Barnes interview in The Times
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Barnes interview in The Times
Can anyone post it up?
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Today's or tomorrow?
Re: Barnes interview in The Times
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Found one but it was 12 months ago
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Ashley Barnes: The ‘cab driver’ who wants England call to cap fairytale rise
The Burnley striker, 29, hopes Gareth Southgate rewards his journey from non-League to the top flight
Barnes has worked his way up from non-League to the top flight
ANDREW YATES/REUTERS
It is not your typical Premier League scene. A people carrier rolls into the car park at Burnley’s training ground and, as the passenger doors slide across, seven footballers emerge, one by one. Then the driver’s door opens and out gets Ashley Barnes, their leading goalscorer and designated driver.
This is what has been dubbed “Ash-Cabs” since the two Ashleys, Barnes and Westwood, expanded their longstanding car-share arrangement, clubbing together to buy what they call a minibus. Their team-mates gather at a pick-up point in Cheshire every morning before their commute takes them around Manchester and up the M66 into East Lancashire. Punctuality is essential; no one dares risk making the others late and having to pay fines on their behalf.
At certain other Premier League clubs, such an arrangement could only be imagined if there were Jacuzzis, mini-bars and goodness knows what else waiting for them in the back. Not here. “No, it’s just the standard [Mercedes] Viano,” Barnes says. “We chipped in for it and we bring the boys in on a daily basis. Eight of us jump in most days. You probably don’t get many players car-sharing at most clubs, but we’re such a tight group here. I think that’s why we work so well together on the pitch.”
This cheek-by-jowl existence, a group of lads piling into the same vehicle on the way to training, brings out a sense of nostalgia in Barnes. It is 13 years since his career began in the unlikely environs of Paulton Rovers, the Somerset-based club competing then, as now, in the eighth tier of English football. “We were paid about £60 a week,” the centre forward, 29, says. “I used to give it to my mum and dad for some keep. I was still at school and lucky enough to be getting paid to play football and it was nice, but for the older lads, it was their livelihood. They were working 9 to 5, coming home, getting changed and training in the evenings. They were must-win games because, if not, those lads weren’t going to be happy with you. I think that put me in good stead, playing men’s football from a young age.”
In an age when so many of English football’s finest young prospects struggle to fulfil their potential, Barnes’s journey to the Premier League — via Paulton, Plymouth Argyle (and spells on loans at Oxford United, Salisbury City, Eastbourne Borough and Torquay United), Brighton & Hove Albion and Burnley — seems instructive. Can it really be a coincidence that, beyond the more prodigious talents of Harry Kane, Raheem Sterling and Marcus Rashford, six of the nine highest home-grown goalscorers in this season’s Premier League have played at non-League level? Troy Deeney and Danny Ings had spells on loan to Halesowen Town and Dorchester Town respectively, while Callum Wilson went on loan to Kettering Town and Tamworth, but Glenn Murray (with Workington Reds, Barrow and Carlisle United), Jamie Vardy (with Stocksbridge Park Steels, FC Halifax Town and Fleetwood Town) and Barnes had a more sustained grounding in non-League football. It suggests that there is somethingto be said for doing it the hard way and arriving on the Premier League stage battle-hardened, rather than wide-eyed.
“You’ve got to work so hard to make it that way,” Barnes says. “You’ve got to want it so much. You need to give everything and keep working on every part of your game and if you get that one chance, you’ve got to grab it with both hands. I know I’m not the finished article, I’ve still got improvements to make. I can’t just turn it on like some of those big players. I’ve got to work so hard in training every day, give everything and
be switched on 110 per cent.”
Barnes played alongside Murray in League One for Brighton, where they scored 42 goals between them in the 2010-11 season. “We worked so well together,” he says. “For both of us, coming up through non-League, into the lower divisions, coming into the professional game a bit later, you just want to keep striving and striving. You’re desperate to achieve things. You’re living your dream now, whereas other people might have had that from when they were young and they just float away. When you’re playing in the lower divisions, you see a lot of great players higher up and you
just want to strive for that chance.
