Chris wilder says…

Wilder is one of the best things to happen to football in years.

He's like a fresh of breath air.
 
I've just read that the referee in question was Tony Harrington, who bafflingly denied us a pen yesterday. So my sympathies are now swinging towards Wilder.
 
Generally speaking, I strive to be a positive guy and genuinely try and think the best of everyone. It’s a challenge sometimes, but I do try.

However, I am prepared to make an exception for Chris Wilder.

It’s the self-self-obsessed, self-righteously belligerent attitude that does it; that, and the face like a bulldog licking **** off a nettle. And the fact that he openly blames everyone and everything for whatever is going wrong in his life.

For all of these reasons (and more), Sandwichgate has lit up my life - it’s like Alan Partridge meets Monty Python, on steroids.

And he just keeps losing; and not just losing, they keep getting annihilated.

I would normally have real empathy for anyone struggling in the Premiership - there but for the grace of God - but I’m so enjoying seeing him looking around, with his squashed, angry face, trying to find someone new to blame as the next goal from the opposition sails into the net.

For me, he looks like the barman in a very low budget working men’s club, rather than the much-vaunted ‘Premier League Manager’. Behaves like one too.
 
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Generally speaking, I strive to be a positive guy and genuinely try and think the best of everyone. It’s a challenge sometimes, but I do try.

However, I am prepared to make an exception for Chris Wilder.

It’s the self-self-obsessed, self-righteous belligerent attitude that does it; that, and the face like a bulldog licking **** off a nettle. And the fact that he openly blames everyone and everything for whatever is going wrong in his life.

For all of these reasons (and more), Sandwichgate has lit up my life - it’s like Alan Partridge meets Monty Python, on steroids.

And he just keeps losing; and not just losing, they keep getting annihilated.

I would normally have real empathy for anyone struggling in the Premiership - there but for the grace of God - but I’m so enjoying seeing him looking around, with his squashed, angry face, trying to find someone new to blame as the next goal from the opposition sails into the net.

For me, he looks like the doorman from a very low budget working men’s club.

One of my mates works for BBC Tees and has met him often. When things were going well for him that first season with us, I asked him what Wilder was like expecting him to lather him with praise like the rest of us were. I was surprised when he said he was the most arrogant, rude and dislikable man he’s ever met. Not so much now.
 
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