QPR Report Twitter Feed

Friday, June 24, 2011

QPR Report Friday: No Routledge Signing...Taarabt Assessed...Relegation Odds...Remembering Leon Jeanne...Flashback: Bill Power QPR's New Chairman

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- Seven Year Flashback: QPR's New Chairman
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- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
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- The Reported Names of the Committee Members of the Official Supporters Club (OSC)...The QPR-OSC Meeting Minutes Scheduled for Monday "Publication"


- Current Premiership Relegation Odds

- Two Year Flashback: QPR Reject Parma Friendly!

- *****STILL WAITING FOR RESPONSES FROM THE OFFICIAL SUPPORTERS CLUB (OSC)...QPR FANS SPEAKING OUT IN PROTEST: QPR 1st & LSA Statements re QPR, Tickets, Actions

- Leeds Ban Great Grandmother for Pitch Invasion

- Intimate piercing leads to red card for Australian

- Flashback: 2008-2009 Youth Team Reviewed

- Ex-QPRs: Where Are They Now?


Paul Warburton/Fulham Chronicle - QPR pull out of Routledge deal
-QPR last night abandoned plans to sign £1.5million Wayne Routledge on a permanent basis.
-It appears Hoops will now be forced to spend the £12 million budget for new faces on shoring up other parts of the squad instead.
- The winger himself left a message on his Twitter account this week he expects to start pre-season training with parent club Newcastle at the beginning of July – and Rangers are reluctantly pulling the plug on a player who gave them the final impetus in the Championship when he signed on-loan in January.
- Routledge made 20 appearances and hit five crucial goals – including a late match-winner at Reading on February 4 when Rs were down to 10 men.
- However, the former Tottenham and Fulham player’s second spell at Loftus Road, following his sale to the Magpies in January 2010, only came about after Jamie Mackie suffered horrific cruciate damage in the FA Cup at the beginning of this January.
- Mackie is on course for a return to action in August, leaving Routledge no option but a return to St James Park.
- The south Londoner was the first man on boss Neil Warnock’s list for Rangers’ return to the Premiership.
- But after the treble disappointments of losing strikers Danny Graham and Steve Morrison to other clubs as well as being priced out of a bid for Peterborough’s Craig Mackail-Smith, the manager is clearly keeping his wallet closed until he can nail down a quality forward.
- An Rs insider admitted: "It’s a question of budget and priorities." Chronicle


David McIntyre Blog -Show Taarabt the reports

Adel Taarabt is doing all he can to avoid ending up back at QPR this season. Which makes this summer no different to last summer and the one before.

Taarabt, as everyone knows, is convinced he should be playing at the very top level. He believes his mistake was to join Tottenham rather than Arsenal, and that having taken a downward step it’s a matter of time before he is taken to his rightful level.

There are plenty of fans and reporters who share Taarabt’s belief that he is good enough – or at least will be – to be a major star. But they’re not the people he needs to convince.

Taarabt’s emergence at Rangers has boosted his profile massively, leading to him being touted as some kind of new sensation. He isn’t. All the major clubs knew everything there was to know about Taarabt already – good and bad. There’s nothing new there. He’s been on the radar for years.

There is certainly lots of interest out there in how Taarabt fares in the top division for QPR. If he cracks it this season he may well get that big move.

My view of Taarabt has always been very straightforward, and why I never considered for a second that Rangers might miss out on him a year ago, when an almighty fuss was made over whether he’d return. There were never going to be any other takers.

For all the hype surrounding Taarabt and the excitement he generates, the bottom line is that no Premier League club will even contemplate taking a player who can’t play up front, can’t play wide, can’t be given the ball in his own half and can’t be spoken to by his team-mates. It’s that simple.

He might have a chance of getting a move abroad, where clubs are structured differently and non-football people make football decisions – as we’ve seen happen at QPR in recent years – but he’s a long way short of Premier League material.

I think one of the biggest challenges he’ll face from August is that in the Championship, where the ball pings around almost non-stop, he could lose possession and quickly be handed another chance. That won’t be the case now.

At a higher level, he’ll find that if he loses the ball he could go five minutes without getting it again. When that happens, I think he’ll get frustrated, making him likely to overdo it when he does finally get the ball back. Eventually, I think this frustration will spill over, leading him to lose the plot totally. I’m happy to be proved wrong, but that’s how I see it going.

A further problem Taarabt will face is that despite his array of tricks, in many ways his game is extremely one-dimensional. He looks to operate in the same areas and do the same things over and over again.

In the Championship, sooner or later he always created something doing this. At a higher level, he’ll be much easier to shut the door on and will need to be clever enough to drift into other areas and pick up space. I don’t think he is clever enough.

Which leads me to the issue of how much Taarabt has actually developed during his time at QPR. I keep hearing that he’s matured, improved as a player and so on. I don’t see that. I see a player who Neil Warnock has allowed to do what he wants, knowing that what he does well makes him too hot for the Championship to handle.

By having everything built around him, being indulged in his every whim and playing in the areas of the pitch he’s best in, I fail to see how Taarabt has in any way developed as a person or player, or been equipped for the future.

An indication of Taarabt’s shortcomings came after the signing of Wayne Routledge, which led to the three men behind the lone striker being rotated much more, taking Taarabt out of the central zone he likes and often into wide areas.

When this happened, Taarabt was given very little change when going one-versus-one against merely decent Championship defenders with top-flight experience like Hermann Hreidarsson and Paul Konchesky. A glimpse of the future, perhaps.

That said, although Taarabt was quieter in those games, there were signs that he was learning. He also showed signs of being able to drop deeper to receive the ball and pick the right pass. That suggests there is a chance he will be able to take his game to another level.

Another challenge facing him is that not only are Premier League players far more likely to suss him out than second-tier defenders, they’re infinitely more likely to also then create something.

Give the ball away 10 yards inside your own half in the Premier League and fail to track back, and it’s very likely you’ll concede a goal. Much more likely than in the Championship.

If that happens, Taarabt will feel the wrath of team-mates and fans in a way he hasn’t before. There’s a world of difference between a dressing room in which he’s regarded as infuriating but likely to get his team promoted, and one in which he is seen as likely to get them relegated.

Sparks will fly, and Warnock’s proposed signing of the ultimate spiky character, Jimmy Bullard, is, mark my words, a sign that Taarabt’s days of being shielded from internal criticism are over. Bullard does not suffer fools.

Scepticism of Taarabt is often seen as typical of the English football mentality – the tide mavericks from Marsh, Bowles and Currie to Waddle and Le Tissier swam against during their careers.

No-one is more despairing of that mentality than me, or usually more eager to defend that type of skilful player. But Taarabt is not in their mould. His all-round game just isn’t there, and comparing him to skilful players from the past does them a great disservice. In fact I take great exception to him being mentioned in the same breath as Roy Wegerle, my all-time favourite player.

Wegerle, like any flair player worth his salt, did the bare minimum without the ball and often much less. In a way, I loved him for it. But this was a player who could play up top, or off the front, who worked both channels, was able to link play and do a host of other things. He was an all-round forward. Taarabt isn’t.

And even Wegerle knew when to drop into the right areas and stop his team being flooded when they didn’t have the ball. The same is true of Le Tissier – who often carried Southampton - and other flair players. They didn’t work hard enough for some, and sometimes went missing during games, but they were not passengers in the way Taarabt is.

It’s not an English thing either. Barcelona have the world’s greatest player in Lionel Messi and before that had Ronaldinho. Both have all the tricks in the book but neither is a liability defensively.

Barc, the best and most beautiful team on the planet, work fiendishly hard off the ball. Any notion that Taarabt could play for a team like that in the near future is frankly ridiculous. Real Madrid and top Italian sides have a similar work ethic without the flair.

So where would Taarabt fit in? Not in top European sides. Not in English teams with superior individual talents than him, and certainly not in those that don’t have those kind of players so rely on a team ethic.

Why, then, is Taarabt convinced the likes of Manchester United, Chelsea and others are watching him? The answer is because they are. Every Premier League club is. But they watch all Championship players.

That’s not to say they and a number of European sides are not monitoring Taarabt more closely than most. Of course clubs are watching him; a 22-year-old with obvious ability, once touted as the next Zidane and who was often so unstoppable at Championship level.

But too much is often made of scouts watching players. I’m always amused at reports of ‘scouts’ from a club being at a game to watch someone. As in scouts plural. As if more than one or even a group of them turn up.

Clubs sending someone to games – especially games in the division below – is standard practice. Any player who makes a name for himself in the Championship will be watched by Premier League clubs. It’s a certainty. Taraabt has been checked, just as the likes of Buzsaky, Rowlands and the late Ray Jones, to name a few, were looked at in previous seasons.

Most scouts are hired on an informal basis, sent along to games in return for merely having their expenses paid, send in a report, and that’s that.

