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"He’s the sort of player you hate if he plays against you but wish with every bit of your soul he was in your team"
KTBFFHSWE 10 years ago Edited
Chelsea FC, Sweden 52 2449

Diego Costa, left, clashed with Liverpool's Jordan Henderson in the tunnel after last week's 1-1 draw at Anfield. Photograph: Carl

Perhaps the only surprising thing about the news Diego Costa and Jordan Henderson were involved in a tunnel bust-up after the first leg of the Capital One Cup semi-final
was that it had not happened sooner. The tension on the pitch had been
stewing nicely, the pair going nose-to-nose at one point like a pair of
posturing boxers at a weigh-in, all bravado and
my-dad-could-beat-up-your-dad, but waiting until later to take swings at
each other. While the details of the set-to did not exactly sound like
the most heinously violent of all time, with some pushing and shoving
but no punches thrown, that hardly seems to matter.

The point is that the pair were continuing the fine tradition of the
fixture, an uncommon rivalry full of needle that developed over those
years when Liverpool and Chelsea seemed to play each other every second
week, as the teams and supporters got to know then grew to despise each other.
Costa seems to be the perfect man to continue this tradition. He is
6ft 2in of walking aggro, a man just as ripe for a wind-up as he is
likely to do the winding. He’s the sort of player you hate if he plays
against you but wish with every bit of your soul he was in your team,
and not just because he is so good. Graeme Souness commented last week
that Arsenal were a team of “son in laws”, nice young men among whom
nary a rascal is to be found, and he did not mean it as a compliment.
Costa is the rascal’s rascal, poking and prodding and pushing and
generally just being an enormously entertaining bastard – but if he was
in your team, he would be your bastard.

“Diego Costa says he never takes his work home with him. Which is probably a good thing,” wrote Sid Lowe
of the Brazilian-Spaniard when he was at Atlético Madrid. “If he did,
he might walk through the door, goad the dog with a stick,
surreptitiously elbow his wife out of the way on the stairs, shrug his
shoulders innocently as she lay in a crumpled heap at the bottom and
whisper insults to his children, look the other way and whistle when
they burst into tears.”

Henderson is by no means the first player to attempt a square-go in
the tunnel with our man. A couple of years ago the Real Betis defender
Antonio Amaya made a rick that resulted in a goal for Costa, for which
he was extremely grateful, it seems. “He was shouting and thanking me
for the gift,” Amaya said. “If my team-mates had not held me back, I
would have killed him. That shows what kind of person he is: he has no
heart and no shame.” Damien Perquis, one of those team-mates, offered
the profound understatement: “Costa is a difficult player to put up
with.”

Quite so. He is a pest, an annoyance, the sort of player who
irritates you even before he scores a goal, which he has already done 17
times in 19 league starts this season. He is the sort of player whose
joy at scoring seems to be amplified by irking his opponents, and like
Jimmy “The Gent” Conway, you get the impression he roots for the bad
guys in the movies. His coach at Valladolid, José Luis Mendilibar, said
Costa had that “mala leche”, which translates as bad milk, but basically means an “edge, nastiness”.
Costa has become such a target that Fenerbahce’s Bruno Alves, the
Portuguese bruiser never shy of a robust challenge himself, laid a
two-foot reducer on him in a pre-season friendly, but this was only
after Costa had scored a quite brilliant solo goal, barrelling through
the Turkish defence like the boulder from Indiana Jones and finishing
unerringly. It was Costa in a nutshell.

Costa is now such a part of the Chelsea-Liverpool enmity the Kop had a
new song about him in the first leg last week – one that was not
especially complimentary about his appearance – but you wonder why they
bothered. If you try to rile him, it seems he will score, give you a
thump, engineer a sending-off, or possibly all three; whatever, it
probably is not going to end well for you.

Of course he probably could not get away with any of this if he was
not so good, but he very much is, and it’s the way he plays that makes
him most entertaining. He is rough in both senses of the word, and while
he has intelligence, a neat touch and scalpel-like accuracy in his
finishing, he does not have a massive amount of finesse but a largely
visceral, unpolished style that makes him stand out in a world where
technical proficiency is king.

“I wasn’t coached,” he said this season. “I think when you are
developed at an academy it shapes you and gives you a certain education.
You need discipline, so there is a downside of never having a formal
education, but there’s also advantages; you learn about the tricks of
the game quicker, and you become smarter by playing on the streets
against older guys.”

