by SPARTA » 02 Sep 2014 13:32
by Ian Royal » 02 Sep 2014 13:38
by Big Foot » 02 Sep 2014 13:41
by sandman » 02 Sep 2014 14:29
by Winchester Royal » 02 Sep 2014 14:37
by SPARTA » 02 Sep 2014 14:49
Ian Royal Sorry, you want the club to go with the minority view just because it's a view that you (and I) agree with? 32% (assuming it was yes / no) should overrule 68%?
by kwik-silva » 02 Sep 2014 14:53
by SPARTA » 02 Sep 2014 15:01
by kwik-silva » 02 Sep 2014 15:03
by paultheroyal » 02 Sep 2014 16:11
SPARTA Coventry City have today said they wont use goal music at their next game because... wait for it... they want to hear the fans celebrate! What a fantastic idea... Fans spontaneous celebrations not cut short by irritating goal music.
Reading FC's response to this was to point fans in the direction of a recent fans survey where 68% of fans wanted the music. But that's still 1 in 3 not wanting it, which is significant enough you would hope - but not in this clubs opinion.
Joey Davey @joedavey1996 17m
.@ReadingFC take note ! Most fans don't want goal music #readingfc pic.twitter.com/EUG8ZFfNKM
Reading FC @ReadingFC 10m
@joedavey1996 Hi Joey! We do value your feedback! In our customer survey (P5), 68% voted in favour of goal music >> http://rdng.co/fanssurvey14
Not that they care what the proportion of fans on here think, but are you in favour or against the goal music?
by winchester_royal » 02 Sep 2014 16:34
by bloody Volvo driver » 02 Sep 2014 16:47
by Silver Fox » 02 Sep 2014 16:50
by urz13 » 02 Sep 2014 17:20
by urz13 » 02 Sep 2014 17:23
SPARTA I'm curious as to how it helps?
You either celebrate spontaneously for about 10 seconds, which is what hooked me as a kid at Elm Park; or you burst into celebration, only to be interrupted by music a few seconds later, killing that moment, and then leaving many of us sitting back down early or cutting short the celebration and then looking at one another and saying, that was a good goal, and sit back down while grown adults and their kids shout 'oi oi oi'.
It's like reaching orgasm, only for your partner stop you before you finish, pull away, and shout oi oi oi at you.
by Green » 02 Sep 2014 17:25
urz13 I honestly don't understand why it is such a big deal to some fans. Many clubs have it, many don't, it's not embarrassing, it doesn't kill the atmosphere but it doesn't generate atmosphere either. Really, I can't understand why people get so hysterical over it - especially on twitter.
by Green » 02 Sep 2014 17:27
urz13SPARTA I'm curious as to how it helps?
You either celebrate spontaneously for about 10 seconds, which is what hooked me as a kid at Elm Park; or you burst into celebration, only to be interrupted by music a few seconds later, killing that moment, and then leaving many of us sitting back down early or cutting short the celebration and then looking at one another and saying, that was a good goal, and sit back down while grown adults and their kids shout 'oi oi oi'.
It's like reaching orgasm, only for your partner stop you before you finish, pull away, and shout oi oi oi at you.
If it affects you that much, don't join in? I never join in
by bobby1413 » 02 Sep 2014 22:26
by Yellowcoat » 03 Sep 2014 11:02
by RG30 » 03 Sep 2014 11:08
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