by AthleticoSpizz » 14 Jan 2024 22:16
by P!ssed Off » 14 Jan 2024 22:17
Snowflake Royal He can afford to pay. He just won't.
by ozzygull » 14 Jan 2024 23:05
Clyde1998ozzygullDirk Gently Can't see what an abandonment will actually achieve, except an FA fine and a points deduction (presumably suspended). Because of precedent, there's no way the FA & FL can let this go unpunished, no matter how deep the emotions.
IMHO it would have been much more effective and impressive to go on for 10 minutes, then all get up and go back to the stands and let the game go on.
That would have given the perception of an organised and co-ordinated group who knew what they were doing and wanted to protest in a way that didn't impact the club, rather than a disorganised group determined to stop the match and impact the club.
As my username suggests I am a Brighton fan. I happen to live in Reading. In 1996 after hearing that our ground was to be sold (asset stripping) leaving us with nowhere to play, during a home game against York City Brighton fans invaded the pitch and broke the goal cross bar so the game could not be continued. Before that point nobody gave a monkey what was happening with a team stuck at the bottom of division 3 (League 2 today). It was the start that changed the course of our club’s history. It got our fight in to the national consciousness, we were deducted points for it and as result on the last game of the 97 season we are actually relegated to the conference league for about 45 minutes until we equalised and sent Hereford down on goals scored. The pitch invasion got the FA to get their finger out and became a mediator between the consortium that wanted to take over and the asset stripping aholes.
By the time they were gone and the consortium took over the only thing we had left was our league status and our name. No ground, no training facilities, no club office. We ended up to spending two seasons ground sharing with Gillingham.
Brighton put out a montage on the eve of our first game In Europe it started with the game against York.
https://youtu.be/KAqQiE44kXQ?si=iXGy_ZVBxVMMe6nJ
Living in Reading I was aware of what is happening in Reading and I join your protest march when you played Portsmouth. I wore my Brighton shirt, lot of your fans came up to say thank you to me and chatted about what was going, their fear, frustration and anger was very familiar to me.
On “northstandchat” the Brighton fans forum after your game yesterday there was a thread started about your issues and the overwhelming attitude is one of support and discussion on how we can help. I tried to bring Reading’s issues to the attention of our fans before, but not many were interested. What happened yesterday really made people sit up and take notice. I really hope it is the start of the end for Dai Yongge and Reading. ( if you do check on there have a thick skin as some people have no got over Steve Coppell leaving and the non playoff pitch invasion )
It may get worse for Reading yet, but the most important thing is you stick together as a fan base, once this fella is out of your club be there to pick up the pieces of what’s left.
Thank you. I think it's always worth remembering that other clubs have gone through similar issues and have managed to recover. Whatever any sporting animosity there may be between clubs, no set of fans should ever have to go through worrying about whether there will even be a club.
I'm relatively young (25), so throughout my early years of watching football, you were playing at the Withdean - a venue completely unsuitable for football. You were held back for years through lack of decent facilities. Now Brighton have one of the best grounds in the country. I've been to the Amex three times, most recently on Tuesday night, and it remains one of the most impressive venues I've been to of the 60-odd I've done; totally fitting of the current position of the club. Brighton are now one of the best sides in the country - especially of those outside the big six.
I think the impact of yesterday is greater than any of us expected. We're in a situation where we've got nothing to lose now; I don't think anyone really cares if we get relegated this season - as long as we've got a club at the end of it.
We've gone down hill so quickly, even a few weeks ago it didn't seem this desperate. I think the events of the last week - the CEO trying to sell players without informing the manager and DOF; the suggestion the owner is attempting to use our income to pay off his own debts and not being serious about selling the club; any sale of the club would involve the training ground being sold separately - has pushed people over the edge. It doesn't help that the owner and directors (all based in China) have been lying to the UK-based staff and supporters' groups about funding and their intentions since the start of the season.
We'll see what happens. Hopefully we can get back to normality at some point.
by Pepe the Horseman » 14 Jan 2024 23:23
Winston BiscuitBrogueWinston Biscuit At a time when we should all be united, its a real shame one or two vocal RFC fans on twitter are trying to go out of their way to cause division amongst us.
Who
Not going to link to it as I have no intention to e-beef or try and cause a pile on, but one of the more prominent RFC fans I often see on twitter commenting on things appears to be campaigning to make the entire thing about themselves and what a huge hero they are.
The ego they must have is quite something.
by Reading4eva » 14 Jan 2024 23:50
Pepe the HorsemanWinston BiscuitBrogue
Who
Not going to link to it as I have no intention to e-beef or try and cause a pile on, but one of the more prominent RFC fans I often see on twitter commenting on things appears to be campaigning to make the entire thing about themselves and what a huge hero they are.
The ego they must have is quite something.
Did see one of the prominent members of SBWD disagreeing with getting the game abandoned, presumably as it wasn't their idea, but happy to take credit for it now it's been deemed a success.
by Pepe the Horseman » 14 Jan 2024 23:52
Reading4evaPepe the HorsemanWinston Biscuit
Not going to link to it as I have no intention to e-beef or try and cause a pile on, but one of the more prominent RFC fans I often see on twitter commenting on things appears to be campaigning to make the entire thing about themselves and what a huge hero they are.
The ego they must have is quite something.
Did see one of the prominent members of SBWD disagreeing with getting the game abandoned, presumably as it wasn't their idea, but happy to take credit for it now it's been deemed a success.
I don't think anyone knew what the best scenario was. My opinion was "do it" as something needs to change and someone needs to listen. But it could have backfired. I think in conjunction with the build up protests, the tennis balls, the march... people have supported it.
Dai had every chance to do something at any point up to this stage including last season. But he hasn't. And therefore, the football world have seen it as the next step.
If he doesn't listen to this now, he's stupid, dumb or doesn't care. He's probably all three but at the same time I would hope he is being advised that his time is up.
by P!ssed Off » 14 Jan 2024 23:55
Pepe the HorsemanWinston BiscuitBrogue
Who
Not going to link to it as I have no intention to e-beef or try and cause a pile on, but one of the more prominent RFC fans I often see on twitter commenting on things appears to be campaigning to make the entire thing about themselves and what a huge hero they are.
The ego they must have is quite something.
Did see one of the prominent members of SBWD disagreeing with getting the game abandoned, presumably as it wasn't their idea, but happy to take credit for it now it's been deemed a success.
by oldebiscuit » 15 Jan 2024 00:01
John Madejski's WalletNathStPaul It had to happen. I don't think it should keep happening but I think a stand had to be made.
I feel sorry for the Port Vale fans, they have been extremely supportive of out plight. It would be a good idea for a representative of our supporters group to get in touch with Port Vale's supporters to see if there is a charitable organisation that they are linked to or are currently supporting. We of course can't compensate the Vale fans personally so maybe a bit of a fundraiser for a local Stoke cause would be a nice touch.
I'd donate tbf
by oldebiscuit » 15 Jan 2024 00:15
NathStPaulSt PauliLower West What's it actually achieved ?
Dai is the legal owner of the club. Mob rule isn't going to over rule the status quo. No oe is going to invest in any football c;lub with that concern in the backs of their minds. Sense of self entitlement is overpowering. Clubs rise and fall. That's the nature of sport in general.
F/ck off lower west.
Take your Daily Telegraph interpretation of history with you…
His name suggests he is a West Stand mong who takes his own sandwiches to games along with a tartan patterned blanket to pit over his legs.
by Reading4eva » 15 Jan 2024 00:21
Pepe the HorsemanReading4evaPepe the Horseman Did see one of the prominent members of SBWD disagreeing with getting the game abandoned, presumably as it wasn't their idea, but happy to take credit for it now it's been deemed a success.
I don't think anyone knew what the best scenario was. My opinion was "do it" as something needs to change and someone needs to listen. But it could have backfired. I think in conjunction with the build up protests, the tennis balls, the march... people have supported it.
Dai had every chance to do something at any point up to this stage including last season. But he hasn't. And therefore, the football world have seen it as the next step.
If he doesn't listen to this now, he's stupid, dumb or doesn't care. He's probably all three but at the same time I would hope he is being advised that his time is up.
Don't think it was ever about getting Dai to listen, we're past that. It was about getting national attention, which was a success.
by 72 bus » 15 Jan 2024 00:36
ozzyguyClyde1998ozzygull
As my username suggests I am a Brighton fan. I happen to live in Reading. In 1996 after hearing that our ground was to be sold (asset stripping) leaving us with nowhere to play, during a home game against York City Brighton fans invaded the pitch and broke the goal cross bar so the game could not be continued. Before that point nobody gave a monkey what was happening with a team stuck at the bottom of division 3 (League 2 today). It was the start that changed the course of our club’s history. It got our fight in to the national consciousness, we were deducted points for it and as result on the last game of the 97 season we are actually relegated to the conference league for about 45 minutes until we equalised and sent Hereford down on goals scored. The pitch invasion got the FA to get their finger out and became a mediator between the consortium that wanted to take over and the asset stripping aholes.
By the time they were gone and the consortium took over the only thing we had left was our league status and our name. No ground, no training facilities, no club office. We ended up to spending two seasons ground sharing with Gillingham.
