Rex
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Post by Rex on Dec 7, 2014 8:29:22 GMT
I hate to think how this bloke would deal with what we have been through!
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 9, 2014 10:49:11 GMT
3-0 DAHN!
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irishrover
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Post by irishrover on Dec 9, 2014 13:52:25 GMT
I must say I have no particular interest in any Premiership team (and don't really like any of the big teams at all) but I do take quite a lot of pleasure in watching Arsenal's annual capitulation at Stoke.
It's normally followed by a mass frothing of the mouth out of Islington about nasty horrible monsterous Northerners daring to touch Arsene's pretty ickle glass men and not just standing there and allowing themselves to be passed to death by their footballing betters. With concurrent demands to ban all football North of the Watford gap. They used to react exactly the same way when losing to Blackburn or Bolton - 'oh it's not fair - we play much nicer football, it's clearly been empirically proven, so we should begin with a 2 goal start at least; the moral victory is always ours'. This time though they were just flat out awful.
So I enjoy the schadenfreude at the sense of entitlement these fans are expressing. All big clubs are essentially the same and all have fans like this - what winds me up about the way Arsenal fans carry on though is their firm belief that their club is somehow different, more decent, more put upon and more deserving than anyone else. They are exactly the same as Man United, Man City, Liverpool, Chelsea etc. They behave exactly the same way, with exactly the same philosophy. Their owned by a Russian and an American and they have lost all links to their community. The difference is they're just not as good at is as some of the other big clubs so they cling on to this 'we play the game the way it is supposed to be played' nonsense in the hope it makes up for it. I can't believe the number of Arsenal who still hammer Van Persie and Fabregas for walking away from them when Arsenal have been doing exactly the same to other clubs for 100 years!
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Rex
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Post by Rex on Dec 13, 2014 11:06:04 GMT
I must say I have no particular interest in any Premiership team (and don't really like any of the big teams at all) but I do take quite a lot of pleasure in watching Arsenal's annual capitulation at Stoke. It's normally followed by a mass frothing of the mouth out of Islington about nasty horrible monsterous Northerners daring to touch Arsene's pretty ickle glass men and not just standing there and allowing themselves to be passed to death by their footballing betters. With concurrent demands to ban all football North of the Watford gap. They used to react exactly the same way when losing to Blackburn or Bolton - 'oh it's not fair - we play much nicer football, it's clearly been empirically proven, so we should begin with a 2 goal start at least; the moral victory is always ours'. This time though they were just flat out awful. So I enjoy the schadenfreude at the sense of entitlement these fans are expressing. All big clubs are essentially the same and all have fans like this - what winds me up about the way Arsenal fans carry on though is their firm belief that their club is somehow different, more decent, more put upon and more deserving than anyone else. They are exactly the same as Man United, Man City, Liverpool, Chelsea etc. They behave exactly the same way, with exactly the same philosophy. Their owned by a Russian and an American and they have lost all links to their community. The difference is they're just not as good at is as some of the other big clubs so they cling on to this 'we play the game the way it is supposed to be played' nonsense in the hope it makes up for it. I can't believe the number of Arsenal who still hammer Van Persie and Fabregas for walking away from them when Arsenal have been doing exactly the same to other clubs for 100 years!
I got taken to the Arsenal v Southampton game the other week. I had a great day out , and the Arsenal fans I met were really good company, but when it comes to their team and how they perceive it you are spot on. The guy next to me had a bit of a rant at full time, telling me it was embarrassing struggling to beat the 'likes of Southampton', I couldn't resist telling him that I was going to watch my team the following Saturday struggle to beat Welling (and we didn't even manage that!)
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Post by lostinspace on Dec 13, 2014 23:17:44 GMT
it's the belief they have the divine right to beat the "likes of Southampton" just by turning up, same applies to Liverpool muffc and the band of money suckers in the english premier league,
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brizzle
Lindsay Parsons
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Post by brizzle on Dec 14, 2014 17:48:30 GMT
I have been following this thread with some interest, and almost posted after the mid-week win in Turkey when Arsenal beat Galatasaray 1-4. Because after the tone of some of the posts it seemed like a bit of payback from Arsene Wenger, not that he would have lowered himself of course. Now I'm no great fan of Arsenal, as it happens I'm more of a Spurs man myself, but I am most definitely a fan of Arsene Wenger. I think that he brings a touch of class to English football in his personal deportment and statements, besides which he is perennially successful with the Arsenal team which he has assembled. Perhaps not as successful as some Arsenal fans wish that he and Arsenal could or would be, but nevertheless more consistently successful than most other Premiership teams. I believe that the man deserves plaudits not only for the team that he has assembled, but for what he is doing for football in England. So it goes without saying that when I read Patrick Collins article in today's '' Mail On Sunday,'' it not only reinforced my views on Arsene Wenger, but also expressed them in a way that I am incapable of doing. If you are intrerested in reading the article it is here . . . . . . but for the full article, which includes video clips, it is here . . . www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2873052/Arsene-Wenger-s-jeering-Arsenal-supporters-shows-fans-attitudes-increasingly-belligerent.htmlI honestly do wonder why on earth Wenger bothers to carry on, because I wouldn't think that he needs to. Presumably he must be either well compensated for his efforts, or (the more likely option in my view) he just loves Arsenal. But the biggest slur on his character (and on this occasion he did respond with the threat of legal action) was when he was accused of being a paedophile. Now that was quite disgraceful. But even his greatest critics must agree that he does certainly carry on . . . irrespective of everyone and anything, and when he does eventually decide to call it a day then at that point English football will be the poorer for it.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 14, 2014 19:49:47 GMT
I must say I have no particular interest in any Premiership team (and don't really like any of the big teams at all) but I do take quite a lot of pleasure in watching Arsenal's annual capitulation at Stoke. It's normally followed by a mass frothing of the mouth out of Islington about nasty horrible monsterous Northerners daring to touch Arsene's pretty ickle glass men and not just standing there and allowing themselves to be passed to death by their footballing betters. With concurrent demands to ban all football North of the Watford gap. They used to react exactly the same way when losing to Blackburn or Bolton - 'oh it's not fair - we play much nicer football, it's clearly been empirically proven, so we should begin with a 2 goal start at least; the moral victory is always ours'. This time though they were just flat out awful. So I enjoy the schadenfreude at the sense of entitlement these fans are expressing. All big clubs are essentially the same and all have fans like this - what winds me up about the way Arsenal fans carry on though is their firm belief that their club is somehow different, more decent, more put upon and more deserving than anyone else. They are exactly the same as Man United, Man City, Liverpool, Chelsea etc. They behave exactly the same way, with exactly the same philosophy. Their owned by a Russian and an American and they have lost all links to their community. The difference is they're just not as good at is as some of the other big clubs so they cling on to this 'we play the game the way it is supposed to be played' nonsense in the hope it makes up for it. I can't believe the number of Arsenal who still hammer Van Persie and Fabregas for walking away from them when Arsenal have been doing exactly the same to other clubs for 100 years! If your idea of a good day out is watching thugs like Shawcross and Noble elbowing, wrestling and kicking each other that's up to you, but what do you base the statement that they have 'lost all links to their community' on? When you have researched what their community dept actually do, free match tickets for local residents, the local jobs created, education programmes delivered, investment in local infrastructure etc, then spend a few minutes looking at the support they give to Bob Wilson's Willow Foundation. There is plenty done off the field in N5 that other clubs could learn from.
