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Seth On a pale blue dot 01 May 14 3.30pm | |
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Palace legend Aki Riihilahti is coming to the Liverpool game and wants to meet for pre-match drinks. He posted this on his Facebook earlier today: Tickets, flight and hotel booked, see you all Crystal Palace people at Selhurst last home game against Liverpool. Where pre-drinks? This was posted amongst the many comments: Would love to see you at The White Horse to join up with other old Palace players.... We have a charity fun day for a local young Girl raising money for a life changing operation. The Crystals and some current Squad members will be popping in.... All day disco inflatables for the kids.... End of home season party.... Not just you Aki but everyone welcome.... · Other people invited him to the Cherries, the Portmanor, Pawsons and Two Brewers. Looks like the great man might be on for a pub crawl
"You can feel the stadium jumping. The stadium is actually physically moving up and down" |
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slubglurge welling 01 May 14 4.08pm | |
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TP would have loved a player like Aki. Guaranteed 100% shift every game. Very much the Jedi of his time but with a slightly better goal ratio.
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PALACE FOR EVER London 01 May 14 5.49pm | |
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home... Always welcome at Selhurst. One of my favourite Palace players. Hero status. Various articles written about us on his webpage.
The pyramid to beat all pyramids!! Find out what team is in which division, eg which division is Coppull United in? |
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Seth On a pale blue dot 01 May 14 6.20pm | |
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Quote PALACE FOR EVER at 01 May 2014 5.49pm
home... Always welcome at Selhurst. One of my favourite Palace players. Hero status. Various articles written about us on his webpage.
25.1.2008 I had a bad day, as I sometimes do when I skip my morning coffee and one thing after another just keeps coming up all wrong. However, I found the cure for my early symptoms of cold January rage when I started reading old questions people had sent me here. I owe you all endless amount of smiles and happiness you have brought to me today and so often. I realised even unreasonable parking attendants can never take some things away from me. I have always Palace. Strength in a person comes from what he holds dear to himself. You can carry that everywhere. Being a player in a club can never really be a love affair but it certainly becomes a part of you in six years. Sometimes even more. In football – as in life - everything is what you make of it. I have been blessed to be an Eagle at my life time. Not because Selhurst Park would feel like my truest home, Croydon my favorite ever place or Crystal Palace football club the greatest dream come through as a footballer. However, I can’t imagine anything better than what I experienced with the Eagles. On and off the pitch. Time can make memories more golden than actual trophies won. As does reflections from people. I am not easily out of words. Talking about hard issues has never been a problem for someone who can write in a national paper details about the death of his grandfather or declares his undying love to Angelina Jolie. However, it has taken me a long time to come in terms with leaving Crystal Palace football club. I have been thankful but also afraid of all the messages and questions I have received after I made my decision to leave the club which had become a very much part of me. What is a worthy answer after such a long and colorful path together? Change is inevitable. I was privileged and worked hard to stay in the club longer than two sets of furniture. I am sure I would have still survived another sofa setting as I did over hundred team mates, ten physioterapists, seven managers, around 200 games, a promotion and relegation during my time at the club. Just to make the record straight, I always got an indication from the Chairman that I would be part of his club next season too but I expressed my wish to leave early on not to make any disturbance for our promotion campaign back then. It was an extremely hard decision, and even if in my last season I had some issues on and off the pitch the deciding factors to leave were personal reasons. I had come to a point I needed to move from London and I couldn’t even think of playing for another English club then so I left UK. I hope people understand and respect this now as well as the Chairman did. I have been told a lot of things about him, but as far as I’m concerned, apart from his lousy banter and dress sense he is good as gold for Palace and we always respected each other personally and professionally. He even described me in his column as committed, hardworking, totally engaging and completely bonkers. That was one of the best reviews and compliments I received in England and I am sure he can mirror those adjectives to himself. I wish him all the best in football and in life, plus that he would get rid of that hair style. I am now close to home in Sweden but still follow weekly news and results from SE25. I don’t think the link between a club and a player should break after he joins another club. I changed from a player of Palace to a supporter of the club. I have been filled with joy about the recent form of the mighty Eagles and what the club has become. When I joined Palace it was struggling and had only few games to avoid relegation to the second division. Years of uncertain results, economy and leadership were deep in the club. I am extremely proud and happy I left a Premiership -worthy club. Literarily everything from training ground showers to general ambitions has changed for better and I had the luxury of being part of that progress from muddy Stockport to the heights of the Premiership. I see and hope for a great future to the club. I carried the shirt with pride. I gave what I had. Someone can question some performances or the quality of football wasn’t always there. However, I will offer a pint or thicker glasses to anyone in the club who dares to question my commitment, loyalty or work rate for the club. Results, performances and times varied - as they do in Crystal Palace - but I can stand behind every day I had the opportunity to work as an Eagle. I think that is why I felt such a good rapport with the supporters. Passion attracts itself. Crystal Palace is full of that. My biggest victory was to be surrounded by so many good people and win friends for life. Thank You. Aki
"You can feel the stadium jumping. The stadium is actually physically moving up and down" |
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pefwin Where you have to have an English ... 01 May 14 6.39pm | |
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Not only have I never met a Palace fan with a bad word to say about Aki, but I never met one that didn't have praise for him.