Brighton put out a montage on the eve of our first game In Europe it started with the game against York.
https://youtu.be/KAqQiE44kXQ?si=iXGy_ZVBxVMMe6nJ
Living in Reading I was aware of what is happening in Reading and I join your protest march when you played Portsmouth. I wore my Brighton shirt, lot of your fans came up to say thank you to me and chatted about what was going, their fear, frustration and anger was very familiar to me.
On “northstandchat” the Brighton fans forum after your game yesterday there was a thread started about your issues and the overwhelming attitude is one of support and discussion on how we can help. I tried to bring Reading’s issues to the attention of our fans before, but not many were interested. What happened yesterday really made people sit up and take notice. I really hope it is the start of the end for Dai Yongge and Reading. ( if you do check on there have a thick skin as some people have no got over Steve Coppell leaving and the non playoff pitch invasion )
It may get worse for Reading yet, but the most important thing is you stick together as a fan base, once this fella is out of your club be there to pick up the pieces of what’s left.
Thank you. I think it's always worth remembering that other clubs have gone through similar issues and have managed to recover. Whatever any sporting animosity there may be between clubs, no set of fans should ever have to go through worrying about whether there will even be a club.
I'm relatively young (25), so throughout my early years of watching football, you were playing at the Withdean - a venue completely unsuitable for football. You were held back for years through lack of decent facilities. Now Brighton have one of the best grounds in the country. I've been to the Amex three times, most recently on Tuesday night, and it remains one of the most impressive venues I've been to of the 60-odd I've done; totally fitting of the current position of the club. Brighton are now one of the best sides in the country - especially of those outside the big six.
I think the impact of yesterday is greater than any of us expected. We're in a situation where we've got nothing to lose now; I don't think anyone really cares if we get relegated this season - as long as we've got a club at the end of it.
We've gone down hill so quickly, even a few weeks ago it didn't seem this desperate. I think the events of the last week - the CEO trying to sell players without informing the manager and DOF; the suggestion the owner is attempting to use our income to pay off his own debts and not being serious about selling the club; any sale of the club would involve the training ground being sold separately - has pushed people over the edge. It doesn't help that the owner and directors (all based in China) have been lying to the UK-based staff and supporters' groups about funding and their intentions since the start of the season.
We'll see what happens. Hopefully we can get back to normality at some point.
It was the same for us in 1997 we needed the owners out whatever happened, we were 12 point’s adrift at one point.
Real football fans do not pick their clubs because of its success, it maybe the place you are born, family connections or something else. It is part of your identity and the club has an important part to play in its community. I do not post on here to gloat but to offer hope and any advice as a fan that’s been through it and came out the other side.
The most satisfying thing you will have when this chapter in your club history is over and the good times start to comeback, you will be able to stand with pride knowing that you were there and you refused to let it die.
by YorkshireRoyal99 » 15 Jan 2024 08:52
by NathStPaul » 15 Jan 2024 08:56
YorkshireRoyal99 Fair play to those fans who went on the pitch and wanted to make a statement on Saturday, it's certainly gathered a lot more attention than previous as well. It's good to see people wanting to make a difference, what difference it will make who knows.
by paultheroyal » 15 Jan 2024 08:59
by NathStPaul » 15 Jan 2024 09:02
by WestYorksRoyal » 15 Jan 2024 09:06
by YorkshireRoyal99 » 15 Jan 2024 09:21
NathStPaul Dai doesn't have to do anything, thats the issue.
by NathStPaul » 15 Jan 2024 09:24
YorkshireRoyal99NathStPaul Dai doesn't have to do anything, thats the issue.
It's also now just pissing money up the wall for him. If he does have cash flow/liquidity issues, it doesn't make sense to keep hold of an asset that's costing you further. Which makes it even more bizarre.
In response to would I have been on the pitch, it depends who I was with. If I was with mates, then yes.
by paultheroyal » 15 Jan 2024 09:25
WestYorksRoyal I was on the fence, but having seen the reaction over the past couple of days you have to say it worked. So much coverage and more to come on various national podcasts I believe. Will it influence Dai, the EFL or government? I'm not optimistic, but we had to raise the agenda which has been achieved.
by Stranded » 15 Jan 2024 09:33
NathStPaulYorkshireRoyal99NathStPaul Dai doesn't have to do anything, thats the issue.
It's also now just pissing money up the wall for him. If he does have cash flow/liquidity issues, it doesn't make sense to keep hold of an asset that's costing you further. Which makes it even more bizarre.
In response to would I have been on the pitch, it depends who I was with. If I was with mates, then yes.
Whose money is it though? If it isn't his i.e a loan that he's never paying back he won't give a shit. I think he is in the scenario where he has multiple people after him in one way or another so he's just burying his head in the sand and hoping everyone goes away when he pops up for air.
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