“I always used to say I wanted just one game in the Premier League, to show what I could do. Now I’ve had over 100 appearances in the Premier League, so that’s something I’m proud of, something that will always stay with me. Now I just think that I want one chance on the international stage. I know I need to concentrate on Burnley first and foremost and keep doing things right, keep working hard for the team, but it’s something else to aim for. You need to keep setting yourself targets like that.”
Until very recently, Barnes’s international hopes were presumed to lie with Austria, whom he represented at Under-20 level, having qualified through his late grandmother, who was born in Klagenfurt. Franco Foda, the Austria coach, was at Turf Moor last month to watch Barnes score the winning goal against Tottenham Hotspur, but so too was Gareth Southgate. Austria’s council of ministers said subsequently that, having discussed the matter, Barnes “does not meet the essential criteria for naturalisation”. One door closes, perhaps, but, having scored six goals in nine Premier League appearances since the turn of the year, he hopes that there may finally be the possibility of an opening where England are concerned.
“The Austria thing has gone quiet,” he says. “They tried to look at the passport situation but it wasn’t successful. My first choice has always been England and if I can keep doing well for Burnley and put the thought in the manager’s mind, you never know what’s around the corner. There’s an international break coming up, so you never know.”
This is Barnes’s fourth Premier League campaign and he needs only one goal, his tenth, to maintain his record of scoring more goals every season in the top flight. As with Murray, he has seemed to become a more rounded footballer — more driven, but also more astute — since recovering from a serious knee ligament injury. Since the midway stage of last season he has scored goals against Manchester United (twice), Manchester City, Chelsea, Arsenal and Tottenham. Liverpool, who await Burnley at Anfield on on Sunday, have been a tougher nut for him to crack since Virgil
van Dijk arrived early last year.
“I love playing against the big teams,” he says. “It’s a great challenge to play against the best and show what you can do. “Van Dijk is the probably only defender I haven’t won many battles against. He’s the strongest, most difficult opponent I’ve come across. He’s definitely up there for Player
of the Year along with the likes of [Sergio] Agüero and [Raheem] Sterling. “I would like to think he has some weaknesses I can conquer but the game looks so easy for him sometimes. He’s a great player.”
What can Van Dijk expect on Sunday? “I think most defenders would say they don’t like playing against me,” Barnes says. “I work so hard. I don’t like to give them a minute’s rest. That’s my aim every time I go on the pitch. I want to play like it’s a cup final. I want to give it my all and leave them coming off the pitch thinking, ‘I didn’t enjoy that. He’s tough. He will not stop.’ ”
Barnes is no stranger to a yellow card — he has picked up seven this season — but the most recent one, against Southampton last month, was regrettable on two levels. He was aghast to be booked for diving when television replays showed that he was fouled by Alex McCarthy, the goalkeeper, (“very frustrating”) and that it should have been a penalty, but he accepts that his reaction, raging at Adam Nunn, the assistant
referee, was “very disappointing”. “I don’t know how the officials didn’t see it [the foul], but I know they have a difficult job to do,” he says. “It was in the heat of the moment but I look back now and know it was too much.”
He knows it does not excuse his reaction, but Burnley had gone 67 Premier League matches without being awarded a penalty — they would finally get one later that afternoon — and the suggestion that he had dived left him furious. “We don’t dive,” he says. “The manager here is very much against that. We’re a very honest group, maybe too honest at times, but that’s the way the gaffer has influenced us.”
In the nicest possible way, they are an uncomplicated team — “earthy”, to use their manager Sean Dyche’s description — and Barnes is an uncomplicated centre forward. It is not hard to imagine that, had things turned out differently for him, he would have been happy running “Ash-Cabs” for the lads at Paulton Rovers as they prepare to take on Cirencester Town at home in the Evo-Stik League Division One South tomorrow.
