Belfast Owl 2 Posted September 10, 2019 Share Posted September 10, 2019 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nut Posted September 10, 2019 Share Posted September 10, 2019 47 minutes ago, Earlsfieldowl said: Once we got him fit he started to show what he was capable of..and then he left classic Wednesday We did that quite a few times in those days. Get someone fit for their parent club whilst contributing very little to us, then they come back a couple of weeks later and have a blinder against us. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
S36 OWL Posted September 10, 2019 Share Posted September 10, 2019 2 hours ago, Animis said: sorry mate Great ninds think alike Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve_Whitton Posted September 10, 2019 Share Posted September 10, 2019 (edited) Worth a read... https://www.marca.com/en/football/international-football/2017/11/10/5a04dd4d268e3ec0358b45bc.html Edited September 10, 2019 by Steve_Whitton Correct link 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spencerowl Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 Playing for these now Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
prowl Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 I'd have him back even now. If he was fit and focused he'd tear this league apart. I think his head is where his problem is. Here he'd get the love he wants. He could be another JJ only ten times better. Maybe not the fantastic wages he's been used to but better than nothing. He's still got a few years left in him. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jackie Sewell Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 Had a chat with him at the bottom of the Kop when he was signing autographs. Seemed a nice lad. Asked him if he was starting.., No... why not ? Gaffer(Gray) says he wants to keep me hungry. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1867Heaven Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 I can remember wanting him to sign for season after Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OWLS about that? Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 On 09/09/2019 at 22:42, i used to be sc_owl said: What I think of when I hear his name. Amazing crisps Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OWLS about that? Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 19 hours ago, Animis said: sorry mate Nice picture of Barnsley there Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
casbahowl Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 (edited) Had to put on extra security at the training ground when some well dodge characters turned up demanding to “speak to him“...... he left the country a few days later....... true dat ( spoken in best Omar voice)! Edited September 11, 2019 by casbahowl Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tarn owl Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 2 hours ago, OWLS about that? said: Nice picture of Barnsley there Oi! This is a local village for local people. We will not have strangers around here. (it makes me think of where i live) 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Animis Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/49664141 Royston Drenthe: Former Real Madrid and Everton winger has 'no regrets' By Sean Cole Football writer 9 minutes ago From the section European Football Share this page Drenthe won two Spanish Super Cups with Real Madrid When Royston Drenthe answers the phone he's on his way to a photoshoot in Amsterdam. It's for an underwear company, and will feature several former footballers. "I don't even have a six-pack but they still want me," he laughs. The former Feyenoord, Real Madrid and Everton winger has always been willing to try new things. For such a colourful character, who has explored interests in music, fashion, perfume and poker, nothing should come as a surprise. At 32, Drenthe is playing for Kozakken Boys in the third tier of Dutch football. He was once perhaps the most sought-after prospect in Europe, if not the world, but his career didn't quite go to plan up until his brief retirement at the age of 29. "The two years that I stopped I needed something new," says Drenthe. "I just had to step out for a bit to find myself again." In the summer of 2007, Drenthe was hailed as the Netherlands' next superstar having led his country to success in the European Under-21s Championship, as well as claiming the award for the tournament's best player. Drenthe scored in a semi-final penalty shootout against England on the way to the Netherlands becoming European Under-21 Champions in 2007 Legendary figures like Luis Figo, Andrea Pirlo and Fabio Cannavaro had previously won the same award. "It was an amazing feeling. At that European Championships everything was going well and when clubs start asking for you it's like a dream come true. I had to make a decision about what I wanted to do. "There were big clubs like Chelsea, Manchester United and Barcelona. It wasn't an easy decision to make but I chose Real Madrid because my step-dad was always a big fan of them." Drenthe was just 20, with one full season in senior football behind him, when he moved to arguably the world's most glamorous and successful club for 14m euros. "You have to take some chances straight away. A lot of people would say, 'it was way too early for him. Why did he leave Feyenoord?' That's football. You make decisions to succeed but sometimes they don't go how you want," he says. "I felt at home straight away because the players were very nice to me and they helped me. They were big stars but they treated me like a normal boy." Drenthe tended towards the spectacular. He scored with a thumping long-range strike on his debut and featured regularly in his first season, initially keeping Marcelo out of the team. He won the title under Bernd Schuster but fell out of favour under subsequent managers, including Jose Mourinho. At a notoriously demanding club, whose supporters had the very highest expectations, Drenthe