Sat. Jun 10th, 2023

Sam Allardyce at Leeds United will have the unique chance to prove themselves on par with Pep Guardiola.

Yorkshire club Barnsley have strongly condemned threats made against Patrick Bamford and his family following his penalty miss in last week’s Premier League draw with Newcastle.

Social media

Sam Allardyce of Leeds United has issued an appeal to the police after Patrick Bamford was subject to online abuse after missing his penalty in last weekend’s 2-2 draw with Newcastle. Bamford received threats and abuse directed at himself and his family before the club issued a statement condemning their behaviour earlier this week.

Allardyce believes the police need to do much more in tackling threats such as Bamford’s missed penalty that allowed Callum Wilson to equalise for Leeds during an exciting opening period at Elland Road. Bamford, on the other hand, has performed “OK.” Allardyce was upset with Wilson for missing such an easy chance but believed his striker performed adequately overall.

Interviewees reported that senior police officers perceive social media as an integral component of today’s media ecology and agree to use it to communicate with citizens. However, its peer sharing and interaction logic could conflict with more hierarchical and authoritarian organizational cultures of police forces (Meijer and Torenvlied 2016).

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Threats

Patrick Bamford has made himself well-known within the media with his writing on various subjects. His articles have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic and Harper’s, while he has spoken at universities including Harvard, Yale and American University of Beirut as a guest lecturer.

Leeds striker Jack Clarke received a number of offensive social media comments after having his penalty saved by Newcastle goalkeeper Nick Pope during Saturday’s 2-2 draw at Elland Road. Allardyce issued a statement condemning this abusive conduct while emphasizing that Clarke has not been affected by these online harassment, vowing that his player would show them otherwise by winning at West Ham on Sunday.

Leeds are in serious danger of top-flight survival and desperately require all three points against London Hammers on Sunday afternoon to maintain their chances of staying up. Allardyce will hope his former club’s recent triumph – reaching the Europa League final thanks to an upset win against AZ Alkmaar on Thursday – can inspire his side at London Stadium.

Leeds United

After Bamford missed a penalty during Leeds’ 2-2 draw with Newcastle, his club and family received widespread online abuse. Allardyce, brought in temporarily as Javi Gracia’s replacement manager, has asked police authorities to do more in order to combat this behavior.

Karen Carney decided to delete her Twitter account after comments she made as a Leeds United pundit were widely derided online, according to friends. Friends reported she received an outpouring of sexist abuse following Leeds United’s decision to share a clip from her commentary via their official account’s Twitter feed.

At 68 years old, Allardyce returns to the Premier League for his 18th season as manager, but will his track record suffice to save Leeds from relegation? They currently rely on goal differential to remain above the drop zone at Elland Road and are in perilous position; hence their board has appointed Allardyce as survival specialist Big Sam for four games remaining this season.

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Sam Allardyce

Big Sam Allardyce has reportedly been appointed Leeds United’s new manager following their split with Javi Gracia, and should take charge at Elland Road for their inaugural game of the season on Saturday afternoon.

Allardyce began his managerial career at Bolton Wanderers, leading them to four consecutive top-eight finishes from 2004 to 2007. Subsequently he led Newcastle United before returning to Premier League management at Blackburn Rovers.

He briefly oversaw England in 2016, before departing after just one match as manager. Allardyce then resumed managing at Crystal Palace and later Everton.

Recently, the 68-year-old advocated for increased protections to shield players from online harassment after Patrick Bamford received death threats following his missed penalty during Whites’ 2-2 draw with Newcastle last weekend.

Source: مباريات اليوم

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