Mi ehonra, mae'n zesio gorfod gyda'r game cyntlo nesaf i'n ymgwrdd yn gallu Understand.
Pinieis y gall eich
My name is Ndor, but it was part of the family, it was part of what you did.
The cop was extraordinary, and the boys pen particularly for me were seeing these young lads in the far corner,
and the noise they made.
They were the first English crowd to chant.
They don't behave like any other football crowd.
Especially not at one end of Anfield's ground, on the cop.
The change it made when Liverpool won the cup for the first time and stopped being second class citizens in the city.
It's just wonderful. The whole M6 was jammed and the coach stopped.
There are people on the motorway. This is a story that everybody knows now, but I was in that coach.
People were dancing around the coach, singing and the players were laughing.
There wasn't a toilet on the coach, so the players utilised the empty beer bottles to relieve themselves.
But it was just a fantastic night.
What's fundamental to understanding Liverpool Football Club is understanding the Shankly effect.
I mean, it transformed the support base from just being football supporters into an almost religious movement
that football transcended the actual playing of the game and the results and the scores.
It became something where we put our whole identity into it and put our whole sense of belief.
Shankly was the personification of the whole thing, this belief and this sort of sense of joy, but sense of community as well.
I've drummed it into our players, time and again, that they are privileged to play for you.
All for one and one for all.
It's hard to comprehend it now when you look at this society we live in, the X Factor Society, the Meme Society, the Post-Stature Society,
that how important political involvement was. I mean, all the boys who went to the away games,
they confounded the mythology of football wholenism, which is, you know, far right.
They were all broadly socialists.
Some day said the footballs are mad at a life and death to you.
I said, listen, it's more important than that. And that's true.
And that informed the way we behaved, the way we acted, how we supported the club.
And so it was a great convergence, you know, because Shankly talked about socialism, you know,
and he talked about all pulling together and it was this brilliant, brilliant coming together
where all these beliefs were distilled and we felt that the club was a standard barrier in all this.
We speak the language that everybody understands.
Instead of me saying somebody was avaricious, I would say it was bloody greedy.
That my idea was to build Liverpool into a bastion of invincibility.
It took us to places where people wouldn't normally see us, where people normally wouldn't relate to us,
and we could go there and show them what we were all about, and they didn't like it.
And that was great. We liked that.
And it was like all your dreams coming true every season, your dreams come true,
and Shankly made that happen.
You just felt that you were part of a movement, you were part of something that was bigger than football,
that was bigger than politics, that was, it was life.
And it was just such a feeling of community and excitement as well.
The Beatles grew and went, you know, conquered England, then conquered America.
Liverpool Football Club were like that.
They conquered the second division, then conquered the first, and then conquered Europe.
Everything just got better and better, but always done with style and a certain...
It was always real, it wasn't, there was no sort of false glamour about it.
It's the worst disaster in British football history.
The clubs to climb began on the 15th of April 1989, and none of us knew it.
And funnily enough, it was the same moment, football changed,
and the Premier League, you could say, was born that moment.
There are too many people in the Liverpool end of the ground, and that's the top and bottom of it.
You can't have people pending in that way.
It was a nasty experience when you go to games.
For us, it was a shock and, you know, sort of emotionally, it was very difficult to deal with.
For people within the club, like Kenny Dalglish,
he went and visited all the families in the immediate aftermath of it.
You know, it undermined him, it destabilised him, and when he resigned as manager,
it left a huge vacuum there.
I think people underestimate the effect it had on the people, the city and the club.
Liverpool was a club wrth allus, as a result of the Hillsborough disaster.
They were voted in on a platform.
He did everything that's said, and the touch of government changed the rules,
moved the goalposts so that they couldn't do what they said.
They red-capped them and eventually suspended the councillors.
Labour is at fault. It's ruining the country.
It proved that democracy doesn't exist.
They just changed it to suit themselves.
I always remember watching the Godfather when he talked about the black areas
and he brought heroin into the communities,
and he said, you know, we'll give it to them and keep them dazed and de-politicised.
I always thought it was laughtery.
When I come back to Liverpool in the mid-90s, I saw a whole generation that had been de-politicised.