“Nobody gave Costa anything for free,” José Mourinho said after
signing him from Atlético in the summer. “He has always had to fight a
lot … he is not afraid of anything; he is ready for everything.”
Call him smart, call him dirty, call him a cheat. Diego Costa
is the sort of footballer we should all want to watch, hugely talented,
aggravation incarnate and absolutely perfect for Chelsea v Liverpool.

-http://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2015/jan/26/diego-costa-rascal-chelsea-liverpool-capital-one-cup-nick-miller

An interesting article from the Guardian about Costa. As the title suggest, and I believe it to be true, he's a great access for Chelsea but a pain in the ass for many other teams. What are your thoughts about him after todays Liverpool clash in the FA cup, in where he played rough even compared to his usual standards?

0
  • History
Showing previous versions of this text.

Diego Costa, left, clashed with Liverpool's Jordan Henderson in the
tunnel after last week's 1-1 draw at Anfield. Photograph: Carl
Recine/Action Images

Perhaps the only surprising thing about the news Diego Costa and Jordan Henderson were involved in a tunnel bust-up after the first leg of the Capital One Cup semi-final
was that it had not happened sooner. The tension on the pitch had been
stewing nicely, the pair going nose-to-nose at one point like a pair of
posturing boxers at a weigh-in, all bravado and
my-dad-could-beat-up-your-dad, but waiting until later to take swings at
each other. While the details of the set-to did not exactly sound like
the most heinously violent of all time, with some pushing and shoving
but no punches thrown, that hardly seems to matter.

The point is that the pair were continuing the fine tradition of the
fixture, an uncommon rivalry full of needle that developed over those
years when Liverpool and Chelsea seemed to play each other every second
week, as the teams and supporters got to know then grew to despise each other.

Costa seems to be the perfect man to continue this tradition. He is
6ft 2in of walking aggro, a man just as ripe for a wind-up as he is
likely to do the winding. He’s the sort of player you hate if he plays
against you but wish with every bit of your soul he was in your team,
and not just because he is so good. Graeme Souness commented last week
that Arsenal were a team of “son in laws”, nice young men among whom
nary a rascal is to be found, and he did not mean it as a compliment.
Costa is the rascal’s rascal, poking and prodding and pushing and
generally just being an enormously entertaining bastard – but if he was
in your team, he would be your bastard.

“Diego Costa says he never takes his work home with him. Which is probably a good thing,” wrote Sid Lowe
of the Brazilian-Spaniard when he was at Atlético Madrid. “If he did,
he might walk through the door, goad the dog with a stick,
surreptitiously elbow his wife out of the way on the stairs, shrug his
shoulders innocently as she lay in a crumpled heap at the bottom and
whisper insults to his children, look the other way and whistle when
they burst into tears.”

Henderson is by no means the first player to attempt a square-go in
the tunnel with our man. A couple of years ago the Real Betis defender
Antonio Amaya made a rick that resulted in a goal for Costa, for which
he was extremely grateful, it seems. “He was shouting and thanking me
for the gift,” Amaya said. “If my team-mates had not held me back, I
would have killed him. That shows what kind of person he is: he has no
heart and no shame.” Damien Perquis, one of those team-mates, offered
the profound understatement: “Costa is a difficult player to put up
with.”

Quite so. He is a pest, an annoyance, the sort of player who
irritates you even before he scores a goal, which he has already done 17
times in 19 league starts this season. He is the sort of player whose
joy at scoring seems to be amplified by irking his opponents, and like
Jimmy “The Gent” Conway, you get the impression he roots for the bad
guys in the movies. His coach at Valladolid, José Luis Mendilibar, said
Costa had that “mala leche”, which translates as bad milk, but basically means an “edge, nastiness”.

Costa has become such a target that Fenerbahce’s Bruno Alves, the
Portuguese bruiser never shy of a robust challenge himself, laid a
two-foot reducer on him in a pre-season friendly, but this was only
after Costa had scored a quite brilliant solo goal, barrelling through
the Turkish defence like the boulder from Indiana Jones and finishing
unerringly. It was Costa in a nutshell.

Costa is now such a part of the Chelsea-Liverpool enmity the Kop had a
new song about him in the first leg last week – one that was not
especially complimentary about his appearance – but you wonder why they
bothered. If you try to rile him, it seems he will score, give you a
thump, engineer a sending-off, or possibly all three; whatever, it
probably is not going to end well for you.

