I am sick of the amassed forces of TV punditry extolling the virtues of the Brazilian style of football. |
|
Then there's no end of trade publications, broker reports and media punditry that can provide supplementary company information. |
|
These are some of the questions on our minds as we turn to purveyors of razor-sharp political punditry. |
|
Sullivan excels at punditry, happily riffing off the news or essaying exuberantly off the top of his head. |
|
Considering that recent polls show support for those issues at 53 and 50 percent respectively, it was a confusing bit of punditry. |
|
Those were the days, of course, in which arts section punditry counted for something and high-level polymathy still had its place. |
|
And so for the opening round of political punditry, we turned to the muscle-bound grapplers themselves. |
|
Now, it seems, there might be an alternative to punditry when the legs go: a transfer to Anzhi Makhachkala. |
|
Stop going on about referees and punditry of all shades would also improve. |
|
Some of the greatest minds in football literature, reportage and general punditry have puzzled over the mystery. |
|
But then, this show has always been more than just the parody of right-wing cable punditry it was originally made out to be. |
|
After surveying the postgame punditry of the convention finale, I had to wonder if I was at the same event. |
|
While these changing whims of the punditry may seem absurd, their final predictions may also, paradoxically, be correct. |
|
Well, that's a caricature, but I guess a fair one, within the loose rules of punditry. |
|
Writing off the two-state solution is the latest trend in Israel-Palestine punditry. |
|
It also allows the punditry to begin, as it did today, before the story has been reported. |
|
I have to say after thirty years in politics and a good bit of punditry of my own, not much shocks me. |
|
Why should Romney have to vet a vice-presidential candidate the punditry demands? |
|
Despite talk of the Internet as a site of quickly glimpsed imagery and viral cat videos, a solid core of old-fashioned moralizing, even sermonizing, punditry is part of the daily burden it presents. |
|
Old political warhorses in Fredericton, Ottawa and everywhere else eventually realize that the jockeying of the backroom boys, the punditry of the press and the betting of the crowd are not enough to win today or tomorrow. |
|
|
Terry Venables, who showed the value of TV punditry by transforming Leeds United into a bunch of namby-pambies. |
|
The early signs were that the expressive and erudite Poyet, fresh from delivering Premier League salvation for Sunderland, was a good early bet for the best newcomer on the punditry couch. |
|
It's a challenge balancing a research specialism with the friendly generalism required for radio punditry – all the more so as an early career academic in a sharp-elbowed job market. |
|
And they promise less punditry and more action with every goal to be shown from all three English divisions. |
|
He will be dabbling in punditry too, and I think he will be a great asset there as he played the game for so long at such a top level. |
|
Elsewhere in these pages you will find the Western Mail's official guide to the Rugby World Cup, packed with punditry, prediction and wise pontification. |
|
The news of Arsenal's interest of in Vidal comes a day after Gunners boss Arsene Wenger praised the Juve star whilst doing punditry work for French television. |
|