"Everything is air-droppable at least once." "When the going gets tough, the tough call for close air support." |
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misterpalace Finsbury Park 01 May 14 6.53pm | |
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What a great guy he is is. I was a bit skeptical during the championship years but he actually stepped right up a gear in the Prem, his goal against Arsenal will forever stay in the memory, god bless that man
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Leicestershireeagle South Leicestershire 01 May 14 7.18pm | |
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Love Aki. Our biggest cult hero?
RED AND BLUE ARMY! |
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kenley eagle Grimsby 01 May 14 7.25pm | |
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Wow , that just gave me goose bumps , top man...
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cpfcmikee Kent 01 May 14 7.34pm | |
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If you've not heard out chat with Aki a couple of months back I fully recommend it [Link] Top, top man. Legend!
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frazzle 01 May 14 7.57pm | |
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What a hero I love him!
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c_block_shedevil London 01 May 14 8.28pm | |
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I remember walking into the Albion pub pre game and bumping into him and a tv crew. We had a quick chat before photos were taken and the HF walked him to the ground. Always have time for Aki, he's a true palace fan.
I'm tough. I'm ambitious. I know exactly what I want. If that makes me a bitch, I'm OK with that. |
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martinb75 Tampere 01 May 14 8.39pm | |
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Quote Seth at 01 May 2014 6.20pm
Quote PALACE FOR EVER at 01 May 2014 5.49pm
home... Always welcome at Selhurst. One of my favourite Palace players. Hero status. Various articles written about us on his webpage.
25.1.2008 I had a bad day, as I sometimes do when I skip my morning coffee and one thing after another just keeps coming up all wrong. However, I found the cure for my early symptoms of cold January rage when I started reading old questions people had sent me here. I owe you all endless amount of smiles and happiness you have brought to me today and so often. I realised even unreasonable parking attendants can never take some things away from me. I have always Palace. Strength in a person comes from what he holds dear to himself. You can carry that everywhere. Being a player in a club can never really be a love affair but it certainly becomes a part of you in six years. Sometimes even more. In football – as in life - everything is what you make of it. I have been blessed to be an Eagle at my life time. Not because Selhurst Park would feel like my truest home, Croydon my favorite ever place or Crystal Palace football club the greatest dream come through as a footballer. However, I can’t imagine anything better than what I experienced with the Eagles. On and off the pitch. Time can make memories more golden than actual trophies won. As does reflections from people. I am not easily out of words. Talking about hard issues has never been a problem for someone who can write in a national paper details about the death of his grandfather or declares his undying love to Angelina Jolie. However, it has taken me a long time to come in terms with leaving Crystal Palace football club. I have been thankful but also afraid of all the messages and questions I have received after I made my decision to leave the club which had become a very much part of me. What is a worthy answer after such a long and colorful path together? Change is inevitable. I was privileged and worked hard to stay in the club longer than two sets of furniture. I am sure I would have still survived another sofa setting as I did over hundred team mates, ten physioterapists, seven managers, around 200 games, a promotion and relegation during my time at the club. Just to make the record straight, I always got an indication from the Chairman that I would be part of his club next season too but I expressed my wish to leave early on not to make any disturbance for our promotion campaign back then. It was an extremely hard decision, and even if in my last season I had some issues on and off the pitch the deciding factors to leave were personal reasons. I had come to a point I needed to move from London and I couldn’t even think of playing for another English club then so I left UK. I hope people understand and respect this now as well as the Chairman did. I have been told a lot of things about him, but as far as I’m concerned, apart from his lousy banter and dress sense he is good as gold for Palace and we always respected each other personally and professionally. He even described me in his column as committed, hardworking, totally engaging and completely bonkers. That was one of the best reviews and compliments I received in England and I am sure he can mirror those adjectives to himself. I wish him all the best in football and in life, plus that he would get rid of that hair style. I am now close to home in Sweden but still follow weekly news and results from SE25. I don’t think the link between a club and a player should break after he joins another club. I changed from a player of Palace to a supporter of the club. I have been filled with joy about the recent form of the mighty Eagles and what the club has become. When I joined Palace it was struggling and had only few games to avoid relegation to the second division. Years of uncertain results, economy and leadership were deep in the club. I am extremely proud and happy I left a Premiership -worthy club. Literarily everything from training ground showers to general ambitions has changed for better and I had the luxury of being part of that progress from muddy Stockport to the heights of the Premiership. I see and hope for a great future to the club. I carried the shirt with pride. I gave what I had. Someone can question some performances or the quality of football wasn’t always there. However, I will offer a pint or thicker glasses to anyone in the club who dares to question my commitment, loyalty or work rate for the club. Results, performances and times varied - as they do in Crystal Palace - but I can stand behind every day I had the opportunity to work as an Eagle. I think that is why I felt such a good rapport with the supporters. Passion attracts itself. Crystal Palace is full of that. My biggest victory was to be surrounded by so many good people and win friends for life. Thank You. Aki I tears in my eyss reading
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