2013年12月2日星期一

A lot of the time they are carrying

"She (Bailey) saw that his eyes were open but they looked frozen."Mr Whittam said the men left the car.He went on: "The driver was carrying a cleaver in his hand. He knelt down by Lee Rigby and took hold of his hair. He then repeatedly hacked at the right side of his neck just below the jawline."Describing Ms Bailey's account, Mr Whittam told the jury: "As she put it, 'I was so shocked that all I could do was sit there and stare at what was happening. I couldn't believe what was going on. He was determined and he wasn't going to stop. He didn't care'."Another eyewitness, Greenwich Borough Council electrician Thomas Seymour, saw a man attack the neck of Fusilier Rigby. TPI acts as both a manufacturer Mr Whittam told the jury: "Mr Seymour 'instantly believed that he was trying to cut the victim's head off'."Another witness, Gary Perkins, described the defendant's actions as being "like a butcher attacking a joint of meat".The jury was shown further images of the two men dragging Fusilier Rigby's body into the road.More relatives of the soldier left the court in tears before the images were shown.The Donegal manager said the youth players were "on a knife edge" pinning their future on securing a professional contract.

He added that managing that pressure and their expectations was the biggest part of his role with the Scottish club."These are young players, they are very keen to get a professional contract. They are looking at fellas driving around in 100,000 cars and they want to be that person. They are on a knife edge."The club will take them through for X amount of years and then when they get to 18 they are looking at them thinking, 'will we keep them?'"You've come through the ranks and all of a sudden it all comes down to 18 or 24 months max."If you get an injury within that time frame that's two months gone out of your 24 months. People are making decisions on you, so there is a lot of pressure."McGuinness added that the problem was often exacerbated because the young players were also under pressure from their parents, who often invest everything in them achieving a contract with the cub."A lot of these kids don't have strong educational backgrounds and they are pinning their future on making it as a professional footballer," he told a health conference in Galway yesterday."

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