Of course he probably could not get away with any of this if he was
not so good, but he very much is, and it’s the way he plays that makes
him most entertaining. He is rough in both senses of the word, and while
he has intelligence, a neat touch and scalpel-like accuracy in his
finishing, he does not have a massive amount of finesse but a largely
visceral, unpolished style that makes him stand out in a world where
technical proficiency is king.

“I wasn’t coached,” he said this season. “I think when you are
developed at an academy it shapes you and gives you a certain education.
You need discipline, so there is a downside of never having a formal
education, but there’s also advantages; you learn about the tricks of
the game quicker, and you become smarter by playing on the streets
against older guys.”

“Nobody gave Costa anything for free,” José Mourinho said after
signing him from Atlético in the summer. “He has always had to fight a
lot … he is not afraid of anything; he is ready for everything.”

Call him smart, call him dirty, call him a cheat. Diego Costa
is the sort of footballer we should all want to watch, hugely talented,
aggravation incarnate and absolutely perfect for Chelsea v Liverpool.

-http://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2015/jan/26/diego-costa-rascal-chelsea-liverpool-capital-one-cup-nick-miller

An interesting article from the Guardian about Costa. As the title suggest, and I believe it to be true, he's a great access for Chelsea but a pain in the ass for many other teams. What are your thoughts about him after todays Liverpool clash in the FA cup, in where he played rough even compared to his usual standards?

Comments
KTBFFHSWE 10 years ago Edited
Chelsea FC, Sweden 52 2449

@quicksy Excellent videos above. However, it seems Costa is mostly a victim in the first video so it's funny that you upload it as evidence that he plays dirty. In general, he does play quite dirty. He's a rough, unpolished player as said before. But each game he receives more foul play than he gives out.

0
  • History
Showing previous versions of this text.

Excellent videos above. However, it seems Costa is mostly a victim in the first video so it's funny that you upload it as evidence that he plays dirty. In general, he does play quite dirty. He's a rough, unpolished player as said before. But each game he receives more foul play than he gives out.

quikzyyy 10 years ago
Arsenal 429 9010

Yea, he never forget.

You may not be interested but he was and still is dirty player.
Laughing to face right in front of team mate? Does respect telling you anything?

" Why Zabaleta is grabbing him by the neck after very heavy tackle ? " And why is Costa already holding Zabaleta's neck?

0:31 victim for provoking?
0:50 dying in pain, and whoa, no no card for opponent, and i'm fit again!
1:10 what a victim, opponent should be banned for 10 years.
1:40 victim again and so on...

What do you expect others players to do when you provoke them? Try to throw stone to a Pit bull, or step him on the tail and wait what he will do. If he will send you kiss back again.

2
Dynastian98 10 years ago Edited
Real Madrid 483 7140

English FA: "Diego Costa has been charged by The FA for violent conduct following an on-field incident which was not seen by the match officials but caught on video. The player has until 6pm on Thursday 29 January 2015 to respond to the charge."

Mourinho has called Costa's stomps "absolutely accidental". Thierry Henry has stated, "You can clearly see he meant that".

0
  • History
Showing previous versions of this text.

English FA: "Diego Costa has been charged by The FA for violent conduct following an on-field incident which was not seen by the match officials but caught on video. The player has until 6pm on Thursday 29 January 2015 to respond to the charge."

Mourinho has called Costa's stomps "absolutely accidental". Thierry Henry has stated, "You can clearly see he meant that".

Marcus2011 10 years ago
Chelsea FC, England 277 6501

So what if he laughed ? who knows why he choose that player to do it to . And does that give right to Howard to come and toss Costa around ? so Childish from Howard . He should have got red .

LOL Maate

Here is a video , pause it on 3rd second and see who put hands on who first .

"Try to throw stone to a Pit bull" exactly , in those incidents pit bull was Costa and stone throwers were others who later acted as victims .

And again why should I care what player he was in Atletico ? He is at Chelsea now .

About Skrtel like I said , I wanted to stay mute but now I must say . Watch the video and see Skrtel was raising his studs towards Costa on purpose as Costa was trying to jump over . Nah i am not convinced about this incident .

