by Huntley & Palmer » 02 Apr 2007 15:10
by Sharpy » 02 Apr 2007 15:13
sheshnuAndyRFC I never said families should not be at football.
No, you merely heavily implied it.AndyRFC Nottingham Forest at Bristol City on Saturday, 3,500 stood up throughout the game hardly a shirt or family in sight.
by Sharpy » 02 Apr 2007 15:14
Huntley & Palmer Having witnessed first hand the supporters of Swansea making their way back from the Den on Saturday afternoon, I am very glad our support is a mixture of lads, kids and older folk. I could think of nothing worse than being hounded around London in a constant police escort and then being frog-marched by 60 odd police dressed in riot gear back on a train home
by Huntley & Palmer » 02 Apr 2007 15:20
by SWLR » 02 Apr 2007 15:34
SharpyHuntley & Palmer Having witnessed first hand the supporters of Swansea making their way back from the Den on Saturday afternoon, I am very glad our support is a mixture of lads, kids and older folk. I could think of nothing worse than being hounded around London in a constant police escort and then being frog-marched by 60 odd police dressed in riot gear back on a train home
you wouldnt get many RFC families at the den though lets be honest
by Behindu » 02 Apr 2007 15:35
SharpyHuntley & Palmer Having witnessed first hand the supporters of Swansea making their way back from the Den on Saturday afternoon, I am very glad our support is a mixture of lads, kids and older folk. I could think of nothing worse than being hounded around London in a constant police escort and then being frog-marched by 60 odd police dressed in riot gear back on a train home
you wouldnt get many RFC families at the den though lets be honest
by EASTENDER MARKY » 02 Apr 2007 15:35
SWLRSharpyHuntley & Palmer Having witnessed first hand the supporters of Swansea making their way back from the Den on Saturday afternoon, I am very glad our support is a mixture of lads, kids and older folk. I could think of nothing worse than being hounded around London in a constant police escort and then being frog-marched by 60 odd police dressed in riot gear back on a train home
you wouldnt get many RFC families at the den though lets be honest
Took my two to the last game - they had a great time and couldn't stop giggling at the banter/exchange of abuse in the 'cage' by the train station. BTW we have two rules: all 'football words' are strictly left at the ground and there will be no splitting on dad to mum, about his use of that language.
by Sharpy » 02 Apr 2007 15:44
BehinduSharpyHuntley & Palmer Having witnessed first hand the supporters of Swansea making their way back from the Den on Saturday afternoon, I am very glad our support is a mixture of lads, kids and older folk. I could think of nothing worse than being hounded around London in a constant police escort and then being frog-marched by 60 odd police dressed in riot gear back on a train home
you wouldnt get many RFC families at the den though lets be honest
Spoken by one who presumably hasn't been there...
Last trip to the Den was pretty normal mix of Royals fans of all ages.
No sign of large numbers of 'lads' which is odd as you'd think all those 'hard core' mates of Sharpy's who get excluded from all the other games woul dhave made a pointof turning up for that one
by Behindu » 02 Apr 2007 15:55
by Sharpy » 02 Apr 2007 15:58
Behindu So you were there but ignore the fact that it was a pretty typical away following ?
What point were you trying to make ?
by SWLR » 02 Apr 2007 16:02
SharpyBehindu So you were there but ignore the fact that it was a pretty typical away following ?
What point were you trying to make ?
im not trying to make one, just saying compared to say fulham there were alot less families at the den
by Irvinchangeyaname » 02 Apr 2007 16:17
Garrincha Generally, there's no doubt this was one of our more vocal away days and streets ahead of the Emirates visit a few weeks ago although that's hardly saying much. (Have we two different sets of supporter's!)
by Behindu » 02 Apr 2007 16:19
SharpyBehindu So you were there but ignore the fact that it was a pretty typical away following ?
What point were you trying to make ?
im not trying to make one, just saying compared to say fulham there were alot less families at the den
by Seal » 02 Apr 2007 16:21
Huntley & Palmer Having witnessed first hand the supporters of Swansea making their way back from the Den on Saturday afternoon, I am very glad our support is a mixture of lads, kids and older folk. I could think of nothing worse than being hounded around London in a constant police escort and then being frog-marched by 60 odd police dressed in riot gear back on a train home
by Arch » 02 Apr 2007 16:25
by Seal » 02 Apr 2007 16:43
Arch This really has to be one of the daftest threads ever. People who harken back to the halcyon days of Elm Park really make me wonder whether they were really there. There was basically one part of the ground - half the south bank - where sharpy-style laddishness was the preferred form of support. The rest of the place was a mixture of families, grumbling old geezers and acres and acres of empty space. If you were right in the middle of the south bank the support seemed great, but if you were anywhere else you realized it was just a few drunks periodically bawling. (When I moved to London, I often went to Highbury. Same phenomenon. If you stood in the North Bank it seemed like the best football support you ever heard, and then you couldn't understand why Arsenal support seemed so shit on telly.)
On away trips (and I only went to a couple as a youth), it was basically a selection of the lads from the south bank. The reason other people didn't go was because going to away matches meant dealing with opposition hooliganism wherever you went, police heavy-handedness, nasty travel services and a generally crap time to and from the ground.
Some people liked that. Good for them. But the old model was a small number of basically similar people, and the new model is a large number of diverse people. If you preferred the old model, and don't want to go, then fine but don't imply that because you prefer it it's objectively better.
Money has got Reading to where we are today. Money from TV, money from expensive tickets, and money from a very fine man who wants his club to be a family club. You can;t have the old ways and still have the success.
by SpaceCruiser » 02 Apr 2007 16:43
SWLR Arch for Mayor - he gets my vote.
by Sharpy » 02 Apr 2007 16:44
SealHuntley & Palmer Having witnessed first hand the supporters of Swansea making their way back from the Den on Saturday afternoon, I am very glad our support is a mixture of lads, kids and older folk. I could think of nothing worse than being hounded around London in a constant police escort and then being frog-marched by 60 odd police dressed in riot gear back on a train home
Agreed but I think there is a middle ground somewhere in between...
by Huntley & Palmer » 02 Apr 2007 16:54
SealHuntley & Palmer Having witnessed first hand the supporters of Swansea making their way back from the Den on Saturday afternoon, I am very glad our support is a mixture of lads, kids and older folk. I could think of nothing worse than being hounded around London in a constant police escort and then being frog-marched by 60 odd police dressed in riot gear back on a train home
Agreed but I think there is a middle ground somewhere in between...
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