Often, scouts are sent along largely to placate agents, who tend to badger clubs to look at their players.

It’s easy for any decent agent to get top clubs to send someone to watch their clients. A host of Spanish clubs were invited to look at Taarabt towards the end of the season before last (which I’m convinced was a bigger factor in his improved displays than any chemistry with the newly-appointed Warnock).

So the scout goes along, the club in question updates their database and is able to tell the agent they’ve obliged their request to have a look, and are monitoring the player. Simple as that.

In Taarabt’s case, there’s more reason than usual to take notice of the standard agent spin that their man has really matured since last time they had a look, and they need to check him out. So they do, seemingly convincing Taarabt that the world’s best are clamouring for his signature.

Clubs watching players isn’t significant. What is significant is who those clubs are sending.

A random example here, but go to a Coventry game during the second half of last season and you’d find chief scouts, heads of recruitment, managers and assistant managers from Premier League clubs. The reason is that goalkeeper Kieran Westwood was of serious interest to them, and they were at the stage of strongly considering him as a signing.

That’s when scouting players gets to the business end. I haven’t seen any evidence of that level of interest in Taarabt.

Warnock isn’t bothered by Taarabt’s musings about being in demand, and in any case has more pressing priorities at the moment. But if he was bothered, there is something he could do that might have some effect.

To counter Taarabt’s excitement at being watched by top clubs, Warnock could show him what they actually think of him. The manager is very well connected and I’m sure could easily get hold of a couple of reports on Taarabt. Let him see them. I would.

These reports would include an assessment of Taarabt that is, at times, damning, and certainly very different to his or his advisors’ view of his ability. Even he might have to take stock.

I can’t claim to be mates with the great and the good of English football, but I know some of those who’ve been sent to watch to Taarabt and have spoken to a few more.

I’ve heard many words used to describe him – many of them complimentary. Yet one word has cropped up more than any other: bargepole.

So the next time Taarabt talks about his inevitable move to an elite club, I say show him a couple of reports on him. And then suggest he stops waiting by the phone." David McIntyre Blog


The Sun/Justin Allen - McAnuff just the Job for QPR
- QPR manager Neil Warnock is weighing up a £2million bid for Jobi McAnuff.
- Reading winger McAnuff was wanted by Warnock last summer but Royals chief Brian McDermott rejected a £1.5m offer.
- But the Hoops supremo remains a big fan of the 29-year-old, who has just one year left on his Madejski contract.
- New Birmingham boss Chris Hughton is also monitoring the situation.
- But a source said: "Jobi would love to have a crack at the Premier League League.
- "He's had his entire career in the Championship. He loves Reading so QPR need to make a decent bid."
- Warnock is ready to rescue Tal Ben Haim from his Portsmouth nightmare.
- Defender Ben Haim, 29, wants to quit after claiming Pompey have withheld his £36,000-a-week wages since January.
- And Rangers keeper Radek Cerny, 37, has signed a new one-year deal. The Sun


Mark Pitman/WalesonLine - The Hollywood twist in the Leon Jeanne story

During the summer months Football League clubs up and down the country will offer trials to talented young players, all of them desperate to earn themselves a professional contract to justify the sacrifices made in their teenage years just to find themselves in that position. One trialist looking to impress at newly-promoted Championship club Brighton & Hove Albion however will be one of Welsh football's modern day enigma's, as Leon Jeanne, 30, attempts to win over manager Gus Poyet and with it make a football comeback worthy of a Hollywood blockbuster. The final twist in Jeanne's rags to riches and back to rags story will depend on his physical and mental strength as he attempts to show he can once again compete against the best, and if he can achieve what recently seemed an impossible dream the scriptwriters will be waiting, but this story is one that is all too real.

Leon Jeanne came to prominence as a teenage sensation with Queens Park Rangers. Manager Gerry Francis showed great faith in one of Welsh football's stars of the future but the Cardiff-born winger struggled to adapt to life in London and suffered the first of a string of well-documented problems during his time at Loftus Road. Jeanne talked candidly about his time at QPR a few years later, describing how earning so much, so young with too much time on his hands resulted in him becoming involved with the wrong crowd as the easily-influenced Jeanne encountered run-ins with the law as often as he did with Francis as he slowly but surely lost his grip on opportunity he had been handed in the professional game. His release from Loftus Road however would result in his first 'second-chance'.

I have no intention to repeat the well-documented times and troubles of Leon Jeanne in this blog. Versions of many events vary and Jeanne himself will shortly have his opportunity to tell his side of the story when his up-coming autobiography is released. Instead, I will concentrate on my own memories of Leon Jeanne's footballing ability, having witnessed him make a number of debut's for different clubs at contrasting stages of his career, as well as seeing him play on the stages that his talent was not meant for. An internet search of his name generates headlines not usually associated with those of a professional footballer, but Jeanne is now attempting to re-write the wrongs, and once again be talked about for his football ability.

Following his release from Queens Park Rangers, Jeanne was offered a return to his home town by then Cardiff City Chairman Sam Hammam. Not one to skirt away from controversy, Hammam realised the potential benefits that the local youngster could bring to his recently acquired club and invested time and money in protecting Jeanne and eradicating the drug problems that he had developed. Jeanne appeared for Cardiff City as a second-half substitute in a midweek friendly against Merthyr Tydfil at Penydarren Park in the summer of 2001. With the part-time side already tiring from the opening half, Jeanne showed the large crowd, myself included, all the ability and talent that Hammam had taken a chance on and his performance became one of the biggest talking points of the night.

Within a year however Jeanne had his contract at Cardiff City terminated having tested positive for a class A drug and then providing a false specimen for a drug test later on in the season. Sam Hammam had tried and failed to eradicate the demons that haunted the player he eventually saw as becoming a local hero at Ninian Park. His debut had showed all the potential and promise that had surrounded him at QPR but his off the field actions continued to mirror what had cost him the life as a professional footballer in London. Within a few weeks though I would again almost witness another debut from Jeanne. Barry Town had arranged a friendly with English pyramid side Havant & Waterlooville at Jenner Park in 2002 in preparation for their upcoming European campaign. The team line-up for Havant surprisingly included Leon Jeanne but Barry Town questioned his involvement due to his recent suspension and Jeanne was withdrawn from the match less than 30 minutes before kick-off.

A popular football figure in the Grangetown area of Cardiff, Mark Jones had taken charge of Welsh Premier League side Port Talbot Town the season before and knew all about Jeanne and his past. Jones invited Jeanne to train with his squad with the intention of it mutually benefiting both parties as Jeanne was firmly out of the only profession he had ever known while Jones was actively searching for any available talent to strengthen his side within the constraints of his clubs budget. On the 16th October 2002, Jeanne sat in the stands of the Millennium Stadium as Wales claimed one of their greatest results in the modern-era with a 2-1 win over Italy. The reality that he could have been part of Mark Hughes squad that night hit home as the anthems rang out amongst the packed stadium as he passed that same comment to those in his company. Within 48 hours Jeanne would make another debut.

A Friday night derby between Llanelli and Port Talbot Town at Stebonheath in the Welsh Premier League would be the next stage to be graced by Jeanne. Despite showing signs around the waist that he was no longer training as a professional, Jeanne scored a sublime second goal in his sides 2-0 win. The S4/C camera's followed him throughout the match for their highlights programme and the paternal instincts of Mark Jones made sure the post-match interview with Jeanne would focus only on his nights work for his new team when the reporters present were only interested in his past. Jeanne remained at Port Talbot Town for a couple of months but his desire to play part-time football quickly diminished as outside activities became his main focus.

Over the course of the next seven years Jeanne played at a host of small Welsh clubs. From Welsh League sides like Dinas Powys and Maesteg Park to turning out for local league outfits like the Carpenters Arms and Cardiff Draconians. Jeanne was almost unrecognisable when I was present for a match he played for the latter with his weight problems hiding the pace he showed that night he impressed for Cardiff City at Penydarren Park. The touches and technique still included his trademark leg-lifting dummy but Leon Jeanne, the talented footballer, no longer existed. Only Jeanne himself can explain those lost years as his disappearances became expected by the tolerating local league coaches who enjoyed the kudos of working with the disgraced star.

In 2009 Leon Jeanne was once again listed on the team-sheet for an English non-league club in a friendly that I attended. This time it was Weston-Super-Mare who had offered him another opportunity to prove himself in pre-season as he made a brief appearance against his former club Port Talbot Town as a second-half substitute. His time at Weston would be unsurprisingly brief however and within a few weeks he was back in the Welsh pyramid with Maesteg Park and Cardiff Corinthians. With his best years as a footballer seemingly behind him, few expected Jeanne ever to find himself back playing any kind of semi-pro standard again, but if his advancing years meant his career was coming to close, they also brought with them a new-found maturity.