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Rex
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Post by Rex on Dec 14, 2014 20:20:51 GMT
I m sure Arsenal do their 'fair share' of charity work, probably no less or no more than other clubs, and probably because they think they ought to be seen to be 'doing something', and in that respect they are no different to any other premier league team. I don't particularly dislike Arsenal btw, I don't really give two hoots about any of the top teams, I posted the video to show just how idiotic some football fans have become, in this case it happened to be an Arsenal fan, but it could easily have been a follower of any team.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 14, 2014 21:06:57 GMT
I m sure Arsenal do their 'fair share' of charity work, probably no less or no more than other clubs, and probably because they think they ought to be seen to be 'doing something', and in that respect they are no different to any other premier league team. I don't particularly dislike Arsenal btw, I don't really give two hoots about any of the top teams, I posted the video to show just how idiotic some football fans have become, in this case it happened to be an Arsenal fan, but it could easily have been a follower of any team. The reply was aimed at Irish. I mentioned the Willow Foundation as it's one that they are understanably heavily involved with, but the rest of the community stuff goes well above and beyond what's actually required. They fill the stadium for just about every League game, go onto their website and try to buy match tickets, but still they give tickets away to locals and always seem to have 'inclusivity and diversity' programes going on. I agree, both blokes in that video are idiots, one won't be happy unless they dominate world football, the other would applaud a dog dirt if it wearing a red shirt with white arms, but every club have supporters like that, and the geezer who makes those videos, Robbie I think his name is, wouldn't get many views on his YouTube channel if he sought out the views Mr Average supporter. I have no idea if the philosophy within the club is any more charitable than at other wealthy clubs, but a story did the rounds a few weeks ago that Spurs had wanted to charge Paul Gascoigne for match tickets and were least in sight when he needed help. Arsenal are reported to have paid £22,000 and Wenger personally another £28,000 towards Paul's medical care recently. I'm not aware of them seeking any publicity for that? Again, I'm not saying that other clubs don't do that sort of thing, but to suggest that they are not interested in community issues looks like a bit of a harsh statement to me?
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irishrover
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Post by irishrover on Dec 14, 2014 23:51:35 GMT
I must say I have no particular interest in any Premiership team (and don't really like any of the big teams at all) but I do take quite a lot of pleasure in watching Arsenal's annual capitulation at Stoke. It's normally followed by a mass frothing of the mouth out of Islington about nasty horrible monsterous Northerners daring to touch Arsene's pretty ickle glass men and not just standing there and allowing themselves to be passed to death by their footballing betters. With concurrent demands to ban all football North of the Watford gap. They used to react exactly the same way when losing to Blackburn or Bolton - 'oh it's not fair - we play much nicer football, it's clearly been empirically proven, so we should begin with a 2 goal start at least; the moral victory is always ours'. This time though they were just flat out awful. So I enjoy the schadenfreude at the sense of entitlement these fans are expressing. All big clubs are essentially the same and all have fans like this - what winds me up about the way Arsenal fans carry on though is their firm belief that their club is somehow different, more decent, more put upon and more deserving than anyone else. They are exactly the same as Man United, Man City, Liverpool, Chelsea etc. They behave exactly the same way, with exactly the same philosophy. Their owned by a Russian and an American and they have lost all links to their community. The difference is they're just not as good at is as some of the other big clubs so they cling on to this 'we play the game the way it is supposed to be played' nonsense in the hope it makes up for it. I can't believe the number of Arsenal who still hammer Van Persie and Fabregas for walking away from them when Arsenal have been doing exactly the same to other clubs for 100 years! If your idea of a good day out is watching thugs like Shawcross and Noble elbowing, wrestling and kicking each other that's up to you, but what do you base the statement that they have 'lost all links to their community' on? When you have researched what their community dept actually do, free match tickets for local residents, the local jobs created, education programmes delivered, investment in local infrastructure etc, then spend a few minutes looking at the support they give to Bob Wilson's Willow Foundation. There is plenty done off the field in N5 that other clubs could learn from. I meant in terms of the relationship between club and fans - and becoming another sterile boring corporate club owned by 2 people who have no interest in the club itself. Half of my girlfriend's family are Arsenal fans from North London - all have working class jobs, none can afford to go and watch them anymore apart from very, very rarely when 20 years ago they could go every week. It's just part of the gentrification of football and I have no interest in that; it has no character; it just doesn't matter if those players are turning out wearing Arsenal shirts, Man United shirts, Real Madrid shirts, AC Milan shirts, - it is all the same, there is no differentiation between clubs anymore and no link between players and clubs either and Arsenal have contributed to that as much as anyone else. Charity has nothing to do with it - I find all the top clubs utterly soulless, not singling Arsenal particularly on that. What I object to is that Arsenal fans cling to this idea that they are the good one of that bunch - the club that plays the game the 'right way' etc etc. Man City claim to have created tons of jobs in East Manchester - claim to have invested massively in the local community, give s**tloads of money to local charities. Doesn't change my opinion that they are soulless waste of space who are completely detached from the history and tradition of English football like all top clubs. Again I can name 20-30 Man City fans I know who watched them in League 1 and can no longer afford to go - makes it all a total waste of time in my view. The casual fan and the fan who never goes is of more value to these clubs than the guy who has invested 40-50 years of his life and I have no time for that, renders the whole point of following a football club irrelevant. Might as well support the Harlem Globetrotters. On Arsene Wenger - an outstanding manager and a decent guy who certainly doesn't deserve the abuse of those idiots on the railway station or on that youtube link and who is amazingly committed to his vision of football and genuinely deserves the plaudits he gets I think. Any Arsenal fan giving him abuse is a moron. But he has no respect for the history and traditions of English football and in all honestly I preferred the top level game in this country 20 years ago to the game now so while he deserves credit for the impact he has made on the game in this country it's not progress I like. I like the game less now than I used to - I genuinely preferred George Graham's Arsenal to Arsene Wenger's. Not all progress is good - I preferred football when it was more physical, more emotional and more messy. Football is not a game that gets better to watch with increased technical precision. I want rock em, sock em punk football with a slight edge to it not a classical music performance. Robin Friday is my idea of romantic football figure, not Johan Cryuff.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 15, 2014 1:26:28 GMT
If your idea of a good day out is watching thugs like Shawcross and Noble elbowing, wrestling and kicking each other that's up to you, but what do you base the statement that they have 'lost all links to their community' on? When you have researched what their community dept actually do, free match tickets for local residents, the local jobs created, education programmes delivered, investment in local infrastructure etc, then spend a few minutes looking at the support they give to Bob Wilson's Willow Foundation. There is plenty done off the field in N5 that other clubs could learn from. I meant in terms of the relationship between club and fans - and becoming another sterile boring corporate club owned by 2 people who have no interest in the club itself. Half of my girlfriend's family are Arsenal fans from North London - all have working class jobs, none can afford to go and watch them anymore apart from very, very rarely when 20 years ago they could go every week. It's just part of the gentrification of football and I have no interest in that; it has no character; it just doesn't matter if those players are turning out wearing Arsenal shirts, Man United shirts, Real Madrid shirts, AC Milan shirts, - it is all the same, there is no differentiation between clubs anymore and no link between players and clubs either and Arsenal have contributed to that as much as anyone else. Charity has nothing to do with it - I find all the top clubs utterly soulless, not singling Arsenal particularly on that. What I object to is that Arsenal fans cling to this idea that they are the good one of that bunch - the club that plays the game the 'right way' etc etc. Man City claim to have created tons of jobs in East Manchester - claim to have invested massively in the local community, give s***loads of money to local charities. Doesn't change my opinion that they are soulless waste of space who are completely detached from the history and tradition of English football like all top clubs. Again I can name 20-30 Man City fans I know who watched them in League 1 and can no longer afford to go - makes it all a total waste of time in my view. The casual fan and the fan who never goes is of more value to these clubs than the guy who has invested 40-50 years of his life and I have no time for that, renders the whole point of following a football club irrelevant. Might as well support the Harlem Globetrotters. On Arsene Wenger - an outstanding manager and a decent guy who certainly doesn't deserve the abuse of those idiots on the railway station or on that youtube link and who is amazingly committed to his vision of football and genuinely deserves the plaudits he gets I think. Any Arsenal fan giving him abuse is a moron. But he has no respect for the history and traditions of English football and in all honestly I preferred the top level game in this country 20 years ago to the game now so while he deserves credit for the impact he has made on the game in this country it's not progress I like. I like the game less now than I used to - I genuinely preferred George Graham's Arsenal to Arsene Wenger's. Not all progress is good - I preferred football when it was more physical, more emotional and more messy. Football is not a game that gets better to watch with increased technical precision. I want rock em, sock em punk football with a slight edge to it not a classical music performance. Robin Friday is my idea of romantic football figure, not Johan Cryuff. I went with a friend to the Burnley game a couple of weeks back, she has a 'Red level' supporter's membership, her ticket price, £28.00. My ticket was a comp given by the club to local residents. We were at pitch level, in about the 15th row just to the side of one of the goals, Hard to concede that's pricing people out of watching their local team? Now that Rooney has grown up and calmed down a bit he shows that it's possible to be a highly skilled player with physical commitment, without kicking chunks out of the opposition. In what way is watching a thug like Kevin Davies or Vinnie Jones running around elbowing people better than watching an entire defence struggling to contain a talent like Rooney? It's actually easier to get tickets now than 20 years ago. Once again, don't brand the club as souless and disinterested in their local community without researching the facts. Plenty of the money generated is filtered back out into north London. I wasn't talking about stadium jobs, I was talking about new jobs within the community. So how different are 5th tier Bristol Rovers? Does the Chairman live 100 yards from the ground and drink in the local, then on match days stand on the terraces and sing his head off? Do the players catch a bus to the ground along with supporters? How many Rovers' players have grown up standing on the terraces at Twerton or in BS7 supporting the team? Football has changed, and not just at the top level. I think you are stuck in the 1960s.
