Friday, 15 February 2008

The '39th step'.....

John Buchan wrote The Thirty-nine Steps while he was ill and in bed with a duodenal ulcer. And the novel, first published in 1915, marked a turning point in Buchan’s literary career.

It is the first of five novels featuring Richard Hannay, an all action hero with a stiff upper lip and a James Bond ability to get out of perilous situations.

With Europe close to war, and with spies hiding behind every curtain, Hannay uncovers an anarchistic plot to destabilise Europe; with Act One….a plan to assassinate Greek Premier, Karolides, during his upcoming visit to London.

Despite departing from the original story line, Alfred Hitchcock’s 1935 adaptation The 39 Steps is a ‘Cinema classic‘…..

Real Madrid are football’s highest earning club, making £24.1m more than Manchester United last season (Source: Deloitte Football Money League 2008).

The European Premier League makes interesting reading….

Real Madrid £236.2m
Manchester United £212.1m
Barcelona £195.3m
Chelsea £190.5m
Arsenal £177.6m , followed by….

AC. Milan, Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Inter Milan, AS Roma, Tottenham, Juventus, Lyons, Newcastle, Hamburg SV, Schalke 04, Celtic, Valencia…..

And propping up the League….

Marseilles £66.6m
Werder Bremen £65.5m

Now I wonder if Newcastle, currently languishing in 13th place in the EPL, would feel ‘bigger’ if they held down a similar position in a new Euro League….

Perhaps Richard Scudamore, Chief Executive of the Premier League, has an eye on this mountain of Euro cash when he talks of the ‘39th step’.

Cambridge United came to the Recreation Ground on Tuesday evening determined to go home with a point…..

And they did.

Cambridge defended deep….filled up the midfield. And ran and ran and continued running, right up to the final whistle. Aldershot wasted two good chances to, perhaps, steal a victory and the game ended 0v0.

And in a hard fought game the sending off , by Referee Phillips, of Aldershot defender Anthony Charles, appeared to be the result of a personal motivation rather than the fair application of the Laws of the Game.

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