MaryAnn Bernal's Blog, page 386

August 16, 2013

History Trivia - Battle of the Spurs - French flee the battlefield

August 16 1513 The Battle of Guinegate (near Saint-Omer in the Pas de Calais, France)or Battle of the Spurs: As part of the Holy League under the on-going Italian Wars, English and Imperial troops under Henry VIII and Maximilian I surprised and routed a body of French cavalry under Jacques de La Palice. The English army was provided by Cardinal Thomas Wolsey and combined several different types of martial forces, and included cavalry, artillery, infantry and longbows using hardened steel arrows designed to penetrate armor more effectively. The French forces were mostly companies of gendarmes and pikemen, with some other mixed forces as well. The battle became known as the "Battle of the Spurs" because of the haste of the French horsemen to leave the battlefield.

submitted by John Herrmann.         
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Published on August 16, 2013 04:58

The Phil Naessens Show 8-16-2013 The Los Angeles Dodgers; From Worst to First!

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2013/08/16/the-phil-naessens-show-8-16-2013-the-los-angeles-dodgers-from/

philvegas1
The Los Angeles Dodgers went from worst to first and it’s once again time to give our NBA Eastern Conference power rankings. Aaron Stampler from Pounding the Rock joins Phil to discuss his top 8 Eastern Conference seeds, Eric Stephen from True Blue LA joins Phil to describe how the Dodgers went from worst to first and Phil gives his top 8 Eastern Conference seeds and much more on today’s Phil Naessens Show.
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Published on August 16, 2013 04:55

August 15, 2013

Violent Disorder by Mark Barry - Print edition book launch - a tale of football (soccer) violence in modern society

My review:

Violent Disorderis the long awaited sequel of Mr. Barry’s highly acclaimed novel on violence in sports, Ultra Violence.

The story revolves around the Bully Brothers, and their passionate support of the Notts Football team, which results in violent clashes with opposing fans on game day.  In this novel, HobNob and Bull draw the reader into their world, recounting horrific tales of brutality when football hooliganism ran rampant decades ago.  However, the sad truth reveals that the violent behavior still exists today as middle-aged men continue to pick up the gauntlet.  A powerful ending.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and I recommend it to men, and women, on both sides of the pond.



Amazon US
http://www.amazon.com/Violent-Disorder-Mark-Barry/dp/149123945X/ref=sr_1_1_bnp_1_pap?ie=UTF8&qid=1376609751&sr=8-1&keywords=violent+disorder+by+mark+barry

Amazon UK
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Violent-Disorder-Mark-Barry/dp/149123945X/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1376493378&sr=8-2&keywords=violent+disorder+by+Mark+Barry
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Published on August 15, 2013 16:43

Blast from the past - Author Mark Barry discusses football (soccer) hooliganism in the UK with Phil Naessens

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/the-phil-naessens-show-january-9-2013-the-best-of-the-phil-naessens-show/

On Wednesdays Phil Naessens Show Phil replays an interview with Mark Barry, author of the novel Ultra Violence. Listen in as Mark Barry shares tales of Soccer Hooliganism in the United Kingdom.
To listen to the program from the site please click the link provided below. To save this program to your portable listening device please right click the link below and select “save as”.
http://phillyflash.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/pns1092013-best-of-pns.mp3
Purchasing information for and my review of Ultra Violence can be found here
For  your  free book download and free trial please visit; http://www.audibletrial.com/flashtennis
The Phil Naessens Show can be heard Monday thru Friday at Max Sports ChannelsOhio Sports Radio NetworkTalk Superstation and K99Rocks
The Phil Naessens Show Facebook Page can be found here
Theme Music for the Phil Naessens Show by MatzWallez
The Phil Naessens Show can also be downloaded on Zunes here and Stitcher here. The program is also available at Miro Guide here
Please visit the Phil Naessens Media site here
The Phil Naessens Show is now on itunes. You can subscribe here

  Amazon UKhttp://www.amazon.co.uk/Mark-Barry/e/...  Amazon UShttp://www.amazon.com/Mark-Barry/e/B0...
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Published on August 15, 2013 06:01

