Point one he will try too hard and the ball will seem like a rubber one. He loses control quite easily in normal circumstances. Point two he's not fit. Point three our defence will cope even if he does get a chance. Point four is he has to be a passenger not being fit so they are in effect playing with 10 men. Point five sadly he won't last 90 minutes anyway.
Not really a big shock that one is it. We have an abundance of strikers and he is bound to be the bottom in the pecking order. Will do him good to get competitive games. Think he will do well for them. I quite liked what I saw last season when he played.
Slight interest to Argyle fans.......Warren Feeney has been sacked by Newport County....bottom of the league. Sean McCarthy and James Bittner have been made caretaker managers for Saturdays game against Stevenage
Now the sacking season is up and running I see Warnock has gone to Cardiff. I suppose it stops him being linked with us every 5 minutes for a while. He must have retired every year for the last 5 or 6.
He hasn't retired yet....not until yet another leader has been appointed......and they still have 16% rating nationwide. The way Theresa May is talking and thieving UKIP policies.....she could change the Conservative Parties name to New UKIP and gain 4 million extra votes........Cameron and Osborne are names of the past....failed scaremongers of doom and gloom.
Prophets, not scaremongers, the s**t is still en route to the fan and is likely to be for a couple of years yet.
History will place them as insignificant in future years.........not loved noticeable by their own party anymore. Cameron will join the same gravy train that many condemned Tony Blair for joining.
You wait and see how insignificant. You are getting the reassuring mood music at present to keep the markets stable. I picture the orchestra on the Titanic every time I see Philip Hammond or Mark Carney. One of 2 things will happen. Either, we lose access to the Free Market and the economy crashes with the effect probably extending for 5 to 10 years as limited specialist resources limit how fast we can do trade deals even if we can find partners. The motor manufacturers have made it very clear where they stand recently. Or, we keep access to some or all of the Free Market and immigration isn't resolved as the xenophobes and racists want it to be. Then the government falls and the markets fall with it as the country looks ungovernable - and probably it is now that the populist genie has been let out of the bottle.
Oh and some more bad news: http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/gra...yle-contract/story-29783906-detail/story.html
The best thing PAFC can do to keep Carey is to get promoted. If a Championship club game in for him, it would be hard to keep him whatever the contractual position. Fail to get promoted again would leave us open to big-wallet bids from League 1. If we do go up however and Adams is given some of the extra cash to make us competitive (and he doesn't seem to need a lot to do that) then you'd hope there'd be no particular reason for Carey to move.
The reason that we still had Graham Carey at the end of last season could of been because he had a spell out injured, followed by a drop in form when he came back, and was then of clubs radar for awhile. I'm not suggesting that's the best ploy this season is to hope he gets injured again and takes awhile to get up to speed when coming back. He is always first on the team sheet when Adams picks his team....with this high regular mileage the chances of him getting injured is always a possibility......Adams will be aware of that.....but is he doing enough to develop another player to take over that roll by giving whoever that might be playing time in league matches......things can look good on the training field but it is match time that proves one way or another if we have someone to fill that need. Teams will eventually find ways of nullifying Carey and to give him no space to show his talent.....it was noticeable on Saturday that Yeovil didn't do enough to smother him, and he strode forward into space and unleashed that goal shot that left their goalkeeper standing transfixed to his goal line helpless. Wasn't this the problem at Wembley that Wimbledon kept him shackled and no one else was playing well enough to take the game to them from another slant.