Jeanne would have one more chance. Bath City manager Adie Britton would be the latest to offer the former Wales Under-21 International the opportunity to show that his undoubted ability was now matched with motivation. Jeanne for once appreciated the opportunity. With his act cleaned up off the field, a leaner and fitter player arrived at Twerton Park in November 2010, his motivation fuelled by the promise of interest from a Football League club if he made a success of this last chance. Dual-registration with Cinderford Town offered him regular football as Britton monitored his progress and his change of attitude became apparent as he stuck with the task in hand longer than his customary few weeks.

Receiving help from all corners along the way, Jeanne was exposed to the harsh realities of what he once had and lost as work began on his autobiography. The final chapter and title would revolve around this last opportunity to salvage his footballing reputation, and as Jeanne put in the hours at Cinderford Town and in the gym, a new-found focus appeared to have brought the best out of this once prestigious talent. His chance of making a Football League return remained a significant outside bet, but his own belief cut the odds considerably, and this week he begins what will be the most important few weeks of his football career.

Brighton & Hove Albion are a club on the up. Under the high-profile guidance of former Chelsea and Spurs favourite Gus Poyet, the club claimed the League One title last season and will start the new Championship campaign in their brand new stadium as they look to repeat their former glories that saw them play in the top-flight and reach an FA Cup Final in the 1980's. One unfamiliar face reporting for pre-season training however will be Leon Jeanne. When former Uruguayan International Poyet took charge at Brighton in 2009, Jeanne was a local league ex-pro lost in the lower levels of the Welsh football pyramid. Both have enjoyed significant rises since then, but even more surprisingly, their paths will this week cross as Brighton prepare for their return to the Championship.

Jeanne still has a lot to prove and the opportunity of a trial at Brighton & Hove Albion does not constitute a return to the professional game. On reflection however, the fact that he does have this second-chance after the problems that ruined his potential as a youngster, and his subsequent years spent in footballing wilderness ,will mean his new-found dedication over the last year has been worthwhile and he can be rightfully proud that his determination to finally succeed has brought with it this reward. Whatever the outcome of his time at Brighton Jeanne still has a unique and powerful story to tell, and even if his football career does not provide the Hollywood ending, he can move on from the professional game without the regret at not taking on and making the most of one last challenge.

Visit www.markpitman1.com for links to all blogs, news stories, features, reports and opinion as the big Welsh football news stories break.
You can also follow Mark Pitman on facebook and twitter.
http://blogs.walesonline.co.uk/sport/2011/06/the-hollywood-twist-in-the-leo.html



Four Year Flashback: QPR Chairman Gianni Paladini Talking About Selling the Club

- QPR Official Twitter (More than 7,000 Followers)

- Ex-QPR Trialist Gets Three Years in Prison over Killing

- Ex-QPR's Ali Russell Update: Speaking About His New Job at Glasgow Rangers

- Ex-QPR Gigi De Canio Supposedly Expecting to Return to England This Summer

- QPR's Last Fan Forum: More than One Thousand, Five Hundred Days (1,500) Days Ago. Flashback to that last forum.

- Yeovil Looks to Fans to Act as (additional) Scouts


- *****QPR FANS SPEAKING OUT IN PROTEST: QPR 1st & LSA Statements re QPR, Tickets, Actions...Still Waiting for Answers from the Official Supporters Club (OSC)


The QPR Official Supporters Club (OSC)

- There remain questions starting with the very simple one of who is actually on the board; how they got there; etc.

QPR and the Official Supporters Club: Some Open Questions

- Almost three weeks ago, (June 3rd) QPR and the QPR Official Supporters Club (OSC) issued a joint statement about the OSC meeting with Club Representatives about among other things, ticket prices.
- The joint statement went on to say "The meeting also highlighted the importance of the OSC as a mouthpiece for the fans. It was agreed that moving forward, the OSC would continue to meet frequently and will aim to meet monthly with the Club to discuss any issues or concerns that the fans might have. The Club proposes to publish a reminder of the upcoming meeting a week in advance and encourage the fans to contact the OSC with any topics they would like discussed. A summary of the points of discussion and the agreed next steps will be made available on the Club website following each meeting. The Club hopes that other supporters groups will also be able to hold regular meetings with the OSC, in order to allow the OSC to better communicate their views to us."

- As others have noted, the OSC Constitution sets out certain things and a number of questions have been asked re the Official Supporters Club and how things are run. And a letter to the OSC was sent from 30+ fans, meeting the OSC bylaws. Two weeks later, things remain as unclear as two weeks ago.

So: Four Open Questions to the OSC and the Club (and there are probably quite a few other questions that could be posed.

[Note: These Four Questions were composed by someone else and were sent to the club several days ago. Thus far, the questions have yet to be answered.]

FOUR QUESTIONS TO THE OSC
1) What was the response by the club to the OSC comments regarding the incredible rises in the cost of season tickets?
2) When will the minutes of the meeting be published?
3) As a member of the OSC (by being a ST holder) please could you inform me as to whom the representatives are?
4) How are the representatives of the OSC elected?


- Recalling QPR's 1968-1969 Season

- Five Year Flashback: "The Trial" Verdicts

Thursday, June 23, 2011

QPR Report Thursday Snippets: The Questions to the Club/Official Supporters Club (OSC) Are Still Out There

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-
- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________

- Forty-One Years Ago Today: Phil Parkes Joins Queen's Park Rangers

- Four Year Flashback: QPR Chairman Gianni Paladini Talking About Selling the Club

- QPR Official Twitter (More than 7,000 Followers)

- Ex-QPR Trialist Gets Three Years in Prison over Killing

- Ex-QPR's Ali Russell Update: Speaking About His New Job

- Yeovil Looks to Fans to Act as (additional) Scouts

- Ex-QPR Gigi De Canio Supposedly Expecting to Return to England This Summer

- England U-17 Football (with Raheem Sterling): England Drew 2-2 vs Canada

- QPR's Last Fan Forum: More than One Thousand, Five Hundred Days (1,500) Days Ago. Flashback to that last forum.

- *****QPR FANS SPEAKING OUT IN PROTEST: QPR 1st & LSA Statements re QPR, Tickets, Actions...Still Waiting for Answers from the Official Supporters Club (OSC)


The QPR Official Supporters Club (OSC)

- There remain questions starting with the very simple one of who is actually on the board; how they got there; etc.

QPR and the Official Supporters Club: Some Open Questions

- Almost three weeks ago, (June 3rd) QPR and the QPR Official Supporters Club (OSC) issued a joint statement about the OSC meeting with Club Representatives about among other things, ticket prices.
- The joint statement went on to say "The meeting also highlighted the importance of the OSC as a mouthpiece for the fans. It was agreed that moving forward, the OSC would continue to meet frequently and will aim to meet monthly with the Club to discuss any issues or concerns that the fans might have. The Club proposes to publish a reminder of the upcoming meeting a week in advance and encourage the fans to contact the OSC with any topics they would like discussed. A summary of the points of discussion and the agreed next steps will be made available on the Club website following each meeting. The Club hopes that other supporters groups will also be able to hold regular meetings with the OSC, in order to allow the OSC to better communicate their views to us."

- As others have noted, the OSC Constitution sets out certain things and a number of questions have been asked re the Official Supporters Club and how things are run. And a letter to the OSC was sent from 30+ fans, meeting the OSC bylaws. Two weeks later, things remain as unclear as two weeks ago.

So: Four Open Questions to the OSC and the Club (and there are probably quite a few other questions that could be posed.

[Note: These Four Questions were composed by someone else and were sent to the club several days ago. Thus far, the questions have yet to be answered.]

FOUR QUESTIONS TO THE OSC
1) What was the response by the club to the OSC comments regarding the incredible rises in the cost of season tickets?
2) When will the minutes of the meeting be published?
3) As a member of the OSC (by being a ST holder) please could you inform me as to whom the representatives are?
4) How are the representatives of the OSC elected?



- Recalling QPR's 1968-1969 Season

- Five Year Flashback: "The Trial" Verdicts


Fulham Chronicle/Jacob Murtagh - Defender eyes QPR move

TEL BEN Haim has told pals he wants to return to the Premier League with QPR.
The Portsmouth defender failed to make an appearance at Fratton Park last season after spending the first half of the campaign on loan at West Ham.
However, cash-strapped Pompey are desperate to get the 29-year-old off their wage bill, and the former Chelsea centre-back has touted himself with a switch back to west London with Rangers. Fulham Chronicle

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

QPR Report Wednesday Update

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- Bushman's 1979/1980 Season

- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________

- *****QPR FANS SPEAKING OUT IN PROTEST: QPR 1st & LSA Statements re QPR, Tickets, Actions...Still Waiting for Answers from the Official Supporters Club (OSC)


- An Assessment of Joe Cole

- Year Flashback; Four QPR Signings Now Completed as Warnock Speaks about Signing Hopes

- Wolves Sign Spurs' Jamie O'Hara for Five Million Pounds

- Recalling QPR's 1968-1969 Season

- Ex-QPR Jamie Cureton May be Returning to Bristol Rovers

- Twenty-Five Years Ago Today: "The Hand Of God" and QPR's Terry Fenwick's "Role" in Maradonna's Second Goal!