The Phil Naessens Show 8-15-2013 Alex Rios to the Texas Rangers

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/author/phillyflash/


philvegas1
The Texas Rangers acquired Alex Rios, the Oakland Athletics are playing better baseball, the Los Angeles Clippers have a great NBA schedule and what makes a good NBA coach? Joining host Phil Naessens to discuss Oakland A’s baseball is Athletics Nation lead writer Alex Hall, Clips Nation Managing Editor Steven Perrin discusses the Clippers schedule and Welcome to Loud City Managing Editor J.A. Sherman discusses what makes a good NBA coach. All this and much more on today’s show
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Published on August 15, 2013 05:49

History Trivia -Mary, Queen of Scotland, arrives in France

August 15

 778 The Battle of Roncevaux Pass (Pyrenees on the border between France and Spain), at which Roland (commander of the rear guard of Charlemagne's army) was killed. The battle was romanticized by oral tradition into a major conflict between Christians and Muslims, when in fact both sides in the battle were Christian. The legend is recounted in the 11th century The Song of Roland, which is the oldest surviving major work of French literature, and in Orlando Furioso, which is one of the most celebrated works of Italian literature.




982 Holy Roman Emperor Otto II was defeated by the Saracens in the battle of Capo Colonna, in Calabria.

1248 –The foundation stone of Cologne Cathedral, built to house the relics of the Three Wise Men, was laid.

1261 Michael VIII Palaeologus was crowned Byzantine emperor in Constantinople.

1309 – The city of Rhodes surrendered to the forces of the Knights of St. John, completing their conquest of Rhodes. The knights established their headquarters on the island and renamed themselves the Knights of Rhodes.

 1457 "Mainz Psalter," the earliest dated book was completed. 1

483 Pope Sixtus IV consecrated the Sistine Chapel.

1548 Mary, Queen of Scotland, arrived in France.
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Published on August 15, 2013 04:02

The Wizard of Notts Recommends: Arilington Million Saturday, August 17, 2013

http://www.hrtv.com/racing/2013-arlington-million/




Mull of Killough
If Grandeur is 7/2 and has a chance, then this horse at 12/1 plus is a place certainty...:-)   
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Published on August 15, 2013 04:02

August 14, 2013

GREEN WIZARD NEWS: Violent Disorder by Mark Barry - AN EXCERPT

http://greenwizardcarla.blogspot.com/2013/08/violent-disorder-extract.html?showComment=1376503308935#c4951365321244446969 Violent Disorder Extract


From Chapter 3:

1988. The brothers have successfully (or unsuccessfully, considering the state of them) led an attack on the Brentford end in retaliation for their attack on Meadow Lane earlier that season. Here, they wait in the ARA van after the game on the High Street. One of them sits there thinking about how fenced-in away pens make it easy for hooligans to spot away fans on their way home after the match.
________________________________________________

Later, in the back of the transit van, the mood was one of congratulations and victory, and the smells were of testosterone, excitement, trainers, fags, bad pies and stale booze. 

Everyone present and correct, the police in West London apparently adopting a soft policy of ejection rather than arrest. The new political regime of paperwork and administration was vexing to the average copper who was usually more content swinging a truncheon into the teeth of a starving miner than tapping on the keys of a back office typewriter. 