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irishrover
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Post by irishrover on Dec 16, 2014 14:48:42 GMT
I meant in terms of the relationship between club and fans - and becoming another sterile boring corporate club owned by 2 people who have no interest in the club itself. Half of my girlfriend's family are Arsenal fans from North London - all have working class jobs, none can afford to go and watch them anymore apart from very, very rarely when 20 years ago they could go every week. It's just part of the gentrification of football and I have no interest in that; it has no character; it just doesn't matter if those players are turning out wearing Arsenal shirts, Man United shirts, Real Madrid shirts, AC Milan shirts, - it is all the same, there is no differentiation between clubs anymore and no link between players and clubs either and Arsenal have contributed to that as much as anyone else. Charity has nothing to do with it - I find all the top clubs utterly soulless, not singling Arsenal particularly on that. What I object to is that Arsenal fans cling to this idea that they are the good one of that bunch - the club that plays the game the 'right way' etc etc. Man City claim to have created tons of jobs in East Manchester - claim to have invested massively in the local community, give s***loads of money to local charities. Doesn't change my opinion that they are soulless waste of space who are completely detached from the history and tradition of English football like all top clubs. Again I can name 20-30 Man City fans I know who watched them in League 1 and can no longer afford to go - makes it all a total waste of time in my view. The casual fan and the fan who never goes is of more value to these clubs than the guy who has invested 40-50 years of his life and I have no time for that, renders the whole point of following a football club irrelevant. Might as well support the Harlem Globetrotters. On Arsene Wenger - an outstanding manager and a decent guy who certainly doesn't deserve the abuse of those idiots on the railway station or on that youtube link and who is amazingly committed to his vision of football and genuinely deserves the plaudits he gets I think. Any Arsenal fan giving him abuse is a moron. But he has no respect for the history and traditions of English football and in all honestly I preferred the top level game in this country 20 years ago to the game now so while he deserves credit for the impact he has made on the game in this country it's not progress I like. I like the game less now than I used to - I genuinely preferred George Graham's Arsenal to Arsene Wenger's. Not all progress is good - I preferred football when it was more physical, more emotional and more messy. Football is not a game that gets better to watch with increased technical precision. I want rock em, sock em punk football with a slight edge to it not a classical music performance. Robin Friday is my idea of romantic football figure, not Johan Cryuff. I went with a friend to the Burnley game a couple of weeks back, she has a 'Red level' supporter's membership, her ticket price, £28.00. My ticket was a comp given by the club to local residents. We were at pitch level, in about the 15th row just to the side of one of the goals, Hard to concede that's pricing people out of watching their local team? Now that Rooney has grown up and calmed down a bit he shows that it's possible to be a highly skilled player with physical commitment, without kicking chunks out of the opposition. In what way is watching a thug like Kevin Davies or Vinnie Jones running around elbowing people better than watching an entire defence struggling to contain a talent like Rooney? It's actually easier to get tickets now than 20 years ago. Once again, don't brand the club as souless and disinterested in their local community without researching the facts. Plenty of the money generated is filtered back out into north London. I wasn't talking about stadium jobs, I was talking about new jobs within the community. So how different are 5th tier Bristol Rovers? Does the Chairman live 100 yards from the ground and drink in the local, then on match days stand on the terraces and sing his head off? Do the players catch a bus to the ground along with supporters? How many Rovers' players have grown up standing on the terraces at Twerton or in BS7 supporting the team? Football has changed, and not just at the top level. I think you are stuck in the 1960s. No not the 1960s - simply the early to mid 90s. And yes I would happily say exactly the same thing about Bristol Rovers. It is not based on some starry eyed vision of the past which had its own flaws - it is based on finding the proesent state of fotball deeply unpleasant and increasingly soulless. It's quite simple really - I cannot see the point in the corporate model of football. What on earth is the point in making an emotional investment in a hedge fund which is pretty much all most football club's are these days. It is a US franchise model of running a sport - not a British engagement of mutual consideration in which there was a trade off between protecting the culture of a community asset and making money out of it. I have no interest in that model. I'm sorry but I just completely reject the idea that there has been no effect on the culture of English football in the last 20 years. A few schemes here and there do not change the fact that it has become harder and harder for people on average or below average income to live the life of a football fan. I have simply met too many people who feel completely excluded from clubs they have invested their life into to see the effect as anything other than negative. The thing has a long tail - what about families? One of the great traditions is the idea that 1/2/3 generations of the same family can go together. I know several people who could just about afford to go themselves but had to give up when they had families because they couldn't afford to take their kids as well. Therefore they couldn't give their kids the same experience of watching football that their father and their grandfathers experienced. To me this is the essence of football in the country - it is the whole point of the game; not flashy multi-million pound signings and gleaming stadiums. That is what I mean by community and that is what has been sacrificed in pursuit of becoming global mega-businesses. Fine if they make that decision that's up to them - leaves me utterly and completely cold though and if that's 'progress' they can all go stick it. I simply don't care anymore and I used to consider myself a Liverpool 'fan' whatever that meant. I also object to the idea that it's about quality over competition. The concentration of talent absolutely appals me. Who on earth benefits from quality players who would be stars at other clubs sitting on the bench for season after season at big clus? Renders the whole thing exercise and totally pointless to me. It becomes about Sports entertainment, not competition and competition is all that sport is about when it comes down to it. I mean really if we want to see the best players in the world play agianst each other then why not just do that? 22 players get together every 3 weeks Finally, I dislike the decline of the idea of football as an 'event'. The only aspect of top level football that really grabbed me in the last decade was Middlesborough's run to the UEFA Cup final. It had that unlikely quality, it had an air of once in a lifetime desperation and it was very, very exciting. It wasn't conventionally 'good football' but it was thrilling, pulsating stuff that stirred the blood. The reason is because it felt like an event. Even in my life time I'm old enough to remember when the FA Cup meant something and when you followed sides on European runs no matter who they were and it's because it was a relative rarity. Football was an event sport; these days it's dreary treadmill. We can predict who will do what in August. Oh look it's Chelsea v Barcelona again etc - who cares, there's not much on the line. Both teams will be playing Champions League football next season so if they lose they'll have another crack at it and the players involved could well be playing for any one of about 8-10 teams who make the Champions League every year. There's nothing original about it, nothing stand out about it. It is just a dreary treamill of predictability. Even when there is some kind of surprise it's on the line of Dortmund beating Barcelona - sorry, it's not that interesting. The big clubs are way too comfortable - there is just not enough on the line. Sport works best when there's an element of desperation not when everyone's in a giant comfort zone. Vinnie Jones? Yes, I generally enjoyed watching him - he's bought into his own stereotype actually he wasn't just an enforcer type he could play a bit too. Kevin Davies, yes I like him too. I like old fashioned back to goal strikers who use their physical strength - I liked Brett Angel, John Gayle those type of players and the chaos they could cause. I don't think football improves as spectacle with increased fitness and increased technical procision. Take the physical risk out and the technical has no more value than your average Futsal game and with about the same level of passion. I like that ball being moved forward quickly and directly - I don't like dull, dreary pass-pass-pass possession football. The most exciting I can remember seeing was the Cole, Yorke, Giggs, Scholes, Beckham United side that was based on a hard as nails midfield and then moving the ball quickly and directly down the flanks - I thought that was thrilling stuff and I hated Man United at the time. I preferred the game when it was more physical, more emotional (hearing managers talk about the game now makes me want to go and watch paint dry with their 'false 9's' and 'high press' etc), more nasty (and I mean on the pitch - no defence of hooliganism here), less organised, more full of humour and generally more rock and roll. The modern game leaves me cold both in the way it's played and in the culture around it which is increasingly humourless and hyperbolically angry (hence these guys) or 'how dare you attack my club' etc. Danny Baker is my idea of the way football should be (both on and off the pitch) - messy, silly, anarchic, irreverant, a bit edgy, warm-hearted and we've got away from all of that everywhere including Rovers. I went to Man City a month ago with a free ticket and nearly fell asleep it was so dead - the only time in the last 10 years I went to a top level game and had a good time was in Germany where all of that stuff still seemed to exist. If that's seen as stuck in the past then fair enough - it is an honest opinion. I haven't drunk the koolaid I was supposed to as I grew up with it, I have less interest in top level football not more. Now it's more of a backround hum than a way of life. It all seems a bit rubbish, false and plastic to me and I don't think I'd have been attracted to the game now as I was then. I only speak for me and it is clearly a miniority view but I know a surprising number of people who share at least parts of it.
