Andy Mitten M.E.N Success comes at a price

bluemanc said:
Reliving City winning the league at United’s expense is not something I’ll make a habit of, but I saw a photo a few weeks after that mind-numbing afternoon which remains vivid. It was a Facebook image of a Wythenshawe Blue celebrating with his brother in a Barcelona pub. The lad has been going to City for years and had waited a long time for that title. There was more emotion in that lad’s face in that single photo than any celebrations I saw on television. You could see that it meant the world to him. .

just reading through his article again, i can't believe he's serious.

the good thing is all the world seen the raw emotion in augero's celebration.

so hes put his foot in it there, big time

you've been found out son

and while were on the subject of emotion i preferred mike inghams commentary over tylers for one reason.

listen to the roar of the city fans on inghams commentary.

thats emotion my pal.
 
a blue on twitter questioned his article and his response was to say "reveal yourself, you're hiding behind a false name!"

people tweet all the national and local journos, none of them come out with defensive language like that

his own fanzine is full of people using pen names, so where's the consistency there? it's just toys out of the pram

this is a guy who ridiculed joe royle saying he looks like mr. potato head and that it takes the nit nurse 7 hours to get all the nits out of his hair

i wonder if young andy would be brave enough to own up to joe royle and tell him all the things he has written about him previously, when he next interviews him in the MEN
 
bluemanc said:
Morrissey may have grown up a mile from Old Trafford, but when he wrote: ‘We hate it when our friends become successful. And if they’re Northern, that makes it even worse,’ he didn’t have football in mind. The lyrics have rung true for United over the last two decades though, not that City fans would ever describe United as friends. City had few friends among fans of other clubs, but lots of sympathisers who loathed United more, who were the top dogs, the team to beat, the club everyone loved to hate. United’s success created millions of haters – the rise of the internet and blanket TV coverage gave them a platform and rubbed their noses in it. Their team couldn’t beat United, so they jibed that all United fans were glory hunters from Surrey who’d never been to Manchester, let alone Old Trafford. Twenty years on, some people still repeat this, still think it’s funny. City’s success will continue to bring changes for match-going blues. I met a Blue relative (by marriage, not blood) outside the Etihad before the derby. He was enjoying City winning, but explained it came at a price. He’d looked around City’s away end at Arsenal and Chelsea and cringed as he saw hundreds of people he’s never seen at the match before – gloryhunters and tourists. Rich ones who go and see United (or now City) in London but never venture north of Tottenham. Tourists who’ll happily pay £300 on the black market for a one-off match in London, thus inflating the price for any genuine fans without tickets. And City are now classed as a category ‘A’ opponent, which means higher tickets prices for home – and away fans. So while your opinion of Fulham may not have changed in five years, theirs certainly has of you and they will sting you for the privilege. For capital ‘Cat A’ games £56 tickets are the norm. Don’t expect the hosts to roll out the carpet either. They won’t laugh along with the ‘typical City’ or the ‘cups for cock ups’ comments any more. And what is typical City these days? Winning every week, boasting that you buy anyone you choose. Click here to sign up to our new free Fantasy Football game where £100,000 is up for grabs Success brings increased expectations – and they can bring out a less edifying aspect of fandom, one where nothing is ever good enough. I listened to one Red moaning the day after United won the treble. It’s a new dawn for City. Being called a ‘noisy neighbour’ by Sir Alex Ferguson will seem like a compliment compared to the abuse at away grounds where everyone wants you to fail. Will you be ‘ABC’ to United’s ABU – (Anyone But United)? Away fans may begrudgingly admire David Silva’s brilliance or Vincent Kompany’s peerless authority, but they’ll seldom show it. Players will be labelled mercenaries and worse, but the fans will bear the brunt of the changes, the price rises, the hangers on, the constant shifting of games for TV. Reliving City winning the league at United’s expense is not something I’ll make a habit of, but I saw a photo a few weeks after that mind-numbing afternoon which remains vivid. It was a Facebook image of a Wythenshawe Blue celebrating with his brother in a Barcelona pub. The lad has been going to City for years and had waited a long time for that title. There was more emotion in that lad’s face in that single photo than any celebrations I saw on television. You could see that it meant the world to him. On his way home that night, the Blue saw a man in a City shirt across the street. He went up to him thinking they’d have much in common and perhaps an impromptu celebration. After all, they were both Blues. Except the lad in the City shirt wasn’t even a fan, just someone who ‘liked’ the shirt. The Blue was befuddled. Welcome to your new world, where more people than ever like you, and even more hate you.
Mittens a writer for the rag fanzine utd we stand,a bit like asking Ric to write an article on utd but Ric couldn't come close to anything like that.
That being on our City page is very poor.



Read more at: <a class="postlink" href="http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/sport/football/s/1583407_andy-mitten-column-success-comes-at-a-price-as-manchester-city-fans-will-find-out" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://menmedia.co.uk/manchesterevening ... l-find-out</a>
And never once did it show. The guy's a genius.
He's wasted at the M.E.N.
 
Doesn't seem like five minutes since a fresh-faced Andy was turning up at Maine Road whenever the rags were away!
 
Blue2112 said:
I'm not being funny but there's a shed load of people on this site that could write football articles every bit as good, no infact actually a whole lot better in all honesty than some of the so called experts. Some of the more articulate posters on here can piece together excellent appraisals with a more genuine, passionate and neutral understanding of the game and are in my opinion often give a far more balanced and enjoyable read than most of the newspaper journalists. Taking away the obvious City slant on all things I will read this site for an opinion on other clubs ahead of the newspaper coloumnists every time. Honestly I can't remember the last time I bought a newspaper and yet I can garner everything I need to know in the General Football forum of what's going on.

Blue2112, you must have read my mind ! As I read this pile of shite I couldn't help thinking how poor Andy Mitten is as a writer. His articles are predictable and his subject matter rarely strays from the Man City / Man Utd relationship which he re-hashes on a daily basis. I assume he is either unable to conjour up an original thought of his own or is just piss lazy. Either way, the guy is just some talentless twat making a butty by trying to con people that he is a "serious journalist".
 
Though I think there is some complete and utter bollocks in this article; particulary the bits about the lack of passion and emotion at the end of the season but some points he makes are valid. I live in just outside Wolverhampton and since May I’m seeing more and more City shirts particulary on kids (which has got to be a good thing for our revenue) – if I ask them why they’re wearing a City shirt I get the answer that “Wolves are shit and City are champions”. In the past I’ve had the same answer from kids in United shirts. In the future we will have older plastic football fans wearing City shirts that have never been to Manchester. The story he tells about the City fan sounds very unlikely.
Having also lived in London it’s true what he says about the London games too. Rich fans and tourists will buy up tickets as they do for United’s games now. It’s the law of demand and supply I’m afraid. Also we are classed as an A category game in most Premiership stadiums in the country
He states the obvious in the fact that the more success you have the more other fans hate you. Our hatred is born out of rivalry but also it’s been made worse by the success they’ve had, the plastic worldwide fan base and (for me definitely) their arrogance. But it’s easy to see how we could be seen in this light in say ten years’ time (just we see it in Chelsea fans now)– some of the younger posters on this forum are already showing that streak of arrogance and booing our team off on Saturday are signs of things to come.
 

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