering niggling and attacking people whilst in portugal.

You are in your own little chelsea bubble

chelsea used to be one of my favourite teams ever since the days of greaves and bobby tambling - no longer

this sums it up from the neutral view :

For a club trying to win friends to boost their fan base, such an aggressive stance is curious, although it is at least consistent. Fed up with widespread criticism, Chelsea have been on the front foot all season, issuing condemnatory statements against such a wide variety of targets as Arsenal, Ken Bates, Mark Schwarzer, the FA and Gallas in the past three weeks alone.

Much of this new resolution comes from José Mourinho, who is not slow to go on the attack, as was illustrated by his row with the French Football Federation over Claude Makelele last week. One of the Portuguese’s main grievances during his dispute with Chelsea 18 months ago was a perceived lack of support from the club on contentious issues, with Mourinho feeling that it was too often left to him to defend their position. Now he is enjoying their backing.

Whether the public is impressed by this approach is a moot point, though, because Chelsea’s support shows little signs of increasing. After a lengthy advertising campaign on their website, the club announced that all non-corporate tickets for Saturday’s Barclays Premiership match against Charlton Athletic had been sold, but corporate packages are still available.

Johnarejr
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Johnarejr Wrote: | 16.40BST | Sep 7, 2006

All has been said and done on this issue. It's a shame that Chelsea made such a statement about a former player. Especially one who has contributed to the team's success the way that Gallas had.
Gallas had greatly disrespected the club and fans with his bratty attitude. JM had nothing but good things to say about him during his antics. A lot of us hoped the team would give him a contract worthy of his talent, and they tried to. He betrayed us.
Despite his actions and words, Chelsea did not have to make an official statement aganist Gallas. His folly will be made clear on the pitch. Let's see how well he performs without Makelele and Essien preventing problems from comming his way. Let's see how long he enjoys playing in front of Lehmann. Can a fine defender find happiness in an offensively focused manager and team? Chelsea, you wasted your breath in defending yourselves. William will meet the same fustrations as Campbell, Cole, and Vieira.

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 23.01BST | Sep 7, 2006

LINK

(Oliver Holt)

GALLAS EXPOSE AN OWN GOAL FOR PLAYER POWER

6 September 2006

IF William Gallas really did threaten to score an own goal if Chelsea played him against Manchester City on the season's opening day, he deserved to be exposed.

If he said all the things the club claim, I'm glad Chelsea opened our eyes to the kind of professional he really is.

In a sport where greed and misdeeds are so often swept under the carpet, the club deserves credit for its transparency.

Although I can't help feeling that the statement Chelsea released about the Frenchman perhaps said as much about Jose Mourinho's state of mind as it did about Gallas's. But in an era when too many players seem to believe they are untouchable it is good to see a club fighting back.

As with so many other things in the sport, Roman Abramovich has changed the rules of the game when it comes to player power.

Because the power of the players is nothing compared to the financial might of the Chelsea owner.

Players walk into a golden circle when they join Chelsea of Abramovich and Mourinho.

But if they play dirty when they try to leave, they know now that they will be named and shamed and held up for what they are.

Kenn Emetulu
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Kenn Emetulu Wrote: | 03.28BST | Sep 8, 2006

LINK


Ah, I thought the Prince of Piss was never going to play any other position but centre-back once he left Chelsea; yet he’s obviously been penciled down as the back-row utility man at Ashburton Grove. Justin Hoyte’s preference even takes precedence before his…Ha! Ha! Ha!

graeme camp
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graeme camp Wrote: | 06.31BST | Sep 8, 2006

Kenn,
I am doubled up laughing at Professor Wenger disclosing that Sir William is likely to play left back for the arse.

Hopefully, this will lead to Gallas finally explaining why he is happy to play left back for a certain North London club but not for a certain West London club. However, I am not holding my breath. BTW, the thought of one Arjen Robben running at him is an image to salivate over.

regards
graeme c

plflem
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plflem Wrote: | 06.30BST | Sep 14, 2006

christ i'm waiting for the movie,harder to read than the bible; mel gibson to direct!

GavH
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GavH Wrote: | 15.20BST | Sep 19, 2006

Why is every one so worried about what the Chelsea haters are saying? Gallas going will not make any difference to Chelsea one way or the other. I remember the days when Man Utd were winning every thing in sight and the same snipers came out the wood work to attack them on every available opportunity, now suddenly its Chelsea's turn because as usual all the haters out there lack one thing - being able to talk about anything positive at thier own clubs because they have won very little or nothing at all. It's a cold hard fact of life unfortunately, Chelsea are successful - therefore we must be hated. If Man U or arsenal win the league this season then everyone will just come out of the timber once more and hate them instead. Instead of blaming Chelsea for all the worlds sins, not only Chelsea supporters but supporters of all other clubs should instead be criticising the sad vindictive media we have in this country that frequently prints before it thinks just the sake of getting an exclusive - regardless of the fact to hand!! I strongly suggest that any one who reads the diatribe of half truths and speculation that the media churns out takes a step back once in a while and realise the words they read are those of a reporter that usually has a hidden agenda to cause as much speculation and to sensationalise as much as possible in order to sell as many copies of his paper as he can. basically I buy newspapers once a week as a backup supply should I run out of toilet paper! To use an analogy- Princess Di was getting a lot of grief from the media then suddenly she died and the same media that were criticising her suddenly wanted to canonise her and give her a sainthood The media is full of hypocracy and they should get all the facts before they criticise any party. supporters of other clubs BEWARE, it could be your team, your manager and you yourselves to get the treatment next that Chelsea are getting from the press at the moment.


Jose gets critisiced constantly for being arrogant - he has a right to be even though in my opinion he isn't, he's just successful and knows it. Remember one important fact here, we live in a country where success is looked at with hatred and envy by those less successful. The people who write to this site to slate Chelsea would love to have the funds available to them that Abramovich has brought to Chelsea. I remember certain quarters calling Ferguson and Wenger arrogant when they were winning titles - they were not, they were successful and knew it and good luck to both of them because they were in a position where they could act the part. Now its Chelseas turn

If any other club were to be offered the money on a scale that Abramovich has made available to Chelsea for player, etc are they honestly trying to say they would not go out and pay idiotic amounts of money to build their own squads up. I do not think anyone could look you in the face and say they wouldn't but as they always say - Envy and jealousy are terrible things. If Abramovich turned round tomorrow and said he was going to buy Liverpool or Arsenal and make £200 million available for them to buy new staff then I dare say we would hear a lot of liverpool and Arsenal fans suddenly declaring what a wonderful man etc that Abramovich is. Get the idea here!! Or indeed would they say "No we don't a Russian's money, go away and take your £200 million with you" I think not!

I truly think some of these Chelsea haters would go after any team that is doing better than their own and they in all reality would probably love to go back to the nostalga of the dark old days when British clubs won the odd trophy but were regarded as a bit of joke in other circles.

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