Welcome
Hello there, welcome to my blog.
My name is Carl MacDonald, I'm a recent Journalism graduate.
Feel free to comment on my posts and subscribe to the blog.
If you wish to contact me, go to the about me page and fill in the form.
Thanks for stopping by.
Follow me on twitter @cmacd57
Tweets
- The EDL are as representative of English citizens as Islamist terrorists are of Muslims. In short, not very. 2 days ago
- RT @LouisTab84: @cmacd57 They are just as dangerous as the Jihadists. 2 days ago
- EDL planning a march in Woolwich. What could possibly go wrong? What an awful set of clowns. 2 days ago
- Absolutely pathetic RT >> "@Official_EDL: ****CONFIRMED WE HAVE BEEN SUBJECT TO A TERROR ATTACK BY ISLAM, WE ARE CURRENTLY UNDER ATTACK****" 2 days ago
- Wow that video of the #Woolwich attacker is one of the most harrowing things I've ever seen. Truly awful. 2 days ago
Blog Stats
- 26,729 views
Navigation
Search Blog
Tag Archives: Chelsea
Tension, twists and drama as the January transfer window slams shut
The January transfer window has long been castigated by football managers across the country and indeed the continent as being a time for impulse buys and inflated prices. At 11pm last night, the 2011 window slammed shut having provided arguably … Continue reading →
Posted in Football, Journalism
|
Tagged Andy Carroll, Anfield, Barcelona, billion, Brazil, British, Carl MacDonald, Championship, Chelsea, David Luiz, David Villa, deadline day, Didier Drogba, England, extravagant, Fernando Torres, football, footballer, January, Jose Mourinho, Kenny Dalglish, Kevin Nolan, Liverpool, Luis Suarez, millions, Newcastle United, Nicolas Anelka, off-field problems, Premier League, Roman Abramovich, Roy Hodgson, South Africa, spending, Stamford Bridge, transfer record, transfer window, Uruguay, World Cup 2010
|
Leave a comment
The demise of the football commentator
Kenneth Wolstenholme etched his words into the history book with his classic “some people are on the pitch, they think it’s all over… it is now!”
But one of my latest gripes about watching footy on T.V. is the shocking demise of the quality of commentary provided. Continue reading →
Posted in Football, Journalism
|
Tagged 1966, 1998, 1999, 2005, 2010, 5live, Africa, Alan Green, Alfonso, American football, Anfield, Arsenal, Barcelona, BBC, Carl MacDonald, Champions League, Charlize Theron, Chelsea, Clive Tyldsley, Didier Drogbar, English, Europe, football, Guy Mowbray, Istanbul, ITV, John Motson, Jonathan Pearce, Kenneth Wolstenholme, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Match of the Day, Milan, Peter Drury, Robot Wars, Siphiwe Tshabalala, Sir Killalot, South Africa, Spain, Steven Gerrard, Sun Jihai, Tottenham Hotspur, World Cup, Yugoslavia
|
2 Comments