A yank comes to England (flying out on Thursday!!)

Skilly McRailnob

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Probably on the wrong board, but...

A friend and I will be flying into Manchester on March 4 or 5. Most of the plans still need to be worked out, but right now we'll be attending the City-Villa game on the 5th, and then we'll gradually work our way south until we fly out of London the following weekend. Sure we'll do some sightseeing, but the goal is to watch as much football as possible.

-Best way to get tickets (for City as well as other matches)?
-What other matches should we target?
-Is BritRail a must?
-Good/cheap accommodations in/near Manchester?

Never been to England, so I don't have a clue...any and all suggestions will be appreciated.
 
Probably on the wrong board, but...

A friend and I will be flying into Manchester on March 4 or 5. Most of the plans still need to be worked out, but right now we'll be attending the City-Villa game on the 5th, and then we'll gradually work our way south until we fly out of London the following weekend. Sure we'll do some sightseeing, but the goal is to watch as much football as possible.

-Best way to get tickets (for City as well as other matches)?
-What other matches should we target?
-Is BritRail a must?
-Good/cheap accommodations in/near Manchester?

Never been to England, so I don't have a clue...any and all suggestions will be appreciated.
I take it you mean the rail pass for foreign tourists? I would say yes if you're doing a lot of travelling as buying individual tickets on the day is usually much more expensive.
 
As to BritRail, as I understand it if you know where you are travelling to and when you can probably do better by booking well in advance on the train operators' own websites. With Virgin Trains for instance you can get some very very good deals on the Manchester-London service if you book a few months in advance, but the problem is the low cost advance fares are not flexible. So if you can't go on the day and time you planned to go, you lose your money. I think the BritRail pass will save you 20% - but if you are prepared to take the risk you can do better simply by booking well ahead (and then you simply use the card you paid with to collect the tickets from a machine on the day of travel)
 
The TV changes haven't been announced that far ahead yet, the only fixture that looks a guaranteed TV pick that week is the North London Derby so the game could take place any time between 12 45 on the 5th and 7 45 on the 7th. Just something to bear in mind when planing your travel.
 
I suspect if you contact City directly they will let you know how to get tickets. They appear to have some systems in place for foreign fans coming for a one-off. At the very least you'll be able to buy one for that game off the website, no problem. There are loads of hotels in Manchester and in the City centre are some of the big, old, formerly grand ones like The Midland and The Brittania which you will get from something like Booking.com for, say £80-100 a night for a double room. They may be a bit faded but the central location makes them worthwhile. If budget is a big issue for you then there are hotels like The Britannia Counrty House Hotel in Didsbury which are a few miles away and very cheap indeed, maybe £50 a night. Stay on here and people can help you out no problem.
 
https://www.thetrainline.com/train-times
Use these for your train trips.

https://www.travelodge.co.uk/
Use Travel lodge for your hotels. Cheap and cheerful and they are everywhere in the UK.

Getting at ticket for Villa at Home will be easy. Just log online at MCFC.co.uk 2/3 week before the fixture then chose your seat.

I personally dont really think Manchester is a sight seeing City. You're best off just getting pissed when you're here and save the sight seeing for London.
 
Probably on the wrong board, but...

A friend and I will be flying into Manchester on March 4 or 5. Most of the plans still need to be worked out, but right now we'll be attending the City-Villa game on the 5th, and then we'll gradually work our way south until we fly out of London the following weekend. Sure we'll do some sightseeing, but the goal is to watch as much football as possible.

-Best way to get tickets (for City as well as other matches)?
-What other matches should we target?
-Is BritRail a must?
-Good/cheap accommodations in/near Manchester?

Never been to England, so I don't have a clue...any and all suggestions will be appreciated.

Not sure why you mean by BritRail? If you mean travelling by British Rail, it doesn't really exist anymore since the privatisation in the 90s. The trains are now operated by various private operators.

If you're wanting to travel from Manchester to London though, you're only direct option is Virgin Trains (real name!) The sooner you book, the cheaper the ticket.

Avoid travelling on a Monday morning or any morning before 9.30 for that matter, and avoid Friday afternoons as well. These times are absolutely packed and you might struggle to get a seat, and the price goes up accordingly.

Decent cheap hotels, check out Ibis, Premier Inn and Travelodge. They are all clean and cheap, similar standard to a Motel 6 in the US. Not luxurious by any means, but if you want somewhere cheap that's not an absolute shit hole, you can't really go far wrong with those.

There are a few in Manchester right on the edge of the city centre, there's a Travelodge on Blackfriars St, and a Premier Inn on Quay St which are 2 minutes walk to Deansgate, which is pretty much the main street / area in the city close to bars, restaurants, shops etc.

When looking at hotels I'd say look close to Deansgate, for the nicest / safest area, or if you prefer more independent and quirky bars / restaurants, look close to an area called The Northern Quarter.

I wouldn't stray too far from those areas though, there are probably cheaper alternatives further out of the city but you could end up being in the middle of nowhere with nothing to do and as a tourist you probably don't want to be walking around aimlessly in some of those areas. There's a Travelodge right near The Etihad but if you're planning to stay a few days, there really is nothing else for you to do near there.

