Sentences with phrase «most recent press conference»

In Mourinho's most recent press conference, ahead of United's Monday night game against Stoke, the manager had the final word on the fall out.
At his most recent press conference, Rodgers was troll the media by sarcastically gloating about the club's new defensive coach, who does not exist!

Not exact matches

«We would expect a material slowing in growth,» Carney said in a press conference after the bank's most recent interest rate decision in May.
They've obviously become the most important part of his life, and that's something he has reiterated plenty in recent press conferences about where he is at this stage in his life.
Sanford said in a press conference Wednesday that he footed the bill for his most recent trip to Buenos Aires.
The press conference, held in the shadows of a federal courthouse where one of New York's most powerful politicians is being tried on corruption charges, came as other recent developments also shine a bright light on the state's insufficient handling of ethics and corruption.
But in a way that calls to mind the recent Jon McGregor novel Reservoir 13, it is pricklingly attuned to the bleak commonalities of all high - profile British crime cases: the tearful press conferences in village halls, the straggly lines of volunteers scouring scrubland for clues, the bouquets of dead flowers sellotaped to telegraph poles and fence posts, and most of all the public hunger for answers.
This is the model that is most favored by the union, as demonstrated by the recent joint press conference UTLA hosted with the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) at Woodland Hills Academy, the first school in LAUSD to transform into an ESBMM school, back in 2006.
One of the most surprising moments at Nintendo's recent E3 press conference was the announcement of Metroid: Other M, a game being made by Tecmo's Team Ninja, known for their work on the Dead of Alive and Ninja Gaiden franchises.
In his recent speech to the Society of Editors Conference, Paul Dacre, the Daily Mail editor and Associated Newspapers» editor - in - chief, launched a stinging attack on what he considers the most dangerous threat to press freedom in many years — the imposition of law protecting an individual's right to privacy.
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