The High Street was busy with shoppers and shirters coming away from Griffin Park. There had been no sign of the Brentford mob, which were bound to be around somewhere.
Leaving an away pen could often be problematic. In the seventies, matches were all mixed up, the crowd unsegregated – stand where you want, like rugby union. That didn’t last long. Fences went up, and special pens for away supporters were created. 
What were away pens for? To protect the home supporters? To safeguard the away supporters? What was certain was that segregation made it easier for the local hunters to find their prey with little or no effort. 
In the seventies, local thugs spotted an opposition supporter because they wore scarves like brightly coloured plumage. After a few well publicised beatings, cuttings, and stabbings (the famous Bradford City photo after a visit to Liverpool – two hundred and thirty stitches, a train track down his back from the nape of his neck to the base of his spine, front page news on all the Sundays), you learned when travelling away to ditch the scarf and mingle in.
Shut your cakehole. Don’t order a pie from the hatches, don’t go to the boozer and don’t tell anyone the time if they asked.
Then, the away pen appeared. An away supporter may as well have tattooed himself on the forehead.  
I Am An Opposition Supporter. Please Kick The Fuck Out Of Me.
Local thugs could wait outside the away pen on deckchairs and enjoy a pint of beer underneath a pink parasol. Not only did you get the hooligans who had actually seen the match, but you got the zombies who spent the day in the pub. The small town morons who couldn’t give a flying fuck about their team, who consumed football through Match of the Day and paid only for games involving Man Utd, and Liverpool, and Chelsea, and Tottenham. 
The plastics. The local headcases who turned out for the fighting. The native thugs. The pubmen, the barflies, the Frank Booths, the furious-hearted alcoholics with their white socks, skinheads, Pods, Pepe jeans, burgundy box jackets, buttery teeth, dripping armpits, low-grade booze, toxic fags, condemned meat pies and solemn, despairing, battered wives.Four thirty on the dot. No effort required.Open the gullet, down the foamy slops in one, and find the away pen.
Take Swindon versus Notts County in August 1985. Classic example of away pen entrapment in action. The Robins, recently promoted from the fourth tier, were on a high under Lou Macari. Picture the scene: The ramshackle ground, crowded wooden stands painted Robin Redbreast Red, the Swindon colours, four giant pylons standing sentinel, banks of rocky terraces like urban cliffs, the sun blazing on a high summer day, the first match of the season.
The West Countrymen expected a rout. The fourth division championship won by March the previous year, and they had every reason to believe that lightning was going to strike twice. The football equivalent of Hitler’s iron legions invading the Sudetenland, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Belgium, Holland, France, Greece…not stopping, on a roll, on a buzz. Unbeatable Swindon Stukas in the clouds dive-bombing division three.
The supine enemy: Three hundred subdued Notts huddled in the top corner of the Kop under a silver grey pylon. Swindon began baying for blood in the opening minutes of the encounter, and they didn’t stop for ninety minutes. Shadeys, every one of them.  Almost all of them out for the afternoon for the purpose of drinking as much cider as possible and then, kicking the fuck out of anything with a northern accent and a black and white heart. Old school Notts fans remembered Leeds in 1975. Stoke at home in 1974. Docherty’s Man Utd at home in 1976.This was similar. 
I went to a massacre, and a football match broke out.
Sensible Notts County supporters prayed for their own side to lose and thus, with positive thinking and divine intervention in the vast car park outside the Swindon main stand, the damage inflicted might be limited to a few trips, a swear word or two, a northern cunt, a fucking wanker; the odd rabbit punch.
Three hundred mile round trip and when you get there, you want your team to lose. It seemed strange, but it happened, even if no one admitted to it at the time. The zombie-eyed Swindoners baying for blood. Two thousand of them. They saw to that.
Naturally, God being a deity with an ironic sense of humour, Notts won 5-1 in what turned out to be the best performance of that entire season.
A result that the baying, drooling ultra-violent Swindon locals were not expecting in the slightest, and it drove them mental. Most of the thousand-strong hooligans left the ground after three goals and waited menacingly outside, kicking at the doors in a recreation of the zombie apocalypse.
You could see them turn. You could see their eyes redden. You could see the bloodlust in their pale faces. The younger, smaller ones peered through the gaps in-between the two giant red doors to the away pen. Spitting, shouting. Rage zombies. Zuvembi.The walking shambling dead.
The Notts hooligans – and there weren’t many on show that day, Dale Crenshaw, Wilconnen, Alan C, Shaun Church, Sparks, some of the older ARA lads, some Clifton, big Pridge, Clifton Tom, Breaker, Haxford, Clarkson, the Printer, Whisky Jack – knew that there was no chance of survival out there on those streets.  They had been there before.
When a fourth goal went in, rather than cheer, the visitors trapped in the away pen turned around to see the reaction of the mob banging on the doors outside. The Swindon fans started to sing. More accurately, they started to chant.  A mantra, a hymn,  a paean, the hooligan psalm, a homage to the Gods of War, Mars, Aries, the intonation, the universal lad’s recitation, both a curse, a wish fulfilment and a prediction.The Notts hooligans knew it well. They could hear, loud and clear, the you’re going to get your fucking heads kicked in song being sung outside.  A simple, repetitive ditty, ideal for masculine get-togethers such as this, with no complicated verses to remember and no need to trail off embarrassingly when you cannot remember the next line. It goes something like this.
You’re going to get your fucking heads kicked in!Clap. Clap. Clap. Clap. Clap Clapaclapaclap.You’re going to get your fucking heads kicked in!Clap. Clap. Clap. Clap. Clap Clapaclapaclap.You’re going to get your fucking heads kicked in!Clap. Clap. Clap. Clap. Clap Clapaclapaclap.
Sung by a thousand young men in sportswear. Every one of them believing every single syllable they sang with a passion.
The Notts fans – shirters, scarfers, electrician Tony and his merry band of guzzlers who had just visited an open day at the local brewery. Haxford and his carload, the chap with the fifties slickback, the Weatherman, the fanatic Notts women with oversized purple overcoats carrying picnic baskets, the faceless baldies, the nameless skins, the programme collectors, the Subbuteo enthusiasts, the groundhoppers with their wives and girlfriends, the men with the titanic spectacles and their replica green and lemon pinstriped shirts, the miners who hadn’t missed a match since Atlee, the old brewery workers, the drunken dribblers and the small knot of hooligans present, about fifteen of them – all felt the liquids inside them turn to ice water.
Thousands of them outside all trying to get in. Swindon Walking Dead.They began to push the doors. You could see the big wooden portals bend, the chains on the handles straining as they tried to force their way in. The coppers on the inside, the thin yellow line, watching and listening like the rest of them…
…but the doors held.
When it was all over, it took the coppers twenty minutes to disperse the locals and rather than open those doors, Notts were marched around the perimeter of an empty ground to the home stands and released through a back entrance. Allowed to scatter among the civilians still wandering around shell-shocked at the results. The Swindon hooligans, a bit slow on the uptake, only worked out what was happening when it was too late.
Most of the Notts fans got away, but it wasn’t all Steve McQueen on his motorbike.
A Notts mini-bus was overturned and set on fire. The supporters’ coach returned the hundred and thirty miles back up the M5 and M42 with broken windows and no windscreen. Several Notts who lacked the survival skills necessary to survive a situation like this (mingling, whistling, hiding in plain sight), were asked the time on the way back to the train station.
The polite ones received a slap for their good manners. Another was kicked half to death next to an Asian beer-off. Two young theology students in glasses, who didn’t even support Notts and were studying at Uni in Bristol, were set upon by frustrated locals and hospitalised.

