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    QPR SACK manager Neil Critchley after miserable run of one win in 12 games since taking over from Michael Beale

    QPR have SACKED manager Neil Critchley after just two months in charge.The former Liverpool development coach took over from Michael Beale in December but won just one of his 12 matches in charge.
    Neil Critchley has been sacked as QPR managerCredit: PA
    Now the West London outfit have axed Critchley with the club languishing 17th in the Championship.
    His assistants Iain Brunskill and Mike Garrity have also left their roles, it has been confirmed.
    CEO Lee Hoos said: “It is hugely disappointing to have to make such a decision so early into Neil’s tenure with the club.
    “However, after seeing the team slip from play-off contenders to one being drawn into a relegation battle, the Board felt it had to act.
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    “There is no doubt Neil inherited a difficult situation when he joined and we would like to acknowledge his superb work ethic and professionalism throughout our dealings.
    “He is a fantastic man and we have no doubts he will go on to be a success elsewhere, just as he was at Blackpool.”
    QPR lost 3-1 at Middlesbrough on Saturday was their third in a row and left them eight points above the relegation zone.
    It is an incredible fall for the R’s, who were top of the table in October under Beale – poached by Rangers – but are sliding at an alarming rate.
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    Director of Football Les Ferdinand added: “Unfortunately, things have not worked out how any of us would have liked.
    “As we enter into a critical stage of the season, we understand the need for a swift appointment to be made.
    “Stability is key to the success of a football club and this season has presented challenges which have denied us that stability.
    “For us to move forward we must all learn from what has happened and pull together.”
    Speaking after the Boro defeat, Critchley was adamant he could turn it around with the current crop of underperforming players.
    PARTING WORDS
    The 44-year-old said: “When I see the players play like they did today, in that type of atmosphere, I’ve got full belief that we can.
    “We just need a bit of luck and things to go for us. It’s just not quite happening.
    “All I can do is concentrate on trying to help the players improve. They need to feel my support.
    “I saw a group that was together today. They’re still playing, in my opinion.”
    Critchley spent seven years at Liverpool, working in the academy and taking charge of the first team twice when Jurgen Klopp was unavailable.
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    He had two years as Blackpool’s head coach – winning promotion via the League One play-offs in 2021 – before joining Aston Villa as Steven Gerrard’s assistant for a brief spell.
    QPR host play-off-chasing Blackburn at Loftus Road in their next match on Saturday.
    QPR were top in October but are hurtling towards the relegation zoneCredit: Rex More

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    Watch hilarious moment Sunderland star Luke O’Nien jumps on rival’s back and gives him KISS leaving fans in stitches

    LUKE O’NIEN found a novel way of getting himself booked.The Sunderland star, 28, was in action against Bristol City on Saturday, when he was shown a yellow card for stopping Alex Scott on the break.
    Luke O’Nien plants a kiss on Alex ScottCredit: Rex
    O’Nien received a yellow card for breaking up City’s counterCredit: Rex

    But, rather than a shirt pull or a trip – O’Nien hitched a ride on his opponent’s back as he raced away.
    Better still, he then planted a kiss on Scott’s face to calm the situation down.
    Scott saw the funny side, but that didn’t stop referee Gavin Ward from brandishing a yellow card from his pocket.
    The Black Cats looked like they were on their way to three points when Jack Clarke gave them the lead with a stunning strike after 59 minutes.
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    However, in stoppage time Nahki Wells steadied his nerves and fired home from the penalty spot to earn the visitors a point.
    The draw sees Sunderland remain in the playoff picture in fifth place – level on points with sixth place Millwall and seventh spot Blackburn Rovers.
    Automatic promotion seems unlikely, with second-placed Sheffield United 12 points clear.
    Despite dropping two points at home, Sunderland boss Tony Mowbray was keen to focus on the positives.
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    “When Jack whacked that one in I thought we’d get over the line but we have to accept the penalty, put the point in the bag and move on,” he said.
    “If we’d said at the start of the week that we’d get seven points, including another trip to London which was our third in ten days, we’d have probably taken that.
    “It was just another challenge for our young team and generally we handled it well, other teams are allowed to attack us and have a game plan, that’s football.
    “We just couldn’t quite see it over the line. It’s a good experience for us.” More