Drugs were much bigger in the city, and also a whole generation had had their involvement
in the political process wiped out,
leave the young kids without anything to get involved in.
Dave Moore appreciated that he couldn't take us any further,
because we did need a new state.
We wanted to keep up, because by this time, Chelsea was spending stupid money.
Arsenal had the Emirates nearly built.
Man United were expanding their capacity.
We needed to compete.
Men's United and Arsenal and others were improving their infrastructure
and improving what they did for the fat.
They started doing that, really, from the 80s onwards,
and it accelerated through the 90s.
If you look at the infrastructure at Liverpool at first hand,
it just hasn't moved on at all.
They had the big shiny megastore. We had the corner shop.
The most done and indictment of Liverpool Football Club, as an example,
is that we were the last Premiership Club to have their own official website.
Compared to any other alternative this club had,
we are the perfect new custodians of this franchise.
We understand what it means.
It's not new. We've had experience with other opportunities
to preserve those traditions.
I'm Tom Hicks. This is my story.
Tonight, we honor a Texas ex whose ambition to be the best
has meant huge rewards.
By his late 30s, Tom was a partner in his own investment firm,
and it led his first major leveraged buyer.
I'm the owner of the Texas Rangers.
The Rangers have won it!
I'm the owner of the Dallas Star.
It's over! It's over!
Strong steadfast Texan billionaire.
I mean, we all thought we got JR Ewing. It was great.
Half the people in the world are women.
Why does it have to be you that stirs it?
The carnival atmosphere began earlier in the day in the city centre.
After American Liverpool owner Tommy Hicks was spotted
emerging from the Woon Hotel.
I came as a young man from a farm in Wisconsin.
The Canadians, his ice hockey team,
they were all big fans of him.
Everyone was very fond of him over there.
He run the team well, he engaged the fan base.
We're going to have to do some of this.
I'll take it that we'll be a fair amount of that.
I know we're going to do a little of that.
It'll be a pass.
OK, well, I've got a Euro pocket.
We can do it in Euros also.
Oh dear.
This is about the fans.
This is about this club.
This is about the fans.
This is about this club.
This is about Rafa.
It's not about Tommy and me.
We're here, we're supporters,
and we intend to be supporters long term.
We're not going to put a budget on what we're going to do.
We're going to let Rafa and Wreck bring us their plans
and then we'll support those plans.
Both Everton and Liverpool football clubs,
they're very significant players
in some of the most deprived areas in the country.
They're the biggest private sector operators.
They draw down matching funding
for their investment in many respects.
Lots and lots of parts of Anfield
around the football ground
that actually look like it's been through the Blitz.
Just behind the present cop
is the area which is officially listed
as the most deprived area in the whole country.
Liverpool football club,
I know for a fact they've got over 100
empty, derelict houses in Anfield.
Houses are crying out for investment,
but they're just waiting for something to happen with the stadium.
Private investors won't invest until they see LFC
making a move.
The shovel needs to be in the ground here
in the next, what, 60-year days or so?
Yeah, more or less.
We would intend to follow that.
I think you'll see the beginning of a great big swimming pool
being dug out in Stanley Park here relatively soon.
They came in, and the first thing they'd done
was scrap the parry bowl, as it's called.
The off-the-shelf design came up with this great design.
To be fair, it's a great design for the new stadium.
Talk of 78,000 to 74,000 capacity.
It's a great design for the new stadium.
Architects fees for a stadium that are probably never going to get
under their reign does ask the question,
and it does anger fans to think,
well, if they were never going to build a stadium,
why were they allowed to spend that money?
Does money from a football club
disappear into pay for stuff that isn't happening?
It makes no sense, really, I think, in the long run
to not put money back into the communities
because it's where your fans come from.
It's where the players come from in the end,
and you're not going to have these players.
You're not going to have people coming through
to play the game on the pitch,
and you're certainly going to have people watching the game
from the terraces unless more is put back into the communities.
So that seems to be pretty fundamental
and not really a controversial point of view.
Should Liverpool football club
the business that is making the most money around yet
and is bringing in all these visitors not want the best for this area?
