by biscuitsrus » 20 Feb 2007 19:25
by GJ79 » 20 Feb 2007 20:00
Harold Oliver - dont listen to these Reading fans. They cry everytime somebody doesn't give them the credit they think they deserve.
by Royal Lady » 20 Feb 2007 20:22
Harold Oliver - I'm a Cheatski fan. I love you.
by Forbury Lion » 20 Feb 2007 22:14
Harold is a member.GJ79Harold Oliver - dont listen to these Reading fans. They cry everytime somebody doesn't give them the credit they think they deserve.
Can someone please tell me why "Harold" is a member???? When hes clearly a chelski fan. Is he another tredder in disguise, just here to make pointless comments?
by Boston Royal » 21 Feb 2007 05:08
AthleticoSpizzI think that you are missing the point M4J11.M4 Junction 11alad Junction 11, if you feel so strongly why don't you ring up and speak to Holt?
Not got the bottle me thinks
He lives to write the shit that's published in the Mirror. What beggars belief is BBCRB handing him the platform. I don't have to listen!
Holt,
BBCB should (as aforementioned) be commended for bringing a bit of controversy to the programme, and indeed Mr Holt should be commended for actually coming onto the programme to face the music.
Hopefully, the quality of questions that he has to face, will not give him the luxury of gaining a few more negative column inches at our expense.
by noise » 21 Feb 2007 07:47
by Barry the bird boggler » 21 Feb 2007 09:09
GJ79Harold Oliver - dont listen to these Reading fans. They cry everytime somebody doesn't give them the credit they think they deserve.
Can someone please tell me why "Harold" is a member???? When hes clearly a chelski fan. Is he another tredder in disguise, just here to make pointless comments?
by Barry the bird boggler » 21 Feb 2007 09:15
by M4 Junction 11 » 21 Feb 2007 09:20
by Vision » 21 Feb 2007 09:35
Wycombe RoyalSO READING'S season is a fairy tale is it? Excuse me for a second while I decide whether to giggle or gag.
Okay, that wasn't too hard. I'll gag. Because I don't see any fairy story at Reading. I don't see romance, either.
I'll be honest. I don't like the club. I don't like what it stands for.
AdvertisementThat starts at the top with a self-satisfied poster boy of conspicuous consumption and Tory donor, chairman John Madejski.
I don't think you should ever, ever trust a man whose eyebrows meet in the middle, or a bloke who is complicit in having a stadium named after him. What a joke that is.
No doubt the board begged and pleaded with him to allow them to recognise his outstanding contribution to Berkshire life. No doubt it was absolutely none of his doing. But I don't care how much money he's poured into the club.
Name a stadium after Tom Finney or Stanley Matthews or Bobby Moore. Name it after Alex Ferguson, Paul Gascoigne or Bill Shankly. But not after a guy who made his money from a magazine flogging used cars.
Perhaps Madejski simply couldn't call to mind a famous Reading player. Come to think of it, neither can I.
But even Doug Ellis drew the line after naming a stand at Villa Park in his honour. He couldn't quite muster the hubris to go the whole hog and adopt the - entire ground.
But not Madejski. He's got all sorts in his name. Some Fine Rooms at the Royal Academy of Arts, too, apparently. Whatever they are.
I read an interview with him in The Independent last year. The reporter noted that a copy of the Rich List, in which Madejski figures prominently, was placed on a table nearby. Gag, gag, gag.
It's not just the chairman, though. I know times are changing fast but I could have sworn that fairy tales didn't used to feature skull fractures and concussions.
I don't care whether Reading finish sixth. You know what, even if they overtake Chelsea and Man United, romp the title and win the FA Cup as well, my abiding memory of their debut Premiership season will always be Stephen Hunt kneeing Petr Cech in the head.
That's their bequest to this campaign. The first team to disable two opposition keepers in the same game. Let's think of a name for the fairy tale that unfolded that day, shall we.
Snow White and the Seven Stretchers. Beast and the Beast. Barbie in It's a Knockout. Then, of course, Reading played the poor little underdog card, proclaimed their innocence and escaped scot-free. Gag, gag, gag.
A few months later their coach, Wally Downes, who really ought to be led to the dugout in a muzzle and restraints, had the gall to accuse Sheffield United boss Neil Warnock of urging his players to injure opponents.
Funny that, given that it was only a few seconds earlier when Reading midfielder Steve Sidwell produced another of the worst tackles of the season with an over-the-top lunge on Chris Armstrong.
I hope the FA throw the book at Downes when they get him down to Soho Square and tell him his tiresome Crazy Gang garbage went out with the dinosaurs.
Then there's Whispering Steve Coppell, another soul bursting with romance.
That's why he blew the chance to get his side into the quarter-finals of the FA Cup on Saturday when he played his second team at Old Trafford.
There's more joie de vivre in a door mat at a funeral home than there is in the laughing boy in charge of Reading.
Coppell couldn't be bothered to attend the post-match press conference on Saturday night. He was too busy raving it up with a cup of tea in a room next door.
So he sent his man on earth and scorer of the Reading equaliser, Brynjar Gunnarsson, instead.
Gunnarsson hails from Iceland and, yes, I know it's unkind but a 2lb pack of Petits Pois from the deep freeze would have spoken with more animation than him.
The reporters, better men than me, who persevered magnificently in asking him questions, deserved commendations for endurance in the face of determined and desperate tedium.
The Iceman cometh and Iceman sendeth fast asleep.
I almost forgot the Reading fans. A contingent of them anyway. They're the rabid bunch who made it their speciality to behave in an especially unhinged fashion towards former managers.
Alan Pardew got the full treatment when he was leaving for West Ham. Mark McGhee was another treated with gratitude and respect whenever he returned.
And I think that's just about covered it. Except I've just remembered I'm doing a phone-in on Radio Berkshire on Friday evening.
Should be a lorra lorra laughs, as John Madejski's favourite theatre companion might say.
by M4 Junction 11 » 21 Feb 2007 09:36
by M4 Junction 11 » 21 Feb 2007 09:39
by Nomad_Royal » 21 Feb 2007 09:52
BBC Radio Berkshire Dear All,
Whilst it is clear that Oliver Holt's work has provoked a strong response from yourselves it is only fair that he be given a chance to come on and have his say, explain the reasoning behind his views and also hear what loyal Royals have to say.
It should be an interesting debate.
You never know, you may well win him round !
All the best
Joel
by 79Royal » 21 Feb 2007 10:27
by Forbury Lion » 21 Feb 2007 11:03
The players quoted have done nothing for Reading FC, John Madejski has.Oliver Holt Name a stadium after Tom Finney or Stanley Matthews or Bobby Moore. Name it after Alex Ferguson, Paul Gascoigne or Bill Shankly. But not after a guy who made his money from a magazine flogging used cars.
by Schards#2 » 21 Feb 2007 11:17
by bigmike » 21 Feb 2007 11:35
by Schards#2 » 21 Feb 2007 11:40
by weybridgewanderer » 21 Feb 2007 11:58
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