Jump to content

johnnyc13

Banned
  • Posts

    282
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by johnnyc13

  1. @RangersFCTrust: The RST has submitted a complaint to the Independent Press Standards Organisation following a clear breach of Editors Code by Jim Spence. Tedi
  2. Rangers cheated, then they died, sevco bought their assets and we have been laughing at the scummy c***s ever since.... The entire world knows it.. Cheating dead scum.. We are all Jim Spence
  3. Vicky and that little Muppet fivestars love to point and laugh at fans that complain to the PSO.. Should be along soon to laugh at the RST.. "No one likes us, we are going to cry like little c***s"
  4. Ill give fivestars no credit, he is lying little rat who deletes post and has several alias accounts who champions racists, homophobes and drug dealers, He is a c**t..
  5. Still clinging to that lie ya c**t... your heads gone fivestars have a lie down.. Edit: If you are going to edit something twice, at least get it correct so it won't make ya look like a raging wee ned that you are
  6. Proud of titles they cheated to win... sums that little cretin fivestars up..
  7. William Austin Nimmo Smith Level 5 are fully engaged to undermine the desire to strip titles. The last thing the football authorities want is a Judicial Review of the privately commissioned report. Despite what Stephen Kerr and one of the malleable Record hacks would have us believe, there are two mechanisms. A judicial review, as is the case with Mike Ashley’s petition to the Court of Session, contravenes the SFA’s articles of association, which deem that the highest court that clubs can appeal to is The Court of Arbitration for Sports. As we have seen with the approval of King, it’s possible to transgress one article on 41 occasions and still be deemed fit and proper at an SFA kangaroo court. Paul Murray was approved by the eleven member Professional Gaming Board. Regan,Ogilvie,McRae & Doncaster set up a meeting of eight members with only seven votes, knowing in advance that they would prevail. King’s approval was a shoddy back room deal. It’s also, incredibly, possible to be serving a suspended sentence for contempt of court, something The Record is studiously avoiding. A cynic might suggest that they don’t want you to know the facts. They have a history of misinformation. As Ashley’s counsel will point out, how can the SFA justify approving an individual who is under licence for three years on a three months prison sentence. King was convicted of contempt on 22 February 2013. King’s supporters point to the Court of Session ruling as proof that a court has deemed King ‘fit & proper.’ This is typical of how misinformed they are. As a former director of RFC plc, King had to apply for permission to be a director of a similarly named club. There is a five years moratorium on directors of a failed enterprise. This is to preclude a company going out of business one day leaving debts behind with the receivers, then setting up the following day. It was a Companies Act technicality. As we saw with LSE AIM, no NOMAD would represent a man with forty-one criminal convictions who is currently under licence. Ashley’s counsel will hammer this point home at The Court of Session on 4th February. Those who wish to add gravitas to the report by Mr Smith refer to him as Lord. However this is a misnomer.Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, commonly known as Law Lords, were appointed under the Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876 to the House of Lords of the United Kingdom in order to exercise its judicial functions, which included acting as the highest court of appeal for most domestic matters. To be appointed a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary under the 1876 Act, an individual was required to have been a practising barrister for a period of fifteen years or to have held a high judicial office. Two years experience as a judge in the Court of Appeal, High Court or Court of Session is sufficient to attain the title of Lord of Appeal in Ordinary. Mr Smith retired from the bench on 30th September 2009. The title Lord.ismerely a courtesy, and since he is not active, he is not a Lord of Appeal. Mr Smith’s report was so flawed that I can understand why successive Rangers administrations have refused to pay the £250,000 fine and costs. Campbell Ogilvie, who was compromised, went out of his way to mitigate his guilt in administrating EBT at Rangers. He refused to cooperate fully with Harper McLeod who were assigned to collate the pertinent information. Sandy Bryson came up with the‘imperfectly registered caveat’ which is a legal travesty. Any junior counsel would raze this nonsense to the ground. The following statement is the central plank of Mr Smith’s report: “Although the payments in this case were not themselves irregular and were not in breach of SPL or SFA Rules, the scale and extent of the proven contraventions of the disclosure rules require a substantial penalty to be imposed.” They were in breach of SPL and SFA rules as they were in breach of the laws of the land. As social taxes were not paid they were also in breach of UEFA rules. This report is fundamentally flawed. A judicial review would set it aside in a matter of months. As a shareholder in Rangers, Mike Ashley could challenge it. As someone who is hell-bent on exposing malfeasance at the SFA, this is one of the options he may choose to explore.