- Crucial Week for Spurs and Orient Opposing West Ham Stadium Move


Martin Samuel/Daily Mail - Adel-ightful partnership
- Adel Taarabt wants away from Queens Park Rangers and claims that Arsenal, Chelsea and Newcastle United are interested. Leaving would be a mistake, though.
- Taarabt is an idiosyncratic talent and has been indulged by an idiosyncratic manager, Neil Warnock, because at Rangers he makes the difference. Warnock has handled him superbly, when few rivals would have been as patient.
- At a bigger club, Taarabt would just become a number and have to conform to team disciplines. This is what happened at Tottenham Hotspur, where Harry Redknapp finally tired of his individualism.
- It is the reason Southampton was the right club for Matt Le Tissier, another unique talent, because the team was then built around his ability. Le Tissier would not have got that freedom anywhere else, and the same applies to Taarabt at Loftus Road. Mail


Metro - A QPR FAN'S VIEW [By "QPR Report"]

Championship winners Queens Park Rangers are where they feel they belong but can they stay up?
- ..They've been in exile for 15 long years, but finally Queens Park Rangers are back in the Premier League.
- The R's have earned their spot after a commanding season in the Championship and with ownership that reads like a 'rich list who's who' it is only natural that plenty of names have been linked to the Loftus Road newboys.
- Veteran gaffer Neil Warnock reiterated that a big spend isn't the answer to staying up. However, Bernie Ecclestone, Flavio Briatore and Lakshmi Mittal might see things differently as they prepare to rub shoulders with the likes of Chelsea, Arsenal and Manchester United.


A FAN'S VIEW (from QPR blog QPR Report)

What positions do your club need to strengthen?

The defence and, even more so, the attack! The attack was weak in the Championship and it will be even weaker in the Premier League.

Who would you like to buy?

The kind of players, we'd like will be going to Chelsea, Manchester United, Liverpool, Manchester City, Spurs, and Arsenal (and apparently Swansea, Norwich and West Ham)! The problem is that QPR, although labeled by the tabloids as 'moneybags', are in fact far removed from that.


We are a small club with a small ground, owned by extremely wealthy men. But that wealth doesn't trickle down to the club. And the club has been losing up to £20million a year.


If the reports are true, Neil Warnock has only been given £10m to spend this summer, which in Premier League parlance is a pittance. That's before one starts factoring in wages and bonuses. Strangely, players seem unprepared to accept that the true reward is having an opportunity to play for QPR...

We've already missed out on Watford striker Danny Graham. Kyle Walker on loan from Spurs has been touted, but ideally Daniel Sturridge from Chelsea on a season-long loan would be great. Either way, if Warnock is selecting players we have complete faith they'll do the job.

Who do you think you'll buy?

There are two kinds of players QPR have been linked to - the type of players Neil Warnock would go for and the type de facto chairman Flavio Briatore and his appointee Gianni Paladini would go for. When we see who we end up buying, then we'll truly know who is really in charge of the team at Loftus Road (not to mention whether Neil Warnock will remain as manager).

Who do you think will leave and who do you want to leave?

In truth we don't have very many players who are worth much: Adel Taarabt, Alejandro Faurlin, and maybe Akos Buzxsaky. Taarabt seems eager to get out of town (or at least to the other part of town!) and Faurlin has been linked to a big-time move to Spain.

Players most QPR fans want to leave are the likes of Rowan Vine and Gary Borrowdale. The difficulty is that while they may not play much (at all) for QPR, they have contracts which make them fairly well paid.

Having said that, the people we REALLY want to see leave are two of the co-owners - Flavio Briatore and Bernie Ecclestone - and chairman Gianni Paladini. If the club is to prosper, we need to see the back of them. Metro






- Five Year Flashback: "The Trial" Verdicts

- Great, Lengthy Audio of Interview with Frank McLintock

- Ex-QPR Assistant Managing Director, Ali Russell is back in Football - at Glasgow Rangers where he is Director of Operations and Commercial Activity.

- The QPR-Parma Non-Game at Loftus Road

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

QPR Fan Groups Speaking Out in Protest

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-
- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________

QPR1st Supporters Trust - www.qpr1st.co.uk

Call for Club Merchandise Boycott

QPR1st acknowledges the statement made by the LSA on Monday and at present shares similar communication issues with the club. QPR1st has always believed that the best way in which we can communicate fans views to the Club is through face to face meetings with the directors of the Board or their representatives and in the past this has occurred on a regular basis. We very much regret that the Club currently is reluctant to continue this practice.

We sympathise with the call from the LSA to decline to buy any merchandise from the club shop or any club publications. Many fans are unhappy with the price increases, the failure to reward loyal fans with a discount and the way the club is being governed at the moment. A collective decision not to buy merchandise may be the most effective way we can ensure that the Club takes notice of these feelings.

We remain in full support of Neil Warnock and the playing squad and are still hopeful the Club will be open to building a stronger relationship with its fans, by working more closely with independent supporter groups, by restoring the Shareholders AGM and by bringing back Fans Forums.


You can read the LSA's statement in full below:

The LSA wrote to our Club Chairman and major shareholders on June 1st requesting an urgent meeting to discuss the high rise in ticket prices and the failure to reward loyal fans with a discount.

The club, however, met solely with the Official Supporters Club (snubbing the LSA) but has not given a response to the OSC or our fans regarding points raised regarding price increases.

We reluctantly advise members of the LSA, which is the largest voluntary paid membership organisation of any QPR fans' group, that relations have broken down between the LSA and the club. Therefore until relations are restored between the club and our fans, we recommend, as a protest, that our members decline to buy any merchandise from the club shop or any club publications. Instead we recommend they should donate money to QPR in the Community Trust.

We urge the club to call an urgent meeting with all fans' groups so that we can resolve the breakdown in trust and relations between QPR and its fans.

We however pledge our undying support for our team and its manager Mr Warnock.


- Believing/Not Believing What The Club Says

- An (obviously-Unscientific) Survey Question re QPR: Do You Believe Your Club? (Feel Free to Vote)


- This QPR Fans View of QPR!


- Flasback to Formation of "Our QPR"

QPR and The FANS

- QPR's Loyal Supporters' Association (LSA) Met Sunday) to Discuss Ticket Pricing and other matters

UPDATE: STATEMENT FROM QPR LSA
- The LSA wrote to our Club Chairman and major shareholders on June 1st requesting an urgent meeting to discuss the high rise in ticket prices and the failure to reward loyal fans with a discount.
- The club, however, met solely with the Official Supporters Club (snubbing the LSA) but has not given a response to the OSC or our fans regarding points raised regarding price increases.
- We reluctantly advise members of the LSA, which is the largest voluntary paid membership organisation of any QPR fans' group, that relations have broken down between the LSA and the club. Therefore until relations are restored between the club and our fans, we recommend, as a protest, that our members decline to buy any merchandise from the club shop or any club publications. Instead we recommend they should donate money to QPR in the Community Trust.
- We urge the club to call an urgent meeting with all fans' groups so that we can resolve the breakdown in trust and relations between QPR and its fans.
- We however pledge our undying support for our team and its manager Mr Warnock.

[Added to the originally-posted statement]
"Other activities and action were discussed and if situation is not resolved by the start of the season, fans will be informed. The LSA also supports QPR 1st who have gathered the signatures to force an EGM of the Official Supporters Club."
(LSA Statement)

- Old LSA Meeting Reports from 2002-2003


QPR and the Official Supporters Club: Some Open Questions

Two weeks ago, (June 3rd) QPR and the QPR Official Supporters Club (OSC) issued a joint statement about the OSC meeting with Club Representatives about among other things, ticket prices.
The joint statement went on to say "The meeting also highlighted the importance of the OSC as a mouthpiece for the fans. It was agreed that moving forward, the OSC would continue to meet frequently and will aim to meet monthly with the Club to discuss any issues or concerns that the fans might have. The Club proposes to publish a reminder of the upcoming meeting a week in advance and encourage the fans to contact the OSC with any topics they would like discussed. A summary of the points of discussion and the agreed next steps will be made available on the Club website following each meeting. The Club hopes that other supporters groups will also be able to hold regular meetings with the OSC, in order to allow the OSC to better communicate their views to us."


