Whiston Blade
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2015
- Messages
- 3,312
- Reaction score
- 5,366
Did anyone actually read the question properly?
1969
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
All advertisments are hidden for logged in members, why not log in/register?
Did anyone actually read the question properly?
You've never played professional football before, this is your one and only chnace but regardless of who you play for, you'll be forgotten about when you leave.
I'd do the same and then after the two years was over and the magic had vanished then I could do whatever I liked following the Blades home and away and have the dink to set the family up for their futures.Man U. I wouldn't want anything to do with the Blades as a professional in the modern game. It would hurt too much when we lost and I wouldn't like being booed by my own. Fuck that, play for Man U, get rich and not care whether the mancs liked me or not.
I'd also use the money to set up a business, then sponsor us. Or, if I found I was better at it than the one I'm currently doing, invest. But only if it was game changing.I'd do the same and then after the two years was over and the magic had vanished then I could do whatever I liked following the Blades home and away and have the dink to set the family up for their futures.
Depends if your ultimate ambition is money driven or something more than that, playing for your home town team.I'd do a stint for United to start with then move on. Anyone who gives up on career progression has limited or no ambition.
No I read the bits I wanted to then made my own conclusion on what the actual question was.Did anyone actually read the question properly?
Depends if your ultimate ambition is money driven or something more than that, playing for your home town team.
Money isn't everything and there are certain jobs which aren't as prestigious but I'd take less money to work on them
I don't know that many people that have the attitude of being "as good as you can working for the best there is around" most people take a job and develop within that job or stay for security. That's why most people don't move jobs that oftenAs I said I would do a stint for United to tick that particular box then move on. Why should football be an exception when your ultimate ambition is to be as good as you can working for the best there is around? It doesn't have to be all about money, although that will come to you as a result of realising your ambition rather than as a driving factor. Maguire is a perfect example, he's managed to reach the England squad and money has come to him as a result of his endeavours rather than him going around chasing it like a whore.
Best for who?Why should football be an exception when your ultimate ambition is to be as good as you can working for the best there is around?
I don't know that many people that have the attitude of being "as good as you can working for the best there is around" most people take a job and develop within that job or stay for security. That's why most people don't move jobs that often
As an ex-employee of a large professional consultancy my experiences are the polar opposite of that. And in my specialist field I can think of only two or three people out of literally hundreds thst I know personally that haven't changed jobs fairly regularly.I don't know that many people that have the attitude of being "as good as you can working for the best there is around" most people take a job and develop within that job or stay for security. That's why most people don't move jobs that often
I'd say that's quite unusual. Most people i know, outside of the project/ contract environment that I work in tend to stay in their jobs until something drastic changes, but these are generally changes which are out of their making (redundancy, restructuring, relocation etc)As an ex-employee of a large professional consultancy my experiences are the polar opposite of that. And in my specialist field I can think of only two or three people out of literally hundreds thst I know personally that haven't changed jobs fairly regularly.
Did anyone actually read the question properly?
I don't know that many people that have the attitude of being "as good as you can working for the best there is around" most people take a job and develop within that job or stay for security. That's why most people don't move jobs that often
Best for who?
I'd rather work for a company I care about.
That's all very altruistic, but as much as you'd like to think otherwise, they don't give a fuck about you. In the job market you look after No. 1.
And if you care for more than only money, you look for other reasons for working for someone.That's all very altruistic, but as much as you'd like to think otherwise, they don't give a fuck about you. In the job market you look after No. 1.
You're telling me the club wouldnt give a fuck about a world star on their books for ten grand a week?
I had already edited my post, to give you more of an insight into my ("the real") world.They'll give more of a fuck about how much they can sell him for. Can I live in your world?
I had already edited my post, to give you more of an insight into my ("the real") world.
I edited it before I saw your response because I thought of a better point to make. It has nothing to do with hoping anyone doesn't anything.Not before I replied you didn't otherwise your original post wouldn't have been quoted in mine. Nice tactic though, a good lesson in how to shift the goalposts hoping someone doesn't notice.
There are plenty of people who are altruistic, they tend to work either in the public sector or for charities. I'm quite cynical of anyone who works in the private sector and isn't chasing either a job they really love or a big pay packet.That's all very altruistic, but as much as you'd like to think otherwise, they don't give a fuck about you. In the job market you look after No. 1.
There are plenty of people who are altruistic, they tend to work either in the public sector or for charities. I'm quite cynical of anyone who works in the private sector and isn't chasing either a job they really love or a big pay packet.
No, I can't. Why should I have to? How does that detract from my point? Not everyone who works for a charity or in the public sector earns £200,000 p.a. Most of them don't. Chief execs in the private sector earn a lot more than that. The head of my department, that's department, not company, 'managing' around 100 people, was on £2m a year when I left.Maybe you can explain why the Chairpersons of some of the major charities earn upwards of £200k p.a. then. I don't give these buggers a red cent and much prefer to give to local charities such a St Lukes & St Wilfreds.
All advertisments are hidden for logged in members, why not log in/register?