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28 minutes ago, dazzledavey36 said:

Front seat passengers of a premiership side.

I'd be happy with that claim to fame!

 

Nothing article. I say good luck to the guy - he was a decent player and, I think, a decent person.

GetSwift’s corporate governance perhaps needs to improve, but there doesn’t seem to be any suggestion of impropriety here.

 

20 hours ago, dazzledavey36 said:

Dylan Crimes, Mitch Morton, Steven Armstrong, Trent West...

Front seat passengers of a premiership side.

Grimes is a hack. 

Mate I don't think you have a clue.

Grimes is 26 with over 100 games up.  Played 25 games this year.  Flag winner & 5th in the Tigers B&F in a Premiership year.

Plays on  talls or shorts & is the first picked in their defence after Rance.  Tough, smart & determined - coaches love him & supporters love him. 

 
46 minutes ago, Cranky Franky said:

Mate I don't think you have a clue.

Grimes is 26 with over 100 games up.  Played 25 games this year.  Flag winner & 5th in the Tigers B&F in a Premiership year.

Plays on  talls or shorts & is the first picked in their defence after Rance.  Tough, smart & determined - coaches love him & supporters love him. 

And our list is still full of just potential, and add to that a list that still plays a 21 game season....

Dylan Grimes is a hack....Yeah right. 

 


a $600 million valuation on a "revenue" flow of $500K... now that is what I call a seriously unbalanced P/E ratio.

Ok guys I'm sure that between us we can come up with the next best version of sliced bread and we'll all be in clover :)

 My Alcohol and drug tab is bigger than this schmucks annual revenue.

This company is doomed.

he is selling icy poles to Pablo Escobar's street vendors.

He's fired.

 

8 hours ago, Ethan Tremblay said:

I was wondering why in his playing days Joel’s nickname was Ponzi. Makes sense now. 

He was always thinking about ways to make money, and would come up with wacky ideas.

 
15 hours ago, Diamond_Jim said:

a $600 million valuation on a "revenue" flow of $500K... now that is what I call a seriously unbalanced P/E ratio.

Ok guys I'm sure that between us we can come up with the next best version of sliced bread and we'll all be in clover :)

Here's a start. Call it e-sliced bread. Sure fire winner.

On 26/01/2018 at 5:27 PM, dazzledavey36 said:

Dylan Crimes, Mitch Morton, Steven Armstrong, Trent West...

Front seat passengers of a premiership side.

Grimes is a hack. 

Oh please. What rubbish. Grimes would walk into any team in the comp.

BTW I think he was picked up in the rookie draft. I wish we had picked him, but good luck to him. He's not only a very good footballer, but a great bloke.


On ‎2‎/‎02‎/‎2018 at 8:47 PM, Blinkybill said:

Oh please. What rubbish. Grimes would walk into any team in the comp.

BTW I think he was picked up in the rookie draft. I wish we had picked him, but good luck to him. He's not only a very good footballer, but a great bloke.

 AFL Pre-Season Draft held at the end of Season 2009 2009 AFL Pre-Season Draft Summary  
 
Round Pick   Drafted By Player Current Team Games Since
Drafted
1 1   Melbourne Joel Macdonald   44
1 2   Richmond Dylan Grimes Richmond 104
1 3   Fremantle Adam McPhee   56
1 4   Sydney Daniel Bradshaw   9
1 5   West Coast Ryan Neates   1
1 6   Port Adelaide Scott Harding   2
1 7   Essendon Kyle Hardingham
  • 3 weeks later...

Joel may be in a spot of bother: (the Age)

GetSwift and its former AFL playing boss hit with $300 million claim

By Sarah Danckert
20 February 2018 — 2:53pm
"GetSwift and its former Melbourne Football Club player chief executive Joel Macdonald is facing a class action from shareholders that could cost the logistics software company $300 million after the company admitted it had not told investors it had lost key contracts......"
 
7 minutes ago, M_9 said:

Joel may be in a spot of bother: (the Age)

GetSwift and its former AFL playing boss hit with $300 million claim

By Sarah Danckert
20 February 2018 — 2:53pm
"GetSwift and its former Melbourne Football Club player chief executive Joel Macdonald is facing a class action from shareholders that could cost the logistics software company $300 million after the company admitted it had not told investors it had lost key contracts......"

 

It never had those contracts, only agreed trials

 this is what caused the global financial crisis, when the value of  A company's share price was more important then how much profit the company was actually making, so once share holders found out that company's were not making profits that related to their share price any pulled out. Most tech companys are over valued, sooner or later unless they turn a profit they all fall over


40 minutes ago, don't make me angry said:

 this is what caused the global financial crisis, when the value of  A company's share price was more important then how much profit the company was actually making, so once share holders found out that company's were not making profits that related to their share price any pulled out. Most tech companys are over valued, sooner or later unless they turn a profit they all fall over

tell elon musk

14 hours ago, daisycutter said:

tell elon musk

There will be a point in time where he must make a profit, I think he will in the he long run, but if not it will fall apart it always does

17 hours ago, don't make me angry said:

 this is what caused the global financial crisis, when the value of  A company's share price was more important then how much profit the company was actually making, so once share holders found out that company's were not making profits that related to their share price any pulled out. Most tech companys are over valued, sooner or later unless they turn a profit they all fall over

err no it was't. Not even close. Back to school for you....

1 hour ago, jnrmac said:

err no it was't. Not even close. Back to school for you....

Yes it was one factor, many Americans who owned their own homes mortgage them to buy, shares, the  global financial crisis was caused by a stock market crash, then many lost their homes, then many American banks went broke because, there was too many houses on the market and not enough buys, now you tell me what caused it then?

Edited by don't make me angry

5 minutes ago, don't make me angry said:

Yes it was one factor, many Americans who owned their own homes mortgage them to buy, shares, the  global financial crisis was caused by a stock market crash, then many lost their homes, then many American banks went broke because, there was too many houses on the market and not enough buys, now you tell me what caused it then?

The beginning of the GFC was due to a crisis in the subprime mortgage market in the US which developed into an international banking crisis following the collapse of Lehman Brothers.


33 minutes ago, Ethan Tremblay said:

The beginning of the GFC was due to a crisis in the subprime mortgage market in the US which developed into an international banking crisis following the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

True it also was due to a stock market crash, because many home owners re mortgage their homes to buy shares, then the market crashed due to over value of listed company's. 

 
8 hours ago, don't make me angry said:

True it also was due to a stock market crash, because many home owners re mortgage their homes to buy shares, then the market crashed due to over value of listed company's. 

No. It just wasn't. Ethan is on the money.

The stock market didn't technically crash. It did fall but well and truly after debt markets blew up. Your simplistic statement that the GFC was caused by share prices not being supported by profits is pure nonsense. Sorry.

 

12 hours ago, jnrmac said:

No. It just wasn't. Ethan is on the money.

The stock market didn't technically crash. It did fall but well and truly after debt markets blew up. Your simplistic statement that the GFC was caused by share prices not being supported by profits is pure nonsense. Sorry.

 

Meanwhile, the equivalent discussion on the Collingwood supporters' discussion board is whether Centrelink payments have kept pace with the price of ready to drink Southern Comfort and Coke.

 


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