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				<title>SheffieldWednesday.com Sheffield Wednesday Email Weblog Owlszone Owlstalk swfc.co.uk wednesdayite paul sturrock - Articles - News</title>
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					  <title>Oh well...</title>
					  <link>http://www.sheffieldwednesday.com/articles/10/1/Oh-well/End-of-the-season-summary.html</link>
					  <description>The season effectively is over, Wednesday not in the promotion mix up. Is it all doom and gloom, or are there brighter things ahead?End of the season summary:That's it then, no surprises that our slim play off hope came to nothing, and with a game to go the season peters out. Yet for the first time in donkey's I await the dawn of the new season with galvanised optimism, I&#160;really can't wait for it to begin. This is something Wednesdayites haven't been able to say for years. Even after Cardiff I was worried that we would go straight back down. There are many plus points to this season, doubles over Leicester (sorry snail/piz), Barnsley, Ipswich, W.B.A, Crystal Palace, and hopefully Norwich come Sunday afternoon. Nobody wants to play us, we are no longer the divisions easy three pointers. Of course to maintain our form we need to make sure we don't do a Luton and sell our top players, lke Brunt, Macca and Wood. We also require a new goalie (after his drop gainst Man utd Turner may be available next season). A Centre back would do us good, and some cover on the left for Brunty. All&#160;this should be possible with the promised cash injection by the board (don't hold your breath on that though).So roll on Sunday, come on you owls, winning finish to the season in front of the (hopefully) swelled Wednesday masses. To be a Wednesdayite, you need to either be naively optimistic, or else gluton for puishment opus dei style. I am an optimist, I think next year is our year. Thank you, you Blue and White Wizards for such a fantastic end to the season!</description>
					  <author>Jhontydon@btinternet.com (Luke Brough)</author>
					  <pubDate>Sun, 29 Apr 2007 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
					 
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					  <title>Commentary?</title>
					  <link>http://www.sheffieldwednesday.com/articles/8/1/Commentary.html</link>
					  <description>John Healm, the Mrs Malaprop of commentators, is living proof that commentating on a football match is difficult. With Helm you get a mix of extraordinary nonsense (see quotes below) and genuine commentary. Wednesday world's commentary today was, according to many listeners neither informative or entertaining. Wednesday world listeners have become used to a combination of the BBC Radio Sheffield's commentary team (Paul Walker, Seth Bennett or Luke Wileman) with John Pearson.It's difficult not to be entertained with Pearson. Totally biased, yet knowledgeable - all Wednesday's goals are greeted with a 'Yessssssss' and is can barely speak with Wednesday holding on to&#160; slender lead. Quality, when you can't make it to a game Pearson makes it feel like your there - sat with your mates after a few pints in the New Barrack. Today's commentary was a little like listening to chalk on a blackboard. Keep Pearson on air!Click here and vote on your favourite commentator! Some of John Helms better commentary:&#34;Viv Anderson has pissed a fatness test&#34;&#34;The USA are a goal down, and if they don't get a goal they'll lose&#34;&#34;Real possession football, this. And Zico's lost it.&#34;&#34;It's as if there's a magnet on the outside of the posts and bar.&#34;&#34;Such a positive move by Uruguay - bringing 2 players off and putting 2 players on.&#34;&#34;Halifax against Spurs, the original David against Goliath confrontation.&#34;Click here and vote on your favourite commentator!  </description>
					  <author>David.Richards@SheffieldWednesday.com (David Richards)</author>
					  <pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 2007 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
					 