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    Burnley to make Jordan Beyer transfer permanent from Borussia Moenchengladbach after sealing Prem promotion

    CHAMPIONSHIP leaders Burnley will take up their option to buy Germany defender Jordan Beyer once they seal promotion.The Clarets have already agreed a fee with Borussia Moenchengladbach and the on-loan centre-back just needs to help Vincent Kompany’s side back into the top flight for the clause to kick in.
    Burnley will take up their option to buy Jordan Beyer once they seal promotionCredit: Getty
    Beyer, 22, has yet to sort out personal terms but that is seen as a formality as he is desperate to play in the Premier League.
    Burnley will also make 22-year-old striker Michael Obafemi’s move from Swansea permanent for £3.5million in the summer. 
    Manchester City legend Kompany has turned the Clarets around as they sit 11 points above second-placed Blackburn.
    And in an exclusive interview with SunSport, the defensive legend admitted not even promotion was his target.
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    He said this month: “The biggest thing I like is a team who scores goals.
    “That’s how I approach every phase of play, every situation. I know how difficult it is to have goals in the team.
    “I couldn’t have predicted that they were going to be so prolific and that we’d have done quite as well as we have.
    “The target was to just have a season where we didn’t entirely collapse after relegation, then improve from there and eventually be in contention.
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    “It wasn’t the plan to do it over the course of this season. Burnley is a very patient place.
    “We don’t get too involved in the rollercoaster of outside noise. Here we’re in a protective bubble. 
    “From day one, it’s been just about improvement, making the squad better and more healthy.
    “We wanted to get players in that would excite the fans and then be convinced that by the end of it we would become good enough. But the time frame was not this fast!”
    Vincent Kompany has taken Burnley to top of the ChampionshipCredit: Getty More

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    Neil Warnock, 74, planning Old Fashioned bid to beat relegation with Huddersfield after revelation on New York holiday