It seems they don't,
it seems they've allowed the situation to remain as it is now.
So, as far as Hicks and Gillette are concerned,
they've been a big negative in terms of regeneration.
But we must kill them and drive them out.
When the first set of publicity accounts come out,
there's a small section in it talking about expenses.
That we should be paying for them and their family
to come over on all expenses paid trips,
staying in five-star hotels,
flying over on private jets,
allowing one of their sons to stand on the pitch
and feel to propose to his girlfriend.
It isn't an all-expenses paid jolly.
Look at the fans that have come on through their turnstiles
who shave or who make sacrifices to pay for their tickets,
who make sacrifices in the summer
or work extra hours all the time to pay for their season ticket.
Why were fans allowed to pay for them to come
and watch the football club that they chose to own?
It's a massive boner contention for Liverpool fans there.
We say we live in a capitalistic society.
What does that mean?
We just didn't see what was coming.
Hicks and Gillette put very little of their own money into this
at the beginning when they bought it for 220 million.
220 million included 40 million of debt
that was already in the company
and then the rest of it was largely speaking borrowed.
A lefbridge buyout is using debt to acquire an asset,
putting the debt onto the asset often,
which is what's happened with Liverpool's case.
A lefbridge buyout is using debt to acquire an asset,
on to the asset often, which is what's happened with Liverpool's case.
The worst aspect is the fact that these are leverage buyouts.
What they're doing, they're laying the debt onto the clubs themselves.
I mean, ultimately, it is, again, the fan and the club that pays their profit.
What's wrong with Liverpool and what's wrong with Manchester United is it's overbought it.
The debt is rising and rising and rising and that becomes more worrying by the day.
Liverpool are paying £770,000 every week.
That's the wages of seven world clubs, seven Fernando Torres''.
They could be paying the wages off every single week.
If you're talking about levels of debt that existed in Manchester United or Liverpool,
then Liverpool fans should be very wary.
That's just awful.
It just makes you think, well, what sense is there in this?
There's no sense of reliance.
Can you understand concerns that supporters might have had when initially it mentioned,
hey, we've already got a couple of Americans coming in to buy Aston Villa, to buy Manchester United,
and now there's a couple of guys coming in to buy Liverpool.
Can you understand their initial concerns?
Well, because we're not English, but it's not easy to own a sports team.
These guys strike me as financial poker players.
Oh, yes, I did. I was in love, you know.
Liverpool for Boclub exist to win Sophie's.
They exist as a source of pride for the supporters.
That's what Bill Shankley said.
Yet instead, under Thomas and George Shillett,
it seems Liverpool for Boclub existed to pay down debt.
We wanted to write until recently, under two or three years ago, about people kicking balls,
about zonal march and about offside traps.
Now we're writing about finances.
I didn't have the expertise to do that.
They're exploiting it.
I mean, we used to think of the phrase that we used to use as a stripping.
I mean, that's how I see it in the same vein,
is that what they're trying to do is take the value out of something,
or the monetary value, and they leave it stripped of that monetary value.
Isn't this pretty so green and so crunchy?
It's so easy on the eyes.
We speak the language that everybody understands.
Instead of me saying something that was avaricious,
I would say it was bloody greedy.
They called it private equity before that.
It was called asset stripping.
It's the same thing.
They come in, they use a product,
they put the debt against that product
and those who buy the product pay off the debt.
Tom Hicks himself is close with us saying,
that Liverpool is like Weetabicks.
When they bought Weetabicks,
you could say that people who ate Weetabicks
were paying for them to own that company.
Mae'r company.
Mae'n ddod i'r ddod.
Mae hi i ddod dw i.
Cygiw sydd wedi eu bodus Rheddoabだけll ar gyfer Llywodraeth,
dyma i gyrddurio lleadu iawn yn gweithgau lleiaidua,
yma i gyrddurio llead её mor gym equalityda.
Y gyrddur 100 o ff shot ym hè appreciation fighradu hynny?
Fyddden…
Fe fydd yw eich gyrdd Corde Nicholas?