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brizzle
Lindsay Parsons
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Post by brizzle on Dec 16, 2014 16:24:29 GMT
Irish, I have noticed that a common theme of your posts is to ''knock'' rose-tinters and 1960s-era football, all in a less-than-obvious way of course. Is it paranoia on my part, or a form of jealousy on yours that you may possibly have missed out I wonder? Incidentally as I can remember watching football in the 1950s, I do wonder where that falls in the grand scheme of things.
But having watched professional football for almost 60 years now, it is my opinion that the best football, together with a host of entertaining characters was in the 1960-1990's era. After that it became like politics . . . dull, boring and quite predictable. To be at of the big clubs grounds during this time was absolutely magic, and I can personally guarantee that you wouldn't have dozed off neither. Anfield, Goodison Park, Highbury, White Hart Lane, Elland Road . . . wherever you went the atmosphere was electric, and all of the grounds were full of characters. Even in the lower divisions the story was much the same, and BRFC and Eastville would have been high on the list of many ''foreign'' supporters at that time. How on earth you can occasionally denigrate a whole generation of football supporters as ''rose tinters'' has always baffled and frustrated me, but each to his own I suppose.
As a child and as a young man I was always delighted to hear stories of ''days gone by,'' when told by the older generation, but you appear to reject this. And I do wonder why?
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irishrover
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Post by irishrover on Dec 16, 2014 18:08:42 GMT
Irish, I have noticed that a common theme of your posts is to ''knock'' rose-tinters and 1960s-era football, all in a less-than-obvious way of course. Is it paranoia on my part, or a form of jealousy on yours that you may possibly have missed out I wonder? Incidentally as I can remember watching football in the 1950s, I do wonder where that falls in the grand scheme of things. But having watched professional football for almost 60 years now, it is my opinion that the best football, together with a host of entertaining characters was in the 1960-1990's era. After that it became like politics . . . dull, boring and quite predictable. To be at of the big clubs grounds during this time was absolutely magic, and I can personally guarantee that you wouldn't have dozed off neither. Anfield, Goodison Park, Highbury, White Hart Lane, Elland Road . . . wherever you went the atmosphere was electric, and all of the grounds were full of characters. Even in the lower divisions the story was much the same, and BRFC and Eastville would have been high on the list of many ''foreign'' supporters at that time. How on earth you can occasionally denigrate a whole generation of football supporters as ''rose tinters'' has always baffled and frustrated me, but each to his own I suppose. As a child and as a young man I was always delighted to hear stories of ''days gone by,'' when told by the older generation, but you appear to reject this. And I do wonder why? Oh, I see where you got that from and that isn't what I meant - the comment further up the thread was in no way a potshot at 1960s football which I certainly don't dismiss or denigrate. I am in absolutely no doubt that the bond between fans and club was stronger in the past, that fan culture was more interesting, that games had a better atmosphere and that all in all it meant more on a fundamental level. I really do believe that football has become a predictable treadmill devoid of real passion and replaced with a sense of entitlement and over the top anger from supporters. The culture of football fans now is the rant - these guys are Arsenal fans but they could be fans of anyone really and I prefer an older culture. The point I was making is that I don't need to go right back for that - I'm old enough to have witnessed a major sea change from the early 90's to feel that (which is ultimately it - you either feel it or you don't; it's not supposed to be a rational argument). I don't reject stories of the past at all - that's not what I'm trying to get at, nor do I challenge peoples right to celebrate it; that's all we have when it comes down to it. By all means give me 25,000 at Eastville etc, give me sides that were made up of homegrown players through the club and games that felt like they stood out and meant something. All of that is great. I don't think I've ever had any issue with that - no denigration there in any way and you're damn right I'm jealous that I only saw the tail end of that; name me a Rovers fan that isn't?! Where perhaps I do have an issue is with the idea that players and clubs today are less loyal than they used to be or less honourable than they used to be. I think that might be where I've taken issue before - not so much criticising a rose tinted view of the football culture perhaps but maybe the views of some of the people and clubs involved. There were very real downsides to some of those connections - namely that employment arrangements allowed clubs to treat players like crap and restricted the amount they could make out of the game while officials raked in the cash. I've never heard a player from the 50s/60s/70s say he wouldn't have moved if the kind of difference in money now existed then, which is completely fair enough of course. I think that's quite an important consideration though when you hear moans from older fans about the attitudes of todays players because much of that was built on keeping players wages artificially down and filling the pockets of club owners even after the maximum wage was abolished. So it was as much about players being screwed as it was players/clubs being loyal. The fact is a lot of the players that were idolised were (in modern terms) cheated by the game. My Grandad's favourite player was Wilf Manion - England star in the 30s and he wound up working as teaboy at Ayresome Park and died without penny to his name (a fate that befell a disturbing number of players from the golden age) when he'd played in front of huge crowds all his career. Tom Finney recently passed away in relative poverty in Preston - the fans raised money so that he could be put into a decent home when he became infirm. Things undoutedly improved as time went on but I'm always struck by the number of these players with heroic local reputations who were slung out of their clubs at the first sign of injury/decline and who had to endure pretty hard times post career and in old age; for all the talk of local players and heroic reputations, some of them didn't half find themselves in dire straits and lacking friends when the music stopped. That seems to fly in the face of some of the more sort of cosy communal visions of that era of football. Now it's not all about money - it's just one aspect. Another might be the occasional tendency to talk up the honesty and fair play of players when everything I've ever read about players who played in the 50s and 60s suggests it was far from that (starting maybe with Hunter Davis's book from the Spurs dressing room under Bill Nicholson). I've read stuff by plenty of ex-players suggesting that gambling and match fixing was rife throughout the era - from large scale to small scale stuff; like professionals doing deals with each other near the end of the season to make sure they hit certain targets in their contract (variations on 'I'll let you score if you let me etc') to players explaining what they'd get up to when the referee wasn't looking (grabbing unmentionables, raking studs down the Achilles, making sure they nailed a player in places they knew they had an existing injury etc). But here's the point where I might be misunderstood - I like all of that (well at least on the player side)! It's real and it's human and to me the reality is way more interesting and fun than some of the myths that are attached to it - I don't want hero's with halos round their heads, I want real people with real flaws. I don't want to believe in a golden age of football in which everyone was honest as the day is long and played the game with 100% integrity and completely for the fans anymore than I want to believe that the point of modern football is for Pep Guardiola and Arsene Wenger to eventually achieve a level of tactics and technique so perfect that there'll be no need for anyone to play ever again; the perfect game will have been played and it will end 0-0 by the way! I want the messy, anarchic world with real people in which you can have your Geoff Bradford's and your John Charles etc - your gentleman of the game. But you've also got another side to it all the Billy Smith's, the Nat Lofthouse's, the Norman Hunter's etc - the people who do anything behind the back of the ref to steal an advantage, the players who fought endlessly with Chairman and were moved on all the time because they wouldn't accept being treated like crap. It's messy and it looked something like real life, something that you could relate to - that's the point. So I guess where I might have issues with 'rose tinting' isn't in celebrating an era, that seems fair and interesting; it's when assumptions about the attitudes of players are used to criticise modern players. Having read quite a lot by and about these players I don't see a massive difference in attitudes once you take into account norms of the era; I do see a mammoth change in the incentive structures and rules. Every era has it's good points and bad points (the 80s had an amazing fan culture of fanzines and humour but it had horrendous hooliganism for example) but this one has turned football from a game to a brand. I'm a football romantic ultimately - I don't think there is any other way to be a fan and sanitised corporate football does nothing for me.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 16, 2014 18:53:36 GMT
