Football: BARRY BANNED; O'Neill dishes out pounds 84K fine & tells rebel: Stay away from training.Byline: By DAVID ANDERSON David Anderson may refer to:
GARETH BARRY'S bitter split from Aston Villa was sealed yesterday when he discovered he had been fined and banned by the club - from their website. Villa boss Martin O'Neill fined his want away skipper pounds 84,000 and banished him from the club's training ground in response to Barry's critical comments at the weekend. But the England midfield star only found out via O'Neill's terse Terse - Language for decryption of hardware logic. ["Hardware Logic Simulation by Compilation", C. Hansen, 25th ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conf, 1988]. internet statement, which read: "Gareth will not be returning to training and he has been disciplined after giving an unauthorised interview." It was the Ulsterman's revenge after he woke on Sunday to read Barry accuse O'Neill of messing him about because he had time to talk about Euro 2008 on the BBC BBC in full British Broadcasting Corp. Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927. , but didn't have time to talk to him. Barry also demanded to be allowed to join Liverpool and O'Neill felt he had to act because the player was ready to confront him over his wish to move to Anfield when he reported back for pre-season training this morning. Barry's transfer is now as good as sealed - it's just a question of how much money O'Neill can squeeze out of Rafa Benitez. Villa claim they have knocked back Liverpool's FOURTH bid, insisting it is below their pounds 18million asking price. "The club have received a renewed offer from Liverpool for the player, but that still falls short of our valuation and has sub sequently be en rejected," stated Villa. The offer is believed to be worth at least pounds 15m and Liverpool boss Benitez is determined not to held to ransom ransom, price of redemption demanded by the captor of a person, vessel, or city. In ancient times cities frequently paid ransom to prevent their plundering by captors. The custom of ransoming was formerly sanctioned by law. . The Reds know O'Neill has handed the initiative to them and he cannot afford to let the club's prized asset rot in the reserves. CAPTION(S): HAMMERED O'Neill is furious with Barry (inset); BENITEZ Determined to land midfielder Barry |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion