Amusingly, even before Pietersen reacted, cricinfo (of ESPN, the world's largest cricket website) were reporting it with a skeptical question mark in the headline.
Conor - Twitter produces different URLs when you are logged in compared with when you are not (there's an extra #! in it). So I have amended the link above, and, as you can see, the tweet does still exist.
Comments are moderated - generally to filter out spam and comments wishing death on people - but other messages will be approved as quickly as possible.
Never thought to actually ask Kevin Pietersen or his management then eh,John?
ReplyDeleteSadly, I'm sure you'll go far at the Sun with this kind of top quality work.
It's also "exclusive" in the Mail
ReplyDeletehttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/cricket/article-1356169/Kevin-Pietersen-quit-day-cricket-World-Cup.html
Is there a new meaning to the word "exclusive" these days?
Ah yes, I believe this story broke on the Mail website last night
ReplyDeletehttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/cricket/article-1356169/Kevin-Pietersen-quit-day-cricket-World-Cup.html
so this is hardly an "exclusive" from the Sun. I'm not sure which paper ran it first but BBC sport credits it to the Mail.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/cricket/9395616.stm
Amusingly, even before Pietersen reacted, cricinfo (of ESPN, the world's largest cricket website) were reporting it with a skeptical question mark in the headline.
@ MOK
ReplyDeleteExclusive to the newspapers pages, as in so exclusive the story doesn't actually exist in the real world.
That Twitter link now says "Sorry, that page doesn’t exist!
ReplyDeleteConor - Twitter produces different URLs when you are logged in compared with when you are not (there's an extra #! in it). So I have amended the link above, and, as you can see, the tweet does still exist.
ReplyDeleteThat's brilliant
ReplyDelete