As others have noted, the OSC Constitution sets out certain things and a number of questions have been asked re the Official Supporters Club and how things are run. And a letter to the OSC was sent from 30+ fans, meeting the OSC bylaws. Two weeks later, things remain as unclear as two weeks ago.

So: Four Open Questions to the OSC and the Club (and there are probably quite a few other questions that could be posed.

[Note: These Four Questions were composed by someone else and were sent to the club several days ago. Thus far, the questions have yet to be answered.]

FOUR QUESTIONS TO THE OSC

1) What was the response by the club to the OSC comments regarding the incredible rises in the cost of season tickets?

2) When will the minutes of the meeting be published?

3) As a member of the OSC (by being a ST holder) please could you inform me as to whom the representatives are?

4) How are the representatives of the OSC elected?


- Any Response for publication can be posted on the QPR Report Messageboard
or emailed to QPR Report


- Great, Lengthy Audio of Interview with Frank McLintock

- Five Year Flashback: "The Trial" Verdicts

- Ex-QPR Assistant Managing Director, Ali Russell is back in Football - at Glasgow Rangers where he is Director of Operations and Commercial Activity.

- The QPR-Parma Non-Game at Loftus Road

QPR Report Tuesday: Half Way Between Seasons

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-
- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________

- A QPR Fans View of QPR!

QPR have now reached the approximate half-way mark between the end of one season. And the start of the new one. And in less than two weeks, players report back (or report for the first time) to training. Less than two weeks after that: the first friendly (Schedule thus far)...

- Believing/Not Believing What The Club Says

- An (obviously-Unscientific) Survey Question re QPR: Do You Believe Your Club? (Feel Free to Vote)

- Great, Lengthy Audio of Interview with Frank McLintock

- Ex-QPR Richard Graham on the Move

- One Year Ago: "Done Deal Derry Doubt"

- Four Year Flashback: Mick Harford Appointed QPR First Team Coach

- Five Year Flashback: "The Trial" Verdicts

- David McIntyre More Positive About QPR Developments/Non-Developments, than some posters (including QPR Report!)


Daily Star - JAY BOOTHROYD TO MEET NEIL WARNOCK
- JAY BOTHROYD will meet QPR boss Neil Warnock this week to discuss joining the Premier League side on a free.
- England striker Bothroyd, 28, has also had offers from Everton, Sunderland and Newcastle after leaving Cardiff.
- Bothroyd’s agent Sky Andrew said: “Jay has just come back from holiday. “It’s an exciting time for him because he has spent three years turning his life around. “He’s in a good position.
Daily Star



- Daily Mail

- Ex-QPR Assistant Managing Director, Ali Russell is back in Football - at Glasgow Rangers where he is Director of Operations and Commercial Activity.


- Flasback to Formation of "Our QPR"

QPR and The FANS

- QPR's Loyal Supporters' Association (LSA) Met Sunday) to Discuss Ticket Pricing and other matters

UPDATE: STATEMENT FROM QPR LSA
- The LSA wrote to our Club Chairman and major shareholders on June 1st requesting an urgent meeting to discuss the high rise in ticket prices and the failure to reward loyal fans with a discount.
- The club, however, met solely with the Official Supporters Club (snubbing the LSA) but has not given a response to the OSC or our fans regarding points raised regarding price increases.
- We reluctantly advise members of the LSA, which is the largest voluntary paid membership organisation of any QPR fans' group, that relations have broken down between the LSA and the club. Therefore until relations are restored between the club and our fans, we recommend, as a protest, that our members decline to buy any merchandise from the club shop or any club publications. Instead we recommend they should donate money to QPR in the Community Trust.
- We urge the club to call an urgent meeting with all fans' groups so that we can resolve the breakdown in trust and relations between QPR and its fans.
- We however pledge our undying support for our team and its manager Mr Warnock.

[Added to the originally-posted statement]
"Other activities and action were discussed and if situation is not resolved by the start of the season, fans will be informed. The LSA also supports QPR 1st who have gathered the signatures to force an EGM of the Official Supporters Club."
(LSA Statement)

- Old LSA Meeting Reports from 2002-2003


QPR and the Official Supporters Club: Some Open Questions

Two weeks ago, (June 3rd) QPR and the QPR Official Supporters Club (OSC) issued a joint statement about the OSC meeting with Club Representatives about among other things, ticket prices.
The joint statement went on to say "The meeting also highlighted the importance of the OSC as a mouthpiece for the fans. It was agreed that moving forward, the OSC would continue to meet frequently and will aim to meet monthly with the Club to discuss any issues or concerns that the fans might have. The Club proposes to publish a reminder of the upcoming meeting a week in advance and encourage the fans to contact the OSC with any topics they would like discussed. A summary of the points of discussion and the agreed next steps will be made available on the Club website following each meeting. The Club hopes that other supporters groups will also be able to hold regular meetings with the OSC, in order to allow the OSC to better communicate their views to us."


As others have noted, the OSC Constitution sets out certain things and a number of questions have been asked re the Official Supporters Club and how things are run. And a letter to the OSC was sent from 30+ fans, meeting the OSC bylaws. Two weeks later, things remain as unclear as two weeks ago.

So: Four Open Questions to the OSC and the Club (and there are probably quite a few other questions that could be posed.

[Note: These Four Questions were composed by someone else and were sent to the club several days ago. Thus far, the questions have yet to be answered.]

FOUR QUESTIONS TO THE OSC

1) What was the response by the club to the OSC comments regarding the incredible rises in the cost of season tickets?

2) When will the minutes of the meeting be published?

3) As a member of the OSC (by being a ST holder) please could you inform me as to whom the representatives are?

4) How are the representatives of the OSC elected?


- Any Response for publication can be posted on the QPR Report Messageboard
or emailed to QPR Report


- Video Snippets from 1973 and 1974: Two Stan Bowles Goals

- Ex-Witney United Manager off to Prison...and "Found:" Ex-QPR Coach (Think "China Brawl")


- Upcoming in July: The London Masters (QPR Defending). Saturday night in Liverpool, Liverpool won the local Masters.

- The QPR-Parma Non-Game at Loftus Road

- Complete QPR Fixtures

Monday, June 20, 2011

QPR Report Monday Updates: QPR Fans and QPR: LSA Statement...Open Questions to OSC

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- Bushman's 1965/66 Season Photo Memories
-
- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER
_____________________________________________________________________________________

- An (obviously-Unscientific) Survey Question re QPR: Do You Believe Your Club? (Feel Free to Vote)

- Video: Raheem Sterling Scoring brilliant Goal for England U-17

- David McIntyre More Positive About QPR Developments/Non-Developments, than some posters (including QPR Report!)

- Two Year Flashback: Crystal Palace Manager Neil Warnock Charges QPR Tried To Hijack one of his Signings!

- Video Snippets from 1973 and 1974: Two Stan Bowles Goals

- Two Ex-QPR June 20 Birthdays

- Ex-Witney United Manager off to Prison...and "Found:" Ex-QPR Coach (Think "China Brawl")

- Chelsea/Abramovich Seeking to Build Up their Scouting Team

- Chelsea Face Points Deduction (Obviously Will Never Happen)

- Ex-QPR Assistant Managing Director, Ali Russell is back in Football - at Glasgow Rangers where he is Director of Operations and Commercial Activity.

- Swindon's Paolo Di Canio Appointment Assessed: When Saturday Comes/David Squires "The brainless appointment of Paolo Di Canio

- Upcoming in July: The London Masters (QPR Defending). Saturday night in Liverpool, Liverpool won the local Masters.

- Hull in for "QPR's" Ambrose?...Swansea and Nottingham Forest in for Chelsea Bertrand?

