What Newcastle lack is a lack of pace

I did as well as I could at Newcastle.

I am a Newcastle fan like everyone knows.

Newcastle are absolutely besotted by injuries.

I will always be a Newcastle United fan all my life.

No more coals to Newcastle, no more Hoares to Paris.

When I first signed for Newcastle, I was still a boy.

I did art history and English literature at Newcastle.

I didn't want to leave Newcastle, but that's football.

I think every English actor is nervous of a Newcastle accent.

I am used to just playing football with my mates at Newcastle.

I'm a Newcastle lad, so to be manager is every Geordie's dream.

If you manage Newcastle, you have to deal with the consequences.

Newcastle need a chief scout who is in unicism with the management

Paul Scholes was at home on a cold February day away to Newcastle.

I'm the football manager of Newcastle, which is owned by Mike Ashley.

If I have to move on from Newcastle, hopefully it will be to somewhere else

I've got belief that the Newcastle fans know how much I want to play for them.

The over-riding reality is that I am just not wealthy enough to own Newcastle.

The reason I joined Newcastle was because I could see we could do great things.

I love everything about playing for Newcastle, the club, the fans and the city.

I want to entertain, I want Newcastle United that is the best it can possibly be.

Since Newcastle I've had a fantastic time at Blackburn and then here, at West Ham.

I'm delighted and incredibly proud to be appointed as head coach of Newcastle United.

Writing imaginative tales for the young is like sending coals to Newcastle. For coals.

Well... I graduated from the business school of Northumberland University in Newcastle.

At Newcastle, I was playing in the No 10 position but also in midfield as a left winger.

Newcastle is in my heart, and even if I maybe go somewhere, Newcastle will be in my heart.

You never know what can happen in the future. But I can't say anything bad about Newcastle.

The spokesman at Newcastle, unfortunately, was mainly me. I had to manage the football club.

I wanted to help Newcastle, I wanted to make it better. I do not seem to have had that effect.

There was a big possibility that I would have had to leave Newcastle had Ruud Gullit stayed as manager.

I am wedded to Newcastle like Sports Direct. They've got me and I've got them. That's just the way it is.

It was really hard in Newcastle. It was one city, one club. Everybody there was really crazy about Newcastle.

I've always felt happy at Newcastle. But things have gone a bit differently for me since we got a new manager.

To improve teams like Newcastle, if you do the right things, it is enough to be stronger and bigger and compete.

I've been happy from the start at Newcastle. It has been my favourite club ever since I was small boy in Serbia.

As a club, there was never any middle ground with Newcastle. They were as high as the sky or in a pit of despair.

With Newcastle there are 50,000 people watching and they want it to be a success, and that is what I am all about.

When I was growing up in Newcastle, there was one other Indian girl, and we got confused for each other constantly.

For any Geordie, if you can't manage to play for Newcastle, then to get back and manage them it's something special.

I've always loved Newcastle. Even when you're watching their games on television, you can feel the passion of the crowd.

If there is one thing that runs through all Geordies, from grandmas to small children, it is a love of Newcastle United.

'Poundshop Kardashians' is Newcastle on a Saturday night. Nobody wears coats - it's all muscles and V-necks and fake tan.

I've always enjoyed playing there. As you drive into Newcastle you see the stadium and you get a buzz. It's a good feeling.

Things could be done better over there at Newcastle, but Leicester have given me the opportunity to do great things hopefully.

Coming to manage Newcastle was never going to be easy. But there was never a side to me that thought, 'Oh no, I do not want that.'

I'm fortunate that Newcastle and the fans welcomed me with open arms because I know it's not easy being a former Sunderland player.

The little I knew of England was London, Newcastle. I knew very little about England and I didn't know anything about Wolverhampton.

It has been three great years; good moments, bad moments, like football is. I'm really proud of the decision I made. Newcastle is home.

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