He would still be striving, though, for that one chance to shine on a bigger stage. “Keep striving” is Barnes’s mantra. It has served him well.
The Burnley striker, 29, hopes Gareth Southgate rewards his journey from non-League to the top flight
Barnes has worked his way up from non-League to the top flight
ANDREW YATES/REUTERS
It is not your typical Premier League scene. A people carrier rolls into the car park at Burnley’s training ground and, as the passenger doors slide across, seven footballers emerge, one by one. Then the driver’s door opens and out gets Ashley Barnes, their leading goalscorer and designated driver.
This is what has been dubbed “Ash-Cabs” since the two Ashleys, Barnes and Westwood, expanded their longstanding car-share arrangement, clubbing together to buy what they call a minibus. Their team-mates gather at a pick-up point in Cheshire every morning before their commute takes them around Manchester and up the M66 into East Lancashire. Punctuality is essential; no one dares risk making the others late and having to pay fines on their behalf.
At certain other Premier League clubs, such an arrangement could only be imagined if there were Jacuzzis, mini-bars and goodness knows what else waiting for them in the back. Not here. “No, it’s just the standard [Mercedes] Viano,” Barnes says. “We chipped in for it and we bring the boys in on a daily basis. Eight of us jump in most days. You probably don’t get many players car-sharing at most clubs, but we’re such a tight group here. I think that’s why we work so well together on the pitch.”
This cheek-by-jowl existence, a group of lads piling into the same vehicle on the way to training, brings out a sense of nostalgia in Barnes. It is 13 years since his career began in the unlikely environs of Paulton Rovers, the Somerset-based club competing then, as now, in the eighth tier of English football. “We were paid about £60 a week,” the centre forward, 29, says. “I used to give it to my mum and dad for some keep. I was still at school and lucky enough to be getting paid to play football and it was nice, but for the older lads, it was their livelihood. They were working 9 to 5, coming home, getting changed and training in the evenings. They were must-win games because, if not, those lads weren’t going to be happy with you. I think that put me in good stead, playing men’s football from a young age.”
In an age when so many of English football’s finest young prospects struggle to fulfil their potential, Barnes’s journey to the Premier League — via Paulton, Plymouth Argyle (and spells on loans at Oxford United, Salisbury City, Eastbourne Borough and Torquay United), Brighton & Hove Albion and Burnley — seems instructive. Can it really be a coincidence that, beyond the more prodigious talents of Harry Kane, Raheem Sterling and Marcus Rashford, six of the nine highest home-grown goalscorers in this season’s Premier League have played at non-League level? Troy Deeney and Danny Ings had spells on loan to Halesowen Town and Dorchester Town respectively, while Callum Wilson went on loan to Kettering Town and Tamworth, but Glenn Murray (with Workington Reds, Barrow and Carlisle United), Jamie Vardy (with Stocksbridge Park Steels, FC Halifax Town and Fleetwood Town) and Barnes had a more sustained grounding in non-League football. It suggests that there is somethingto be said for doing it the hard way and arriving on the Premier League stage battle-hardened, rather than wide-eyed.
“You’ve got to work so hard to make it that way,” Barnes says. “You’ve got to want it so much. You need to give everything and keep working on every part of your game and if you get that one chance, you’ve got to grab it with both hands. I know I’m not the finished article, I’ve still got improvements to make. I can’t just turn it on like some of those big players. I’ve got to work so hard in training every day, give everything and
be switched on 110 per cent.”
Barnes played alongside Murray in League One for Brighton, where they scored 42 goals between them in the 2010-11 season. “We worked so well together,” he says. “For both of us, coming up through non-League, into the lower divisions, coming into the professional game a bit later, you just want to keep striving and striving. You’re desperate to achieve things. You’re living your dream now, whereas other people might have had that from when they were young and they just float away. When you’re playing in the lower divisions, you see a lot of great players higher up and you
just want to strive for that chance.
