Sentences with phrase «served at full back»

Alongside him, Gordon Greer continues to be fundamental to the Seagulls for no matter how carefully you want to pass the ball, having an enforcer in your rear window will always give you confidence while Brighton are also extremely well served at full back.

Not exact matches

Hamm, who yesterday cleared a cool $ 3 billion in less than three hours off his shares in Continental Resources Inc. after the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) announced that it had finally agreed to cap its production at 32.5 million barrels per day, also serves as the CEO of Continental Resources, which is clearly a full - time gig when he's not busy raking in billions on the back of OPEC deals.
Clyne has been a virtual ever present and has thrived in the Premier League having served his apprenticeship in the Championship and is now on the fringes of the full England national team set - up and is a player that cost the South - Coast club very little and could go on to be a player who either serves them well in the future of perhaps yields a good fee if the club opt to consider offers for a player who has excelled at right - back this term.
Reports are keen to suggest and hint that our full - back would relish teaming up with Pep Guardiola, who he spent time with at Barcelona in his younger years, as well as claiming he would be eager to return to Barca where he previously served at the academy.
Barcelona's long - serving Brazilian defender Dani Alves has reportedly told his representatives to begin the search for a new club, with the full - back keen on leaving the Spanish giants when his contract expires at the end of the season.
The narration serves to send us back to 1939 New York, where we encounter a full - of - himself young urbanite trying to mack on Oona O'Neill (Zoey Deutch, «Before I Fall») at the Stork Club.
In Chicago, 100 percent of the teachers at Maria Saucedo Scholastic Academy voted to boycott the Illinois Standards Achievement Test, backed by the full support of the Chicago Teachers Union, which called it «an obsolete test [that] has no use to educators or administrators... and serves no purpose other than to give students another standardized test.»
Lo and behold, one of the images on a monitor was of Harbor Lights Supper Club, the façade of which, at least, served as «The Bar,» bringing me back, full circle, to a past I thought I had circumvented.
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