2
Jimbet 10 years ago
Arsenal, Malaysia 12 1292

Dirty player but hoping he would stop playing dirty because he got so much talent. What a waste. :l

0
Marcus2011 10 years ago
Chelsea FC, England 277 6501

" Mourinho has called Costa's stomps "absolutely accidental" . "

He did not say which one was accidental . That part he left for media to brag about and blow it out of proportions .

0
tiki_taka 10 years ago
Barcelona, France 367 9768

I dont know if people knows this sort of guys who need to be angry to perform better, in Tennis you had Mc Enroe, the more he was winding up, the harder it became for his opponents, some get frustrated and loose their control on the game, and others need to get winded or frustrated to show up their extra powers...

Thats remind me of Dragon Ball Z, Costa is near to become a super Sayan :D....


I hate arrogance on the pitch more than pure banter or what you call '' dirty '' i call it provocation...

I will just make people notice that Costa shake the hands of his rivals at the end of each game, thats part of his game and im sure he could be a nice guy outside the pitch...

6
Dynastian98 10 years ago
Real Madrid 483 7140

No one doubts Costa's actions outside of the pitch. He is a nice person. It's his actions on the pitch that concerns all.

0
Dynastian98 10 years ago Edited
Real Madrid 483 7140

Mourinho: "There is a campaign on the television with a certain pundit that is saying Diego Costa 'crimes.' This guy must be nuts."

Meanwhile, FA: "Following an Independent Regulatory Commission hearing, Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has been fined £25,000"

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  • History
Showing previous versions of this text.

Mourinho: "There is a campaign on the television with a certain pundit that is saying Diego Costa 'crimes.' This guy must be nuts."
Meanwhile, FA: "Following an Independent Regulatory Commission hearing, Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has been fined £25,000"

JuanMata10 10 years ago Edited
Chelsea, Austria 17 1696

"The player has until 6pm on Thursday 29 January 2015 to respond to the charge."

The deadline is pretty short-dated. Seems like the FA is trying to do everything to get him banned for the ManCity fixture on saturday. Why am I not surprised?

As for the others blaming Costa.. I agree his playing style is pretty dirty, but why is no one talking about Henderson or Lucas who were kicking our players all the time in the two fixtures? Why is no one mentioning Balotelli trying to take Matic down like a ******* wrestler? Or Skrtel, who behaved as bad as Costa did? Right, because they are not Chelsea players. Mourinho's statements are correct, there clearly is a campaign against us. Everywhere. On every football forum or on facebook/twitter etc. people are constantly bashing our club, regardless of what we do. We're playing the best football in England throughout the whole season, but when our approach is quite defensive for one game every Chelsea hater crawls out of his cave and is basically ready to talk **** about us. You know what I'm talking about Yet, when for example Atletico plays like this, everyone says: "Atletico is so ******* good" or "Diego Simeone is a genius". Bunch of hypocrites.

2
  • History
Showing previous versions of this text.

"The player has until 6pm on Thursday 29 January 2015 to respond to the charge."

The deadline is pretty short-dated. Seems like the FA is trying to do everything to get him banned for the ManCity fixture on saturday. Why am I not surprised?

As for the others blaming Costa.. I agree his playing style is pretty dirty, but why is no one talking about Henderson or Lucas who were kicking our players all the time in the two fixtures? Why is no one mentioning Balotelli trying to take Matic down like a fucking wrestler? Or Skrtel, who behaved as bad as Costa did? Right, because they are not Chelsea players. Mourinho's statements are correct, there clearly is a campaign against us. Everywhere. On every football forum or on facebook/twitter etc. people are constantly bashing our club, regardless of what we do. We're playing the best football in England throughout the whole season, but when our approach is quite defensive for one game every Chelsea hater crawls out of his cave and is basically ready to talk shit about us. You know what I'm talking about Yet, when for example Atletico plays like this, everyone says: "Atletico is so fucking good" or "Diego Simeone is a genius". Bunch of hypocrites.

Dynastian98 10 years ago Edited
Real Madrid 483 7140

@Juan

Are you blind to the Atletico hatred all over Spain? Almost every big team hates them. Their suffocating football is difficult to break down, and on top of that they try to break the legs of every Real Madrid and Barcelona player they can see. I'm watching the Barca - Atleti game right now, and you won't believe some of the challenges Atletico players are making right now.

