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#EFL Championship
hendolish · 9 months
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jobe bellingham, the man you are 😮‍💨
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daydreaminroro · 9 months
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precious babyboy🫶🏻
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ferraripoolfc · 3 months
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WHAT A HAPPY DAY FOR US LIVERPOOL FANS!!!
Liverpool beat Chelsea 0-1 with an amazing goal by Liverpool captain Virgil Van Dijk at the 118th minute!! An amazing bounce back from the Dutch man himself with his first goal being ruled offside but later coming back with the winner!! Van Dijk was also chosen for MOTM for his phenomenal performance! Even with Ryan Grevnberch being subbed off due to injury all players still gave it their all! A big congratulations to all youngers who debuted and youngers who played their first final today leaving with their first professional trophy/medal!
Youngers!
-Bobby Clark
- Conor Bradley
-James McConnell
-Jayden Danns
- Jarell Quansah
Congratulations Reds this is the first trophy of the season and a good “Thank You” to Jurgen Klopp with this being his last season as the Liverpool Gaffer.
Virgil with the same energy in 2024 & 2022
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fitfootballers · 11 months
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Harry Winks 🔥
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raphoupix · 2 months
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Aaron Ramsey - Wales
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tracksuitlesbian · 30 days
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Watching Leeds United try and get promoted
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passperspective · 7 months
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Sheffield Wednesday, Gone by Friday?
Thai businessman and owner of EFL Championship club Sheffield Wednesday, Dejphon Chansiri, is causing quite a stir within the team and community. He has appealed to supporters to donate £2 million in order to prevent financial fines and a transfer restriction on the team. 
To quote, “If 20,000 people gave £100, then it's £2 million, and it’s clear.”
Following this, in an interview with the Sheffield Star, Chansiri stated that staff and players might not receive payment as well due to the current hardship or “cash-flow issues”.
However, the Sheffield Wednesday owner has made fast enemies with the community, in an attempt to convince fans to donate, he declared “If you don’t want to save your club, then don’t call yourselves the owners and me the custodian”
Following an incident in the previous month, Chansiri took aim at Wednesday supporters, stating he was halting funding the team because of the unjust treatment he had gotten from the supporters, “I am not willing to inject more money while I am being treated unfairly by those fans.”
He defended himself saying the following, "You do not understand how important this club is to me and my family. I have been here nine years and it is a part of my life." This whole situation has caused severe unrest at the club.
As of now, the future of Sheffield Wednesday is up in the air. Debts are to be paid ideally by November 10th.
Do you think a resolution can be found in time?
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stuartarmstrong · 8 months
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Stuart Armstrong after receiving the Man of the Match award v Stoke City 03.10.23 | Sky Bet Championship | photo by Matt Watson
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sl0wdiver · 1 year
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The lord giveth (Spurs beat Chelsea 2-0) and the lord taketh away (United 2-0 up against Newcastle)
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wallpapers4screen · 1 year
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Download wallpapers Sheffield United glossy logo, 4K, red football background, EFL Championship, soccer, english football club, Sheffield United emblem, Sheffield United FC, football, sports logo, Sheffield United logo, Sheffield United for desktop free
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ziddlediddle · 10 days
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WE GOIN' WEMBLEYYYYY BABEYYYYY
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oscarkisembo25 · 21 days
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Oops which town is this?!🤯... the premier league was the target but boy did they jump gun👏🏽
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raphoupix · 10 months
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Harry Winks
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tracksuitlesbian · 10 days
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Let's do the damn thing!
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ultrafox1963 · 22 days
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King vacates throne after 17 years as a professional
The news that Andy King, one of the most distinguished players in Leicester City's history, is to retire as a player at the end of the current season, came as little surprise to members of the Blue Army.
Currently at Bristol City, the club of his boyhood affections, the 35-year-old Wales midfielder has made just 14 league appearances during the current campaign and it was clear he did not feature in the future plans of boss Liam Manning.
Fans and former managers alike have been quick to pay online tributes to a player whose remarkable achievements during his time at Leicester lifted him to legend status.