- Signed Photos of (younger) Flavio Briatore and Bernie Ecclestone Available for Sale

- Three Warnock Interviews from Friday raising troubling Questions re what's going on at QPR

- The QPR-Parma Non-Game at Loftus Road

- Seven Year Flashback: QPR's CEO David Davies Resigns from QPR. A few days later, Chairman Nick Blackburn resigns, opening the way for a Bill Power-Gianni Paladini takeover

- Four Year Flashback: Another Report on the AGM

- PARMA Statement re Non-QPR Game at Loftus Road

- Flasback to Formation of "Our QPR"

- Video: QPR vs Manchester City (1978-79)

- Complete QPR Fixtures


QPR and The FANS

- QPR's Loyal Supporters' Association (LSA) Met yesterday (Sunday) to Discuss Ticket Pricing and other matters

UPDATE: STATEMENT FROM QPR LSA
- The LSA wrote to our Club Chairman and major shareholders on June 1st requesting an urgent meeting to discuss the high rise in ticket prices and the failure to reward loyal fans with a discount.
- The club, however, met solely with the Official Supporters Club (snubbing the LSA) but has not given a response to the OSC or our fans regarding points raised regarding price increases.
- We reluctantly advise members of the LSA, which is the largest voluntary paid membership organisation of any QPR fans' group, that relations have broken down between the LSA and the club. Therefore until relations are restored between the club and our fans, we recommend, as a protest, that our members decline to buy any merchandise from the club shop or any club publications. Instead we recommend they should donate money to QPR in the Community Trust.
- We urge the club to call an urgent meeting with all fans' groups so that we can resolve the breakdown in trust and relations between QPR and its fans.
- We however pledge our undying support for our team and its manager Mr Warnock. (LSA Statement)


QPR and the Official Supporters Club: Some Open Questions

Two weeks ago, (June 3rd) QPR and the QPR Official Supporters Club (OSC) issued a joint statement about the OSC meeting with Club Representatives about among other things, ticket prices.
The joint statement went on to say "The meeting also highlighted the importance of the OSC as a mouthpiece for the fans. It was agreed that moving forward, the OSC would continue to meet frequently and will aim to meet monthly with the Club to discuss any issues or concerns that the fans might have. The Club proposes to publish a reminder of the upcoming meeting a week in advance and encourage the fans to contact the OSC with any topics they would like discussed. A summary of the points of discussion and the agreed next steps will be made available on the Club website following each meeting. The Club hopes that other supporters groups will also be able to hold regular meetings with the OSC, in order to allow the OSC to better communicate their views to us."

As others have noted, the OSC Constitution sets out certain things and a number of questions have been asked re the Official Supporters Club and how things are run. And a letter to the OSC was sent from 30+ fans, meeting the OSC bylaws. Two weeks later, things remain as unclear as two weeks ago.

So: Four Open Questions to the OSC and the Club (and there are probably quite a few other questions that could be posed.

[Note: These Four Questions were composed by someone else and were sent to the club several days ago. Thus far, the questions have yet to be answered.]

FOUR QUESTIONS TO THE OSC

1) What was the response by the club to the OSC comments regarding the incredible rises in the cost of season tickets?

2) When will the minutes of the meeting be published?

3) As a member of the OSC (by being a ST holder) please could you inform me as to whom the representatives are?

4) How are the representatives of the OSC elected?


- Any Response for publication can be posted on the QPR Report Messageboard
or emailed to QPR Report


-FLASHBACK to 2004: "OUR QPR"


NOTE: QPR1st Posted, June 8 - Fans Demand Season Ticket Holders Meeting
- QPR1st has been informed that a written request has been received by the secretary of the Official Supporters Club undersigned by thirty members calling on the Club to call an Extraordinary General Meeting, as per section 3.8 of the Queens Park Rangers Official Supporters Club Constitution and Rules. The OSC is now consulting with the Club as to how such a meeting could take place.
- This raises the prospect of the Club hosting a meeting which potentially hundreds or thousands of disgruntled QPR season ticket holders would have an entitlement to attend, and which we are confident the OSC will ensure is held at a time most suitable for its members.
- QPR1st would of course welcome the Club arranging such an event and will use such a meeting to call for a ‘one member one vote’ system of electing the OSC Committee, as well as to challenge the Club’s decision to end direct consultation with independent fans groups.
- Nevertheless we can not help but suspect that if the OSC was to have a Committee democratically elected by season ticket holders, then the OSC would very quickly join the LSA and QPR1st on the Club’s ever increasing list of persona non grata.
- QPR1st Trust Board QPR1st Supporters Trust - QPR1st


FITZ HALL/QPR Official Site
QPR Official Site - HALL: 'WE'LL HAVE NO FEAR'

Mon 20 Jun 2011

They say that experience is key, but QPR defender Fitz Hall believes that the fearless approach from the R's younger players could have just as much of an advantage next term.

Rangers kick-off the new Barclays Premier League campaign against Bolton Wanderers at Loftus Road following the release of the 2011/12 fixtures on Friday.

Speaking exclusively to www.qpr.co.uk at the Club's Harlington Training Ground, boyhood Arsenal fan Hall can't wait to kick-off the season in W12, saying: "When you get promoted, the first thing everyone thinks about is who you're going to play first game.

"I'm sure all the fans and players are looking forward to it.

"As a boy I supported Arsenal and whenever I've played against them it's been quite special.

"Saying that, the last time I played against them I scored an own goal!

"I'm definitely looking to put that one right."

Hall experienced an indifferent campaign last year following a number of injury setbacks but, as the defender explains, he is doing all he can to be fitter than ever for the new season.

"I had a little break but I've been at the Training Ground for a lot of the summer so far, trying to get right for next season," Hall said.

"Last season I was hit with quite a few injuries and it was a bit stop-start.

"I'm trying to make sure that doesn't happen next year. I'm currently doing a pre-pre-season!"

The R's Club Captain also has high hopes for next season, adding: "I think we can do well next season.

"The gap between the Premier League and the Championship is definitely closing.

"The sides that were promoted last season all did well and even though Blackpool got relegated, they were flying at the start of the season and surprised a few people.

"It gives everyone hope. I don't think many people gave them that much hope, but for them to go to the last game of the season and still be in with a shot of staying up certainly does.

"If that's anything to go by then we'll definitely fancy our chances.

"We've got experience but I think it helps when you've got young players who haven't played in the league before, because they're not scared of anything.

"They don't know what to expect and they've not been there.

"A lot of people also want to prove themselves, and I think that will help as well.

"The top 10 - or certainly the top four - in the Premier League are in their own little league, but anyone in the bottom half can finish anywhere.

"I'm sure when we go into the games against the teams in the bottom half that we'll be looking to take three points.

"Anything that we can take off the top teams is probably going to be a bonus at the end of the season."

*Fitz Hall is Co-Founder of the 'A-Star' movement, who are set to launch the 'A-Star League' (ASL) next month. For more information, click here.
http://www.astarleague.com/ http://www.qpr.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10373~2377489,00.html


Mobile QPR - Posted on: Fri 17 Jun 2011 - QPR CONGRATULATED IN PARLIAMENT
Local MP Andy Slaughter has tabled an Early Day Motion congratulating QPR on winning the npower Championship.
Slaughter also touches on the R's promotion, Neil Warnock and the good work that QPR in the Community Trust do in the local area.
The motion - which has so far been signed by over a dozen MP's, including Alan Johnson - reads as follows:
QUEEN'S PARK RANGERS FC
That this House congratulates Queen's Park Rangers Football Club on winning the Championship and being promoted to the Premier League; acknowledges the skill, dedication and effort of Neil Warnock, his management team and players and the enthusiasm and loyalty of QPR fans worldwide; and looks forward to the return of Premiership football to Shepherds Bush and the continuation of the wonderful contribution the club makes to the local community through the activities of its outreach team, QPR in the Community Trust.
Click here for more information - QPR Mobile


SOCCERNET/Rob Facey - An embarrassment of riches
June 18, 2011
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It has been 15 long years since Queens Park Rangers competed in the top flight of English football. Rather than anticipating the new season with giddy excitement, fans are once again nervously placing their faith in a club that has narrowly avoided disaster after disaster in recent times.

Back in 1995-96, under the stewardship of player-manager Ray Wilkins, the West London side struggled to cope with the recent sale of England striker Les Ferdinand to Newcastle and finished 19th. They were relegated that year along with Manchester City and Bolton Wanderers.

QPR soon found themselves lost in the footballing wilderness. Another relegation followed before their slow ascent back into the mainstream this season. The club did occasionally make the news, albeit for mostly negative reasons. These range from the tragic and untimely deaths of youngsters Ray Jones and Kiyan Prince, the numerous threats of extinction, the alleged boardroom gun saga, the embarrassing brawl with the Chinese Olympic team and the frankly humiliating home defeat at the hands of Vauxhall Motors in the FA Cup.

Things were apparently looking up when, in September 2007, Flavio Briatore and Bernie Ecclestone arrived from the glamorous world of Formula One to stave off the latest threat of administration. Overnight, the club were propelled onto sports pages around the world with talk of them being in a position to financially challenge their neighbours at Stamford Bridge.

However, a flurry of managers, increased ticket prices and Briatore's talk of a 'boutique football club' - where image comes first, and football later - understandably worried fans. One Monday night shortly after the takeover soon came to define the differing attitudes between the board and the fans about the club's direction. Supermodel Naomi Campbell and it-girl Tamara Beckwith were in the directors' box for QPR's 1-0 victory over Norwich City and, while the television cameras focused on the A-listers in the director's box, fans were relieved to have finally secured their first win of the season after nine attempts. They were bottom of the league and struggling to fill the stadium.

By the end of the year, off-field events continued to dominate the news and paint a happy picture of a club on the up as Lakshmi Mittal, one of the richest men in the world, bought a 20% stake in QPR. He was to be represented on the board by his son-in-law and newly appointed vice president Amit Bhatia.

