Thanks to "The Thief", "Qingqing Little Wolf" and "I'm Looking Up at My Home in Hell" for the rewards!
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If Beckham's influence as England's darling, sought after by the media and the outside world, vaguely made Ferguson think that Beckham was leaving his authoritative control, and then the two father and son parted ways, then, Lampa
De's words made Aldrich no longer try to keep the other party.
Can success be achieved elsewhere?
What do you think of Millwall?
What do you think of Aldrich?
If he thinks he can succeed wherever he goes, Aldridge doesn't want to waste words, patience, or energy anymore, because Lampard already has more confidence in himself than anything else. This belief overrides the relationship between the team and the coach.
It seems like you can control the world by yourself.
Aldridge is impatient for players over 21 years old, because 21 years old, for a professional player, should be the stage of maturity. Only before the age of 21, Aldridge will invest more patience.
To teach players, as for Lampard
The change of mentality over the past year, or the improvement of self-confidence, has become a bit "arrogant" in Aldridge's eyes. Aldridge thinks it is normal. He has achieved success as a young man and won the World Cup at the age of 24. He is not allowed to be a little bit.
The idea of "I am number one in the world"?
Aldrich himself has one.
He also believes that he is unparalleled in the world.
He began to feel that he was unique, and the gap between his peers and him was gradually becoming apparent. This gap was by no means a result of one or two games. It was a gap. A gap in one level, once it was subtly recognized by the outside world, like this
The gap will not change due to the results of one or two games.
The arrogant Aldridge and the arrogant Lampard cannot reach an agreement.
From Aldridge's standpoint, he will consider and imagine for the players. But there is a big premise, that is, the interests of the club should be considered first.
Keeping Lampard and Kaká in the same period, when Nedved begins to take his final call, these two players with different styles and characteristics will compete with each other, which will also provide Millwall with more technical and tactical options in the future.
, not to mention that it will ensure the thickness of the lineup.
But now that Lampard is leaving, Aldridge has to say he feels sorry, no. Not at all.
He is a more realistic person, and he is so realistic that he doesn't care about the fame of those "big-name" stars.
How much contribution has Lampard made at Millwall?
Except for this season, I have never played the main role before.
Millwall has been cultivating him, and during his off-field scandals and negative news about having an affair with a page three girl, Aldridge has been tolerating him and occasionally warning him. Maybe Ronaldinho did it too, but Ronaldinho was very fond of Millwall.
What was Wall's contribution?
This is reality.
Now that I have gained fame and strength, I start to ask for it, and like a spoiled child, I will get angry if I don't get it. Yes, the other party is actually just very realistic. Since I can't get it here, I will go there.
Ask elsewhere.
In Aldrich's eyes, his departure was nothing more than the departure of a "cultivated product".
There is no shortage of geniuses in wealthy teams. A team without geniuses cannot be called a wealthy team. At most, a prefix can be added: former wealthy team.
In a wealthy family, the success of a genius means draining the blood of countless geniuses of the same generation!
In the past, Solskjaer, Phillips, Tony, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Drogba, Spain's Vicente and Joaquin pair of golden wings, Vieira, Ferdinand, etc., most of them were similar.
The situation is that at the same time, he was squeezed out by better people and had no room for survival, so he had no choice but to leave!
There are only those like Shevchenko, Trezeguet, etc. that Millwall failed to keep and had to let them go.
Today, Aldridge continues to trust Nedved, and Lampard embarks on the same path as many outstanding players before him, leaving.
No one outside knew that Lampard's fate was decided in the Manchester United dressing room, and no one knew that on his way back to London from Manchester, Aldridge called the heads of several top European clubs.
Among them are Joan Laporta, the popular candidate for the Barcelona presidential election, Florentino Perez, the head of Real Madrid, Beckenbauer, the honorary chairman of Bayern Munich, and so on.
Barcelona and Real Madrid are both chasing Beckham. Bayern Munich has Ballack and does not need Lampard.
By the time Aldridge returned to London, the matter was settled.
