Thaumagurist* jgriowa Last year my daughter came across a guy in full Chelsea kit, about to play racquetball (she's working her way through university working at a fitness center) - she recognised the fact that he was wearing a football kit and asked him how he came to be supporting a team when they were in Cedar Falls, Iowa. He didn't answer her question, but instead, asked how she recognised the shirt. When she told him her father was a Reading supporter, she said he became a little obnoxious and said he couldn't believe that ANYONE would support that club. She didn't know what to say to that as she was just trying to be nice, so the conversation die a quick death. I later explained to her that, in addition to being a 'little' club, the only reason this particular American Chelsea fan would even recognise the Reading name would be the Hunt-Cech incident. I still can't believe a guy running around a racquetball court in Chelsea kit (assuming the footwear were trainers and not boots
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Can't believe that any Chelsea fan would still hold a grudge against us for that incident.
Why not? Many people believe what they want to believe, and will always believe an accident was somebody's fault. Many Reading fans were really angry about carlo nash "taking out" Kitson in a challenge a few years back, even when it became clear that it really was just an accident. Loads of Arsenal fans still insist Taylor's challenge on Eduardo was "disgraceful" and will talking about cloggers like him recklessly launching into over the ball tackles, even though it's been shown numerous times that he didn't go over the ball, nor did he even lunge in.
Add to that a press which generally sees everything from a big 4 perspective, and you get fans of those clubs, who get far more decisions go their way than the rest, who are convinced there's some sort of referee vendetta against them.
And some, it has to be said, are just a bunch of knobs.