People hate on Costa and Mou because they have a reputation. Costa is already known as an extremely dirty player in Spain, and his reputation has carried on to England. Mourinho has always been an outspoken man, and some of his comments are deserving of fines due to a breaching of rules, and the media takes advantage of that and amplifies everything he says. Note that Wenger did not get fined for pushing Mourinho, but Jose would've been guaranteed a fine if it was him who pushed Arsene. This is because of his reputation of being a little troublemaker, and the media jumps on things like that. It's an ironic double standard that is held in England. Blame the nation's media. If Jose would be fined for shoving an opposition manager, then Arsene should be as well. F**king double standards.

PS. If it isn't clear, I agree with you. There is an anti-Chelsea attitude in England, but I have disliked Costa from his Rayo Vallecano days, so don't think that I hate Costa because he plays for Chelsea. I've been talking sh*t about him for many years now.

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  • History
Showing previous versions of this text.

@Juan

Are you blind to the Atletico hatred all over Spain? Almost every big team hates them. Their suffocating football is difficult to break down, and on top of that they try to break the legs of every Real Madrid and Barcelona player they can see. I'm watching the Barca - Atleti game right now, and you won't believe some of the challenges Atletico players are making right now.

People hate on Costa and Mou because they have a reputation. Costa is already known as an extremely dirty player in Spain, and his reputation has carried on to England. Mourinho has always been an outspoken man, and some of his comments are deserving of fines due to a breaching of rules, and the media takes advantage of that and amplifies everything he says. Note that Wenger did not get fined for pushing Mourinho, but Jose would've been guaranteed a fine if it was him who pushed Arsene. This is because of his reputation of being a little troublemaker, and the media jump on things like that.

quikzyyy 10 years ago
Arsenal 429 9010

Yea Henderson and Lucas both deserved red cards I agree with that. Well if you're defender and opponent striker is playing dirty, you can't expect defender to be nice on him.

And yea, every football fan in this world is wrong, except Chelsea's and Mourinho. If everyone, everywhere is against your favourite club, don't you think that they have reason?

0
Marcus2011 10 years ago
Chelsea FC, England 277 6501

F*ck FA ! F*ck them bastards ! All these years I have been chelsea fan I have never witnessed not once even before Abram came to club , when Chelsea was judged properly by FA when playing against big club after the match . This bastards obviously don't want to see EPL race to end so early that is why they want to weaken us . So pissed about this . It took months before they made decision about Suarez and ivanovic incident but when it came to Chelsea's Costa they took about 20 hours . What about those bloody Lucas , Skrtel and Henderson who were scum through two fixtures !

0
KTBFFHSWE 10 years ago
Chelsea FC, Sweden 52 2449

Totally agree with Marcus. Quikzyyy, you're always trying to hate on Chelsea, in every thread regardless the subject. "If everyone, everywhere is against your favorite club, don't you think that they have reason?" Please elaborate? What could those reasons possibly be? What are your reasons? Because you're an obvious Chelsea hater. Not trying to start a fight here because I really don't care of who likes Chelsea or not. Just curious in your point of view regarding it.

0
JuanMata10 10 years ago Edited
Chelsea, Austria 17 1696

@Dynastian: I'm not on spanish forums, so I basically don't know what they think about Atletico. On english forums, I see them being respected, also by you and @tiki. You clearly dislike them, but you respect them. That's the difference.. our rival teams' fans don't respect us. I think I've never seen anybody on Footyroom yet, who defended Chelsea (apart from Chelsea fans, obviously), all we get is hate. As for you disliking Costa.. It's okay that you hate him, I've got no problem with that, but some people on this website are so full of hatred for our club that they jump on Chelsea players all the time, while they simply don't care when players of other clubs do something similar or even worse. That's what grinds my gears.

@quikzyyy:* "*Well if you're defender and opponent striker is playing dirty, you can't expect defender to be nice on him."

Great piece of argumentation there. It's 100 % Costa's fault, right? Right? Wrong. As far as I'm concerned at least two people have to be involved in a fight. From minute one, both Skrtel's and Costa's intention was to annoy the other one. It all started when Spain played Slovakia last year, it was love at first sight. Since then, they've played each other three times, I think, and it was the same story everytime. I'm sure you remember as you are from Slovakia yourself.