I went with a friend to the Burnley game a couple of weeks back, she has a 'Red level' supporter's membership, her ticket price, £28.00. My ticket was a comp given by the club to local residents. We were at pitch level, in about the 15th row just to the side of one of the goals, Hard to concede that's pricing people out of watching their local team? Now that Rooney has grown up and calmed down a bit he shows that it's possible to be a highly skilled player with physical commitment, without kicking chunks out of the opposition. In what way is watching a thug like Kevin Davies or Vinnie Jones running around elbowing people better than watching an entire defence struggling to contain a talent like Rooney? It's actually easier to get tickets now than 20 years ago. Once again, don't brand the club as souless and disinterested in their local community without researching the facts. Plenty of the money generated is filtered back out into north London. I wasn't talking about stadium jobs, I was talking about new jobs within the community. So how different are 5th tier Bristol Rovers? Does the Chairman live 100 yards from the ground and drink in the local, then on match days stand on the terraces and sing his head off? Do the players catch a bus to the ground along with supporters? How many Rovers' players have grown up standing on the terraces at Twerton or in BS7 supporting the team? Football has changed, and not just at the top level. I think you are stuck in the 1960s. No not the 1960s - simply the early to mid 90s. And yes I would happily say exactly the same thing about Bristol Rovers. It is not based on some starry eyed vision of the past which had its own flaws - it is based on finding the proesent state of fotball deeply unpleasant and increasingly soulless. It's quite simple really - I cannot see the point in the corporate model of football. What on earth is the point in making an emotional investment in a hedge fund which is pretty much all most football club's are these days. It is a US franchise model of running a sport - not a British engagement of mutual consideration in which there was a trade off between protecting the culture of a community asset and making money out of it. I have no interest in that model. I'm sorry but I just completely reject the idea that there has been no effect on the culture of English football in the last 20 years. A few schemes here and there do not change the fact that it has become harder and harder for people on average or below average income to live the life of a football fan. I have simply met too many people who feel completely excluded from clubs they have invested their life into to see the effect as anything other than negative. The thing has a long tail - what about families? One of the great traditions is the idea that 1/2/3 generations of the same family can go together. I know several people who could just about afford to go themselves but had to give up when they had families because they couldn't afford to take their kids as well. Therefore they couldn't give their kids the same experience of watching football that their father and their grandfathers experienced. To me this is the essence of football in the country - it is the whole point of the game; not flashy multi-million pound signings and gleaming stadiums. That is what I mean by community and that is what has been sacrificed in pursuit of becoming global mega-businesses. Fine if they make that decision that's up to them - leaves me utterly and completely cold though and if that's 'progress' they can all go stick it. I simply don't care anymore and I used to consider myself a Liverpool 'fan' whatever that meant. I also object to the idea that it's about quality over competition. The concentration of talent absolutely appals me. Who on earth benefits from quality players who would be stars at other clubs sitting on the bench for season after season at big clus? Renders the whole thing exercise and totally pointless to me. It becomes about Sports entertainment, not competition and competition is all that sport is about when it comes down to it. I mean really if we want to see the best players in the world play agianst each other then why not just do that? 22 players get together every 3 weeks Finally, I dislike the decline of the idea of football as an 'event'. The only aspect of top level football that really grabbed me in the last decade was Middlesborough's run to the UEFA Cup final. It had that unlikely quality, it had an air of once in a lifetime desperation and it was very, very exciting. It wasn't conventionally 'good football' but it was thrilling, pulsating stuff that stirred the blood. The reason is because it felt like an event. Even in my life time I'm old enough to remember when the FA Cup meant something and when you followed sides on European runs no matter who they were and it's because it was a relative rarity. Football was an event sport; these days it's dreary treadmill. We can predict who will do what in August. Oh look it's Chelsea v Barcelona again etc - who cares, there's not much on the line. Both teams will be playing Champions League football next season so if they lose they'll have another crack at it and the players involved could well be playing for any one of about 8-10 teams who make the Champions League every year. There's nothing original about it, nothing stand out about it. It is just a dreary treamill of predictability. Even when there is some kind of surprise it's on the line of Dortmund beating Barcelona - sorry, it's not that interesting. The big clubs are way too comfortable - there is just not enough on the line. Sport works best when there's an element of desperation not when everyone's in a giant comfort zone. Vinnie Jones? Yes, I generally enjoyed watching him - he's bought into his own stereotype actually he wasn't just an enforcer type he could play a bit too. Kevin Davies, yes I like him too. I like old fashioned back to goal strikers who use their physical strength - I liked Brett Angel, John Gayle those type of players and the chaos they could cause. I don't think football improves as spectacle with increased fitness and increased technical procision. Take the physical risk out and the technical has no more value than your average Futsal game and with about the same level of passion. I like that ball being moved forward quickly and directly - I don't like dull, dreary pass-pass-pass possession football. The most exciting I can remember seeing was the Cole, Yorke, Giggs, Scholes, Beckham United side that was based on a hard as nails midfield and then moving the ball quickly and directly down the flanks - I thought that was thrilling stuff and I hated Man United at the time. I preferred the game when it was more physical, more emotional (hearing managers talk about the game now makes me want to go and watch paint dry with their 'false 9's' and 'high press' etc), more nasty (and I mean on the pitch - no defence of hooliganism here), less organised, more full of humour and generally more rock and roll. The modern game leaves me cold both in the way it's played and in the culture around it which is increasingly humourless and hyperbolically angry (hence these guys) or 'how dare you attack my club' etc. Danny Baker is my idea of the way football should be (both on and off the pitch) - messy, silly, anarchic, irreverant, a bit edgy, warm-hearted and we've got away from all of that everywhere including Rovers. I went to Man City a month ago with a free ticket and nearly fell asleep it was so dead - the only time in the last 10 years I went to a top level game and had a good time was in Germany where all of that stuff still seemed to exist. If that's seen as stuck in the past then fair enough - it is an honest opinion. I haven't drunk the koolaid I was supposed to as I grew up with it, I have less interest in top level football not more. Now it's more of a backround hum than a way of life. It all seems a bit rubbish, false and plastic to me and I don't think I'd have been attracted to the game now as I was then. I only speak for me and it is clearly a miniority view but I know a surprising number of people who share at least parts of it. Can't be bothered to wade through all of that! I'm guessing you are ranting that modern football is contrived, but ignore the fact that the protagonists are now athletes rather than a bunch of blokes having a laugh and getting pissed up, often the night before the game. Also guessing that you haven't bothered looking at what Arsenal's community dept actually do. Yes, it's a business first and foremost, but the area would miss them if they left. To be honest, you lost me when you started talking about Robin Friday, obviously a tragic waste of a young life, but as a player he was a nasty piece of work.
