Calciopoli or Morattopoli.. inter fake orgasm (12 Viewers)

Mark

The Informer
Administrator
Dec 19, 2003
97,629
Ref: Moggi never locked me in
Friday 30 January, 2009
Referee Gianluca Paparesta insists one of the big Calciopoli scandals was untrue. “Luciano Moggi never locked me in the dressing room.”

When the trial prompted Juventus’ demotion in 2006, one of the stories most widely circulated was that Paparesta was locked in the dressing room under the Stadio Granillo after Moggi became infuriated at the 2-1 defeat to Reggina.

“I can finally tell the only absolute truth about that day, November 6 2004. Moggi never locked me in the dressing room,” Paparesta told La7 television.

“Moggi and [director Antonio] Giraudo were both agitated and complained about my performance, but nobody locked me in.

“They merely complained in an angry way because I had not given their side a penalty and disallowed an equaliser just before the final whistle – something that proved I certainly wasn’t trying to favour Juve.

“Then they left and my only mistake was not putting that incident in my report.”

Moggi bragged in some wiretapped phone conversations that he had locked Paparesta in and the failure to report that is what prompted the referee to be suspended.

“This is not just my version, it is the truth,” assured the official who is appealing against his ban. “I was not on my own, as the assistants, fourth official and an observer were present. If something had happened, they would’ve reported it.”

Paparesta did call Moggi after the incident, but assured it had nothing to do with their argument in Calabria.

“That was a mistake. I called him because there was an incredible trial by media against me after the game and Moggi was bragging about it.

“If he really thought I was incapable of continuing my job, then he should have made a formal request to the authorities.”




another Calciopoli argument down.
 

CheSchifo!

Senior Member
Jan 11, 2009
642
I am done with this whole Calciopoli thing to be honest. I know that we weren't exactly told nothing but the truth, but I also know that, at the very least, Moggi's role wasn't pretty. The scandal is so ugly that I think it would destroy my love for Italian football if I looked into it any deeper.
 
Jul 2, 2006
19,435
Ref: Moggi never locked me in
Friday 30 January, 2009
Referee Gianluca Paparesta insists one of the big Calciopoli scandals was untrue. “Luciano Moggi never locked me in the dressing room.”

When the trial prompted Juventus’ demotion in 2006, one of the stories most widely circulated was that Paparesta was locked in the dressing room under the Stadio Granillo after Moggi became infuriated at the 2-1 defeat to Reggina.

“I can finally tell the only absolute truth about that day, November 6 2004. Moggi never locked me in the dressing room,” Paparesta told La7 television.

“Moggi and [director Antonio] Giraudo were both agitated and complained about my performance, but nobody locked me in.

“They merely complained in an angry way because I had not given their side a penalty and disallowed an equaliser just before the final whistle – something that proved I certainly wasn’t trying to favour Juve.

“Then they left and my only mistake was not putting that incident in my report.”

Moggi bragged in some wiretapped phone conversations that he had locked Paparesta in and the failure to report that is what prompted the referee to be suspended.

“This is not just my version, it is the truth,” assured the official who is appealing against his ban. “I was not on my own, as the assistants, fourth official and an observer were present. If something had happened, they would’ve reported it.”

Paparesta did call Moggi after the incident, but assured it had nothing to do with their argument in Calabria.

“That was a mistake. I called him because there was an incredible trial by media against me after the game and Moggi was bragging about it.

“If he really thought I was incapable of continuing my job, then he should have made a formal request to the authorities.”




another Calciopoli argument down.
Gsol said it 2 years ago.I posted the article numerous times but some mongrels still choose to believe what Moratti and co says.

we have wasted our millions,our past and future because of those urban legends.:faq1:
 

Alen

Ѕenior Аdmin
Apr 2, 2007
53,941
Gsol said it 2 years ago.I posted the article numerous times but some mongrels still choose to believe what Moratti and co says.

we have wasted our millions,our past and future because of those urban legends.:faq1:
Can't you simply enjoy this?
It doesn't matter what gsol was saying, or what you were saying. The media kept quiet about the facts and those urban legends were used to harm Juve and to form the public opinion.
Now something else is happening. The media isn't hiding some facts anymore. There is a lot of talk about giving back to us the lost scudetti, they don't hide what Paparesta is saying and they write about scandals concerning Inter (which is probably BS story again, but it's hurting Inter's image and it's influencing public opinion about Inter and indirectly about Calciopoli, but this time it's in our favour).

Something's cooking obviously and this time it's not us who have to be worried about it.
 

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