From Despair To Where? But why over analyse something that inspires blind loyalty, passion, emotion, opinion and, yes, fallibility in it's followers. Turn football into a spreadsheet and all you do is lose the inherent humanity and uncertainty that makes following your team so exiting in the first place? There is nothing wrong with following an instinct or a gut feeling about something, but you make it sound like a mental weakness to be deplored.
When I teach writers I teach them to be analytical BETWEEN stories but to "write drunk" (ie let go and DON'T be analytical.)
When I watch a game, I watch a game. The ref is ALWAYS biased against us. The other side gets the luck.
I'm just as blinkered, emotional, carried-away as the next guy or gal.
That's "at the game". Discussion should be based on reality not subjectivity.
Why do you think football managers and coaches take notes while watching the game?
Because recall is notoriously unreliable and selective.
Take the one example of converting corners. I was STUNNED to discover that last season we went 138 corners without scoring
and also 105 corners without scoring. It seems, when we check, "obvious" that we are virtually certain NOT to score when we
get a corner, BUT WATCHING A GAME, WE GET A CORNER, I THINK "50-50 CHANCE WE'LL SCORE NOW".
There's a reason for that. We over-emphasise the memories of corners we DID score from and discount the hundreds of misses.
But my "gut-feel", my "knowledge", before seeing the stats, was that we "often" scored from corners.
Last season we had 326, THREE-HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SIX
UNSUCCESSFUL corners.
Without checking the figures, my gut-instinct, "I watch the game!" impression would have said
(a) We are 5-10 times better at converting corners.
(b) We score a lot more corners than in reality.
INCIDENTALLY, this season, we have ALREADY beaten our total number of goals-from-corners for last season