  8. At least fivestars is admitting he is on the wind up, you would worry for his sanity if he wasn't, poor wee fella...
  9. So the dead club made a few bad signings so the rest of the cheating is OK...
  10. That's why us internet Bampots have got to pull these cretins up on every lie they publish for the thick hoard like tedi there to lap up. Make no mistake between now and December the 2nd we will see cheating rangers apologist after apologist rolled out in the rags...
  11. “Lock them up and throw the key away,” The club I gave blood, sweat and tears for is dead. Whose fault is it? I don’t care. “All I care about is the people who brought Rangers to their knees are punished. Tax evasion is a crime, everyone knows that. If you don’t pay your taxes you go to jail. “It’s a white-collar crime that must have consequences so if HMRC are really serious about liquidation giving them the best chance to investigate why Rangers failed, I want to see it done properly. - Richard gough.
  12. "In fact, barring Darren O’Dea, who played a handful of games for Celtic" Richard Gough Darren O Dea played 70 times for Celtic winning two titles a Scottish FA cup and Scottish League cup and played in the Champions league. What is it with these stupid ***s.... Can they not help themselves lying or are they just like all the other ra peepul, are they just really really bad at maths? Or do ra peepul have bigger handfuls than the rest of us??
  13. THE LIST OF RANGERS EBT PAYMENTS Alan Hutton, £364,000: Made debut in 2002 and played 94 games, before £9million move to Spurs. Alex McLeish, £1.7million: Managed Rangers from 2001-06. Alex Rae, £569,000: Midfielder arrived at Ibrox in 2004 and spent two years there. Played 34 games. Andrei Kanchelskis, £145,000: Russian winger arrived from Fiorentina in 1998 for £5.5million. Andrew Dickson, £33,000: Head of football administration since 2003. Previously financial controller at Ibrox. Arthur Numan, £510,000: Dutch full-back arrived at Rangers from PSV Eindhoven in 1998 for £4.5million. Played 118 times. Barry Ferguson, £2.5million: Former youth player who became Rangers captain. Played at Ibrox from 1996-2003 and 2005-09. Bert Konterman, £300,000: Dutch defender signed by Dick Advocaat for £4.5million in 2000. Bert Van Lingen, £65,000: Assistant manager under Dick Advocaat from 1998 to 2002. Billy Dodds, £190,000: Arrived in a £1.5million deal from Dundee United in 1999. Bob Malcolm, £125,000: Central defender started his career with Rangers in 1997. Played 88 games. Left for Derby County in 2006. Carlos Cuellar, £448,255: Spanish centre-half arrived from Osasuna in £2.37million deal in 2007. Moved to Aston Villa in 2008. Chris Burke, £55,000: Started career at Rangers, playing 96 games from 2002 to 2009. Left for Cardiff City. Christian Nerlinger, £1.8million: German midfielder signed from Borrusia Dortmund in 2001 and left in 2004. Claudio Caniggia, £1million: Argentinian signed from Dundee for £1million in 2001. Craig Moore, £1.1million: Australian centre-half played more than 90 games from 1994-98. Returned in 1999 and stayed until 2005. Dado Prso, £1.9million: Croatian striker was free transfer in 2004. Left for Dinamo Zagreb in 2007. Dan Eggen, £68,000: Norwegian central defender signed in 2003 from Spanish club Alaves. Sir David Murray, £6.3million: Owned club from 1988-2011, during which Rangers lifted 15 titles and 26 cups. Sold shares to Craig Whyte for £1. Dick Advocaat, £1.5million: Rangers manager from 1998-2002. Spent almost £74million to win five trophies, including two titles. Douglas Odam, £119,000: Finance director for 15 years. Left in 2003 to take up a role within 