After being released from Chelsea’s academy at the age of 15, King found another route into professional football at what was then the Walkers Stadium. To say he made the most of that opportunity would be a huge understatement.
The first signs that his career would be far from the ordinary came when he helped City lift the Premier Academy League title in 2007, beating a Sunderland team that itself fielded several future Premier stars, including Jordan Henderson, who himself would enjoy a notable career with Liverpool and England.
At that time, few believed that the senior crown would ever join its junior counterpart in the Foxes’ trophy cabinet, particularly when City’s first team were relegated to League One the following year.  By that time, King had progressed into the senior squad, but made a limited impact during a tumultuous and troubled campaign.
However, under the auspices of new manager Nigel Pearson, King was able to play a key role in City’s revival, gaining a regular berth in a side which swept to the League One title at the first time of asking, and maintained its momentum after its return to the Championship. During this time, he also gained the first of his 50 caps for Wales, the country of his grandfather’s birth.
Despite Pearson’s departure in summer 2010, following a particularly cruel playoff exit at Cardiff, King’s progress continued under Sven-Goran Eriksson, in a campaign which saw him finish as City’s top scorer and earn a place in the Championship team of the season. However, the impact of a rapid turnover of players during this period eventually told on both the team and King himself, and a string of indifferent results in 2011-12 heralded the end of the Eriksson era at City.
Even Pearson’s return to Leicester could not stop King’s career from entering a prolonged period of stagnation, which was a contributory factor towards two further failed promotion campaigns.  By the time City finally returned to the top flight in 2014, he was no longer a regular first-team starter, though the demands of a gruelling season ensured he still played a key role within the squad.
Many media pundits, together with a section of City’s own fanbase, were less than convinced that the team as a whole, and King in particular, would be able to withstand the rigours of Premier League football.  Indeed, for the first three-quarters of the 2014-15 season, neither team nor player did much to dispel such doubts.
But a switch to a three-man midfield, reputedly at the insistence of veteran Argentine signing Esteban Cambiasso, helped to bring a dramatic improvement in form.  King rediscovered the goal touch which had appeared to desert him, and his late winner against West Ham, coupled with another strike against Swansea in the following home match, helped to provide the impetus for one of the most improbable escapes from relegation in Premier League history.
This proved to be merely the opening chapter for one of the most incredible fairytales in the history of sport, with City making light of the departures of both Cambiasso and Pearson to launch an unlikely - and ultimately successful - bid for the title. 
Although King often played second fiddle to the midfield duo of Danny Drinkwater and the hitherto-unheralded N’Golo Kanté, his deployment as an auxiliary midfielder to protect crucial leads during the closing stages of many City victories throughout this heroic campaign, proved one of many masterstrokes by the maestro Claudio Ranieri. 
King thus became the first (and to date, the only) player in the Premier League era to win league winners’ medals at each of the top three levels. His goal against Everton in the final home game of the Premier title season provided particular delight for the City faithful.
He managed to continue this success at international level that summer, helping Wales to reach the semi-finals of the European Championships for the first time.
However, although he featured in the Foxes' run to the Champions League quarter-finals the following season, his career suffered a distinct downturn in the subsequent years. Increasingly marginalised at Leicester, King endured a series of unsuccessful loan spells at various clubs before finally leaving the King Power Stadium in 2020, though he still managed to set a record (later surpassed by Kasper Schmeichel) as the City player with the most international appearances.
But just as it appeared King would be lost to the game, Bristol City offered him the opportunity - which he eagerly took - to rebuild his career and realise further childhood ambitions. As a consequence, during the past three seasons, he has played a significant role in the consolidation of the Robins' status as a Championship club.
As he brings down the curtain on a distinguished playing career, King can look back with pride on his numerous achievements during the past 17 years. Not only has he lived the dream, he has played a full and active part in bringing others to life.
Many in the game, whether fans or colleagues, will wish him well in whatever he chooses to do in the future.
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kennywashere00 · 2 months
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2 fabio carvahlo goals starboy is so back
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