Mae'r ddechrau sydd yn ei ddechrau ar gyfer gweithio'r ddechrau,
ac mae'r ddechrau yn ei ddechrau, mae'r ddechrau'n gwybod.
Mae'n ddechrau sy'n ddechrau'n ddechrau, mae'n ddechrau'n ddechrau,
lle mae'r ddechrau'n ddechrau a'r ddechrau'n ddechrau.
Yn ymddangos yma, mae'n gweithio i mi a ddim yn ysgwrdd i'r drws yn ysgwrdd.
Felly dyna ieth fod yn ddesfer i'n fuodigo yn ysgwrdd i mi.
Felly, roedden yn
D nyfwc am gent Cym Links bandwyr?
Ond efallai yn hyn ph axiysion yourt h Pam hears!
Hle yw'r cyfeil newid.
Yn ddydgol y gandwyr Pride Lwyfryרט felly wedi ar y A fearedll Fям investment
I nodw'r pwysig o Gwyd Ceer granny?
Yna wrth i alw y cyfnod ff crispf?
Ydw y gallai angen ar gondol yr A thew ganddf yn nesaf pwynd ni hefyd invited.
Mae'n taiwch i bywsc pan fydddaraf yn oed y Prodys Gwyd thuc
Ond am rywun y gallwch i ddweud
Danies is my career.
It's... utopium unlimited.
It grows in the dark.
I'w droi gwylio gwyllteis, sy'n situs ranked lŵwgaeth ychydig hynny'n 100 rhai oant ur grantetol dorel.
of gallu 40 a 50...
..na cael ei dewis a chio chwyl f prospects.
He he, Marker dropped five points. I'm glad my money's tied up in hay.
I claim this title is, usual, a Saturday, but as of Llywodrafor it is not for his, I read it above.
Mae'r fawr yn goll yn Llywodraeth!
Goll!
Goll!
Goll!
Goll!
Capitalism?
Wel, why should there be any question about it?
Hasn't it given us the highest standard of living in the world?
We must do our best at helping people with their needs to go to work as an client.
They must have been at work, working hard at counting, doing something good at pay investing.
Most people would probably love to see the financial dealings of the time issues of the例えば嘞 i las her.
Lwch dda'r clwsau a'n gyfnw'n byw'r clwsau'r sgrutinu.
Rwy'n cael ei ddweud o'r ddweud o'r ddweud.
Rwy'n cael ei ddweud o'r ddweud os rwy'n cael ei ddweud o'r ddweud...
.. everyone is looking for anton word.
hesiton ynedaeth i ddefnyddio.
Siwyddon eich tell diddol yncrit recl�牙 ni'i gynnal ddech am,
darauf am ymddangos ymddangos D бойf yn edrych,
a Maggie nid yn sig bair ar unrhyw mwynt yn dal,
a Siwyddon er mwyn튼ol yn finernol ac mae arfer yn eich l 팬f���der.
Mae gwellgoauti wedi gwneud ar efecto bydd hynny,
ynw'n invention
oousedran i wir ar unrhyw allanol,
mae teimlo yw'nfromاeth.
Mae gaf i dyma ar dnnaraf ei syfi ddwych wedi cael uned liftsraffo,
na mwyn.
felly mae'r bod Wrath Podfer yn chefonohol ar hyn.
Mae f adverse, a facebook-blub ac product held yn nie dogs palmol.
Mae'n mynd lle i, wraps pob i siwr.
Dayb hwnach eich bod sourol anchored ar y clom esyn yn ddigon.
E synth am Перaklyf, ac eich r�w'l ynollai'n ei fy OTти.
Bydd cymrydd jamell, gyda y llifyr lle Babyn ryw beth mewn syr a conflictio mewn siarru ac r Carnut.
The only thing that they're going to do is take it to pieces.
Ym wneud llawer felly
Aha – 있죠, cam gell hyn ychydig yn ofertaeth sy'n offängtuaeth i allafaniaeth European没有?"
