Hardcore!

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Neiler

Player Valuation: £100m
:lol::lol::lol:

64 members tonight i guess some people wernt kidding when they said they were finished with the club if we didnt sign 7 quality players!
 
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they are all out drowning their sorrows because money has been spent, moyes has got a top target, and by the time they get to send all their death threats and hate mail, postage will have gone up so they'll have to take time off from their 'everton jihad' schedule and pop down the post office for some small change stamps.
 
they are all out drowning their sorrows because money has been spent, moyes has got a top target, and by the time they get to send all their death threats and hate mail, postage will have gone up so they'll have to take time off from their 'everton jihad' schedule and pop down the post office for some small change stamps.


I was thinking there was a group meeting, to draw up Plan B, for when they oust Kenwright!:lol:
 

et tu brutus?

Et tu Brute? is the quote

Caesar's last words are not known with certainty, and are a contested subject among scholars and historians alike. The version best known in the English-speaking world is the Latin phrase Et tu, Brute? ("And you, Brutus?" or "You too, Brutus?" or "Even you, Brutus?"); this derives from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, where it actually forms the first half of a macaronic line: "Et tu, Brute? Then fall, Caesar." Shakespeare's version evidently follows in the tradition of the Roman historian Suetonius, who reports that Caesar's last words were the Greek phrase "καὶ σὺ τέκνον;"[1] (transliterated as "Kai su, teknon?": "You too, my child?" in English).[2] Plutarch, on the other hand, reports that Caesar said nothing, pulling his toga over his head when he saw Brutus among the conspirators.[3]
 
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