    NEIL WARNOCK was sipping his aptly named favourite cocktail — an Old Fashioned — in Downtown Manhattan this week.If there was a stiff drink befitting one of football’s great characters it would be that one.
    Neil Warnock was drinking cocktails in New York before flying back to the UK to take the Huddersfield job
    Warnock has made a shock return to management with the TerriersCredit: Getty
    Dating back to a bygone age, it is one of the most basic concoctions — bourbon, bitters, sugar and water on the rocks garnished with an orange slice or zest with a cocktail cherry in a proper heavy short glass.
    With Warnock, who dates back to 1948, you get a fiery little number that is a fusion of straight-talking, no-nonsense passion garnished with a hilarious sense of fun that keeps captivating players, fans and media alike.
    Warnock, aged 74 and 79 days today, will become the second-oldest manager in professional English football history behind Roy Hodgson when he takes charge of struggling Huddersfield against Birmingham — after flying back from a short romantic Valentine’s break to answer the club’s SOS call.
    And he told SunSport: “Sharon and I were drinking cocktails in some great little jazz clubs in New York but four nights in such a hectic city is enough when you get to our age.
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    “While I was drinking an Old Fashioned listening to great pianists, singers and saxophonists, I was feeling, well, a little old-fashioned!
    “But, mind you, the next ten weeks are going to be far more hectic than being in New York!”
    The Yorkshireman, who claimed he had retired in April, has won an English record of eight promotions in a 43-year career that has spanned 16 different clubs.
    But now he must navigate 15 fixtures — eight against top-ten clubs — to save the second-bottom Terriers from crashing into League One just a year after they were a play-off final away from making a return to the Premier League.
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    Managers Danny Schofield, 42, and 39-year-old Mark Fotherington have been and gone this season and Huddersfield have not won for eight matches.
    Warnock added: “I’m not a miracle worker and don’t walk on water but am not a bad manager and will give it my best shot.
    “They’ve had two young guys in charge and wanted someone with experience to organise the team until the end of the season, making them harder to beat, because they’ve been a bit of a mess.
    “After Birmingham, it’s Burnley away and we’ve got all the top teams to face — but that’s what I love because we can ruffle a few feathers, can’t we?
    “The top teams will be under as much pressure as we are. Rather than having that trepidation you get when you’re younger and worrying too much, I’m not going to panic.
    “I told the players, ‘You’re lucky I’ve come out of retirement. I’m going to enjoy these 15 games and want you to as well.’ We’re going to give it a real go.”
    Warnock has taken the job “on a Yorkshireman’s handshake” with owner Dean Hoyle until the end of the season.
    He is already a hero in this market town in the foothills of the Pennines after getting the team promoted to what is now known as the Championship in 1995 via the play-offs.
    The Terriers boss said: “The fans will be pleased. I got a great reception when I came up here before Christmas. I want to put smiles on their faces.”
    While Warnock jokes he is a dinosaur, he has embraced the world of social media, setting up his own Twitter account with some of his posts going viral.
    When Lionel Messi was captured sleeping with his arm around the World Cup, Warnock tweeted the image alongside one of him snoozing with the Championship trophy he won with QPR in 2011. With the caption “Deja Duvet”, the post had FOUR MILLION hits.
    And earlier this week, he posted a photo of himself next to a model of a T-Rex skeleton with the caption: “From one dinosaur to another, not extinct yet.”
    He admitted: “I’d never thought about Twitter before I retired because I can’t even turn a computer on.
    “Someone puts the posts up for me but I’m always thinking of ideas what to put on there. One of the first things I posted was on my bicycle in Scotland. There was a heatwave so I simply told people to drink plenty of water and not get dehydrated. It got 2.5m hits in less than ten hours. I was thinking, ‘How sad is this?’
    “I looked a right idiot. But, like the dinosaur tweet the other day, I like to make people smile and laugh. You must laugh at yourself sometimes.”
    Not so laughable is the amount of recent controversy over  refereeing decisions and Warnock probably holds the record for paying out the most fines for his bust-ups with officials.
    And while he admits he is unlikely to change his ways, he believes now that fellow Yorkshireman Howard Webb is in charge of refereeing in English football, the quality will improve.
    He said: “I’ve looked at some of the mistakes over the past few weeks in VAR and it’s the same old names that cropped up when I was managing before.
    “They’ve gone in the right direction with Howard, he’s a proper referees’ man. He uses the law of the game that no one bothers with — the common-sense one. We can’t carry on like we have.
    “I wanted VAR because I got relegated at Cardiff because of a goal that was two yards offside. But I never envisaged the problems it’s causing. They’re still getting decisions wrong and the way it’s done is taking the joy out of goal celebrations. It’s taking too long.
    “We need to put a time limit on it. I’d say 30 seconds — if they can’t make their mind up in that time you must go with the referee’s decision. Sometimes it takes three or four minutes — that’s ridiculous.
    “I wasn’t a fan of the last guy in charge, Mike Riley, because when he refereed he was a robot.
    “And that’s how all his referees have turned out to be.”
    But if Warnock keeps Huddersfield up, he will celebrate by downing a few more of his Old Fashioned cocktails.
    And he insisted: “I’m then going to retire again.”
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    Yeah, right… or wait for another job to pop up next February?
    He laughed: “At my age, working ten weeks a year is just perfect.” More

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    ‘Kid called me a ‘f***ing Chinese p***k’ – Neil Etheridge joins Troy Deeney in revealing impact of shocking racist abuse

