Horsham RoyalSnowflake Royal ... an enjoyable promotion chase followed, if successful, by not just guaranteed losing and being patronised the next season. Which is what follows a Championship promotion.
Errrr, Leicester, Brighton, West Ham
by Snowball » 06 May 2023 15:11
Horsham RoyalSnowflake Royal ... an enjoyable promotion chase followed, if successful, by not just guaranteed losing and being patronised the next season. Which is what follows a Championship promotion.
by Royal_jimmy » 06 May 2023 15:43
Horsham RoyalSnowflake Royal ... an enjoyable promotion chase followed, if successful, by not just guaranteed losing and being patronised the next season. Which is what follows a Championship promotion.
Agree. 100% not fussed about the PL, but (eventual) promotion from L1 will be sweet.
by Snowflake Royal » 06 May 2023 15:47
SnowballHorsham RoyalSnowflake Royal ... an enjoyable promotion chase followed, if successful, by not just guaranteed losing and being patronised the next season. Which is what follows a Championship promotion.
Errrr, Leicester, Brighton, West Ham
by Lower West » 06 May 2023 21:54
fred sharpes nose I'm sure he is reflecting on his decisions to sell (multiple times) and choices made - clearly with hind sight I suspect wishes he had stuck with it and be foresighted about being a yo yo club - up down up down rake in the parachute payements and very slowly build for the long term future. Its hard to see how we would be any worse off if he'd stay in charge - at least we'd have a ground to call our own
by under the tin » 07 May 2023 10:44
SutekhAthleticoSpizz Good post Fred
Sir John should not bear any brunt of what is going on at the club right now.
Yes, he sold out to weasels, but that would always have happened eventually, sadly football draws weasels. We have been sold to an assortment of them since 2012. Football in general is full of them (Wrexham aside, so it would seem and so we are told).
Have seen Reading exceed all of my childhood expectations (forget the Wembley trips and the Premier League), I was loving the hoops a long time before replica shirts even existed).
My wildest dreams were first exceeded away at Ipswich 1987 when Steve Richardsons goal guaranteed us 13th place in the old Division One….our highest ever league place finish. Now that was something to really celebrate. The relegation in 1988 having won the Simod Cup still hits home harder than anything that has/is going on now.
The Sky etc. footballing £ has dampened the appetite….and sadly the interest too.
Couple that with all the greed driving everything and every decision made or not made has to be analysed by a bunch of tedious, vapid non entities plus the idiot way FIFA keep adjusting rules to wreck what is a simple game. Lot to be said for getting rid of TV money and also for letting some of these big clubs all naff off and play with themselves somewhere so the rest of us can get back to enjoying the game.
by windermereROYAL » 07 May 2023 10:51
by AthleticoSpizz » 07 May 2023 10:55
by under the tin » 07 May 2023 11:01
blythspartanSouth Coast Royalblythspartan Going back to the days of walking up Grovelands Road with my dad on the way to Elm Park, getting promoted to the old Division 2 was a dream neither of us thought would be realised.
I remember reading Sir John’s comments years ago about taking us to the promised land and I just remember thinking what a load of rubbish but he proved me wrong.
Since 1973 to 2011/12 supporting Reading has been really exciting and exceeded my wildest dreams. The last 10 years has been utter torture and we’re now back to where we started.
I am still confident of better times to come but accept there will be more bumps in the road ahead. I’ll will always support my hometown club and I wouldn’t swap it for for the big guns in the Premiership. I am looking forward to winning a playoff final in the next year or two.
Did you never walk along the Oxford Road and up Wantage or Wilson Road?
Yeah, when I started going with my mates we always went up Wantage Road. I went to Wilson School so normally avoided that way.
I bought my first house in Albany Road so that was Prince of Wales Avenue onto Norfolk Road and then the Spread Eagle for a pint or two. From there it would either be the Tilehurst End or a walk up to the South bank.
by Einstein agogo » 07 May 2023 11:04
by ayjaydee » 07 May 2023 12:15
Mid Sussex Royal Veteran of several relegations back to 1971 when we dropped into the 4th division, this one maybe feels a bit worse than some as its a long time since we've been third tier.
But in a way the last few seasons have been draining, Saturdays have stopped becoming enjoyable and I won't miss dull games against the likes of Birmingham, Cardiff and Stoke every week.
by SCIAG » 07 May 2023 12:19
under the tinSutekhAthleticoSpizz Good post Fred
Sir John should not bear any brunt of what is going on at the club right now.
