News about Phil Brown

We thought early retirement would be all holidays - now we're being forced back to work: Find out how much extra pension income YOU need to beat inflation

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 24, 2024
According to official statistics, a record number of over-55s have started taking time on their careers in the last few years, with close to 400,000 more than average leaving the workplace. However, many who resigned early are now being forced to return to work as a result of rising costs. An explosionshell study by us found that many people who did not retire early are now being forced to return to work as a result of rising costs. Peter Truesdale (pictured) was ecstatic to announce his early retirement. However, the 61-year-old is now burning through his savings at a much faster rate than anticipated. He says he can't afford to live the retirement he wished for and must return to work.

IAN LADYMAN: It will take more than Jim Ratcliffe's new chief executive to put an end to Jim Ratcliffe's excessive waste culture that caused Man United's blow of £150 million on Casemiro

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 26, 2024
IAN LADYMAN: Casemiro (left) - the Brazilian midfield player who was left Real Madrid for Manchester United in the summer of 2022, he told a teammate that he couldn't believe how much money he was earning. United are now counting the cost of that decision just over a season and a half later. Casemiro may well have left United States over the next week or so, and Saudi Arabia may be the destination. No surprise there. Who else is going to take a player who, at the age of 32, is earning north of £300,000 a week and still has two and a half years left on his contract? Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the club's owner, was inset. Right: New Chief Executive Omar Berrada

Former Premier League manager is appointed by the National League's BOTTOM CLUB until the end of season, as he seeks to 'sink his teeth' into relegation battle

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 11, 2024
The Worcestershire team is seven points off safety, but they do not know that they will be delivering against the odds when needed.' Kidderminster is the ninth club he has played for, and his career has taken him to places like Barrow, Bolton, and Hyderabad, India.

Fans call Ron the Rat for nearly sinking Southend, but the owner maintains he had the club's best interests at heart: you can decide if he deserved compassion after he pleads with Mail Sport

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 21, 2023
Exclusive biography of IAN HERBERT The details of Ron Martin's tenure as owner of Southend United - the winding petitions, the vociferous fans outside his house, and the toy rats thrown on the ground at home games - are so bad that you want to silence them when discussing them with him in the library of the five-star London hotel where he asks that we speak. Martin does not appear to be concerned about discretion, however. A man in the corner of the room feigns indignation in our discussion, but he does not leave his sofa once. And there's no wonder. Martin cruises his 25-year journey on the Essex coast, from beating Manchester United 1-0 in the League Cup to walking down his drive to greet demonstrators at the end of it. He wants to celebrate the good times. He skates gracefully and gracefully over the bad.

After a drunken incident earlier this year, a former Premier League star has been barred from a UK golf course that costs more than $100,000 to be a member

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 20, 2023
After enraged club chiefs with his inebriated play earlier this year, a former Premier League player has revealed he has been barred from playing at one of the UK's most expensive golf courses. Between 2005 and 2010, the ex-midfielder made 90 Premier League appearances for three different clubs. The 45-year-old has a variety of hobbies outside of golf, including golf, and earlier this year, he joined Sunningdale Golf Club in Berkshire, where it costs £92,000 to become a full member, with an annual fee of £9,500.

WONDERS OF THE PYRAMID: The worst-run club in the land is 33 days from extinction… PLUS here are THREE games you should watch this weekend

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 1, 2023
LEWIS STEELE: It's a breathtaking train ride into Southend, along the coast, and through Leigh-on-Sea, the fishing town. However, my last few visits have been tinged with sadness and annoyance, as the job has always been to cover England's worst-run club. Fans of Southend United will not object to me using that word to describe their beloved club, an institution of our sport, who has spent 102 years in the Football League.

According to a charity, senior employees are being asked to rethink plans to keep up with increasing bills

www.dailymail.co.uk, June 17, 2023
The Age UK said that it is continuing to hear from older people whose retirement aspirations are being ruined by inflation's effects.' According to the charity's Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimates, 1.075 million people under the age of 65 were fired between February and April 2023, down from 1.180 million a year ago. According to a survey, nine out of every cent of 60 to 65-year-olds have been forced to change their work plans as the cost of living has risen. Nearly half of those who work worry that they won't be able to retire before the state pension age, with seven percent frightened that they will never be able to avoid working.

As councils abandon traditional pay-and-display meters, two million residents face 'parking meter deserts.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 22, 2023
Since the National Trust's abolished traditional pay-and-display meters in west Surrey, it has been a parking hell. Rather, drivers are urged to use the parking app PayByPhone. The Daily Mail can confirm that it is one of around 30'cashless' National Trust car parks, meaning only under 4% are now 'app only'. It comes as 2 million people live in 'parking meter deserts' as councils abandon traditional machines in favour of cashless alternatives. The trend has been branded 'appalling' by charity chiefs and MPs, who have urged council chiefs to consider the consequences on older motorists.

Is your pension at risk of losing thousands of dollars from your pension?

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 11, 2023
Around 11 million employees contribute to a workplace pension, which they will rely on for a high quality of life in their later years. However, they face a retirement lottery, as some are in pension plans that are generating high returns, while others are stuck in ones that are seriously lagging behind. Workers have no idea which provider they trust for their pension; employers select them. And most people are unaware that there are major differences between the best and worst pension plans.

The infamous Hull City team, by Phil Brown, addresses the pitch 14 years on

www.dailymail.co.uk, December 26, 2022
Andre Marriner blew his whistle to bring an unfortunate first half of football for Hull City. It was Boxing Day 2008, and the Tigers were swept away from the Etihad Stadium due to two goals from Robinho and Felipe Caicedo within 21 minutes. Phil Brown's (right) team had been flying high during their first season in the Premier League, finishing in sixth position by Christmas, a barely believable position following their similarly memorable promotion in the previous season. (left): This is the first time a reading of the riot act in the Etihad pitch (left) was published.

Thousands of people live in the United States with dangerous 'forever chemicals.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 12, 2022
The hazardous chemicals are estimated to be in over 57,000 communities around the country, with hotspots in every state. They are concentrated near industrial plants, wastewater treatment plants, military bases, and major airports. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl compounds (PFAS) are a class of man-made chemicals that repel grease, water, stains, and heat. They are used to produce thousands of common household products, including food wraps, carpets, clothing, and baking pans. The chemicals are referred to as "forever chemicals" because they do not break down in the environment and can take years to degrade in the body. They have been attributed to cancer, birth defects, and infertility. 'While it's scary that there are over 57,000 presumptive contamination sites,' says Dr. Brown, the head of Northeastern University's Social Science Environmental Health Research Institute and paper co-author, "this is almost certainly a significant underestimate.'