Those hotel brands also exist in London, but expect to pay at least double the price in London.

In Manchester there are plenty of decent bars, restaurants, clubs, whatever your taste. I'd be happy to recommend places for you if you PM me with the kinds of places you like. The city centre is small enough to walk around, and if you are in to shopping Manchester is great for having lots of shops and department stores very close to each other.

Tourist wise, again it depends on your taste, but if you've obviously got an interest in football the National Football Meseum in Manchester is something they don't have in London. Any other type of museum or gallery I'd say wait until you get to London as there is far bigger choice and better quality there.

Getting tickets I don't think you'll struggle for City vs Villa. The best way would be to join the club as a "Cityzen" on the website as this allows you to buy tickets online in advance. It's now possible to print off e-tickets yourself which would be ideal for you.
 
As mentioned, the game could be on any of the Saturday / Sunday or Monday night kick off times and we wouldn't know the exact time until early in the new year TV schedules ar released - which fucks up your chances of getting the cheaper tickets on the train.
Also if you don't mind a longer travel time, Megabus is very cheap between Manchester and London and takes about 5 hours.
 
I you're looking, as you say, to watch more football during that week then there are a load of Championship fixtures on the evening of Tue 8 Mar and you should be able to find one to suit. There are usually some tasty games in the Championship and well worth a look.
 
Probably best to buy a UK Rail Pass before you arrive, which will give you total flexibility and avoid paying last minute high prices. You can configure it to your requirements before you buy. Also, they have special offers (cheaper) for February at the moment, so it might be worth waiting a few weeks to see if they do the same for March https://www.visitbritainshop.com/world/britrail-gb-pass/
 
You will have to try the local food I have never seen a real pie in the states, your eyes will be opened!

As for getting tickets like someone has said contact the club, I am sure they will be able to help
 
I presume like most you will head for London, but in my opinion we have much better places.
Bath / Chester / York / Oxford /Edinburgh.
I would suggest you buy Lonely Planet guide to Britain.
A brilliant book for travellers and gives you every piece of information you need from places to train's / bus's / hotels / restaurants /pubs .
 
I presume like most you will head for London, but in my opinion we have much better places.
Bath / Chester / York / Oxford /Edinburgh.
I would suggest you buy Lonely Planet guide to Britain.
A brilliant book for travellers and gives you every piece of information you need from places to train's / bus's / hotels / restaurants /pubs .

Yeah York and Chester tend to go down well with everyone.

In Manchester City match obviously, The National Football Museum, maybe the Etihad Stadium and Museum Tour, not sure they do an Etihad Campus/CFA tour yet and couldn't tell you how much is available for the public to see but someone else here should be able to tell you. Other than that use Manchester for the Shopping, the Food and the Night Life (most information about those will be available online if you want to tailor to your own tastes).
 
Lots of football that week. As well as premier league games that weekend, there is also last 16 Champions League games scheduled for that week as well as midweek championship football schedule.

If you want to see a more realistic football ground than the big arena types and are heading to London for your flight home, I would recommend getting tickets for the Fulham game. Old fashioned football ground right on the Thames and in a good area for drinking etc.

Some places worth a visit have already been mentioned. Agree with York, Bath, maybe Oxford worth a visit and the Lake District for a day if you are happy heading North first.

I prefer Premier Inn to Travelodge and can sometimes get rooms for a good price. London rooms in good quality hotels can be got for £100 a night currently at the back end of that week
 
American that has visited the UK 4 times.

I recommend The Temple bar, somewhere with a buffet in the Curry Mile, BarBurrito, 1 night in Bath, 1 day in Chester, Evil Eye Lounge in York, climb the dead volcano in Edinburgh, don't bother with Preston unless you want to bring wife/gf shopping or watch a match, see a musical in London (great shows and a lot cheaper than in the States)

and don't worry about waiting in the queue when ordering a drink :) they'll just think you're a dumb Yank with no manners but won't say anything about it. a couple English friends would give me their money and have me get the drinks. I didn't realize what I was doing was wrong until they laughed about it and let me in on the unwritten queue rules
 
If The City game is moved from the Saturday there is a game a few miles north of Manchester by tram (or bus) on that day - Bury v Bradford City. Could well be a promotion clash and probably a good crowd and atmosphere for that level. Lancashire v Yorkshire too!
 
Things to do in Manchester Football Museum & War Museum ,tour of Citys ground .if the game doesn't clash with City go and watch Bury only down the road 20 min on the tram .China town and Curry mile well worth a visit ,Shambles square before the game Mary ds after
 
Take him to York to see the Minster and Jorvik - he'll always remember them. A trip to Clitheroe, the Trough of Bowland and Whalley Abbey is also worth considering along with a night in Dublin's fair city.
 
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Your initiation ceremony should consist of a tour of all the shithole grounds we suffered in 1998-99. It doesn't matter if no football is being played, as it wasn't when we were watching either. Just turn up, get shedded in a few local alehouses and insult everyone you see who isn't a blue. Make your way to the ground, shout abuse for 90 minutes and have an argument with yourself about whether Royle should be sacked. A few more beers followed by either a ruck or a fuck or both if you're lucky and you're one of us.

Oh Manchester is wonderful.....
 

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