Inter Milan is dominated by Juventus and Moggi in Italy. It is rare for them to buy the players they like easily in the country. When Aldrich promoted Lampard to Moratti, Moratti agreed and transferred.
In terms of membership fees, Inter Milan was not stingy and directly offered 25 million pounds. Aldridge quickly cut through the mess and nodded in agreement.
After the call with Moratti, Aldrich called Andrew again and told him the result without explaining anything. It was unnecessary.
When he returned home, Aldridge completely forgot about the team work. When he entered the house, he threw away his suitcase with great relief, sat on the sofa and took a deep breath, complaining: "I have been away from home for too long.
It’s torture.”
Yiwen happened to be walking downstairs holding the little princess Bonnie in her arms. She smiled and said, "You don't mean what you say. In fact, you have lived a very happy life in the past two months, haven't you?"
Aldrich took Bonnie, kissed her little face tenderly, and then kissed Yiwen again, smiling without saying a word.
Yi Wen understands him and he doesn't try to quibble.
Sitting in a box at the stadium and watching the game, I always felt like an outsider. But when I returned to the team, even if Manchester United failed to reverse Manchester United's title defense in the end, it felt really different. Everything that happened during this period was unforgettable.
Especially when he thought that Wenger was suffering more than him, Aldridge really didn't feel that it was so tragic. After all, he had someone to back him up.
"Dad, when do we set off?"
Bert and Earl ran in from the backyard with a football in their arms, shouting happily.
Aldrich leaned back on the sofa and said feebly: "Let dad rest for a night, and we will go on an adventure tomorrow. Okay?"
...
The next day, the Aldrich family embarked on their summer journey.
In mid-June, two seismic transfers in English football were born.
Beckham, the 28-year-old top star of Manchester United and vice-captain of the England national team, joined Real Madrid for 35 million euros, and the Galacticos have become a giant.
Lampard, who has just turned 25 and is one of the heroes of England's World Cup victory, landed in Apennines with a transfer value of 25 million pounds and joined Inter Milan, which was runner-up in Serie A for two consecutive years and reached the semi-finals of the Champions League last season!
Beckham's departure is not unexpected. Starting from February this year, the flying boot scandal has developed to its conclusion. The outside world has basically strongly predicted this outcome, especially when Ferguson led the Red Devils back to the top of the Premier League. Beckham's departure has become even more
It's a sure thing.
Lampard's departure has caused huge controversy. Some people think it is the loss of a Premier League star. Some people are speculating about what kind of conflict broke out between him and his mentor Aldridge, or whether he was marginalized in the Millwall locker room.
Transformed? Isolated?
Although the Millwall locker room is headed by captain Southgate, Millwall has never been a team with obvious English colors. First, Joe Cole was given up and was sold cheaply to Tottenham at the end of the season.
7 million pounds was taken away. Later, Lampard left for the Apennines. Many famous players in England believed that Sir Hall’s tolerance for English players had reached its limit!
It is undeniable that the British are arrogant in their bones, making it easy for them to be complacent when they achieve something. They ask for high salaries, have off-field scandals, are keen on being in the limelight, engage in endless infighting, etc. They always demand more than they contribute, as if they are sacrificing.
This word is rarely used by English people.
Just as the time came to the end of June, a landmark event occurred in English football and even European football.
Let's turn the time back to early June. In England, news about the bankruptcy of low-level teams broke out one after another, especially the financial crisis of low-level league broadcasting company ITV, which made the survival of low-level teams even more difficult. Bankruptcy, liquidation, and reorganization in
Continuing to live in the cracks is a new choice.
Leeds United survived last season and avoided bankruptcy by selling off a large number of stars. The team also barely avoided relegation and stayed in the Premier League. As for Ridsdale's boast before the season that they could still compete for the championship, they would only be above the relegation zone at the end of the season.
Ranking No. 1 makes the joke sound too cold.
Leeds United is still raising loans from everywhere, and their operating costs have been significantly reduced. However, the previous loans now need to be repaid, which is still a very huge burden, so they still have to continue to increase revenue and reduce expenditures to "buy time", otherwise,
The fate of bankruptcy and liquidation is still unavoidable.
