

Cesc Fabregas’ Dining Habits the Latest Victim in Russian Spy Case
By: Bob | December 7th, 2006
I can’t wait for the mysterious death of the Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko to become a made-for-television movie. The whole case has all the requisite elements for a thriller: spying, poison, sushi and football. By now you have probably heard that traces of the stuff that killed Litvinenko were found at Arsenal’s brand spanking new stadium. The source has been traced to a former KGB spy named Andrei Lugovoy, who watched Arsenal play CSKA Moscow in the Champions League in November. There have been many time when I’ve watched Arsenal play and have felt like I drank a bucket of polonium-210 afterward, but that is another story.
The latest development in this ever evolving case is that Arsenal midfielder Cesc Fabregas has been forced to change his normal eating habits. Fabregas has revealed that he is a frequent customer of the sushi joint where it is believed that Litvinenko ate the stuff that ended up killing him.
Fabregas said: “I didn’t have any idea this could have been at the game against CSKA.
“I knew there were aeroplanes that could have been infected and that part of the plot happened in a restaurant I go to regularly.
“Although I like Japanese food a lot, until everything is cleared up I won’t go back there as a precaution.”
Between poisoned fish, bad cheese and bugging devices, it is nearly impossible for Premiership players to have a decent meal in London these days.
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