Yes, he sold out to weasels, but that would always have happened eventually, sadly football draws weasels. We have been sold to an assortment of them since 2012. Football in general is full of them (Wrexham aside, so it would seem and so we are told).
Have seen Reading exceed all of my childhood expectations (forget the Wembley trips and the Premier League), I was loving the hoops a long time before replica shirts even existed).
My wildest dreams were first exceeded away at Ipswich 1987 when Steve Richardsons goal guaranteed us 13th place in the old Division One….our highest ever league place finish. Now that was something to really celebrate. The relegation in 1988 having won the Simod Cup still hits home harder than anything that has/is going on now.
The Sky etc. footballing £ has dampened the appetite….and sadly the interest too.
Couple that with all the greed driving everything and every decision made or not made has to be analysed by a bunch of tedious, vapid non entities plus the idiot way FIFA keep adjusting rules to wreck what is a simple game. Lot to be said for getting rid of TV money and also for letting some of these big clubs all naff off and play with themselves somewhere so the rest of us can get back to enjoying the game.
Amen to that
by Sutekh » 07 May 2023 12:42
SCIAGunder the tinSutekh
Couple that with all the greed driving everything and every decision made or not made has to be analysed by a bunch of tedious, vapid non entities plus the idiot way FIFA keep adjusting rules to wreck what is a simple game. Lot to be said for getting rid of TV money and also for letting some of these big clubs all naff off and play with themselves somewhere so the rest of us can get back to enjoying the game.
Amen to that
Strongly disagree, it's empty old-man nostalgia. Quality of football in this country would drop dramatically without TV money, the oligarchs would also pull their sides further ahead of the rest. Frankly most of the recent adjustments made by IFAB have been clearly positive (ending double jeopardy, removing the stupid "ball must go forward at kick off" rule, increased use of technology), and even unnoticeable to the average fan (like making the coin toss more intuitive).
Anyone who thinks football would be better without TV money should try watching some games at a level where they don't have TV money. It's shit. Or look at the improvements in women's football in this country since they got more TV money. Or find some recordings of football in the 80s, before IFAB banned the tackle from behind and the passback.
by tmesis » 07 May 2023 14:52
SCIAGunder the tinSutekh
Couple that with all the greed driving everything and every decision made or not made has to be analysed by a bunch of tedious, vapid non entities plus the idiot way FIFA keep adjusting rules to wreck what is a simple game. Lot to be said for getting rid of TV money and also for letting some of these big clubs all naff off and play with themselves somewhere so the rest of us can get back to enjoying the game.
Amen to that
Strongly disagree, it's empty old-man nostalgia. Quality of football in this country would drop dramatically without TV money, the oligarchs would also pull their sides further ahead of the rest. Frankly most of the recent adjustments made by IFAB have been clearly positive (ending double jeopardy, removing the stupid "ball must go forward at kick off" rule, increased use of technology), and even unnoticeable to the average fan (like making the coin toss more intuitive).
Anyone who thinks football would be better without TV money should try watching some games at a level where they don't have TV money. It's shit. Or look at the improvements in women's football in this country since they got more TV money. Or find some recordings of football in the 80s, before IFAB banned the tackle from behind and the passback.
by LUX » 07 May 2023 15:36
under the tinblythspartanSouth Coast Royal
Did you never walk along the Oxford Road and up Wantage or Wilson Road?
Yeah, when I started going with my mates we always went up Wantage Road. I went to Wilson School so normally avoided that way.
I bought my first house in Albany Road so that was Prince of Wales Avenue onto Norfolk Road and then the Spread Eagle for a pint or two. From there it would either be the Tilehurst End or a walk up to the South bank.
First started going as an 11 year old in 1970. Number 17 bus from home in Earley, got off at the stop at the end of Kensington Road.
Into the town end (pre-segregation).
Got to old enough to pass for being 18 Few beers in the Horse and Jockey, walk along Tilehurst Road, a quick pint in the Swiss, then South Bank.
Happy days.
by Franchise FC » 08 May 2023 06:56
SCIAGunder the tinSutekh
Couple that with all the greed driving everything and every decision made or not made has to be analysed by a bunch of tedious, vapid non entities plus the idiot way FIFA keep adjusting rules to wreck what is a simple game. Lot to be said for getting rid of TV money and also for letting some of these big clubs all naff off and play with themselves somewhere so the rest of us can get back to enjoying the game.