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Rex
Predictions League
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Posts: 3,287
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Post by Rex on Dec 16, 2014 19:40:39 GMT
No not the 1960s - simply the early to mid 90s. And yes I would happily say exactly the same thing about Bristol Rovers. It is not based on some starry eyed vision of the past which had its own flaws - it is based on finding the proesent state of fotball deeply unpleasant and increasingly soulless. It's quite simple really - I cannot see the point in the corporate model of football. What on earth is the point in making an emotional investment in a hedge fund which is pretty much all most football club's are these days. It is a US franchise model of running a sport - not a British engagement of mutual consideration in which there was a trade off between protecting the culture of a community asset and making money out of it. I have no interest in that model. I'm sorry but I just completely reject the idea that there has been no effect on the culture of English football in the last 20 years. A few schemes here and there do not change the fact that it has become harder and harder for people on average or below average income to live the life of a football fan. I have simply met too many people who feel completely excluded from clubs they have invested their life into to see the effect as anything other than negative. The thing has a long tail - what about families? One of the great traditions is the idea that 1/2/3 generations of the same family can go together. I know several people who could just about afford to go themselves but had to give up when they had families because they couldn't afford to take their kids as well. Therefore they couldn't give their kids the same experience of watching football that their father and their grandfathers experienced. To me this is the essence of football in the country - it is the whole point of the game; not flashy multi-million pound signings and gleaming stadiums. That is what I mean by community and that is what has been sacrificed in pursuit of becoming global mega-businesses. Fine if they make that decision that's up to them - leaves me utterly and completely cold though and if that's 'progress' they can all go stick it. I simply don't care anymore and I used to consider myself a Liverpool 'fan' whatever that meant. I also object to the idea that it's about quality over competition. The concentration of talent absolutely appals me. Who on earth benefits from quality players who would be stars at other clubs sitting on the bench for season after season at big clus? Renders the whole thing exercise and totally pointless to me. It becomes about Sports entertainment, not competition and competition is all that sport is about when it comes down to it. I mean really if we want to see the best players in the world play agianst each other then why not just do that? 22 players get together every 3 weeks Finally, I dislike the decline of the idea of football as an 'event'. The only aspect of top level football that really grabbed me in the last decade was Middlesborough's run to the UEFA Cup final. It had that unlikely quality, it had an air of once in a lifetime desperation and it was very, very exciting. It wasn't conventionally 'good football' but it was thrilling, pulsating stuff that stirred the blood. The reason is because it felt like an event. Even in my life time I'm old enough to remember when the FA Cup meant something and when you followed sides on European runs no matter who they were and it's because it was a relative rarity. Football was an event sport; these days it's dreary treadmill. We can predict who will do what in August. Oh look it's Chelsea v Barcelona again etc - who cares, there's not much on the line. Both teams will be playing Champions League football next season so if they lose they'll have another crack at it and the players involved could well be playing for any one of about 8-10 teams who make the Champions League every year. There's nothing original about it, nothing stand out about it. It is just a dreary treamill of predictability. Even when there is some kind of surprise it's on the line of Dortmund beating Barcelona - sorry, it's not that interesting. The big clubs are way too comfortable - there is just not enough on the line. Sport works best when there's an element of desperation not when everyone's in a giant comfort zone. Vinnie Jones? Yes, I generally enjoyed watching him - he's bought into his own stereotype actually he wasn't just an enforcer type he could play a bit too. Kevin Davies, yes I like him too. I like old fashioned back to goal strikers who use their physical strength - I liked Brett Angel, John Gayle those type of players and the chaos they could cause. I don't think football improves as spectacle with increased fitness and increased technical procision. Take the physical risk out and the technical has no more value than your average Futsal game and with about the same level of passion. I like that ball being moved forward quickly and directly - I don't like dull, dreary pass-pass-pass possession football. The most exciting I can remember seeing was the Cole, Yorke, Giggs, Scholes, Beckham United side that was based on a hard as nails midfield and then moving the ball quickly and directly down the flanks - I thought that was thrilling stuff and I hated Man United at the time. I preferred the game when it was more physical, more emotional (hearing managers talk about the game now makes me want to go and watch paint dry with their 'false 9's' and 'high press' etc), more nasty (and I mean on the pitch - no defence of hooliganism here), less organised, more full of humour and generally more rock and roll. The modern game leaves me cold both in the way it's played and in the culture around it which is increasingly humourless and hyperbolically angry (hence these guys) or 'how dare you attack my club' etc. Danny Baker is my idea of the way football should be (both on and off the pitch) - messy, silly, anarchic, irreverant, a bit edgy, warm-hearted and we've got away from all of that everywhere including Rovers. I went to Man City a month ago with a free ticket and nearly fell asleep it was so dead - the only time in the last 10 years I went to a top level game and had a good time was in Germany where all of that stuff still seemed to exist. If that's seen as stuck in the past then fair enough - it is an honest opinion. I haven't drunk the koolaid I was supposed to as I grew up with it, I have less interest in top level football not more. Now it's more of a backround hum than a way of life. It all seems a bit rubbish, false and plastic to me and I don't think I'd have been attracted to the game now as I was then. I only speak for me and it is clearly a miniority view but I know a surprising number of people who share at least parts of it. Can't be bothered to wade through all of that! I'm guessing you are ranting that modern football is contrived, but ignore the fact that the protagonists are now athletes rather than a bunch of blokes having a laugh and getting pissed up, often the night before the game. Also guessing that you haven't bothered looking at what Arsenal's community dept actually do. Yes, it's a business first and foremost, but the area would miss them if they left. To be honest, you lost me when you started talking about Robin Friday, obviously a tragic waste of a young life, but as a player he was a nasty piece of work. Slightly ironic to accuse Irish making comment without 'researching his facts' in an earlier post then comment on his with an opening line of 'Can't be bothered to wade through all that'!
I took the gist of what he said to be that football was much more fun to be part of when it wasn't all quite so 'perfect', and I agree with him. That may make us both some kind of footballing philistines to some, but if it's what we both prefer, then it's what we both prefer. What I saw on the pitch at Welling last week, engaged me far more than what I saw at The Emirates, admittedly Rovers are my team, so that would have played a part, but I certainly enjoy what some may call an agricultural type of football match than what others may describe as a technically brilliant one.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 16, 2014 21:59:28 GMT
Can't be bothered to wade through all of that! I'm guessing you are ranting that modern football is contrived, but ignore the fact that the protagonists are now athletes rather than a bunch of blokes having a laugh and getting pissed up, often the night before the game. Also guessing that you haven't bothered looking at what Arsenal's community dept actually do. Yes, it's a business first and foremost, but the area would miss them if they left. To be honest, you lost me when you started talking about Robin Friday, obviously a tragic waste of a young life, but as a player he was a nasty piece of work. Slightly ironic to accuse Irish making comment without 'researching his facts' in an earlier post then comment on his with an opening line of 'Can't be bothered to wade through all that'!
I took the gist of what he said to be that football was much more fun to be part of when it wasn't all quite so 'perfect', and I agree with him. That may make us both some kind of footballing philistines to some, but if it's what we both prefer, then it's what we both prefer. What I saw on the pitch at Welling last week, engaged me far more than what I saw at The Emirates, admittedly Rovers are my team, so that would have played a part, but I certainly enjoy what some may call an agricultural type of football match than what others may describe as a technically brilliant one.