Sir David Murray’s business empire. Egil Ostenstad, £370,000: Norwegian forward signed from Blackburn on free transfer in 2003. Federico Nieto, £24,500: Argentine striker joined on loan deal in 2005 from Almagro. Scored once in three matches. Gavin Rae, £376,000: Midfielder signed from Dundee in 2004 for a fee of £250,000. Moved to Cardiff in 2007. George Adams, £30,000: Head of youth development between 2003-05. Graeme Souness, £30,000: Player-manager from 1986-91. Gregory Vignal, £173,000: French defender joined on loan from Liverpool in 2004. Moved to Portsmouth in 2005. Ian McGuinness, £25,400: Club doctor sacked after Paul Le Guen left. Ian Murray, £95,000: Midfielder was free transfer from Hibernian in 2006. Left in 2007. Jan Wouters, £285,000: Former Dutch midfielder joined as a coach under Dick Advocaat, then Alex McLeish. Left in 2006. Jean-Alain Boumsong, £630,000: French centre-half joined in 2004 on free transfer. Moved to for Newcastle for £8million. Jerome Bonnissel, £48,000: French left-back arrived in 2003 from Bordeaux. Joel Le Hir, £28,275: Paul Le Guen-appointed physiotherapist from 2006 to 2007. John Greig £40,000: Played for club from 1961-78. Managed Rangers from 1978 to 1983. Later became a director. John McClelland, £225,000: Appointed a director in 2000. Chairman from 2002 to 2004. Resigned last year. Julien Rodriguez, £638,000: French centre-half signed from Monaco in 2005 for £1million. Left for Marseille in 2007. Kevin Muscat, £1million: Australian defender joined from Wolves in 2002 on free transfer. Joined Millwall in 2003. Kris Boyd, £215,000: Signed from Kilmarnock in 2006 for £500,000. Left in 2010. Libor Sionko, £178,000: Czech midfielder signed from Austria Vienna in 2006. Played 18 matches before signing Copenhagen in 2007. Lorenzo Amoruso, £639,000: Italian defender signed from Fiorentina for £4million in 1997. Moved to Blackburn Rovers for £1.4million in 2003. Martin Bain, £249,000: Chief executive of Rangers from 2005 to 2011. Resigned after Murray sold club to Whyte. Marvin Andrews, £316,025: Centre-half from Trinidad and Tobago joined from Livingston in 2004. Michael Ball, £1.4million: Left-back signed from Everton in 2001 for £6.5million. Moved to PSV Eindhoven in 2005. Michael Mols, £260,000: Dutch striker joined Rangers under Dick Advocaat. He arrived in 1999 and spent five years at Ibrox. Mikel Arteta, £674,603: Spanish midfielder joined in 2002 and played 50 matches, scoring 12 goals. Moved to Everton. Nacho Novo, £1.2million: Spanish striker joined in 2004 from Dundee for £450,000. Neil McCann, £500,000: Winger joined from Hearts in 1998 for £2million. Nuno Capucho, £970,000: Portuguese winger who arrived in 2003 for £700,000. Olivier Bernard, £224,000: French defender arrived on a free transfer in 2005. Paolo Vanoli, £592,000: Italian left-back joined from Bologna in 2003 and played in 28 matches. Paul Le Guen, £201,250: French manager replaced Alex McLeish in 2006. Left in January 2007 after a string of poor results. Pedro Mendes, £1million: Portuguese midfielder joined in 2008 for £3million. Joined Vituria Guimares in 2010. Ronald De Boer, £1.2million: Dutch midfielder joined in 2000 under Advocaat. Ronald Waterreus, £510,000: Dutch goalkeeper joined Rangers in 2004 from Manchester City. Sasa Papac, £319,000: Bosnian left-back arrived in 2006 from Austria Vienna for £450,000. Sotirios Kyrgiakos £532,200: Greek centre-half signed from Panathinaikos in 2005. Stefan Klos, £2million: German international keeper signed in 1999 for £800,000. Join Bayer Leverkusen in 2007. Stephane Wiertelak, £28,275: French fitness-physiotherapy coach joined Rangers in 2006 under Le Guen. Steven Davis, £600,000: Northern Ireland midfielder. Left for Southampton in the summer. Steven Smith, £7500: Defender came through youth ranks and made debut in 2004. Steven Thompson, £485,000: Joined from Dundee United in 2003 for £200,000. Went to Cardiff City in 2006. Tero Penttila, £140,000: Finnish defender joined in 1999 for £300,000 from Haka Valkeakoski. Left in 2002 to join HJK Helsinki. Thomas Buffel, £1.2million: Belgian midfielder joined in 2005 for £2.3million from Feyenoord. Tore Andre Flo, £1.3million: Norwegian striker joined from Chelsea in 2000 for £12million. Sold for £6.75million to Sunderland in 2002. Yves Colleau, £106,200: Former French midfielder served as assistant to Le Guen at Rennes, Lyon and Rangers from 2006 to 2007. Zurab Khizanishvili, £405,000: Georgian defender joined on a free transfer from Dundee in 2003. Moved to Blackburn Rovers in 2005.