    IN the space of 17 days, Birmingham team-mates Troy Deeney and Neil Etheridge have been victims of racial abuse from fans at English football grounds.And, yes, you can check the dateline at the top of this story, the year is 2023.
    The recent experiences of Neil Etheridge and Troy Deeney show how much work still has to be done to curb racism in footballCredit: Roland Leon Sun Commissioned
    Birmingham team-mates Etheridge and Deeney are speaking outCredit: Roland Leon Sun Commissioned
    Britain has been a multicultural  society for decades and its national sport has been surrounded by anti-racism campaigns, slogans and gestures for several years, too.
    Yet here we are, discussing the serious impact on two experienced, “thick-skinned” pro footballers who  suffered vile racial slurs from the terraces.
    In this interview, Birmingham captain Deeney and keeper Etheridge describe feelings of degradation,  worthlessness, numbness — even shame — after they were victims of sickening slurs on the basis of their ethnic origin.
    A high-profile black man, Deeney suffers dozens of instances of racism every week — mostly online, but  occasionally in person.
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    And, most recently, from a supporter of his own club after Tuesday’s 2-0 home defeat by Cardiff.
    Etheridge is half-Asian — his father is white British, his mother Filipino.
    Other than one incident at school in an “affluent, white area that wasn’t multicultural”, he had never suffered racial abuse until the dying moments of a 2-2 FA Cup draw at Blackburn Rovers on January 28.
    When I asked Deeney whether he wanted to write about Tuesday’s incident at St Andrew’s in his weekly SunSport column, he suggested that Etheridge joined our conversation.
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    It felt like I’d been stabbed with a hot knife in an area of my body I didn’t even know I had. You feel numb, degraded, worthless.Neil Etheridge
    Deeney suggested some people might be tired of hearing him “banging on about racism again”. It’s sad he fears such attitudes, but perhaps he is right.
    He felt Etheridge might offer a different perspective. To prove racism wasn’t exclusively a “black issue” and also to hear how it felt to be racially abused from the terraces for the first time.
    Recalling the incident, Etheridge says: “We scored a last-minute equaliser  at Ewood Park, I’d celebrated by the  halfway line and, as I walked back towards the goal, I  heard the normal sort of abuse you get used to.
    “Then, all of a sudden, there was a person standing out in the crowd and it got very nasty. He was saying, ‘You f***ing Chinese p***k’.
    “He then pulled his face back to  give the impression he had ‘Chinese’ eyes, as people might say. I was really taken aback.
    “It felt like I’d been stabbed with a hot knife in an area of my body I didn’t even know I had.
    “You feel completely numb, completely degraded and worthless, which is a really weird sensation. It cuts you deep.
    “Mentally, it’s affecting you. Then you start questioning yourself.
    “When the police spoke to me, I’m thinking, ‘Has this really happened?’ Although the CCTV footage made it pretty damned clear it had.
    “I reported it to the referee, he  dealt with it well and the FA got involved. The police found the culprit.
    “The culprit has admitted the offence. It was a 15-year-old.
    “The kid said he didn’t believe it was racist — that is what we are  dealing with, a complete lack of education and understanding. That’s why we both wanted to speak . . . ”
    Striker Deeney reported abuse as Birmingham lost 2-0 at home to Cardiff in the Championship on TuesdayCredit: Rex
    Deeney intervenes: “You’re not going to offend me, mate, we have discussed this . . . the idea of a ‘black agenda’, as if racism is solely a black issue.”
    “That’s what I mean,” says Etheridge. “There are fewer Asian people in English football — as a half-Asian player, it’s not being talked about,  then people can say “it [anti-Asian discrimination] isn’t racist, is it?”
    As for Tuesday’s incident, Deeney explains: “I’d come on 15 minutes  from time, at 0-0, and Cardiff scored two late goals.
    “At the final whistle, we go around the pitch and clap — win, lose or draw.
    “Then we came to the tunnel, it’s the kids and disabled area, and you  often hear, ‘Troy, can I have your shirt?’
    “In this instance, I’m hearing  swearing and abuse aimed at everyone. Then I spot this guy on the concourse.
    “He is leaning over, we’ve made eye contact, and it is, ‘You black c***, you f***ing n*****’. I asked, ‘What did you say?’ and he repeated it. I’m like, ‘Wow, you really don’t give a f*** do you?’”
    I ask Deeney how this made him feel. I apologise if the question sounds trite but, as a white man with no experience of suffering racism, I want him to differentiate between this experience and that of an angry fan shouting abuse without racial connotations.
    Deeney says: “You know what? My first thought on Tuesday was to question myself, almost as if I’m trying to justify what he’s said. I’m asking, ‘I wasn’t that bad was I?’
    “Then the rage comes. And after that, I can only describe it as shame. You feel embarrassed. You feel ‘less than’.
    “You end up looking at yourself, thinking, ‘Am I what I thought I was?’
    Deeney and Etheridge revealed the distress caused by racismCredit: Roland Leon Sun Commissioned
    “You have to be a bit arrogant to  be a professional footballer. But I’m  asking, ‘Am I actually good at football or just what this bloke says I am?’
    “You build a tolerance to being called a c*** or fat or s**t or rubbish.
    “I’ve been called every single word about my footballing ability, I’m used to it and I will wear it. But if you have to go racial and cultural, I’ll never understand that. I am a big-headed, fat c***, I don’t care, but when it was racial . . . ”
    Etheridge intervenes: “I discussed  it with my old man and he said  ‘uneducated people’.
    “But those guys at Chelsea who abused Raheem Sterling a few years ago, who can afford to buy tickets for Chelsea v Man City, I’m guessing, but they might not be that uneducated.
    “I didn’t fully understand until  it happened to me. Until you have been through it, you can’t. I want to make sure it doesn’t happen to the next generation of players.
    “I’m 33, if that happened to a 21-year-old, they might not be able to control themselves to go to the ref . . . it’s not an easy process.
    “I can only imagine what those lads went through being abused after the Euros final — Bukayo Saka, Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho — it’s a  complete mindf***.”
    I’ve been called every single word about my footballing ability, I’m used to it and I will wear it. But if you have to go racial and cultural, I’ll never understand that.Troy Deeney
    Deeney says: “Neil has been around racism but until it  specifically hits you, you really can’t  comprehend that shameful feeling.
    “It’s not that we are ashamed to  be black or Asian, of our heritage,  it’s the way people can make you  feel ‘less than’. No one has any control over what colour they are.”
    Etheridge agrees: “As senior players we have thick skins, we’ve played at the highest level in front of big crowds.
    “You gain a certain tolerance to abuse but when you are being abused racially, you just can’t imagine how degrading it is for one human being to say those things to another.”
    Deeney believes racial abuse is  part of a wider feeling of “entitlement” among football supporters.
    He says: “We’ve created a herd  mentality. As soon as you go through the turnstiles there are no rules, no respect, a feeling of entitlement, ‘I pay my money and  can do what I want’.
    “You’re a Chinese p***k, you’re a black c***, in the street or at work people are aware they can’t say this stuff.”
    Etheridge says: “It’s like the other night at Arsenal with Kevin De Bruyne, the same herd mentality.  People chucking missiles.”
    “Yes, I was at the Arsenal-City game,” says Deeney, “Nowhere else in life would you see someone launch a bottle and get 15 more people saying, ‘That’s a good idea, I’ll lob a bottle, too’.
    Kevin de Bruyne had bottles thrown at him by Arsenal fans, but hit back by winking at the perpetrators as Man City won 3-1
    “But if Kevin launches one back, he’s in the wrong. If Neil goes into the crowd and grabs the kid at Blackburn, the FA would be on him like a ton of bricks.”
    On the evening of the Blackburn game, Etheridge was scrolling through Twitter.
    He says: “A woman who’d been at the game had written, ‘This is what  he thinks of that crybaby Birmingham goalkeeper’.  And then there is a  video of, presumably, her son, no  older than ten.
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    “He’s shouting, ‘You s**t b*****d’. And yeah, OK, that’s football. But she is now using it as a trophy that her  ten-year-old son is saying that, on  the back of me being a ‘crybaby’ for reporting racial abuse.
    “So when we talk about education, well education is clearly not coming from that kid’s home . . . ” More