Then the real fun started. Forgetting the flurry of managers that soon came to represent their ownership, the most worrying trait of the early Briatore-Ecclestone years was the conveyor belt of anonymous faces brought to the club, whether it be on loan or on longer contracts.

There are far too many names to mention, but arguably the most embarrassing episode came in 2008 after Argentinean midfielder Emmanuel Ledesma, on loan from Genoa at the time, scored a hat-trick against Carlisle in the Carling Cup. The club shop had commemorative T-shirts for sale in time for the weekend. Needless to say, there was not much uptake.

Two years passed, yet QPR's progress on the pitch was still being stunted by the constant interference from above and the frustration in the stands reached new heights. The chairman, Gianni Paladini - the man who was to be at the centre of the Alejandro Faurlin transfer debacle this season - was another huge factor in the merry-go-round of players and managers. The fans made their feelings towards the former agent known, in addition to the continued baiting of Briatore and Ecclestone.

A small victory, and period of respite, for the fans came when the increasingly unpopular Briatore eventually stood down as QPR Holdings Chairman in February 2010. The club was still in the bottom half of the league.

A month later, Neil Warnock was brought to the club from Crystal Palace. Mittal's representative, the popular Amit Bhatia, was instrumental in convincing the former Sheffield United man to take the job. This was not an easy feat. He was, after all, the 11th managerial appointment since the 2007 takeover.

Warnock was welcomed by most QPR fans as someone with a decent track record in the division and, perhaps most importantly, a famously stubborn attitude. This was certainly needed when it came to dealing with the board and, in particular, the club's scattergun transfer policy.

A staggering 50 players had been brought to the club before Warnock and his staff finally gave the club a sense of direction. As if to prove a point, just three players were brought in last summer - Paddy Kenny, Clint Hill and Shaun Derry - all experienced, no-nonsense professionals with whom Warnock had worked previously. The signings complemented the existing talent perfectly and, with the Championship title won, fans were excitedly and optimistically looking to the future.

This was before the shock resignation of Bhatia from the board last month.

In a statement at the time, Bhatia said: "It is clear to me from recent board meetings that my vision, strategy and direction for the club is very different from that of the other shareholders and board members." He added that the 40% price hike in season tickets was another key factor.

Bhatia did confirm that the Mittal family was considering a potential buyout of the other existing shares - a popular idea with the fans - but with Briatore once again involved with the everyday running of club and his idea of a 'boutique club' growing ever nearer, it is unlikely he would sell. Likewise Ecclestone, who, despite confessing to not having a great deal of football knowledge himself, has invested a lot of his personal wealth into the running of the club over the past season.

This in mind, and the fact that his ally was no longer present to fight his corner, fans feared that the vulnerable position Warnock found himself in would result in him leaving the club and, despite being given a vote of confidence by Briatore, the lack of transfer activity since clinching promotion this summer suggests that wider issues continue to undermine the progression of the club.

In recent weeks, QPR have been linked with World Cup-winner Marco Materazzi, former Italy defender Nicola Legrottaglie, and Juventus striker Amauri, who has been on loan at Parma. All are experienced Serie A players, but hardly align with Warnock's signings from last summer.

Of the three promoted clubs, QPR remain the only side not to have signed any new players, yet the doubt over who exactly is initiating the talks from Loftus Road these days will be of primary concern for most fans.

While it is not yet time to panic - Warnock, like most players, has been enjoying his holidays recently - the fans who are being asked to pay extortionate prices next season will, understandably, want to see a slightly higher value product. Many have already declined the offer to renew season tickets.

Yet marquee signings are not what is needed at QPR. After everything the club has been through during this hiatus from the top flight, the need for transparency and stability is needed now more than ever.

The biggest worry of all, though, is that the last year's success was the blip, as opposed to the years of chaos and politics that preceded it. Soccernet



QPR OFFICIAL SITE - 2011/12 MATCH TICKET LATEST
Fri 17 Jun 2011
- The QPR Box Office would like to advise supporters that no match ticket price / on-sale date information will be announced until Mid-July. Once the information is confirmed, it will be announced first here on www.qpr.co.uk, so please keep an eye on this website. Until 5:00pm on Friday 15th July, the QPR Box Office will solely be administering the sales of Season Tickets.
- The Club appreciates your patience and look forward to announcing further details regarding the upcoming fixtures in due course. QPR

Sunday, June 19, 2011

QPR Report Sunday: Taarabt Wants to Leave?...QPR's Parliamentary Congratulations

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- Bushman's 1965/66 Season Photo Memories
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- Throughout the day, the QPR Report Messageboard has news updates, comments and perspectives - even links to other board comments of interest re QPR matters (on and off the field) along with football (and ONLY football) topics in general....Also Follow: QPR REPORT ON TWITTER [Note: There may be some temporary "Slight Technical difficulties" with the QPR Report Messageboard as the Proboard "hosts" are doing whatever they're doing!
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- An (obviously-Unscientific) Survey Question re QPR: Do You Believe Your Club?

- QPR's Loyal Supporters' Association (LSA) Meeting today (Sunday) to Discuss Ticket Pricing

- Chelsea Face Points Deduction (Obviously Will Never Happen)

- Upcoming in July: The London Masters (QPR Defending). Last night in Liverpool, Liverpool won the local Masters.

- Hull in for "QPR's" Ambrose?...Swansea and Nottingham Forest in for Chelsea Bertrand?

- Signed Photos of (younger) Flavio Briatore and Bernie Ecclestone Available for Sale

- Birthdays for David Kerslake and Paul McGhee

- Four Year Flashback: Paul Parker (Temporarily) Back at Loftus Road

- Four Year Flashback: Another Report on the AGM

- Ex-QPR Assistant Managing Director, Ali Russell is back in Football - at Glasgow Rangers where he is Director of Operations and Commercial Activity.

- Three Warnock Interviews from Friday raising troubling Questions re what's going on at QPR

- Seven Year Flashback: QPR's CEO David Davies Resigns from QPR. A few days later, Chairman Nick Blackburn resigns, opening the way for a Bill Power-Gianni Paladini takeover

- PARMA Statement re Non-QPR Game at Loftus Road

- Flasback to Formation of "Our QPR"

- Video: QPR vs Manchester City (1978-79)

- Complete QPR Fixtures


MAIL/Joe Berstein - Taarabt sparks £10m chase after midfielder reveals he's ready to call time on QPR

Contract talks between the inspirational midfielder and the club have broken down and the 22-year-old now wants to leave. Worse still, he is tipping Championship winners Rangers for instant relegation.

All of which will be music to the ears of Newcastle, who had a £5m bid for the midfielder rejected in January, as manager Alan Pardew continues to rebuild his team after adding Demba Ba and Sylvain Marveaux to his squad.

Taarabt, voted the best player in the Championship last season, said last night: 'I helped QPR win promotion but they will not offer me a better contract. They say I am already on big wages.

'They want me to stay four years on the same terms. But I don't want to sign for four years then after one year I am going to be back in The Championship.

'No disrespect, but if we keep the same players, it will be very difficult to stay in the Premier League when you are playing Man United and Chelsea.'

Taarabt's contract runs until 2013 but it is believed there is a break clause that could be activated by the Moroccan next summer.

Champions: but Taarabt as tipped QPR to go straight back down

Rangers have had offers of £5m but have told him they will only let him go for £10m. 'It's a lot of money because I have not been successful yet in the Premier League,' he said.

'But when Rangers sell me they have to give 40 per cent of the fee to Tottenham, my first club.'

Despite interest from Paris St-Germain and Juventus, Taarabt wants to stay in the Premier League. He said: 'Why should I go to France and play some games in front of 7,000 people? I like it in England. The stadiums are full all the time.

'I understand that QPR have changed my life. People had almost forgotten me when I joined from Tottenham. But I don't think they are being fair to me.'

Pardew, whose rebuilding plans have already seen the departure of physical English players Andy Carroll and Kevin Nolan, is a long-time admirer and can be expected to re-enter the race for a player who could end up being idolised at St James' Park in the same way as Paul Gascoigne, a player he is often likened to.

French-born Senegal striker Ba and Rennes wide-man Marveaux arrived last week on free transfers and another French flair player, Hatem Ben Arfa, is due back from long-term injury.

Although he speaks good English, having joined Spurs as a 17-year-old, Taarabt said: 'It is good for me that Newcastle have a few French players.

'People say Newcastle will be good for me, that the fans love players like me. It is fantastic to play in front of 50,000 supporters every week. I do not need one of the very big clubs at this stage.'

There is still uncertainty about the future ownership of QPR, with steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal trying to wrest control from Bernie Ecclestone. Mail


Mobile QPR - Posted on: Fri 17 Jun 2011 - QPR CONGRATULATED IN PARLIAMENT

Local MP Andy Slaughter has tabled an Early Day Motion congratulating QPR on winning the npower Championship.

