Terry Zarsoff
First Grader
I think (and hope) they will play and that the club (read owners) backs down and reverts to a standard jersey.
Looks like no one on the management side at Fort Fumble has had any staff training in the armed forces (yes, of course they haven’t) where you are taught to think through the consequences of your decision making. In Australia we call it the JMAP (Joint Military Appreciation Process).
If they had, none of this would have happened. At the risk of sounding wise after the event, the first inkling of potential disaster was that the three players modelling the jumpers are of Anglo-Saxon/Celtic stock. Not a Jason Saab or a Polynesian player in sight.
Well played Manly-Warringah. Well played.
Let’s hope Tony Mestrov can bring some Ken Arthurson/Frank Stanton-style common sense to the CEO role, in turn lasting more than the figurative five minutes in the job.
The optimist in me also hopes that this could be the beginning of the end of the Penn family’s involvement in the club - which in footballing parlance, has been one unforced error after another, for about 15 years now.
To be fair, they may have had no inkling of this, but it doesn’t help matters when the chairman chooses to live and work in NYC - instead of having his ‘finger on the pulse’ here in Sydney.
Looks like no one on the management side at Fort Fumble has had any staff training in the armed forces (yes, of course they haven’t) where you are taught to think through the consequences of your decision making. In Australia we call it the JMAP (Joint Military Appreciation Process).
If they had, none of this would have happened. At the risk of sounding wise after the event, the first inkling of potential disaster was that the three players modelling the jumpers are of Anglo-Saxon/Celtic stock. Not a Jason Saab or a Polynesian player in sight.
Well played Manly-Warringah. Well played.
Let’s hope Tony Mestrov can bring some Ken Arthurson/Frank Stanton-style common sense to the CEO role, in turn lasting more than the figurative five minutes in the job.
The optimist in me also hopes that this could be the beginning of the end of the Penn family’s involvement in the club - which in footballing parlance, has been one unforced error after another, for about 15 years now.
To be fair, they may have had no inkling of this, but it doesn’t help matters when the chairman chooses to live and work in NYC - instead of having his ‘finger on the pulse’ here in Sydney.
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