“I always used to say I wanted just one game in the Premier League, to show what I could do. Now I’ve had over 100 appearances in the Premier League, so that’s something I’m proud of, something that will always stay with me. Now I just think that I want one chance on the international stage. I know I need to concentrate on Burnley first and foremost and keep doing things right, keep working hard for the team, but it’s something else to aim for. You need to keep setting yourself targets like that.”
Until very recently, Barnes’s international hopes were presumed to lie with Austria, whom he represented at Under-20 level, having qualified through his late grandmother, who was born in Klagenfurt. Franco Foda, the Austria coach, was at Turf Moor last month to watch Barnes score the winning goal against Tottenham Hotspur, but so too was Gareth Southgate. Austria’s council of ministers said subsequently that, having discussed the matter, Barnes “does not meet the essential criteria for naturalisation”. One door closes, perhaps, but, having scored six goals in nine Premier League appearances since the turn of the year, he hopes that there may finally be the possibility of an opening where England are concerned.
“The Austria thing has gone quiet,” he says. “They tried to look at the passport situation but it wasn’t successful. My first choice has always been England and if I can keep doing well for Burnley and put the thought in the manager’s mind, you never know what’s around the corner. There’s an international break coming up, so you never know.”
This is Barnes’s fourth Premier League campaign and he needs only one goal, his tenth, to maintain his record of scoring more goals every season in the top flight. As with Murray, he has seemed to become a more rounded footballer — more driven, but also more astute — since recovering from a serious knee ligament injury. Since the midway stage of last season he has scored goals against Manchester United (twice), Manchester City, Chelsea, Arsenal and Tottenham. Liverpool, who await Burnley at Anfield on on Sunday, have been a tougher nut for him to crack since Virgil
van Dijk arrived early last year.
“I love playing against the big teams,” he says. “It’s a great challenge to play against the best and show what you can do. “Van Dijk is the probably only defender I haven’t won many battles against. He’s the strongest, most difficult opponent I’ve come across. He’s definitely up there for Player
of the Year along with the likes of [Sergio] Agüero and [Raheem] Sterling. “I would like to think he has some weaknesses I can conquer but the game looks so easy for him sometimes. He’s a great player.”
What can Van Dijk expect on Sunday? “I think most defenders would say they don’t like playing against me,” Barnes says. “I work so hard. I don’t like to give them a minute’s rest. That’s my aim every time I go on the pitch. I want to play like it’s a cup final. I want to give it my all and leave them coming off the pitch thinking, ‘I didn’t enjoy that. He’s tough. He will not stop.’ ”
Barnes is no stranger to a yellow card — he has picked up seven this season — but the most recent one, against Southampton last month, was regrettable on two levels. He was aghast to be booked for diving when television replays showed that he was fouled by Alex McCarthy, the goalkeeper, (“very frustrating”) and that it should have been a penalty, but he accepts that his reaction, raging at Adam Nunn, the assistant
referee, was “very disappointing”. “I don’t know how the officials didn’t see it [the foul], but I know they have a difficult job to do,” he says. “It was in the heat of the moment but I look back now and know it was too much.”
He knows it does not excuse his reaction, but Burnley had gone 67 Premier League matches without being awarded a penalty — they would finally get one later that afternoon — and the suggestion that he had dived left him furious. “We don’t dive,” he says. “The manager here is very much against that. We’re a very honest group, maybe too honest at times, but that’s the way the gaffer has influenced us.”
In the nicest possible way, they are an uncomplicated team — “earthy”, to use their manager Sean Dyche’s description — and Barnes is an uncomplicated centre forward. It is not hard to imagine that, had things turned out differently for him, he would have been happy running “Ash-Cabs” for the lads at Paulton Rovers as they prepare to take on Cirencester Town at home in the Evo-Stik League Division One South tomorrow.