HobNob mingled in with the local civilians walking in an anaconda-like procession back to the train station. He noticed several other Notts doing the same. He even winked at one and very nearly gave himself away to an ugly looking cider drinker in a red Harrington with ears the size of the tips of broccoli spears, tombstone teeth, and piggy eyes far too close together for decent conversation. Survival was the important thing.
Buy Violent Disorder here in paperback here: (UK)
Violent Disorder  £6.99
Buy Violent Disorder here on Kindle
Violent Disorder Kindle UK £1.99
Violent Disorder (US) $3.08
Don't miss the Second Edition of Ultra Violence, the first in the series. Same book - new symmetric cover.
New cover reveal...

Little County.County’s got no lads.Little County.Wankers, County.Old men.Got no lads.Who the fuck are Notts County.Little County.County’s got no lads…
(Trad: Pub Gossip: Circa late twentieth, early twenty first century.)
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Published on August 14, 2013 11:05

Megan: Breadcrumbs For The Nasties Book One by Steven Novak - Amazon Review

5.0 out of 5 stars Apocalyptic thriller, August 14, 2013
By Miss Mac (Omaha NE) Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?) This review is from: Megan: Breadcrumbs For The Nasties Book One (Kindle Edition) Megan is the story of a young girl's survival in an apocalyptic setting, a world that she had been born into. Separated from her parents, she is befriended by a strange man, who protects her from the human savages roaming the earth. The two of them flee the city, but are pursued by the thugs in power. There are multiple close calls throughout the story in this suspenseful story. I look forward to reading the next book in the series.

http://www.amazon.com/Megan-Breadcrumbs-Nasties-Book-ebook/dp/B00EFEXO1E/ref=cm_rdp_product_img
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Published on August 14, 2013 06:34

Violent Disorder by Mark Barry - hooligans battling in the streets - Amazon Review



Amazon Review:

5.0 out of 5 stars excellent read 11 Aug 2013
By P Stant
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
An intriguing real insight into the life's and minds of various males who used to battle in the streets as football hooligans. Excellent and 10 out 10 from me



Amazon UKhttp://www.amazon.co.uk/Mark-Barry/e/B008479RWI/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1


Amazon UShttp://www.amazon.com/Mark-Barry/e/B008479RWI/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1




 
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Published on August 14, 2013 06:14