Fel hyn yw, Han Jude
wedi wneud fe'wn c carbs
fel bot wych ar ma mile
a wnaeth e wedi ffinolyswyr
ti ddim yn Griffithaeth
ac neu at li wireswyr
Gyd-di-gall, roastys,
waith o het o Gym yn Pen
Ring casnod oherwydd
Mae'r Baseball storiolaeth yn digwydd o'r gwmarau a d hac yn bachau ty splendor arno'r cyfanyddion
The fear ond y drwy cyfrydd gwahanol yn ddefnyddio èu
mewn gerwraeth prof cigarettes i ni'r cyfi amser i ddeithas hon
Yr Hollinydd gyyrthραf han midnight yn ysgrifio ar hyn wedi cael fyホ plut mois Stored
Merci practices a beth.
The businesses are all in excellent shape financially. They all are healthy. They've got strong incomes and relatively small debt in this difficult world.
Why would he fit in all of Dickon's stories then?
The bin made bank club before, the sport franchises and their previous business dealings, the bin made bank club, to them it seems to be a badge of honour.
Rather than something to be ashamed of and something to prevent, they just accept it as a way that they do business.
These guys, they're just speculators. They speculate in sports clubs. Sometimes it comes off, sometimes it doesn't.
But I mean, the last thing that they're interested in is the longer term health of an individual sports club.
What it's about is a fast turnover and a fast book.
Maybe this is the greatest racket I ever came up with.
You can say that again. No, what a sucker. 20 Gs, just like that.
Tom Hicks and George Gillette have got a track record of what they are doing now.
They wouldn't be responsible for repaying any part of the debt. Live a pool for ball club boards.
And that's when you begin to see players sold to meet debt repayments to get the bank's money back.
And we're able to live a pool for ball club then.
I know what stability means to professional sports organisations.
I can't see how it will ever be possible for Liverpool fans to trust these people again.
We don't believe that the way Liverpool is currently managed and its stewardship isn't safe hands and we'd like a change.
Almost 40 years ago, my grandad stood on these steps in front of a crowd that had not come to see a triumphant Liverpool side,
but to welcome home a side that had been defeated in the 1971 cup final.
Then again, in 2005, over a million people turned out to celebrate the magic of Istanbul.
Whether it's a success or a failure, we support our team.
We've moved into an era when the Wall Street businessmen are coming into it.
The Gordon Gechel, you know why you're fucking with this company because it's fuckable.
And Liverpool was more fuckable than most.
The price is right, the exciting game of fitting, buying and bargaining.
A majestic break front, an elegant design by Union National.
But now that they've officially put the club up for sale, Thomas and George, they let team to have become a bit bullish.
The Hicks valuation of £800 million is pure fantasy land.
I don't know where he gets that from, can't see any possible justification for it or any number anywhere near it.
It's incredible to think that the man who bankrolled the American War of Independence was born just a stone's throw away from here in Toxford.
A fellow called Robert Morris was not only known as the financier of the revolution,
but he also signed both the Declaration of Independence and the American Constitution.
So this Liverpool-born banker was the first also to use the dollar symbol in official documentation.
Now whilst we can legitimately claim as scouts that we gave America a constitution and a currency,
in retain America gave us Gillette and Hicks, it doesn't seem to be a face walk to me, I don't know what you think.
If all those years ago the Americans could claim their country back from the English,
then nearly two and a half centuries later, scouts all over the world should be claiming our club back from the Americans.
I'd like to say is a model of a club where there is a shared ownership amongst a lot of people,
ideally with the sort of members club kind of approach.
Just hope that we can put football back into the hands of the people because that's what it's all about.
Without the people there's no game really.
Goodbye folks, it's been weird.
Children, have you ever met the bogeyman before?
No, of course you haven't, for you're much too good I'm sure.
Don't you be afraid of him if he should visit you.
He's a great big coward so I'll tell you what to do.
Hush, hush, hush, here comes the bogeyman.
Don't let him come too close to you, he'll catch you if he can.
Just pretend that you're a crocodile and you will find that bogeyman will run away a mile.
Say shoo shoo and stick him with a pin.
Bogeyman will very nearly jump out of his skin.
Say buzz buzz just like the wasp that stings.
Bogeyman will think you are an elephant with wings.
Tell him you've got soldiers in your bed for he will never guess that they are only made of lead.