  14. Gough has a wee bleat about some fantasies that never happened in the Sun Gough: When will the Rangers witch hunt end? Spoiler: click to toggle CELTIC won the former Scottish Premier League in season 1997/98. It was a historic triumph given that it stopped Rangers winning a record ten-in-a-row. Looking back, it was one of my biggest career disappointments. I’d love to have that tenth league medal in my possession, having made history as Rangers captain. But here’s a scenario for you. Can you imagine if it emerged in later years that Henrik Larsson had an EBT during that season? If it turned out the Swede — Celtic’s key player in that title triumph — was paid via a scheme that’s now infamous in Scottish football. Following the logic of the real-life never-ending EBT row, I’d be due a league winner’s medal. For me and all the rest of my Rangers team-mates, ten-in-a-row would suddenly be a reality. You’d think I’d be delighted to see my name written into the history books, right? Wrong. I would have no interest in that medal. I would have no interest in seeing Celtic stripped of that historic title. That is the honest truth. It would mean nothing to me. It wouldn’t matter if Wim Jansen’s entire Celtic squad had EBTs, they won it fair and square on the pitch. And that’s the reason I can’t get my head around the continued clamour to rip titles away from Rangers. I can’t speak for directors of Celtic and other SPL clubs between the years of 2001 and 2010. I don’t know what is being said behind closed doors or what went on at the SPFL conference call after HMRC recently won their Big Tax Case appeal. Celtic fans are up in arms but that’s Scotland for you. I’m sure if Larsson did have an EBT, a lot of Rangers supporters would have strong views. But as a football man, I value and respect the opinion of my peers. It’s been fascinating reading the comments of Celtic legends like Martin O’Neill, John Hartson, Chris Sutton and Paul Lambert this week. To a man they have zero interest in the idea of Rangers being stripped of titles. They look back at 2003 and 2005 and believe they were beaten on he pitch — not in contract talks. The fact Celtic couldn’t beat Motherwell at Fir Park in O’Neill’s last league game had nothing to do with Rangers players’ having EBTs. In fact, barring Darren O’Dea, who played a handful of games for Celtic, no other ex-player has called for Gers to be stripped of titles. Surely that speaks volumes. Are all the Celtic fans going to turn on them for holding that view? Do they just ignore O’Neill — one of their greatest managers — and dismiss what he says? What’s to be gained from dredging all this up again? Why are people so hell-bent on attacking Rangers? I’ve been involved with Scottish football since the early 1980s and never seen hatred like this before. Are supporters of other clubs not content with the punishment Rangers have already had? Last time I looked, my old club had been out of the top flight for almost four years. They haven’t competed in Europe since 2012. There has been an administration and liquidation of the oldco, with a squad full of international players walking away for nothing. There have been fines, a transfer embargo and all manner of on-field humiliations. Rangers are now on their fourth manager in that period and still have a long way to go before challenging Celtic again. Off the field, the heart and soul has been ripped out of the club as well-known businessmen lined up to take advantage. Oh, and an impending court case might end up proving that the club was the victim of a major fraud during a takeover. That’s quite a list of punishments. The club has been dragged through the gutter over the last few years. But still fans of other clubs aren’t happy. Still they want to point to a tax scheme that gave fortunes to the likes of Tero Penttila and demand titles are stripped. Really? Do they hate Rangers that much? Will they ever tire of trying to harm the club? I look at Hearts and sympathy that directed towards them after Vladimir Romanov disappeared and they went into administration. Rangers’ treatment was the opposite. If anything, the abuse increased following the Craig Whyte and Charles Green years. It’s no wonder some fans think Rangers would be better off packing up and going elsewhere. I’m proud of the club’s Scottish roots and the day will come when they’re the best in the country again. But when you see the hatred directed towards Rangers, right now the thought of a return to the top flight holds little appeal. ‘No one likes us’ the fans sing. That line has never been more apt.
  15. "Wankerishly" Is that in the dictionary ya utter moron? The_Arsehole is a wee bit rattled by that article me thinks...
×
×
  • Create New...