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    James McClean bizarrely urges football chiefs to allow players to FIGHT and introduce sin bins to REDUCE ‘handbags’

    WIGAN’S James McClean has come up with a left-field suggestion that footballers should be ALLOWED to fight on the pitch to improve the game.The winger thinks football should take a page out of ice hockey’s book where the referee allows players to briefly fight before being sent to the sin bin for five minutes.
    James McClean having a scrap with an opposition playerCredit: Rex
    McClean in action for Wigan against BlackburnCredit: Rex
    The controversial winger took to his Instagram page with the suggestion.
    He said: “Just an observation. If football introduced the rule like in ice hockey where if there is an on field issue then let two players involved have a 10/15 second tear up and then sin bin them, I guarantee there’d be far less handbags.”
    McClean’s out the box suggestion goes against with the current rules of football which sees players sent off and handed suspensions for acts of violent conduct.
    The former Stoke man has increasingly known for speaking his mind on polarising matters.
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    The Republic of Ireland international has refused to wear a poppy which marks Remembrance day and took time last year to open up about the abuse he received for his stance.
    In September during a minutes silence following the passing of the Queen he stood away from his team-mates.
    Wigan will be hoping that McClean doesn’t become involved in any scraps as they bid to beat the drop in the Championship.
    McClean has made 31 appearances for Wigan this season scoring two goals and providing six assists.
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    The Latics currently sit 22nd in the table two points off the bottom. More