He would still be striving, though, for that one chance to shine on a bigger stage. “Keep striving” is Barnes’s mantra. It has served him well.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Cheers SH - see you the 25th or 26th in Auckland! UTnzC!
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Thanks for that. Brilliant read which gives an insight into why we are so tight knit
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Thanks Chester Perry
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Excellent, thanks for posting CP.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
If any footballer deserves recognition, it is Ashley Barnes.
He has literally worked and worked to turn himself into a very clever/skilfull footballer.
It is true that he gives everything for the cause, every time.
He has literally worked and worked to turn himself into a very clever/skilfull footballer.
It is true that he gives everything for the cause, every time.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Brilliant interview with Barnes. He’s been my favourite Burnley player for some time, the epitome of what BFC is all about. He must be one nasty SOB to play against, long may he keep the same attitude.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
He’s the Alf Tupper of the football world.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Barnes reminds me of the connection I had with the likes of Farrell and Deary. They understood where we come from.
Love him .
Love him .
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
aye, my favourite player
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Seriously does anyone actually buy that he doesn't dive? He's the biggest cheat we have and his reputation of falling to the floor probably didn't help him. He may not have dived at that moment but he's a master at falling to the floor.
Don't get me wrong. I think it's good he's like that because you see it so much the other way round but really to say "we don't cheat" is laughable to me.
Don't get me wrong. I think it's good he's like that because you see it so much the other way round but really to say "we don't cheat" is laughable to me.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Think that's absolute crap to be honest. I've never seen Barnes dive. Have I seen him exaggerate things when he goes for a header in midfield? Yes. But does he 'dive'...no.superdimitri wrote:Seriously does anyone actually buy that he doesn't dive? He's the biggest cheat we have and his reputation of falling to the floor probably didn't help him. He may not have dived at that moment but he's a master at falling to the floor.
Don't get me wrong. I think it's good he's like that because you see it so much the other way round but really to say "we don't cheat" is laughable to me.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
He doesn't dive he just collapses usually in mid-field when away from the goal and as pundits say if you are touched you can go down. But yes he does milk it sometimes; but so did Brian Pilkington and Harry Potts when they played for us.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Nice one Darnhill but younger readers will have no idea about "the tough of the track", living under a railway arch, washing in cold water with carbolic soap, a diet of fish and chips but then slaying the might of communist runners.Darnhill Claret wrote:He’s the Alf Tupper of the football world.
Nice that you see Barnesy in this way.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
I am not sure I like this idea.
8 of them in a minibus!
The cargo is all a bit too valuable for me!
A coach is ok, but a minibus?
8 of them in a minibus!
The cargo is all a bit too valuable for me!
A coach is ok, but a minibus?
Re: Barnes interview in The Times
There is another thread on the go at the moment Why is Burnley Special, I think this article goes a long way to answer it. Barnes took over when Dean Marney departed as my favourite current player and as I look back and remember Brian O'Neil being my favourite for a while, hell yes Burnley is special even the old toilets have a history none of us can forget. Great article Ashley Barnes, just keep working hard and you may end up a Burnley Legend.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Not exactly like a company not sending their top execs on the same plane together. That section of the M6 too...
Absolute rubbish suggesting diving too. We may exaggerate slightly now and then but there is definitely a clear difference between that and diving....
Absolute rubbish suggesting diving too. We may exaggerate slightly now and then but there is definitely a clear difference between that and diving....
Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Hmm 8 in a minibus which includes Westwood, who had a virus a few weeks ago. Could explain our lacklustre last couple of games maybe?
Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Ashley Barnes does dive and the excuses that he exaggerates or falls to the floor etc and doesn’t dive is exactly the problem in Football, it’s like the but there’s contact argument, it is still cheating and dishonest.
For what it’s worth I have no issue with his antics as I often think we are too honest and that gets us know where in this league, SD isn’t going to change things on his own.