Maybe you are right, but I was right not to read it, now that I've made the effort, it adds nothing to what he said earlier. The difference being, I made it clear that I was guessing what he's saying, he directly accused Arsenal of losing links with the community, when the exact opposite is the case. Lionel Messi or Kevin Muscat? You pays your money and takes your choice
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irishrover
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Post by irishrover on Dec 16, 2014 23:03:15 GMT
Slightly ironic to accuse Irish making comment without 'researching his facts' in an earlier post then comment on his with an opening line of 'Can't be bothered to wade through all that'!
I took the gist of what he said to be that football was much more fun to be part of when it wasn't all quite so 'perfect', and I agree with him. That may make us both some kind of footballing philistines to some, but if it's what we both prefer, then it's what we both prefer. What I saw on the pitch at Welling last week, engaged me far more than what I saw at The Emirates, admittedly Rovers are my team, so that would have played a part, but I certainly enjoy what some may call an agricultural type of football match than what others may describe as a technically brilliant one.
Maybe you are right, but I was right not to read it, now that I've made the effort, it adds nothing to what he said earlier. The difference being, I made it clear that I was guessing what he's saying, he directly accused Arsenal of losing links with the community, when the exact opposite is the case. Lionel Messi or Kevin Muscat? You pays your money and takes your choice So are you suggesting the whole thing rests on whether Arsenal give a wadge of money to local good causes and run some community outreach schemes? urgo - that means they are a social force for good and any other criticism is invalid. Is that the basis of the argument? Because that's clearly not what I mean by community. Community is not a top down process of benevolence defined by the organisation that's providing it - that's charity. In itself that's a corporate definition of community; most banks and major companies do these kind of things and most of their communities would be stuffed if they left; that doesn't make everything they do beyond criticism. I mean community in the sense of people's relationship with each other and with the club; that's a real sense of community. It's not something you run or operate or invest in, it's something you either have or lose because it's not a one way street. Man City do loads of stuff in the area I live in - they invest in homeless shelters, they offer free tickets to under privileged kids, they run drugs awareness programs in Mosside, provide books for schools; absolutely loads of stuff. But that doesn't stop most Man City fans I know complaining that the club feels distant to them, saying they don't care as much and saying they won't be able to take their kids in the same way their father and their grandfather took them. That's the kind of Community I'm on about - a mutual engagement. They could solve all homelessness in Manchester and give everyone in my street £100 and it still wouldn't change the fact that they have fundamentally transformed (some might say destroyed) emotional links that have lasted for 3 or 4 generations. That's behaving like philistine's in my book. You seem to like the idea of football as some kind of moral device. Robin Friday = Bad, Lionel Messi = good. Vinnie Jones = Bad, Johan Cryuff = good, passing = good long ball = bad, Stoke = Bad, Arsenal = good etc. I don't really get that as an approach to being a fan - I can't see how the game exists in that kind of good or evil frame. I didn't mean Robin Friday is this great example of humanity; of course he wasn't, the guy was a dick. The point is, why shouldn't there be dicks in football? Why only want the game to be played by a certain type of hyper-professional? Why does it need to be this morally pure enterprise where the aim is endless personal and tactical improvement? I want football to be something people can relate to - not some kind of magical world on a pedestal. I liked football when it was messy and mistakes driven and played by real people with flaws who people can relate to (Tony Adams is a great example) not media managed brands. Mistakes make for a better game and flaws make for a more interesting world, surely the perfectly played match would end 0-0? The best football I saw in the last year was the final 20 minutes of Everton v Liverpool last season where both sides lost the plot, lost their shape and just went for it like a playground all in game and I remember thinking why don't we ever see this anymore? The managers were going spare on the touchline, no one was in the right position, everyone coughing up posession but you know what the crowd was going mental and that was fun and it was purely from the heart not the head. The most fun game I've seen this season; Scotland v Ireland at Celtic Park and I'm not really interested in either side. Technically very average but my god it really meant something to the people on the pitch and in the stands so who cares about the quality and I remember so many details from that game (I can't remember a thing from the Manchester derby I watched, not even the exact score); I'd take a ticket to watch that game over any Premiership match this season.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 17, 2014 0:57:25 GMT
Maybe you are right, but I was right not to read it, now that I've made the effort, it adds nothing to what he said earlier. The difference being, I made it clear that I was guessing what he's saying, he directly accused Arsenal of losing links with the community, when the exact opposite is the case. Lionel Messi or Kevin Muscat? You pays your money and takes your choice So are you suggesting the whole thing rests on whether Arsenal give a wadge of money to local good causes and run some community outreach schemes? urgo - that means they are a social force for good and any other criticism is invalid. Is that the basis of the argument? Because that's clearly not what I mean by community. Community is not a top down process of benevolence defined by the organisation that's providing it - that's charity. In itself that's a corporate definition of community; most banks and major companies do these kind of things and most of their communities would be stuffed if they left; that doesn't make everything they do beyond criticism. I mean community in the sense of people's relationship with each other and with the club; that's a real sense of community. It's not something you run or operate, it's something you either have or lose or invest in because it's not a one way street, and that's whats been transformed. Man City do loads of stuff in the area I live in - they invest in homeless shelters, they offer free tickets to under priviledged kids, they run drugs awareness programs in Mosside, provide books for schools; absolutely loads of stuff. But that doesn't stop most Man City fans I know complaining that the club feels distant to them, saying they don't care as much and saying they won't be able to take their kids in the same way their father and their grandfather took them. That's the kind of Community I'm on about - a mutual engagement. They could solve all homelessness in Manchester and it still wouldn't change the fact that they have fundamentally transformed (some might say destroyed) emotional links that have lasted for 3 or 4 generations. That's behaving like philistine's in my book. You seem to like the idea of football as some kind of moral device. Robin Friday = Bad, Lionel Messi = good. Vinnie Jones = Bad, Johan Cryuff = good, passing = good long ball = bad, Stoke = Bad, Arsenal = good etc. I don't really get that as an approach to being a fan - I can't see how the game exists in that kind of good or evil frame. I didn't mean Robin Friday is this great example of humanity; of course he wasn't, the guy was a dick. The point is, why shouldn't there be dicks in football? Why only want the game to be played by a certain type of hyper-professional? Why does it need to be this morally pure enterprise where the aim is endless personal and tactical improvement? I want football to be something people can relate to - not some kind of magical world on a pedestal. I liked football when it was messy and mistakes driven and played by real people with flaws who people can relate to (Tony Adams is a great example) not media managed brands. Mistakes make for a better game and flaws make for a more interesting world, surely the perfectly played match would end 0-0? The best football I saw in the last year was the final 20 minutes of Everton v Liverpool last season where both sides lost the plot, lost their shape and just went for it like a playground all in game and I remember thinking why don't we ever see this anymore? The managers were going spare on the touchline, no one was in the right position, everyone coughing up posession but you know what the crowd was going mental and that was fun and it was purely from the heart not the head. The most fun game I've seen this season; Scotland v Ireland at Celtic Park and I'm not really interested in either side. Technically very average but my god it really meant something to the people on the pitch and in the stands so who cares about the quality and I remember so many details from that game (I can't remember a thing from the Manchester derby I watched, not even the exact score); I'd take a ticket to watch that game over any Premiership match this season. Society has changed, you seem to be blaming that on wealthy football clubs, when the reality is that the big clubs do more than their fair share to create the exact community spirit you are accusing them of destroying. So, let me get this straight, your mates who are City fans would rather have cheap tickets to a football match than have homeless shelters, help for people with addictions, well stocked libraries, free soccer schools, coaching courses, working with local youngsters who are at risk of falling into a 'gang culture' lifestyle etc etc. To be honest, City sound like the sort of club I would want in my community. Friday was a 'dick' but that's the sort of player you want to watch? Makes no sense, guess you love it when a defender runs his studs down the back of Arjen Roben's legs, but hey, whatever rocks your boat. I'll agree about Stoke though, Stoke = bad, any club who continue to employ an animal like 'he's not that type of lad' Shawcross deserve zero respect. It's not just the way that he could easilly have ruined Ramsey's entire career, the bloke has previous, if it wasn't Ramsey it would have been someone else, that has no place in football. You stand there clapping as players wrestle each other to the floor if you like, I'll stick with enjoying Messi, Ronaldo and Neymar along with memories of Henry, Revilinho and Pele if it's all the same.
