John Terry: Here's A Literature Lesson In Swearing

A Swearing Lesson For John Terry

John Terry may have been found not guilty of racially abusing Anton Ferdinand, but one thing that's been made abundantly clear throughout the course of the trial is the pitiful state of banter that pervades the top tier of our national sport.

Insults confirmed as acceptable on-pitch 'hand bags' by Terry, Ferdinand and Terry's teammate Ashley Cole, include classics such as (WARNING: BAD LANGUAGE TO FOLLOW!):

"You shagged your teammate's missus, you're a cunt"

"Fuck off you knobhead"

"You're fat" (to goalkeeper Paddy Kenny)

and "your breath smells" (denoted by waving a hand in front of one's nose).

In other words, what you'd expect to hear from a set of 10-year-old boys from rival schools throwing Ribena cartons at each other over a bus stop.

Is this really the best our footballing heroes can do? What kind of example does it set to aspiring young swearers the world over?

There's a lot Terry and the rest of the Premier League's millionaires could learn from by getting their heads into some classical literature, not least of all how to wind each up with a little erudite flair.

To save them the bother, we've dug deep and compiled 13 suggestions ahead of the new season.

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