For what it’s worth I have no issue with his antics as I often think we are too honest and that gets us know where in this league, SD isn’t going to change things on his own.
Re: Barnes interview in The Times
loved reading that
he is very hard working but then again so is most of the team, which is how BFC win games and surprise other teams and we ended up an unbelievable 7th last season
he is very hard working but then again so is most of the team, which is how BFC win games and surprise other teams and we ended up an unbelievable 7th last season
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
I've seen Barnes blatantly dive. One game away at Sunderland a couple of years ago (drew nil nil) particularly springs to mind.
But in fairness, I think Dyche has broadly cut that out of his game and I can't recall seeing him doing something similar since. He does sometimes look for free kicks around half way, but there's always contact there and he's basically just become good at forcing players to foul him and then making sure the ref knows he's been fouled. Not sure that's quite the same thing.
But in fairness, I think Dyche has broadly cut that out of his game and I can't recall seeing him doing something similar since. He does sometimes look for free kicks around half way, but there's always contact there and he's basically just become good at forcing players to foul him and then making sure the ref knows he's been fouled. Not sure that's quite the same thing.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
It’s certainly not diving. He’s fouled and, as you say, makes sure the ref knows.claretspice wrote:I've seen Barnes blatantly dive. One game away at Sunderland a couple of years ago (drew nil nil) particularly springs to mind.
But in fairness, I think Dyche has broadly cut that out of his game and I can't recall seeing him doing something similar since. He does sometimes look for free kicks around half way, but there's always contact there and he's basically just become good at forcing players to foul him and then making sure the ref knows he's been fouled. Not sure that's quite the same thing.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
He dives all the time. His favourite is to fall forward around the box when a defender challenges him. He "buys" and makes the most of challenges but it's still diving if he does it to win decisions.
A few times it costs him when the refs don't buy it when he's actually fouled.
Rubbish that dyche has trained it out of him. He dives the same now as he airways did.
A few times it costs him when the refs don't buy it when he's actually fouled.
Rubbish that dyche has trained it out of him. He dives the same now as he airways did.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
I am very sure that Ash backing towards a player, feeling contact, and going over, is NOT diving. It is clever play. Cleverer defenders (like Van Dyke) don’t fall for it. If it was diving, they would.
Re: Barnes interview in The Times
What struck me was the Barnes and Westwood clubbed together to buy the bus, when surely either one could have bought it out of a fortnight's wage. They aren't into wasting money.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Dyches diving campaign is about players going down without being touched, not as Barnes does wait for the touch and then go down. I’m not a fan of either if i’m honest, that said I remember celebrating Roger Eli diving all them years ago.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
He's been a legend for a while already!vinrogue wrote:There is another thread on the go at the moment Why is Burnley Special, I think this article goes a long way to answer it. Barnes took over when Dean Marney departed as my favourite current player and as I look back and remember Brian O'Neil being my favourite for a while, hell yes Burnley is special even the old toilets have a history none of us can forget. Great article Ashley Barnes, just keep working hard and you may end up a Burnley Legend.
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
Bugger off and support Leeds then!.........you can carry Bamford's tissues, for when he weeps!... Boo Hoo...superdimitri wrote:He dives all the time. His favourite is to fall forward around the box when a defender challenges him. He "buys" and makes the most of challenges but it's still diving if he does it to win decisions.
A few times it costs him when the refs don't buy it when he's actually fouled.
Rubbish that dyche has trained it out of him. He dives the same now as he airways did.
Ashley Barnes is AWESOME!
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
When I read that article and the one about Tarks it made me feel super proud that I am a fan of such a REAL club without foreign ownership without a foreign manager without hardly any foreign players
Super Ashley Barnes
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Super Ashley Barnes
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Re: Barnes interview in The Times
A dive is when a player goes down without being touched. That is different to exaggeration, which is what Barnes does very well