sometimes came up short. The pressure induced anxiety. "I was a young lad who came to a big club, playing in front of 90,000 people every home game," he explains. "There came a moment where I had a problem but the people around me talked to me and helped to point me in the right direction." Drenthe shared a picture with his three children on Instagram Loaned out to Hercules after a difficult third season in Madrid, progress on the pitch was accompanied by strife and uncertainty off it. "It was very good but also very bad. I had a great time there but it was a bad time for the club. They weren't paying salaries and that kind of stuff," he says. "At that moment it wasn't easy. I was like, 'If they don't pay salaries, I'm not coming into training'." Drenthe went on strike, and found himself a target for the supporters' frustration as a result. Another promising loan spell at Everton turned sour when he was ostracised by David Moyes amid rumours of indiscipline and a wayward lifestyle. "Sometimes things happen and I got punished for the things that I did. It's like seven years ago now. Some of the wild things that I did, I don't even know that I did them. "I always focused on football. You guys think that I didn't but I always did. Some people see things and read things so they get their own opinion. But they don't know me as a person. It doesn't bother me." Drenthe had a reputation as a playboy and party animal throughout his career. Rightly or wrongly, the public perception has endured even as his priorities have changed. It certainly doesn't tally with how he sees himself now. "I like to help people. I'm open. I'm a family man. I'm just Royston, you know? I go with the flow." After leaving Real Madrid when his contract expired, Drenthe spent a few months in Russia at Alania Vladikavkaz before returning to England with Reading and then Sheffield Wednesday, before spells in Turkey and the UAE. After more issues with agents and unpaid wages Drenthe, disillusioned, retired in 2016, just nine years on from Europe's biggest clubs clamouring to sign him. On joining Everton on loan in 2011 Drenthe said: "When I went to Madrid I needed two or three months settle in, but at Everton it took one week and I was settled in." "I was making music but it's difficult to say that I was focused on one thing. I was busy with lots of different things," he says. "I've always liked music. When I'm happy I listen to music and when I'm sad I listen to music as well. It always gives me a good feeling." Aside from rapping as Roya2Faces, there was also a record company, a clothes shop, a perfume store and his six children to keep him busy. Then last summer he received an offer from his former mentor, Henk Fraser, the manager of Sparta Rotterdam, to give football another go. And now Drenthe's playing alongside his cousin with Kozakken Boys in the Dutch third tier in front of crowds of at most a couple of thousand. It's not the Bernabeu but he's glad to still be playing. For casual observers, bewitched by his skills as a youngster, there will always be a lingering sense of what might have been, but Drenthe himself doesn't share it. "No regrets at all. Everything happens for a reason," he says. "I don't regret anything because I'm happy with where I am and I'm happy with where I've been. I'm living my life at the moment." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
31Dec1966 Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 Does anyone else think it's weird how few games some modern footballers play ? Drenthe has only played 192 games in his entire career. Wonder what happened to that Rodri chap we signed? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorfolkNChance Posted September 11, 2019 Share Posted September 11, 2019 34 minutes ago, 31Dec1966 said: Does anyone else think it's weird how few games some modern footballers play ? Drenthe has only played 192 games in his entire career. Wonder what happened to that Rodri chap we signed? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rodri_(footballer,_born_1990) Played 32 games for Granada last year , not had a bad few years in terms of appearences and goals Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bulldog Posted September 12, 2019 Share Posted September 12, 2019 On 09/09/2019 at 22:54, crookesowl said: This one? The one amazing bit of skill in what was a very awful game - Boxing day 2014 wasn't it?? 1:0 with a Stevie May penalty Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wednesdaywizard Posted September 12, 2019 Share Posted September 12, 2019 That goal at Charlton was great. Good away day that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jim Wonk Posted September 12, 2019 Share Posted September 12, 2019 On 11/09/2019 at 17:39, 31Dec1966 said: Does anyone else think it's weird how few games some modern footballers play ? Drenthe has only played 192 games in his entire career. Wonder what happened to that Rodri chap we signed? I think he‘s playing for a working men’s club in Salou Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sergeant Tibbs Posted September 12, 2019 Share Posted September 12, 2019 On 10/09/2019 at 06:48, SwellOwl said: Charlton away. For 10 seconds I felt we had the Real Madrid Royston. He looked good then and took that goal very well, But like most of his appearances the rest of the game passed him by. Another game I walked away from thinking how did we not win that. Because we didn't take our chances when we were top probably. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwellOwl Posted September 12, 2019 Share Posted September 12, 2019 12 minutes ago, Sergeant Tibbs said: He looked good then and took that goal very well, But like most of his appearances the rest of the game passed him by. Another game I walked away from thinking how did we not win that. Because we didn't take our chances when we were top probably. SWFC story for many years! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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