will
620 posts


@saintsfcwill @SaintsExtra @JPercyTelegraph And you would be if you didn’t cheat your way through the season and atleast we’ve got something to show for out time in the prem 👍
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👔 Former Southampton manager Russell Martin is in advanced talks to take over at League One side Leicester City #saintsfc @JPercyTelegraph

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@ExclLcfcnews @SaintsExtra @JPercyTelegraph youre in the 3rd tier of english football by the way pal
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@saintsfcwill @SaintsExtra @JPercyTelegraph Southampton losing 9-0 at home to us makes me chuckle aswell
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@saintsfcwill @SaintsExtra @JPercyTelegraph Typical scummers forcing rivalries with clubs who don’t care about them
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@saintsfcwill He has only been a manager what 6 months? Refused to change shape until Ben Garner came in and the whole fanbase wanted him gone after Oxford. The players were always good enough to win plenty of games. Also Tonda just stands there on the sideline without barely a word
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🚨🎙️Thierry Henry on Southampton expelled for spying drama against Middlesbrough:
“I have to be honest, this is a difficult one. Spying on another team’s training is wrong. Full stop. It crosses a line, it undermines the trust that should exist between clubs, and I understand why Middlesbrough are furious and why the EFL felt they had to act strongly. Integrity matters in this game.
At the same time, I find myself questioning whether expulsion from the play-offs is the right punishment. It feels… heavy. Almost like using a sledgehammer when a precise scalpel was needed.
Let’s be clear: this wasn’t match-fixing or doping. It was analysts pushing boundaries for tactical information, something that, sadly, has happened in different forms across the game for years.
Marcelo Bielsa did it openly at Derby and Leeds, admitted it, and people called him a genius, not a criminal. Drones, analysts in trees, whatever, in the modern game with data and marginal gains everywhere, clubs push boundaries.
Southampton admitted it, yes, and they deserve punishment. A heavy fine, points deduction, maybe even a ban for the staff involved. But kicking the entire club out after they earned their place on the pitch? That punishes players, coaches, and fans who had nothing to do with one or two analysts doing something stupid.
What troubles me most is the collateral damage. The players who battled through a tough Championship season after relegation, who went to extra time and scored that late goal to beat Middlesbrough on the pitch, they earned their place in the final through merit.
Now that achievement is being erased because of actions taken by a small number of staff members. That feels disproportionate to me. A significant fine, a points deduction for next season, and sanctions against the individuals responsible, those would be strong, meaningful punishments that address the breach without nullifying an entire season’s competitive work.
Sport has to balance two things: protecting fairness and recognising that human error and ambition sometimes lead people astray. If every rules breach in high-stakes moments leads to rewriting results, we risk turning the disciplinary process into something more powerful than the football itself. I’ve sat in dressing rooms where we prepared meticulously for opponents. Everyone does. The difference is getting caught.
I hope Southampton appeal and that the final decision finds a better equilibrium. Middlesbrough deserve respect, they were wronged but the players of Southampton also deserve not to have their legitimate efforts wiped away. Football is emotional, passionate, and imperfect.
The response to this should reflect wisdom as much as outrage. We need clearer rules going forward so incidents like this become rare, but we must be careful not to let one mistake destroy what was built legitimately on the grass.


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southampton football club, on behalf of all of us, you are an absolute disgrace. @SouthamptonFC #saintsfc
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