Man Utd hardman Roy Keane looks embarrassed after his phone pass code is ‘revealed’ – and it has emotional meaning

2 months ago 18

ROY KEANE looked embarrassed after Jill Scott appeared to reveal his phone pass code in a hilarious moment on the latest episode of Stick to Football.

The Manchester United legend, 53, took his mobile out after Gary Neville asked to see his most recent music playlist.

a group of people sitting around a table with a sign that says sticky to footballYouTube / Stick to Football
Roy Keane got his phone out after Gary Neville asked to see his recent music playlist[/caption]
a group of people sitting around a table with a sign that says stickyto footballYouTube / Stick to Football
Jill Scott claimed to have spotted Keane’s passcode[/caption]
two men sit at a table in front of a sign that says the overlapYouTube / Stick to Football
He looked sheepish and embarrassed after Scott appeared to expose him[/caption]

That came following Keane‘s claim that his Mastermind subject would be on 80s music.

As the former Red Devils midfielder switched on his phone, ex-Manchester City and England star Scott leant over to get a look at the screen.

Speaking on Stick to Football, sponsored by Sky Bet, she then hilariously said: “Do you know what his passcode is? 1999. I just seen it.”

Jamie Carragher and Neville burst into hysterics as Keane looked up and somewhat embarrassingly shook his head.

Arsenal icon Ian Wright then said: “You’re gonna have to change that now, Roy.”

Before Neville added: “He’s gonna have to change his alarm code as well – his gate code.”

It is unclear whether Scott was being serious or simply having a joke at Keane’s expense.

But the four-digit code would make sense given 1999 was the year he famously won the Treble with Man Utd.

CASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO WELCOME OFFERS

On the same episode of Stick to Football, Keane took aim at Arsenal for their performance in Sunday’s 2-2 draw with Manchester City.

After comparing them to sides managed by “Tony Pulis, Sam Allardyce, Steve Bruce or Neil Warnock,” he said: “I’m on about when you’ve got it [the ball], still look after it.

“Don’t even worry about playing one up front, but when you do get it try and get four, five, six passes.

“They were just booting it like a small team with a small mentality.

“When I see England international players just booting it out of play I’m going ‘What are you? League One? League Two?'”

Read Entire Article