And the one that also suffered from the economic crisis, which completely broke out last summer, was Chelsea.
Chelsea, who made a net profit of 500,000 pounds without spending a penny in the transfer market last summer, are two extreme pictures.
In the arena, Ranieri proudly proclaimed the team's greatness, and cited the team's ability to reach the Champions League despite zero investment last summer as evidence of the team's strength and progress.
On the other hand, the haze surrounding the huge Chelsea village lingers for a long time.
For nearly 18 months, Chelsea owner Bates has been overwhelmed by debts of more than 90 million pounds.
There are three problems he faces. The first is that although Chelsea has built a mature business chain, the team is not particularly outstanding. Restaurants, hotels, various entertainment services, etc. within these business chains have developed slowly. In other words, he
The investment has not received good commercial returns. The second is Chelsea’s huge debt problem.
The debt interest rate is as high as 9%. The third is the huge operating cost of the team. The players' annual salary alone exceeds 50 million pounds. He cannot cope with the rapidly growing bill of 23 million pounds. Unfortunately, he is
A speculative businessman would not have the courage to invest all his family property in football as a pastime.
He has tried selling the club or raising capital to dilute his equity.
Just like someone valued Chelsea at less than 20 million pounds, how could Bates let it go?
At the beginning of June, Chelsea faced a similar desperate situation to Leeds United.
Barcelona took advantage of the situation and wanted to take away Hasselbaink for only 6 million pounds. Gudjohnsen's agent was encouraging the players to ask for a salary increase. Arsenal was eyeing an available payment in Gala's contract clause for an opportunity.
treat......
With Chelsea in dire straits, Bates finally came up with a plan, which was "asset securitization." In the ideal plan, after paying off nearly 100 million pounds of debt, he would be able to keep more than 20 million pounds in cash in the bank.
It is guaranteed by Chelsea's season tickets for the next 25 years.
Bates was so confident in this that he rejected Barcelona's ridiculous offer, rejected Gudjohnsen's request for a salary increase, and even warned Arsenal's Dane to stay away!
Plans cannot keep up with changes quickly.
No investors were interested in the plan that Bates came up with, because Leeds United was involved in a bloody massacre, and no one wanted to accompany Chelsea in the fire. Just like Leeds United's current debt problem, investors really lost their money. Basically,
When he lent Leeds United 10 pounds, he might get back less than 3 pounds.
There are still people who come to give Bates warmth, and there are investment institutions willing to inject capital into Chelsea to ease Chelsea's financial pressure and tide over the difficulties.
However, the condition was that Bates "retire" and the investment institution sent another management team to run the huge Chelsea Village. Bates angrily refused this condition, and there was quite a feeling that he would rather die with Chelsea than step down in despair.
Tough attitude.
However, given Chelsea's geographical location and "social status" in London, after all, many of Chelsea's fans are middle- and upper-class customers. Maybe they are not as wild as ordinary people watching football, and they may bring famous models with them.
Sitting quietly in the stands next to me for 90 minutes, but football, in the end
After all, it is the most mainstream entertainment project in this country, and there is only one London in the world. West London is a paradise for the aristocracy. Chelsea’s Stamford Bridge is in West London. Even if it does not have a glorious past, it has such a "social status"
, which makes it have many careerists eyeing it covetously.
Some people want to take advantage of the opportunity to buy Chelsea at a low price, while others are willing to spend a lot of money to buy it. The more Chelsea reaches the final moment of life and death, more and more "saviors" gather around Bates, because those who want to take over Chelsea, regardless of
Whether it is an individual or a consortium, they do not want to receive a mess that has been rebuilt after a bankrupt company.
To put it bluntly, Chelsea's current problem is one word: money.
For wealthy people, this is not a problem.
London real estate boss Paul Taylor, a consortium represented by London lawyer Mel Goldberg, Scottish Premier League Celtic owner Desmond, a Venezuelan consortium, Rotch Group...
Bates has more and more choices, but the time left for him is getting less and less. Chelsea needs money. (To be continued, please search Piaotian Literature, the novel is better and updated faster!