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					  <title>Swan still reduced to tears by the fix that came unstuck</title>
					  <link>http://www.sheffieldwednesday.com/articles/5/1/Swan-still-reduced-to-tears-by-the-fix-that-came-unstuck.html</link>
					  <description>By Rick Broadbent, writing for the Sunday Times 		     Our correspondent talks to one of the players jailed after the betting scandal that rocked football  		   									 	   	 	 	   	 	  	  							 		 		   		    IT WAS a &#163;50 bet. The odds were 2-1. Ipswich Town won 2-0 and his wife took the winnings. The wider results involved hate mail, street fights and slopping out in a rancid prison cell. &#8220;When I&#8217;m dead it will still rise up from the grave,&#8221; Peter Swan said. Swan was not involved in the recent love fest with the 1966 World Cup squad. He probably would have been but he was serving a life ban from football for defrauding bookmakers when Bobby Moore and Co were becoming indelible icons. Along with his Sheffield Wednesday team-mates, David Layne and Tony Kay, Swan was sentenced to four months in jail the previous year and branded with the stigma of being England&#8217;s very own fixer.Now, with Italian football in the throes of a revolution after its own elaborate scandal, Swan&#8217;s story is as pertinent as ever. &#8220;I&#8217;d be amazed if footballers aren&#8217;t betting on matches,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Where there&#8217;s money there will always be a fiddle. Even with honest people there is temptation. I could put my hand in the till now. I don&#8217;t, but the temptation is there. NI_MPU('middle');&#8220;I&#8217;m sure there have been bent referees. Back in our time there was a lot of talk about it going on in the lower leagues. We were scapegoats but they had to make an example of us because it was that rife.&#8221; Now a publican in Chesterfield, Swan, 67, has rarely spoken about his role in the saga and, even now, breaks down in tears at several points. He is not about to pretend that he has no regrets because they drip from every reminiscence. &#8220;David [Layne] and I have asked ourselves many times why we did it,&#8221; he said. &#8220;What fools we were. I was banned from going to all football matches. When the wind blew you could hear the roar from Hillsborough at our house and that was hard. I played for a pub side and they got fined for having me. &#8220;I wasn&#8217;t even allowed to go and watch my son, Carl, play. It was like they&#8217;d cut my legs off. You think about what you could have done and you feel like busting a vein.&#8221; It was December 1962 when Layne went to watch his old club, Mansfield Town, play West Ham United. He bumped into another player, Jimmy Gauld, and heard about how players were making money from bets. Gauld needed another fixture and Layne reasoned that Wednesday always lost to Ipswich. He put it to his friends, Swan and Kay, at training and the fix was sealed. &#8220;We lost the game fair and square,&#8221; Swan said. &#8220;But I still don&#8217;t know what I&#8217;d have done if we&#8217;d been winning. It would have been easy for me to give away a penalty or even score an own goal. Who knows?&#8221; Eventually the net closed in on Gauld, who wanted one last pay day. He told the Sunday People that he had a story that would rock football and then used taped conversations with Layne to back up his story. When it came to court in 1965, Layne tried to carry the can by pleading guilty. Swan was the only one of the three to go in the witness box. &#8220;They cut me to pieces and twisted things,&#8221; he said. &#8220;My solicitor, Mr Arnold, had been very optimistic, but on that day he got into the car and said, &#8216;Are you prepared to go to jail?&#8217; I said, &#8216;You&#8217;re joking,&#8217; but he said, &#8216;It&#8217;s all gone against us.&#8217; I was frightened to death. We never came back.&#8221; In a Lincoln prison cell with a bucket in the corner, the scale of their foolishness was blinding. A burglar taught Swan to pick a lock and he played for the Thorp Arch prison side. When he got out he received a life ban from the FA. Having once been told by Alf Ramsey that he was &#8220;top of the list&#8221;, he was now an outcast. &#8220;I got awful stick,&#8221; he said. &#8220;My mother would ring and say your brothers were fighting on Saturday night. They&#8217;d get in trouble because of what people were saying. The worst was the abuse my children took. I had to go and see the headmaster once. And there was the mail. &#8216;You&#8217;ve never been any f***ing good anyway.&#8217; &#8221; Gauld got &#163;7,000 from the Sunday People but was sentenced to four years. Seven other players were jailed. The life bans were lifted after seven years and Swan returned to Wednesday. Once the Italian media had labelled him the best centre half in the world. Now he was a 34-year-old nearly man whose 19 England caps were supplanted by his work in a bakery, car showroom and a hardware store. He did play for Wednesday again but it was a postscript to a tale of what ifs. &#8220;I was happy for the England team in 1966 and Big Jack [Charlton] did a great job, but you can&#8217;t help thinking about what might have been,&#8221; he said. Swan fell out with Kay over his advisory role in a 1997 television docudrama called The Fix. &#8220;It made it sound like David had dragged us into it,&#8221; Swan said. &#8220;It wasn&#8217;t like that at all. If anything, David was noble and tried to save us.&#8221; In Swan&#8217;s forthcoming biography, Setting The Record Straight (Tempus, &#163;17.99), Jimmy Greaves is among those who says they were treated harshly. &#8220;We let a lot of people down and it will be with me until I die,&#8221; Swan said. WHERE ARE THEY NOW?Trials and tribulations of guilty men  What happened to the other three players involved in the match-fixing scandal?    DAVID LAYNE: A prolific goalscorer, he rejoined Sheffield Wednesday after his ban was lifted, but never made the first team. Played for Hereford United and Matlock Town before injury forced him to retire. Now a pub landlord in Sheffield, he remains friends with Swan TONY KAY: Became Britain&#8217;s most expensive footballer when he moved to Everton for &#163;60,000. Then the betting story broke and he spent 12 years in Spain after selling a fake diamond. He was jailed for a weekend after being arrested on his return home. He earned one England cap, worked as a groundsman in London and now lives in Merseyside JIMMY GAULD: The Scottish ringleader of the betting syndicate, he was a forward for Everton, Plymouth Argyle, Swindon Town, St Johnstone and Mansfield Town, where he had a broken leg when he met Layne. Condemned by the judge for ending the careers of the Sheffield three, he was sentenced to four years and fined &#163;5,000. He refused to return Layne&#8217;s calls when he tried to contact him recently </description>
					  <author>David.Richards@SheffieldWednesday.com (David Richards)</author>
					  <pubDate>Mon, 14 Aug 2006 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
					 
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