Jackson CornerVictor Meldrew So far nobody in the same decade as me-nothing particularly to be proud of but as some say...FACT.
First game-Reading 4 Norwich 4. March 27th 1954.
One of my proudest moments was on January 23rd 1982 watching my son run on the pitch as mascot with Kerry Dixon,Neil Webb and Lawrie Sanchez-to think we had 3 of our best ever players turning out but only drew 2-2 v Plymouth in front of just 3024 and could only finish that season in 12th place in Div 3.
Looking back over the years Reading were not very good but generally we had a reasonable home record and as we hardly ever travelled away apart from FA Cup games Reading won more games than they lost at home in most seasons.
In that my first season Reading scored 57 league goals at home in 23 games which is somewhere near our best return and conceding 33 meant an average of just under 4 goals in every home game-no wonder I was hooked.
As with some of the others on here I am not so intense any more about RFC and don't quite have the same passion about the club.
I think it comes down to 3 things:-
My age
The long-ball game that we play
And the poor effort I thought the club made to retain our Premier League status.
Sorry I don't get that. If you have witnesed all those grim years of treading water in the lower leagues as I did in the 70's and 80's. Then you would apriciate the fact, that even now we are punching above our weight in the 2nd tier of English football.
I also don't think we are a long ball team I would say going back as far as Mcghee we have had managers who have had the team play a passing game.
Pardew, Coppell, Mcdermot even Rodgers
You don't get it do you?
I,along with a lot of fans that I know,feel the same way.
Having witnessed all the poor stuff for all those years we became totally dismayed that the club just threw away membership of The Premiership,something that had taken all those years to get to but made such little effort to stay there.
On the question of long-ball refer to Prostak and Floyd in particular who share my view and with respect I'm not sure what you have been watching.
Incidentally I had an E-mail today from a friend of mine who works for the Mail on Sunday as a sports writer (now only occasionally and semi-retired after years of reporting on football,golf and tennis) and although he lives in Caversham he says that he doesn't watch Reading much because of the long-ball game.