Slaughter also touches on the R's promotion, Neil Warnock and the good work that QPR in the Community Trust do in the local area.

The motion - which has so far been signed by over a dozen MP's, including Alan Johnson - reads as follows:

QUEEN'S PARK RANGERS FC

That this House congratulates Queen's Park Rangers Football Club on winning the Championship and being promoted to the Premier League; acknowledges the skill, dedication and effort of Neil Warnock, his management team and players and the enthusiasm and loyalty of QPR fans worldwide; and looks forward to the return of Premiership football to Shepherds Bush and the continuation of the wonderful contribution the club makes to the local community through the activities of its outreach team, QPR in the Community Trust.
Click here for more information - QPR Mobile


SOCCERNET/Rob Facey - An embarrassment of riches
June 18, 2011
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It has been 15 long years since Queens Park Rangers competed in the top flight of English football. Rather than anticipating the new season with giddy excitement, fans are once again nervously placing their faith in a club that has narrowly avoided disaster after disaster in recent times.

Back in 1995-96, under the stewardship of player-manager Ray Wilkins, the West London side struggled to cope with the recent sale of England striker Les Ferdinand to Newcastle and finished 19th. They were relegated that year along with Manchester City and Bolton Wanderers.

QPR soon found themselves lost in the footballing wilderness. Another relegation followed before their slow ascent back into the mainstream this season. The club did occasionally make the news, albeit for mostly negative reasons. These range from the tragic and untimely deaths of youngsters Ray Jones and Kiyan Prince, the numerous threats of extinction, the alleged boardroom gun saga, the embarrassing brawl with the Chinese Olympic team and the frankly humiliating home defeat at the hands of Vauxhall Motors in the FA Cup.

Things were apparently looking up when, in September 2007, Flavio Briatore and Bernie Ecclestone arrived from the glamorous world of Formula One to stave off the latest threat of administration. Overnight, the club were propelled onto sports pages around the world with talk of them being in a position to financially challenge their neighbours at Stamford Bridge.

However, a flurry of managers, increased ticket prices and Briatore's talk of a 'boutique football club' - where image comes first, and football later - understandably worried fans. One Monday night shortly after the takeover soon came to define the differing attitudes between the board and the fans about the club's direction. Supermodel Naomi Campbell and it-girl Tamara Beckwith were in the directors' box for QPR's 1-0 victory over Norwich City and, while the television cameras focused on the A-listers in the director's box, fans were relieved to have finally secured their first win of the season after nine attempts. They were bottom of the league and struggling to fill the stadium.

By the end of the year, off-field events continued to dominate the news and paint a happy picture of a club on the up as Lakshmi Mittal, one of the richest men in the world, bought a 20% stake in QPR. He was to be represented on the board by his son-in-law and newly appointed vice president Amit Bhatia.

Then the real fun started. Forgetting the flurry of managers that soon came to represent their ownership, the most worrying trait of the early Briatore-Ecclestone years was the conveyor belt of anonymous faces brought to the club, whether it be on loan or on longer contracts.

There are far too many names to mention, but arguably the most embarrassing episode came in 2008 after Argentinean midfielder Emmanuel Ledesma, on loan from Genoa at the time, scored a hat-trick against Carlisle in the Carling Cup. The club shop had commemorative T-shirts for sale in time for the weekend. Needless to say, there was not much uptake.

Two years passed, yet QPR's progress on the pitch was still being stunted by the constant interference from above and the frustration in the stands reached new heights. The chairman, Gianni Paladini - the man who was to be at the centre of the Alejandro Faurlin transfer debacle this season - was another huge factor in the merry-go-round of players and managers. The fans made their feelings towards the former agent known, in addition to the continued baiting of Briatore and Ecclestone.

A small victory, and period of respite, for the fans came when the increasingly unpopular Briatore eventually stood down as QPR Holdings Chairman in February 2010. The club was still in the bottom half of the league.

A month later, Neil Warnock was brought to the club from Crystal Palace. Mittal's representative, the popular Amit Bhatia, was instrumental in convincing the former Sheffield United man to take the job. This was not an easy feat. He was, after all, the 11th managerial appointment since the 2007 takeover.

Warnock was welcomed by most QPR fans as someone with a decent track record in the division and, perhaps most importantly, a famously stubborn attitude. This was certainly needed when it came to dealing with the board and, in particular, the club's scattergun transfer policy.

A staggering 50 players had been brought to the club before Warnock and his staff finally gave the club a sense of direction. As if to prove a point, just three players were brought in last summer - Paddy Kenny, Clint Hill and Shaun Derry - all experienced, no-nonsense professionals with whom Warnock had worked previously. The signings complemented the existing talent perfectly and, with the Championship title won, fans were excitedly and optimistically looking to the future.

This was before the shock resignation of Bhatia from the board last month.

In a statement at the time, Bhatia said: "It is clear to me from recent board meetings that my vision, strategy and direction for the club is very different from that of the other shareholders and board members." He added that the 40% price hike in season tickets was another key factor.

Bhatia did confirm that the Mittal family was considering a potential buyout of the other existing shares - a popular idea with the fans - but with Briatore once again involved with the everyday running of club and his idea of a 'boutique club' growing ever nearer, it is unlikely he would sell. Likewise Ecclestone, who, despite confessing to not having a great deal of football knowledge himself, has invested a lot of his personal wealth into the running of the club over the past season.

This in mind, and the fact that his ally was no longer present to fight his corner, fans feared that the vulnerable position Warnock found himself in would result in him leaving the club and, despite being given a vote of confidence by Briatore, the lack of transfer activity since clinching promotion this summer suggests that wider issues continue to undermine the progression of the club.

In recent weeks, QPR have been linked with World Cup-winner Marco Materazzi, former Italy defender Nicola Legrottaglie, and Juventus striker Amauri, who has been on loan at Parma. All are experienced Serie A players, but hardly align with Warnock's signings from last summer.

Of the three promoted clubs, QPR remain the only side not to have signed any new players, yet the doubt over who exactly is initiating the talks from Loftus Road these days will be of primary concern for most fans.

While it is not yet time to panic - Warnock, like most players, has been enjoying his holidays recently - the fans who are being asked to pay extortionate prices next season will, understandably, want to see a slightly higher value product. Many have already declined the offer to renew season tickets.

Yet marquee signings are not what is needed at QPR. After everything the club has been through during this hiatus from the top flight, the need for transparency and stability is needed now more than ever.

The biggest worry of all, though, is that the last year's success was the blip, as opposed to the years of chaos and politics that preceded it. Soccernet


QPR and the Official Supporters Club: Some Open Questions

Two weeks ago, (June 3rd) QPR and the QPR Official Supporters Club (OSC) issued a joint statement about the OSC meeting with Club Representatives about among other things, ticket prices.
The joint statement went on to say "The meeting also highlighted the importance of the OSC as a mouthpiece for the fans. It was agreed that moving forward, the OSC would continue to meet frequently and will aim to meet monthly with the Club to discuss any issues or concerns that the fans might have. The Club proposes to publish a reminder of the upcoming meeting a week in advance and encourage the fans to contact the OSC with any topics they would like discussed. A summary of the points of discussion and the agreed next steps will be made available on the Club website following each meeting. The Club hopes that other supporters groups will also be able to hold regular meetings with the OSC, in order to allow the OSC to better communicate their views to us."

As others have noted, the OSC Constitution sets out certain things and a number of questions have been asked re the Official Supporters Club and how things are run. And a letter to the OSC was sent from 30+ fans, meeting the OSC bylaws. Two weeks later, things remain as unclear as two weeks ago.

So: Four Open Questions to the OSC and the Club (and there are probably quite a few other questions that could be posed.

[Note: These Questions were composed by someone else and were sent to the club several days ago. Thus far, the questions have yet to be answered.]

1) What was the response by the club to the OSC comments regarding the incredible rises in the cost of season tickets?

2) When will the minutes of the meeting be published?

3) As a member of the OSC (by being a ST holder) please could you inform me as to whom the representatives are?

4) How are the representatives of the OSC elected?

- Any Response for publication can be posted on the QPR Report Messageboard
or emailed to QPR Report


QPR OFFICIAL SITE - 2011/12 MATCH TICKET LATEST
Fri 17 Jun 2011
- The QPR Box Office would like to advise supporters that no match ticket price / on-sale date information will be announced until Mid-July. Once the information is confirmed, it will be announced first here on www.qpr.co.uk, so please keep an eye on this website. Until 5:00pm on Friday 15th July, the QPR Box Office will solely be administering the sales of Season Tickets.
- The Club appreciates your patience and look forward to announcing further details regarding the upcoming fixtures in due course. QPR

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