Amen to that
Strongly disagree, it's empty old-man nostalgia. Quality of football in this country would drop dramatically without TV money, the oligarchs would also pull their sides further ahead of the rest. Frankly most of the recent adjustments made by IFAB have been clearly positive (ending double jeopardy, removing the stupid "ball must go forward at kick off" rule, increased use of technology), and even unnoticeable to the average fan (like making the coin toss more intuitive).
Anyone who thinks football would be better without TV money should try watching some games at a level where they don't have TV money. It's shit. Or look at the improvements in women's football in this country since they got more TV money. Or find some recordings of football in the 80s, before IFAB banned the tackle from behind and the passback.
by SCIAG » 08 May 2023 09:59
tmesisSCIAGunder the tin Amen to that
Strongly disagree, it's empty old-man nostalgia. Quality of football in this country would drop dramatically without TV money, the oligarchs would also pull their sides further ahead of the rest. Frankly most of the recent adjustments made by IFAB have been clearly positive (ending double jeopardy, removing the stupid "ball must go forward at kick off" rule, increased use of technology), and even unnoticeable to the average fan (like making the coin toss more intuitive).
Anyone who thinks football would be better without TV money should try watching some games at a level where they don't have TV money. It's shit. Or look at the improvements in women's football in this country since they got more TV money. Or find some recordings of football in the 80s, before IFAB banned the tackle from behind and the passback.
I don't think 'money' itself is the problem. It's more the concentration of that money at fewer and fewer clubs, aided by rules, such as the Bosman ruling, which make it increasingly more difficult for any clubs outside a monied elite to compete.
For all of the complaints about the top sides not treating the FA Cup seriously, for example, the bigger problem is that the top sides win it almost every time.
The thinking seems to be that the big clubs bring in the TV viewers, so it helps TV if those clubs are perpetually successful, and if TV is happy, they'll pay more money. What nobody appears to have noticed is those big clubs still bring in the viewers even when they aren't playing well. There's really nothing to suggest a more equal league would result in a loss of viewers. With the threat of a breakaway league very much diminished, there ought to be a feel that the leagues don't think they have to give the big clubs what they want 'or else', but I suspect they keep doing things to make the already rich clubs richer.
by Millsy » 08 May 2023 10:36
by RoyalBlue » 08 May 2023 12:26
AthleticoSpizz If it weren’t them, it’d be the next ones
You are aware of this modern game business aren’t you?
by RoyalBlue » 08 May 2023 12:29
tmesisSCIAGunder the tin Amen to that
Strongly disagree, it's empty old-man nostalgia. Quality of football in this country would drop dramatically without TV money, the oligarchs would also pull their sides further ahead of the rest. Frankly most of the recent adjustments made by IFAB have been clearly positive (ending double jeopardy, removing the stupid "ball must go forward at kick off" rule, increased use of technology), and even unnoticeable to the average fan (like making the coin toss more intuitive).
Anyone who thinks football would be better without TV money should try watching some games at a level where they don't have TV money. It's shit. Or look at the improvements in women's football in this country since they got more TV money. Or find some recordings of football in the 80s, before IFAB banned the tackle from behind and the passback.
I don't think 'money' itself is the problem. It's more the concentration of that money at fewer and fewer clubs, aided by rules, such as the Bosman ruling, which make it increasingly more difficult for any clubs outside a monied elite to compete.
For all of the complaints about the top sides not treating the FA Cup seriously, for example, the bigger problem is that the top sides win it almost every time.
The thinking seems to be that the big clubs bring in the TV viewers, so it helps TV if those clubs are perpetually successful, and if TV is happy, they'll pay more money. What nobody appears to have noticed is those big clubs still bring in the viewers even when they aren't playing well. There's really nothing to suggest a more equal league would result in a loss of viewers. .
by tmesis » 08 May 2023 13:34
Millsy The idea that just because we're back in a division we've spent most of our history in, it means we're basically the same club we were is flawed.
We're more like the son who has spent a couple of decades round the world as a rich celebrity with his big rolex watch and California tan who comes home to stay a couple of nights with his old folks before jetting out again, than we are an old broke son who's come back home to stay forever in his old bedroom as the kid he once was with mummy and daddy.
We've got a big modern stadium, we've experienced the promised land several for several seasons, bigger fanbase, more respect, bigger goals, better infrastructure etc etc.
Much as League One would like to have its little boy back to stay forever, the fact is we've grown up and are only visiting.
Users browsing this forum: Google Adsense [Bot] and 174 guests