by Jackson Corner » 24 Oct 2019 17:17
by Stevie G » 24 Oct 2019 19:58
by URZZZZ » 24 Oct 2019 23:35
by FiNeRaIn » 25 Oct 2019 00:37
URZZZZ To be honest, it deeply upsets me seeing kids walk around town centres in the middle of no-where with City shirts on. You’ve become accustomed now to seeing Liverpool, United, even Chelsea shirts around everywhere but seeing people with City shirts on irritates me for some reason. Bunch of plastics
by URZZZZ » 25 Oct 2019 00:50
FiNeRaInURZZZZ To be honest, it deeply upsets me seeing kids walk around town centres in the middle of no-where with City shirts on. You’ve become accustomed now to seeing Liverpool, United, even Chelsea shirts around everywhere but seeing people with City shirts on irritates me for some reason. Bunch of plastics
The impact of plastics really alters the game in the UK. Here it does not. You can be a glory hunting Patriots fan but it has no impact on the money they are able to spend on the team. The salary cap is the cap and tough shit, it's pretty much identical to everyone else. There is nothing you can do other than pick the right coaches, offer contracts to the right players and draft well at the end of every year. You have to be well run and you can't throw money at it. The impact of plastics in the UK however means when all your school and town support premiership sides 200 miles away, it takes the money away from the local sides, gives it to the those clubs who spend it on players to increase the gap between your team and keep you down in the doldrums. They can also turn your players heads, pinch your managers and come steal your academy prospects for peanuts. It's utterly ridiculous when you think about it and you all have been lapping that up and watching it get worse for how many decades now?
Man City are just a classic example of the above, but they aren't alone. Just throw money at it until something sticks.
by Royal Bahamas » 25 Oct 2019 03:50
by Pepe the Horseman » 25 Oct 2019 08:35
Royal Bahamas I have watched Reading since I was very young boy, sometimes able to sit on my Dads shoulders. My absolute number one hero became Colin Meldrum........
Then as a 10 year old, my friend Jimmy Fall moved up to Bootle, Liverpool
...and he took me to A field . I had never seen or felt anything like it.....
I have followed both Reading and Liverpool ever since....
Unfortunately I have barely stepped foot back in Britain in over 43 years
.....
by Basildon » 25 Oct 2019 10:25
Pepe the HorsemanRoyal Bahamas I have watched Reading since I was very young boy, sometimes able to sit on my Dads shoulders. My absolute number one hero became Colin Meldrum........
Then as a 10 year old, my friend Jimmy Fall moved up to Bootle, Liverpool
...and he took me to A field . I had never seen or felt anything like it.....
I have followed both Reading and Liverpool ever since....
Unfortunately I have barely stepped foot back in Britain in over 43 years
.....
Must have been some field.
by JamieY26 » 25 Oct 2019 10:54
by Millsy » 25 Oct 2019 11:30
by BR0B0T » 25 Oct 2019 12:09
FiNeRaInURZZZZ To be honest, it deeply upsets me seeing kids walk around town centres in the middle of no-where with City shirts on. You’ve become accustomed now to seeing Liverpool, United, even Chelsea shirts around everywhere but seeing people with City shirts on irritates me for some reason. Bunch of plastics
The impact of plastics really alters the game in the UK. Here it does not. You can be a glory hunting Patriots fan but it has no impact on the money they are able to spend on the team. The salary cap is the cap and tough shit, it's pretty much identical to everyone else. There is nothing you can do other than pick the right coaches, offer contracts to the right players and draft well at the end of every year. You have to be well run and you can't throw money at it. The impact of plastics in the UK however means when all your school and town support premiership sides 200 miles away, it takes the money away from the local sides, gives it to the those clubs who spend it on players to increase the gap between your team and keep you down in the doldrums. They can also turn your players heads, pinch your managers and come steal your academy prospects for peanuts. It's utterly ridiculous when you think about it and you all have been lapping that up and watching it get worse for how many decades now?
Man City are just a classic example of the above, but they aren't alone. Just throw money at it until something sticks.
by Snowflake Royal » 25 Oct 2019 12:11
2 world wars, 1 world cup The thing is I have no idea what happiness people get supporting Man City when they're not from there at all and are just supporting a team that's gone from total shite to 2nd best in the country with just money. Do the kids walking around with City tops on have any idea at all/ Would they have any emotion at all? And even if you're born in Manchester what pride can you have with a team that's just had a ridiculous amount of money pumped in.
I have always 'supported' Liverpool only because when I was 5 my best mate told me he supported them and the Liverpool badge was the best badge in the Panini stickers we were collecting so I arbitrarily decided to support them. I'm glad Liverpool are top of the league but I've never been there and I don't really give that much of a toss.
Part of me hopes my home town Reading stays relatively shit so it will always be 'my' club. I guess I wouldn't mind us crawling up slowly into the PL, nothing spectacular, and survive over a number of seasons. But I'd hate it if some mega rich tits came in splashed 100s of millions on new players and we ended up top of the PL but a totally unrecognisable plastic crap club.
by Hound » 25 Oct 2019 12:16
by Millsy » 25 Oct 2019 12:22
Snowflake Royal2 world wars, 1 world cup The thing is I have no idea what happiness people get supporting Man City when they're not from there at all and are just supporting a team that's gone from total shite to 2nd best in the country with just money. Do the kids walking around with City tops on have any idea at all/ Would they have any emotion at all? And even if you're born in Manchester what pride can you have with a team that's just had a ridiculous amount of money pumped in.
I have always 'supported' Liverpool only because when I was 5 my best mate told me he supported them and the Liverpool badge was the best badge in the Panini stickers we were collecting so I arbitrarily decided to support them. I'm glad Liverpool are top of the league but I've never been there and I don't really give that much of a toss.
Part of me hopes my home town Reading stays relatively shit so it will always be 'my' club. I guess I wouldn't mind us crawling up slowly into the PL, nothing spectacular, and survive over a number of seasons. But I'd hate it if some mega rich tits came in splashed 100s of millions on new players and we ended up top of the PL but a totally unrecognisable plastic crap club.
Well the football is incredible for a start.
People like success. People like bragging rights. It's exactly the same reason why Utd, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool shirts are common around the country.
You've got to remember that actually the proportion of football fans that regularly attend games isn't that high. And the number who really understand football is arguably even lower.
by John Smith » 25 Oct 2019 13:51
2 world wars, 1 world cup I have always 'supported' Liverpool only because when I was 5 my best mate told me he supported them and the Liverpool badge was the best badge in the Panini stickers we were collecting so I arbitrarily decided to support them. I'm glad Liverpool are top of the league but I've never been there and I don't really give that much of a toss.
by 3points » 25 Oct 2019 13:57
by Hiram K Hackenbacker » 25 Oct 2019 14:04
3points It actually goes even further now. The lad of a friend of mine started "supporting" Paris St Germain when he was about 14. He doesn't even support Arsenal anymore (now they've become shit), let alone Reading. That's the impact of the Champions League coverage, although with that on BT Sport these days it may well not happen as much
by morganb » 25 Oct 2019 14:51
by Hound » 25 Oct 2019 15:04
by 72 bus » 25 Oct 2019 15:14
Snowflake Royal You've got to remember that actually the proportion of football fans that regularly attend games isn't that high. And the number who really understand football is arguably even lower.
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