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    Sheff Utd boss Paul Heckingbottom sent off for smashing subs board in anger during 3-1 loss at home to Middlesbrough

    SEETHING Sheffield United manager Paul Heckingbottom was sent off for furiously smashing the substitutions board. The Blades boss, 45, saw his side stuffed 3-1 at home to promotion rivals Middlesbrough.
    Paul Heckingbottom was sent off by Andre Marriner as the Sheffield United boss lost his coolCredit: Alamy
    The Blades manager kicked the substitutes board as he let his frustration outCredit: Getty
    Paul Heckingbottom sent off for this last night 😂The 4th official were wi’ t’subs board and then suddenly he were wi’out t’subs board… pic.twitter.com/ZEEucqxJ1j— Tommo (@LUFC1992_v2) February 16, 2023

    Oli McBurnie gave the home side a fifth-minute lead but Chuba Akpom equalised before a Cameron Archer double in the second half to seal all three points for Michale Carrick’s men.
    And it was Archer’s second and Boro’s third that sent Heckingbottom into an angry spin, believing James McAtee was fouled in the build-up.
    The manager booted the fourth official’s board in the dugout and then sarcastically clapped referee Andre Marriner as he was shown the red card.
    Heckingbottom admitted he deserved to be given his marching orders but said: “Marriner waves an advantage and four seconds or whatever later, they have scored.
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    “If Macca had gone down, then that doesn’t happen and their lad gets booked. You see it time and time again.
    “It’s nothing to do with this game, my frustration has been building over the season.
    “We are an honest team but in our conversations about McAtee and Sander Berge getting fouled, we get double punishments because we don’t get bookings and we’re not losing free-kicks.
    “I’m having conversations with my assistants about whether we should go down. I shouldn’t react that way but it’s not that game.
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    “We’re getting punished, I think, for our honesty. As football, we’re rewarding people for going down.
    “I hate the way the game is going. I don’t like it. But that’s the situation.”
    Sheffield United lost in the play-offs to Nottingham Forest but are well on course to get back into the Premier League this time around.
    Despite their first defeat since November – ending a 13-match unbeaten run in all competitions – the Bramall Lane outfit are still second in the Championship and seven points clear of third-placed Middlesbrough with a game in hand. More

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    Fuming Blackpool fans ‘never want to see Arsenal loanee Charlie Patino in shirt again’

    BLACKPOOL fans are raging at Arsenal loanee Charlie Patino after their 2-1 loss at Swansea.Patino, 19, was sent off during Wednesday’s crucial Championship clash in Wales in what was the Seasiders’ NINTH red card of the season.
    Charlie Patino was sent off during Blackpool’s loss to SwanseaCredit: Alamy
    Some Blackpool fans want Arsenal loanee Charlie Patino to leaveCredit: Getty
    The midfielder was initially booked on 39 minutes and then received his second yellow card only 12 minutes into the second half.
    Blackpool fans are infuriated with the talented teenager and some have called for him to be sent back to Arsenal.
    Enraged supporters took to social media and some demanded manager Mick McCarthy offloads the England Under-20.
    One fan tweeted: “I don’t want to ever see Patino in a Blackpool shirt again.”
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    Another posted: “Charlie Patino, already on a yellow, with a horror tackle to be dismissed. Stupid challenge.”
    A third commented: “Get rid of him he is absolutely embarrassing.”
    This fan wrote: “Shouldn’t even be playing, too inexperienced and too weak!!”
    And that one tweeted: “Send him back to Arsenal the lad can’t take.”
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    Blackpool are bottom of the Championship table after the loss to Swansea.
    The Tangerines suffered their 15th defeat in 31 matches in the second division.
    McCarthy’s men are facing relegation to League One as they are four points away from safety. More