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irishrover
Global Moderator
Joined: June 2014
Posts: 3,372
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Post by irishrover on Dec 18, 2014 16:59:40 GMT
So are you suggesting the whole thing rests on whether Arsenal give a wadge of money to local good causes and run some community outreach schemes? urgo - that means they are a social force for good and any other criticism is invalid. Is that the basis of the argument? Because that's clearly not what I mean by community. Community is not a top down process of benevolence defined by the organisation that's providing it - that's charity. In itself that's a corporate definition of community; most banks and major companies do these kind of things and most of their communities would be stuffed if they left; that doesn't make everything they do beyond criticism. I mean community in the sense of people's relationship with each other and with the club; that's a real sense of community. It's not something you run or operate, it's something you either have or lose or invest in because it's not a one way street, and that's whats been transformed. Man City do loads of stuff in the area I live in - they invest in homeless shelters, they offer free tickets to under priviledged kids, they run drugs awareness programs in Mosside, provide books for schools; absolutely loads of stuff. But that doesn't stop most Man City fans I know complaining that the club feels distant to them, saying they don't care as much and saying they won't be able to take their kids in the same way their father and their grandfather took them. That's the kind of Community I'm on about - a mutual engagement. They could solve all homelessness in Manchester and it still wouldn't change the fact that they have fundamentally transformed (some might say destroyed) emotional links that have lasted for 3 or 4 generations. That's behaving like philistine's in my book. You seem to like the idea of football as some kind of moral device. Robin Friday = Bad, Lionel Messi = good. Vinnie Jones = Bad, Johan Cryuff = good, passing = good long ball = bad, Stoke = Bad, Arsenal = good etc. I don't really get that as an approach to being a fan - I can't see how the game exists in that kind of good or evil frame. I didn't mean Robin Friday is this great example of humanity; of course he wasn't, the guy was a dick. The point is, why shouldn't there be dicks in football? Why only want the game to be played by a certain type of hyper-professional? Why does it need to be this morally pure enterprise where the aim is endless personal and tactical improvement? I want football to be something people can relate to - not some kind of magical world on a pedestal. I liked football when it was messy and mistakes driven and played by real people with flaws who people can relate to (Tony Adams is a great example) not media managed brands. Mistakes make for a better game and flaws make for a more interesting world, surely the perfectly played match would end 0-0? The best football I saw in the last year was the final 20 minutes of Everton v Liverpool last season where both sides lost the plot, lost their shape and just went for it like a playground all in game and I remember thinking why don't we ever see this anymore? The managers were going spare on the touchline, no one was in the right position, everyone coughing up posession but you know what the crowd was going mental and that was fun and it was purely from the heart not the head. The most fun game I've seen this season; Scotland v Ireland at Celtic Park and I'm not really interested in either side. Technically very average but my god it really meant something to the people on the pitch and in the stands so who cares about the quality and I remember so many details from that game (I can't remember a thing from the Manchester derby I watched, not even the exact score); I'd take a ticket to watch that game over any Premiership match this season. Society has changed, you seem to be blaming that on wealthy football clubs, when the reality is that the big clubs do more than their fair share to create the exact community spirit you are accusing them of destroying. So, let me get this straight, your mates who are City fans would rather have cheap tickets to a football match than have homeless shelters, help for people with addictions, well stocked libraries, free soccer schools, coaching courses, working with local youngsters who are at risk of falling into a 'gang culture' lifestyle etc etc. To be honest, City sound like the sort of club I would want in my community. Friday was a 'dick' but that's the sort of player you want to watch? Makes no sense, guess you love it when a defender runs his studs down the back of Arjen Roben's legs, but hey, whatever rocks your boat. I'll agree about Stoke though, Stoke = bad, any club who continue to employ an animal like 'he's not that type of lad' Shawcross deserve zero respect. It's not just the way that he could easilly have ruined Ramsey's entire career, the bloke has previous, if it wasn't Ramsey it would have been someone else, that has no place in football. You stand there clapping as players wrestle each other to the floor if you like, I'll stick with enjoying Messi, Ronaldo and Neymar along with memories of Henry, Revilinho and Pele if it's all the same. I'm not convinced Society has actually changed that much - I still think people value those connections and traditions a great deal. What I see mostly is sadness, dissapointment and apathy among my friends that they can't go to football on a Saturday afternoon anymore. I think that's all football is about when it comes to it - that's what makes it special; the emotional attachment is what seperates it from other forms of entertainment, organisations and even other sports. Without those emotional links you might as well cheer for the Lloyds bank's community department. To me it's incredibly sad that a lot of these bonds have been broken for people. The broader social good football clubs have or don't have is debatable (I would argue Man City have basically bought off the council asking awkward questions about their tax arrangements and planning issues and ends don't justify means fir me) but, no, that trade off (which I don't really recognise as valid) is not worth it because football club's great value was in the depth of the emotional connections it gave people with their community and the people around them not as sort of top down charitable trust; there is nothing special or unique about the latter they exist in many forms for better or worse- there is something very special in the former and it's been eroded for a huge number of people. It's not about good or bad; that's the point. I don't neccesarily want to watch Robin Friday or Vinnie Jones all the time but I don't want a game that is sanistised of them completely either on the false basis that there is something 'bad' about them that needs expunging so the game can be populated by identikit hyper-professionals striving for perfection. I'd rather a game containing players I can relate to and recognise and that to some degree reflects the society I live in for all its messy contradictions; that's something I can connect with and care about; it's what attracted me to football in the first place as a kid. I find it difficult to care about or relate to a game involving pampered over-hyped, over-protected superstars who live in a fantasy land. I can't relate to Pele, Messi, Revolinho, Henry, Gareth Bale, Wayne Rooney etc - I can admire them as genius's but it is at a distance. I can see Tony Adams as my mate's dad, I can see Ian Wright as like someone I grew up with who was fun to be around, I can see Ossie Ardilles as the likeable kid who is struggling to fit in, I can see Robin Friday as that nutter I was at school with who completely lost the plot and ended up in prison etc. However superficial I can care about that. Now people either admire players and clubs or they mock them; they don't relate or empathise. The emotion is replaced by a sense of desire (sometimes entitlement) and shedloads of tedious anger with very little in between; people react so OTT to relatively small setbacks or perceived slights on their club ('the media is anti-Arsenal/Liverpool/Man United etc...', 'x hasn't tried hard enough in the last few games', 'we haven't won anything for 2 minutes sack everybody' etc) like these guys. Arsenal are 6th in the league and in the last 16 of CL you'd think the club was going out business or in the relegation zone for crying outloud! Makes it hard work rather than fun and reflective glory is all that remains. The City and United fans I know seem to feel relief not joy when they win and get far more worked up when someone criticises their club than they seem to enjoy when things are going well. It seems such a negative experience. That's what I'm trying to get across - it's not a simple 'things are crap now and were great then' argument or vice versa. Clearly most people don't agree with me but I'm trying to explain why I find myself caring less and less, which I find upsetting because this is something that was very important to me and I find myself increasingly alienated from. To me this stuff really matters. I honestly think it's part of the reason darts has become so popular (it got bigger ratings at times than football last Christmas) - it's just blokes throwing nails at the wall really accurately; very skillful but limited. But they seem like relatable people and the fans all seem to be having fun and not spending all their time treating their guy like an infallible god and hating on any opponent (beyond panto style booing) or perceived flaw; that's all being a football fan seems to be right now. Tribalism with none of the positives.
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