Also, I've never said that everyone else was wrong and that only Mourinho is always right, but on this topic, he clearly is. But you only see, what you want to see, I guess. Oh, and please tell me the reason, why "everyone, everywhere" hates us. And don't say it's because we play dirty.. the hate has always been there, even before Costa played for us.. :-)

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  • History
Showing previous versions of this text.

@Dynastian: I'm not on spanish forums, so I basically don't know what they think about Atletico. On english forums, I see them being respected, also by you and @tiki. You clearly dislike them, but you respect them. That's the difference.. our rival teams' fans don't respect us. I think I've never seen anybody on Footyroom yet, who defended Chelsea (apart from Chelsea fans, obviously), all we get is hate. As for you disliking Costa.. It's okay that you hate him, I've got no problem with that, but some people on this website are so full of hatred for our club that they jump on Chelsea players all the time, while they simply don't care when players of other clubs do something similar or even worse. That's what grinds my gears.

@quikzyyy:* "*Well if you're defender and opponent striker is playing dirty, you can't expect defender to be nice on him."

Great piece of argumentation there. It's 100 % Costa's fault, right? Right? Wrong. As far as I'm concerned at least two people have to be involved in a fight. From minute one, both Skrtel's and Costa's intention was to annoy the other one. It all started when Spain played Slovakia last year, it was love at first sight. Since then, they've played each other three times, I think, and it was the same story everytime. I'm sure you remember as you are from Slovakia yourself.

Also, I've never said that everyone else was wrong and that only Mourinho is always right, but on this topic, he clearly is. But you only see, what you want to see, I guess. Oh, and please tell me the reason, why "everyone, everywhere" hates us. And don't say it's because we play dirty.. the hate has always been there, even before Costa played for us.. :-)

raimondo90 10 years ago
Valencia, Argentina 89 2492

Juan, everyone hates chelsea jsut like everyone hates barcelona, City, Real, Arsenal and so on. Hate comes from being on top. As for the henderson, skrtel and lucas im sure they arent being punished because they dont do takles or cause confrontations every single game they play. There is a reason why Costa already had accumulated 5 yellow cards and served a suspension.

There is no conspiracy against Chelsea as Mou would want everyone to believe. Every time his team underperform its due to the referee but never due to the team, or so thats what mou claims.

Also chelsea fans may feel attacked due to the fact that normal its the very same fans bragging about being on top and at the same time making fun of the other fans.

Anyways, im glad costa is probably getting punished for his dirtyness. Before or after the City game is all the same to me.

2
Marcus2011 10 years ago
Chelsea FC, England 277 6501

F*ck them they gave him 3 match ban ! I am waiting for Lucas and Skrtel and Henderson punishments ?

"Every time his team underperform its due to the referee but never due to the team, or so thats what mou claims. "

What a bias view ! Every time ? Are you sure ? Show me those times when Mourinho blamed referee unjustifiably ? He did it recently and apologized right after the match to referee and still media made a big deal out of it .

" Also chelsea fans may feel attacked due to the fact that normal its the very same fans bragging about being on top and at the same time making fun of the other fans."

which club does not have those type of fans ? anyways I am done here it is all childish talk . You don't watch Chelsea matches so stop with this made up crap .

@quikzy

Englighthen us what are the those reasons to hate Chelsea , because they change so often depending on how or what Chelsea is doing . We don't need other clubs to stop hate us , we want simple football respect .

0
RealMadrid17 10 years ago
Real Madrid 20 755

I don't wish with every bit of my soul he played for Real. But still what Cech says is relatively true

0
KTBFFHSWE 10 years ago
Chelsea FC, Sweden 52 2449

Still curious to why "everyone, everywhere" hates Chelsea. Please answer. This will be fun!

0
nandaYNWA 10 years ago Edited
Liverpool, Australia 87 946

I swear, all the chelsea fans are blinded by their own biased opinions. sometimes you just need to put your love for your club aside and admit that what the player did was wrong, and that they were punished fairly.

ill admit that lucas and henderson deserved to be punished. But like it was said, theyre not the ones getting into fights and doing outrageous things on the pitch week in week out.

6
  • History
Showing previous versions of this text.

I swear, all the chelsea fans are blinded by their own biased opinions. sometimes you just need to put your love for your club aside and admit that what the player did was wrong, and that they were punished fairly.

ill admit that lucas and henderson deserved to be punished. But like it was said, theyre not the ones getting into fights and doing outrageous things on the pitch week in week out.